Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category

May 01 2008

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Room to Read: One Person Can Change the World

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Can one person, one idea or one organization possibly make a difference in the lives of millions of people? If you are familiar with the story of John Wood, the Microsoft executive who left his job (and wrote about it in his 2006 book, Leaving Microsoft to Change the World) to start a non-profit organization, Room to Read, to bring books, libraries, computer labs and education to children in developing countries, then you would answer yes.

Knowing that “education is a lifelong gift that empowers people to ultimately improve socioeconomic conditions for their families, communities, countries and future generations,” Room to Read has made a tremendous difference in the world and in the lives of children since it began in 2000 and has attracted worldwide attention and well-known supporters. With over 3600 libraries built in Cambodia, India, Laos, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Vietnam and South Africa, there is still so much work to be done to establish libraries in other countries. This means that there are many ways to involve more individuals, classrooms, schools, neighborhoods and organizations around the world to donate funds or volunteer their time and efforts to raise money.

Be sure to click on the Room to Read link in the blogroll to learn more about this amazing organization. As you read through all the information posted on the site, I am confident that you will be inspired to think about how you can help.

I hope you and your family will find a way to be of service to this worthy effort and encourage you to share the Room to Read link with your friends. Perhaps you’ll even think of other ways you, as one person, might change the world just as John Wood was able to do through Room to Read.

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Apr 24 2008

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TREAMIS World School: A Global Education Model

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According to Thomas Friedman, author of The World Is Flat, we now live in a “flat world” where technology has broken down the borders and we can literally travel through time and distance. It is a world where geography and language differences no longer are insurmountable barriers to communication.

With the “flattening” of our world, parents and educators are now asking the same questions: What will it would take to effectively prepare today’s students to be global citizens in a “flat world?”

Yesterday, I shared coffee and conversation with Mr. Venkatesh Koravadi and Dr. Krishna Jayaraman and learned about one school, located in Bangalore, India, that is off to good start to become a global education model. Mr. Koravadi is the Managing Director of TREAMIS World School and Dr. Jayaraman is a biotech executive and promoter of TREAMIS.

TREAMIS World School opened almost a year ago and established its mission as fostering independent thinking and self-discipline. Along with academics, art, music and sports, TREAMIS teaches the universal values of teamwork, respect, responsibility, ethics, etiquette and service. You can learn more about TREAMIS World School by clicking on the link in the blogroll.

With connections to Lake Forest Academy and Morgan Park Academy and plans for technology-based collaborative projects for the students here and in India, TREAMIS World School has established itself already as a leader pursuing global learning for its students.

It’s amazing to contemplate what might happen if every school in every country had such a focus on universal values, a well-rounded curriculum designed for the whole child, implementation of best practices for maximum student achievement and the inclusion of global learning opportunities. Perhaps, we would be raising students who would be truly equipped with the skills to live in peace, serve others, create, innovate and work productively.

Without a doubt, the students at TREAMIS World School and others with a similar focus will be ready for global citizenship and ready to succeed and compete in a “flat world.” How about the students in your school? Will they be ready?

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Apr 15 2008

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Conscious Discipline: A Program of Peace for Your Home, School and the World

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As a parent, your child’s first and most important teacher, have you ever wondered if there was one program that could teach relationship skills to children and adults and promote happiness and success at the same time?

Certainly in our world of today, this is a question I know many parents and teachers and professionals in the mental health field have asked. Especially since 9/11 and Columbine, there has been a focus on finding a way to promote peace in our homes, schools and the world.

As a classroom teacher, I emphasized to my students that peace began in each person’s heart. I told my students that each of us could then model the image of peace to those we met.

Yet realistically I knew that it wasn’t that simple and that specific skills and ways of thinking had to be taught and demonstrated before a peaceful home, classroom and world became possible.

Just how these skills could be effectively taught became clearer to me last year when I was invited to be part of the planning and implementation of a series of workshop for parents. It was then that I learned about the Conscious Discipline program by Becky Bailey,
http://www.beckybailey.com/. This unique program captures the energy of “daily conflict to teach character development, conflict resolution, social skills and self-control.”

Since November of 2007, I have participated in two parent workshops based on the Conscious Discipline program. During these workshops I had the chance to talk with youth leaders who have gone through the workshop training and applied the skills to their work. They shared their stories of success and I could tell that this program was making a difference for them and for the children and families they served.

On a more personal level, I have seen how effective the skills from this program are in my own life and personal relationships. I encourage you to check out the website in the blogroll and discover for yourself the potential of Conscious Discipline. You will be encouraged and amazed at the changes you will see in yourself and your children once you have practiced the skills and tried them out.

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Apr 04 2008

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Mobilizing the Hearts and Minds of All Students: Mobile Technology Solutions

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Are you looking for a way to transform teaching and learning? Would like to capture the imagination and attention of your children in your classroom or those in your home? Then you might want to explore how mobile technology solutions can meet the learning needs of today’s diverse student population.

That’s exactly what happened to me when I collaborated to write a grant for Palm IIIc handheld computers in 2001. I used these mobile computers in my classroom for three years and also utilized the school’s AlphaSmarts, portable laptop alternatives, for four years. It was amazing to see how many of my students approached learning in a more engaged manner when they were offered the options of mobile technology tools like the Palms and the AlphaSmarts and could get away from paper and pencil and even the desktop computers.

Now seven years later, students are even more experienced and at home with mobile devices than they were when I used mobile computers with my third graders. With the number of phones and iPods now becoming more commonplace possessions among younger students, mobile computers offer the promise of transforming our schools in ways we could not have dreamed possible when most of us were in college.

Just like the OLPC initiative, mobile computers are designed to create a new learning environment and not just function as an additional tool in the classroom. In this new learning environment, the focus is on the individual student constructing his/her own knowledge. By utilizing specially designed software, teachers are able to “mobilize” the curriculum and move students away from paper and pencil.

Many of the software applications available today for mobile computers have been developed at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor at the Center for Highly Interactive Computing in Education (HI-CE) under the direction of Dr. Elliot Soloway, an Arthur F. Thurnau professor in three departments at Michigan and a leader in the field of mobile computers. He and Dr. Cathleen Norris, Regents Professor at University of North Texas co-founded GoKnow, Inc which provides mobile computer software and professional development training for teachers and administrators.

To listen to Dr. Soloway and see these mobile computers in action, check out the link from YouTube, Mobile Computers in the Classroom, listed in the blogroll on the right. I encourage you to visit the website of GoKnow, Inc., which is also listed in the blogroll. There is no doubt in my mind that you will be just as captivated about the possibilities for mobile computers in the classroom as I was. Let me know what you think and if you are using them right now in your school.

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Mar 20 2008

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OLPC: Ready to Transform Education on a Global Scale

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Ever since I learned about the One Laptop Per Child organization, whose ambitious goal is to provide 150 million children around the world with inexpensive laptops by the end of this year, I have been totally captivated by the vision and the implication of what this would mean in terms of transforming the current education model.

Imagine what might happen if we empower all children, their families and teachers in the poorest of nations and the poorest of counties in the United States with the ability to learn 24/7?

What if we could actually remove the obstacles and barriers that block learning and create a learning environment and community that celebrates the universal human right of education? What might happen if we provided children with an environment that supported learning and developed creativity for the entire family?

This is what OLPC is really all about and what makes it such an exciting initiative. My excitement has continued to grow over these past three years for OLPC, especially since I recently attended the 2008 Society for Information Technology and Teacher Education Conference that was held in Las Vegas just a few weeks ago from March 3rd through the 7th.

At the closing session on March 7th, we were privileged to hear Antonio Battro, current Chief Education Officer of OLPC cast a vision of allowing children, as young as four years old, to own a durable, low-cost laptop that comes with 100 e-books loaded on it, a digital still and video camera and built-in capability to connect with a local server and the Internet and collaborate on projects and share knowledge with their peers from their school and with children all around the world.

Battro, from Argentina, talked about his OLPC conversations around the world with heads of state and kings and indicated that there are now 50 countries involved in some phase of exploring or implementing the use of the OLPC laptop. He emphasized that the OLPC initiative is not about giving children a technology tool but about the creation of a learning community where education is everywhere, available to everyone. To Battro, education is as basic to improving the human condition as is fresh water and food and must be provided at the same time.

If you’d like to learn more about OLPC and get involved and support this effort, please check out the links in the blogroll to the right. I hope you’ll be just as captivated as I am with how creating a learning environment with this simple technology tool can be a revolutionary agent of change in the lives of so many children and families around the world.

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Mar 09 2008

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Nings: Social Networks for Every Interest

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If you’re like me, you might be relatively new to the world of social networking. I’m hoping that getting involved with these networks will expand both my knowledge and ability to share what I’ve learned about helping children reach their learning potential.

While I don’t have a Facebook or MySpace profile yet, I did learn over a week ago that a link to this blog was featured on the Ning, Our Gifted Online Conferences: A Gathering Place for All Things Gifted.

The day after I first saw a link to my blog on this Ning, I attended the IL-TCE Conference on February 28th in St. Charles and learned that there are around 170,000 Nings (social networking sites focused on a single interest). I also learned that the number of Nings is growing daily and that Nings are quite easy to create. If you’re interested in creating your own education related Ning, I’ve included a link in the Blogroll on the right that will help you get started.

Joining Our Gifted Online Conferences, http://giftedonlineconferences.ning.com/, will let you get involved in an active online gifted community where you can share resources and information on many aspects of giftedness. If you’d like to get connected with other parents and teachers who are interested in “all things gifted,” this looks like a great place to start.

Please let us know about other Nings that might be of interest to teachers and parents – I’ll list these in the Blogroll. Thank you!

Getting involved in social networking can be a powerful tool for parents and teachers. I’m looking forward to learning more about how these networks can help us all work together to discover and nurture the gifts in every child.

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Mar 01 2008

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Scratch: A New Technology Tool That Can Unleash Your Child’s Creativity

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I just spent two days at the annual Illinois Computing Educator’s technology conference in St. Charles and came back with so many new ideas that I’ll be blogging about in the next few weeks. This conference is a great local one for teachers and parents would learn quite a bit, too! It’s important to keep up with all the technology that our children are becoming so competent with manipulating and attending this conference is a great way to keep current: http://www.iceberg.org/page.php?pid=10

The first new technology tool I wanted to share with you is Scratch, a software tool from MIT and released last spring. Michael Resnick, from MIT, gave the IL-TCE conference attendees a look at the potential for this software to develop creativity in children. It’s an awesome tool that you’ll want to check out: http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2007/resnick-scratch.html

I also learned more about social networking and it’s implication for teachers and parents – more about that in my next post.

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Feb 27 2008

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Digital Diversity: Providing Curriculum Access and Acceleration in a Flat World

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What strategy has the most potential to transform classroom practices and improve teaching and learning and develop creativity here in the United States and around the ever-increasing “flat world” of today?

That’s a question parents and educators all over the world have been debating over the past few years. If you were to answer this question, which of these strategies would you choose?

1. After-school tutoring – requiring students to receive extra help
2. School choice – allowing parents to transfer their children to a school that has met its annual testing goals
3. School restructuring - hiring a new staff in schools where a certain percentage of students fail over several years to meet test standards in math and reading
4. Professional development for teachers in educational technology – training in the effective integration of technology tools to provide students access and acceleration of the curriculum and active, engaged learning opportunities

Certainly each of these strategies has its merits. The first three represent components of the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) “toolkit” here in the United States. However, the last answer, professional development for teachers in educational technology, is included in the provisions of NCLB and might have the most impact on actually bringing about the much needed changes in our educational system here. It also might hold the key to transforming education in general around the world.

In some of our classrooms here and abroad, there is an emphasis on the use of conventional paper and pencil/scripted teaching strategies with a focus on worksheets and yearly testing results. While this traditional and time-honored approach of paper and pencil might work with a limited number of students, it is not the answer for all students. In fact, this approach is often a barrier to both the access to and acceleration of learning for many of our students with learning differences.

Research has shown that for students who are still working on mastering the basic skills and those students who are reading, writing and thinking several grade levels beyond their peers, technology tools can provide both access and acceleration of the curriculum that conventional methods often fail to provide.

These tools represent digital diversity and were described by Grace Rubenstein in her 2006 Edutopia article, “What’s Next: Our Look at the New (School) Year.” She talked about “universally designed technology” that is designed to meet the needs of all students and allow teachers to have the instructional flexibility to focus on student strengths.

I strongly believe, as do many of my colleagues, that helping teachers understand the need for instructional flexibility, provided by the use of digital diversity, is key to improving teaching around the world. It is also essential to improving learning and developing creativity among our students who are communicating, collaborating and competing in a new world, a “flat world,” as Thomas Friedman has written about in his book, The World Is Flat.

If you agree with this need for a focus on professional development in educational technology for teachers, then there is something that you can do. If you live here in the U.S., you can contact the U. S. House Committee on Education and Labor, listed in the blogroll on the right, and let them know what you think so they can incorporate your feedback into changes to NCLB, which is still in committee and up for reauthorization either before or after the 2008 fall election. Tell them that you feel that a continued high-stakes testing focus, a reduction in time spent on science, social studies, P.E. and the arts and the punishment of a growing number of schools for “failing” is not helping our students or our teachers.

Let the Committee on Education and Labor know that all this testing and narrow subject focus is draining the joy and enthusiasm for learning and teaching from our students and our teachers and gradually breaking their connection with each other. Tell the Committee on Education and Labor that it would be wiser to provide an increased focus on needed professional development in educational technology. With this focus, teachers would then be more equipped to transform their classroom practices and create a more playful, relaxed and engaging learning environment that would truly meet the needs of a diverse student population.

If we all speak up and let our voices be heard, I am confident that we can help our schools transform classroom practices to improve teaching and learning. With digital diversity in place and teachers adequately trained to integrate technology tools, our students will be ready to become productive and creative citizens in our “flat world” and have an equal opportunity to compete on a level playing field in a global economy.

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Feb 19 2008

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Flexibility and a Sense of Humor: Stories of Strategies That Work

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Looking for some truly effective teaching strategies for the classroom and at home? I’ve discovered that you don’t have to go far to find a wealth of material. By asking the teacher down the hall, a fellow educator at a conference or one of your carpool parents you will be amazed at what you can learn. Here are two of my own stories that might provide you with some tips on what works in the classroom and at home.

Finding My Instructional (and Parenting) Flexibility
When I decided that all my gifted students should be able to write easily and love writing because they were gifted, I was in for a rude awakening. Every year I was confronted with a few of the gifted students in my class who either had no confidence in their writing abilities or were such perfectionists that they seemed to get stuck during some phase of the writing process. It wasn’t until I allowed my students to give me more direction regarding their writing learning styles and I gave them more writing options that I truly learned the magic of instructional flexibility. Doug Kutner, a noted Portland, Oregon psychologist who specializes in helping gifted children and adolescents, was truly instrumental in providing me with a fundamental basis for the rationale behind the need for flexibility, especially with teaching writing. What he has to say about children and writing will provide useful insights that will be helpful to both teachers and parents: http://dougkutner.com/pub_toc.htm. Thanks to the lessons I learned from listening to the children and the wisdom of the researchers, I found my instructional flexibility and began to better meet the needs of all my students.

Learning How to Cultivate a Playful Environment and Use My Sense of Humor
Life, if you think about it, is sometimes a laughing matter. Our plans, so carefully laid, don’t always turn out the way we hope. Lessons we develop for our classroom don’t always go they way they should. As parents, we don’t always get the cooperation or respect we expect from our children. In all these examples, one thing we can retain and control is our sense of humor. I learned in working with gifted children and their families that having a sense of humor was key to survival as a teacher. Humor reduced my stress level, built relationships with children and parents and developed creativity and problem solving skills in my students. Finding, developing and utilizing my sense of humor came as a result of personal reflection and investigation of some helpful humor resources such as the Humor Project, http://www.humorproject.com/ and Diane Looman’s, http://www.dianaloomans.com/, wonderful book, The Laughing Classroom. Once I tapped into my sense of humor, I was able to transform myself as a teacher and later as a parent and spouse in ways I could never have dreamed possible.

I am confident that each of you reading blog post has a story or two to tell of what works in your classroom or home. Please consider taking the time to share your story so we all can learn from each other. Thank you!:)

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Feb 12 2008

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Turn Every Child’s Strengths into Pathways of Success

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Have you ever wondered what is the best way to help your child succeed in school? Do you think that high-stakes testing is really the answer to student success? These are important questions that legislators, educational researchers, parents and teachers alike are asking more frequently these days.

Despite the focus of the NCLB legislation on testing, remediation and addressing the perceived weaknesses of students, more and more practitioners in the field of education are looking for new strategies to help children succeed. These teachers are doing what could be considered a “best practice” in education because it truly works: teaching to student strengths as the answer to promoting learning success and raising achievement test scores.

Teaching through a child’s strengths is actually the best way to help a child improve in all areas of the curriculum, including math and reading. Like all students, twice-exceptional students, those identified as gifted and having a learning difference or difficulty, truly benefit from strength-based instruction. The Twice-Exceptional Dilemma, listed in the blogroll, provides an abundance of resources to help teachers and parents to implement these strength-based strategies

Dr. Thomas Armstrong, author of the 2002 The Multiple Intelligences of Reading and Writing, states in his book that “we need to pay much more attention to the neglected intelligences, especially those such as spatial, bodily-kinesthetic, musical and naturalist, that may be particular strengths of individuals who have had special difficulties in successfully making their way through our heavily linguistic schools.”

Marcus Buckingham, author of Go Put Your Strengths to Work, points out the dramatic increases in engagement and productivity when individuals in the workplace play to their strengths every day. Such engagement and productivity could be seen in Wilbur and Orville Wright.

According to an article in the most recent EPS catalogue (epsbooks.com), these two talented brothers had a hard time sitting still and concentrating, struggled to keep up with their lessons and were always at work on their inventions. Their mother “encouraged discovery” and their thinking and understanding of mechanics. Their father bought them a toy helicopter and as a result the two brothers decided to build an airplane. Despite their lack of high school education, they both possessed an incredible ability to “visualize a mechanical device, take it apart and put it together, and transfer working parts from other machines – without a single tool.”

This ability to “visualize a mechanical device” certainly isn’t a skill we could test today with NCLB, but it is a skill that has changed the world. So let’s encourage our children and their passions, strengths and gifts because we never know which of their strengths will lead to a pathway of success – just like the Wright brothers – and change our world.

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