Showing posts with label U.S. EDUCATION. Show all posts
Showing posts with label U.S. EDUCATION. Show all posts

Monday, March 11, 2013

Heigh-ho! Heigh-ho!

Working on our Abacus Prodigy app! Lots of designing for me to work on and lots of fun coding for our awesome CTO!!! But hey...it's all for the kids right?!



Friday, May 18, 2012

Florida's FCAT results. Lowering standards instead of raising them?

The state of Florida just released the results of the FCAT writing scores. Only 27% of fourth graders earned a passing score. The state commissioner is proposing to reduce the passing score from 4 (out of 6) to a 3.5 (out of 6). Lowering the standards to make it appear the students are doing better than they actually are. Is this the solution? I say no. Share your thoughts in the comments section.

http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/05/14/2799146/fcat-writing-scores-plummet.html

Here's a YouTube video talking about this issue as well:

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Article: Forget Wall Street. Go Occupy Your Local School District!


Forget Wall Street. Go Occupy Your Local School District

Our nation's schools are a larger cause of economic inequality than investment banks and CEOs
Oliver Bevan / Getty Images
OLIVER BEVAN / GETTY IMAGES
It’s easy to get angry at banks and CEOs, especially as more Americans slip below the poverty line while the rich keep getting richer. But if the goal of Occupy Wall Street is improving social mobility in this country, then the movement really needs to focus as much on educational inequality as it does on income inequality. There is perhaps no better example of how the system is rigged against millions of Americans than the education our children receive.
Public schools are obviously not to blame for the mortgage crisis, over-leveraged investment banks or the other triggers of our current economic woes. But when it comes to giving Americans equal opportunity, our schools are demonstrably failing at their task. Today zip codes remain a better predictor of school quality and subsequent opportunities than smarts or hard work. When you think about it, that’s a lot more offensive to our values than a lightly regulated banking system.
What do I mean by educational inequality? We’re all familiar with achievement gaps between white kids and minorities. But here’s the income-based gap: just 8% of low-income students get a college-degree by the time they are 24 while three-quarters of affluent students do. This has little to do with corporations, hedge funds or any of the other villains du jour. But make no mistake, outcomes like this kill economic mobility in this country.
So why are our schools, which should be an engine of opportunity, barely sputtering along?
Depending whom you ask, you’ll hear that the problem is too little money. Or it’s too much money and too little performance. Or poverty. Or lack of standards. Or lousy curriculum. Or teacher effectiveness. Or archaic rules and regulations. Or lack of innovation. Or lack of choice. Or too much power in the hands of the teachers unions. Or too little power in the hands of teachers.
In fact, in different places around the country, it’s all those things and others. But our tribal politics leave no room for that sort of nuance. Meanwhile, our politicians are too skittish to take on special interests or too wrapped up in ideology to acknowledge that no single solution — for instance, school choice, ending the federal role in education or just addressing poverty — will fix our education system.
So rather than taking aggressive steps to create fairer funding systems for schools to give poor kids a shot, to weed out bad teachers, or jettison policies that have clearly outlived their usefulness, we have phony wars about teacher pay or No Child Left Behind that dance around the real issues. Just this week a new report about New York highlighted how the state’s budget cuts will hit low-income schools almost three times as hard (losing $843 per pupil) as the wealthiest districts (which will lose just $269 per pupil). And earlier this month the Chicago Tribune highlighted how the poorest school districts in Illinois spend just 30% of what the most affluent ones do. Many localities, including really poor ones, are still left to come up with much of the funding for their schools; in other places the unfairness is due in part to state funding formulas that actually favor affluent communities over low-income ones. Occupy that.
As people across the country struggle to find jobs in this economy, consider how public schools factor into unemployment rates in two states. In September, unemployment in Michigan was 11.1%, the third highest in the nation. In Massachusetts it was 7.3%, below the national average of 9.1%. Those two states have both experienced substantial disruption to their economies. Massachusetts watched textiles and industry move south, and in Michigan the automobile industry has contracted. But the superior public schools in Massachusetts, which outpaces Michigan on a variety of measures, have no doubt been a key factor in that state’s ability to attract technology companies and other new industries. Good public schools not only create a competitive workforce, they create the kinds of communities where people will relocate to work and where entrepreneurs can launch businesses.
A sad irony of Occupy Wall Street is that the movement is being embraced by the teachers’ union. The unions are hardly the only cause of our educational problems, but they’re not doing enough to fix them. In ways large and small, they defend practices and policies — things like how teacher pay is factored into the amount of money that is allotted to individual schools — that disadvantage low-income students. Can the Occupy movement square this circle? We’ll see.
In any event, here’s my humble suggestion to all the protesters who are getting kicked out of Zuccotti Park and other places across the country: take your posters and your outrage and go occupy the central office of your local school districts and its teachers’ union headquarters. Then demand the kind of radical change we need to create a school system that lives up to our values rather than mocking them. Our schools are a more sympathetic target than corporate CEOs, but for many Americans they are a larger cause of economic injustice.
Rotherham, a co-founder and partner at the nonprofit Bellwether Education, writes the blog Eduwonk. The views expressed are his own.
Read more: http://ideas.time.com/2011/11/17/forget-wall-street-go-occupy-your-local-school-district/#ixzz1dyV0kJxG

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Early Childhood Education


The Article:

Kindergarten Teachers Say Students Are Behind on Day One
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  • November 4, 2011 • 5:30 am PDT
  • 97 responses
kinder
According to a new survey presented at the annual conference for theNational Association for the Education of Young Children yesterday, two-thirds of kindergarten teachers say the majority of their students start school without knowing basic preschool concepts like the alphabet. At a time when closing the achievement gap is a national imperative for our nation, veteran kindergarten teachers say students are less prepared for school than ever before.
Just 6 percent of kindergarten teachers say that students are very well prepared academically when they enter the classroom. Students come in lacking the ability to hold a pencil or write their name. Fewer than 9 percent of teachers rated incoming student's oral language skills as very good. Given that the size of a student's vocabulary is an indication of how well they'll do academically for the rest of their lives, that doesn't bode well for ensuring students are on the track toward college or careers.
The problem, of course, is that despite universal acknowledgement of the importance of early childhood education—and President Obama's support of such initiatives—too few students attend high-quality preschool programs that teach them the basics. Funding for preschool programs has been cut in state after state, and more cuts are on the way. Sure, every parent should spend time reading with her child, practicing the alphabet, and counting to 10, but that doesn't always happen. Even parents who have gone to college are busy working long hours and don't always take the time to read with their kids. Wealthier families have a huge advantage because they can compensate by paying for private preschools.
That's a real shame. If every student had access to early childhood education, they'd all start kindergarten at the same place, essentially cutting off the creation of the achievement gap. Until that happens, we shouldn't be surprised when kindergarten teachers say students aren't ready to learn.

The sad part is reading the comments readers were making on Facebook. The majority of the comments were parents saying that the teachers should be the ones teaching the kids, NOT the parents. It's no wonder our country is falling behind other countries. Parents need to take more responsibility and teach their own children!!! This makes me sad and mad at the same time!!! Thoughts?

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Math - A huge problem in the United States

The majority of Americans believe their kids' schools teaches top-rated Math and that their children are well-versed in Mathematics. This report proves otherwise. Even our Nation's top performing state - Massachusetts falls behind 14 other countries in Math.


Friday, September 30, 2011

Students vs. Prisoners


This is a sad comparison. If we can only push those funding to children first, perhaps we will have less "prisoners" in the system. How can we do that?

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

The "Stephen & Melinda Gates Foundation"



The Stephen & Melinda Gates Foundation (that's Stephen Colbert, by the way) is donating $100,000 to DonorsChoose.org! And all you have to do is upload a photo to help.If they can get 20,000 people to submit their photo with Stephen & Melinda, they will donate $100,000 to DonorsChoose.org! Go here to submit your photo!


I submitted my picture this morning! ...And no my hair does not look like that! :)

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Math, science focus of new 'Sesame Street' season

sesame_street.jpg

NEW YORK (AP) - More than three dozen celebrities, including Nicole Kidman and Robin Williams, athlete Carmelo Anthony and Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, are set to appear on the new season of "Sesame Street."
"Sesame Street" begins its 42nd season on PBS on Sept. 26.
PBS said Monday the focus of the preschool educational series will be on science, math and engineering education. That includes age-appropriate experimentation, including designing a launcher to send Hubert the Human Cannonball over a yard and into a bucket of blue gelatin on the season premiere. The orange monster Murray will conduct science experiments in a regular feature.
Other celebrities set to make cameos include Mark Ruffalo, Sofia Vergara and Seth Rogen; talk-show hosts Craig Ferguson and George Lopez; and musicians Jay Sean and Bruno Mars.
I love that PBS is trying to take a stance and push STEM education, even to the point of adding engineering to it. Engineering is an important subject for our kids to learn especially in the future we are heading towards! As much as some people want to avoid technology, I believe we need to embrace it and use it for good! 

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

SAT Reading Scores Fall to the Lowest!


 GREAT ARTICLE:


SAT reading scores fall to lowest level on record
By Justin Pope, Associated Press 


(AP) - SAT reading scores for the high school class of 2011 were the lowest on record, and combined reading and math scores fell to their lowest point since 1995.

The College Board, which released the scores Wednesday, said the results reflect the record size and diversity of the pool of test-takers. As more students aim for college and take the exam, it tends to drag down average scores.
Meanwhile, other tests taken by more representative groups of high school students have shown reading skills holding steadier. And in the context of the 800-point test, the three-point decline in reading scores to 497 may seem little more than a blip.
Still, it's just the second time in the last two decades reading scores have fallen as much in a single year. And reading scores are now notably lower than as recently as 2005, when the average was 508.
Average math scores for the class of 2011 fell one point to 514 and scores on the critical reading section fell two points to 489.
College Board officials pointed to a range of indicators that the test-taking pool has expanded, particularly among Hispanics, which is a good sign that more students are aspiring to college. For instance, roughly 27 percent of the 1.65 million test-takers last year came from a home where English was not the only language, up from 19 percent just a decade ago.
But the increasingly diverse group of test-takers is clearly having more trouble with reading and writing than with math. Wayne Camara, College Board vice president of research, said recent curriculum reforms that pushed math instruction may be coming at the expense of reading and writing _ especially in an era when students are reading less and less at home.
"We're looking and wondering if (more) efforts in English and reading and writing would benefit" students, Camara said.
Gary Phillips, chief scientist at the American Institutes of Research, cautioned against using SAT scores as a way to measure national performance.
Overall on reading, "I think we're treading water in the long-run," Phillips said, citing other tests like the National Assessment of Educational Progress. "In the short run, we've had a few blips in a couple directions. Based on the international comparisons, however, we're still not doing all that well."
Bob Schaeffer, public education director of the group Fair Test, a longtime critic of the SAT, found unpersuasive the College Board's explanation that the declines were due largely to a broadening test pool. In 2003, he said, the number of SAT-takers expanded by a greater percentage than last year, but scores that year rose 6 points on math and reading.
"Yes, changing test-taker demographics matter," he said. "No, they don't explain a 18-point drop (in combined scores) over five years."
The College Board, a membership organization that owns the exam and promotes college access, also released its first "College and Career Benchmark" report, which it said would eventually be used to give states and school districts better data on how ready their students are for college. Based on research at 100 colleges, the College Board calculated that scoring 1550 or above on the three sections of the test indicated a 65-percent likelihood of attaining at least a B-minus average in the freshman year of college.
Overall, 43 percent of test-takers reached that benchmark. The College Board emphasized the tool is for policymakers, and shouldn't be used by college admissions officers to evaluate individual candidates.
The main message from the College Board was the importance of a rigorous curriculum, which is a strong and perhaps growing predictor of SAT scores.
For instance, nearly one in five students takes less than four years of high school English. That's about the same percentage as a decade ago, but it now makes a much bigger difference on SAT scores: The reading scores of those students have fallen from 500 to 462. Students who took AP and honors classes, meanwhile, score significantly higher across the board.
A decline in average scores isn't necessarily good news for top students who were applying to competitive colleges. The number of high scores is also increasing. For instance, the number of students with math scores of at least 700 is up 22 percent since 2007.
The SAT and rival ACT exam are taken by roughly the same number of students each year. Most colleges require scores from at least one of the exams but will consider either. In recent years, some colleges have adopted test-optional policies allowing applicants to decline to submit test scores at all.
The College Board, which charges $49 this year for the test, has faced criticism from some educators over fees. This year it says it had responded to the weak economy with more financial aid, granting 350,000 students fee waivers, an increase of 77 percent in the last four years.
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Justin Pope covers higher education for the AP. You can reach him at twitter.com/jnn_pope97
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What are you doing to increase your child's reading skills? I must add that while reading proficiency is important, it is more important to increase their comprehension skills. I usually start my 7/8-year-old students to start learning about character development, themes, and plots in a much more simplified way. You can do that by having a storybook journal with each book they read. Have your child list out the important characters in the book. They can draw the character, map out character traits and personalities. Talk about themes such as love, honesty, knowing who you are (personal identity), religion, and do on. Have your child write a few short sentences of what you guys discussed. Just remember they are still young, so it does not have to be complicated. However, this will allow your child to start reading and seeing a distinct difference in their approach to reading. They will enjoy reading more and have a deeper understanding for such topics. In addition, learning such skills will help with their writing as well. What else do you do to help with your child's reading comprehension?

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Importing Talent

It is rather hard to get back into the groove of blogging after being sick for so long. I must say this second pregnancy has really taken a toil on my body! It's interesting how the human body goes through its own wears and tears. However, in my absence, I have been reading up on lots of articles and uncovered lots of new products. So...will try harder to keep it up and provide you with lots of interesting viewpoints and items!

Sean Yazbeck. Courtesy of Inc. Magazine.
I was reading the Inc. magazine the other day and came across an article about Sean Yazbeck. He won one of the seasons of The Apprentice and has since left the Trump organization to start his own company. His company - Wavsys - has had a 3-year growth of 760.1% and a 2010 revenue of $15.2 million. Not too bad! He was quoted saying: "We employ engineers and contract them out for things like setting up an antenna out in the field or writing code that will run the next generation of handsets. Our challenge has been finding the right kind of talent here in the U.S. We had to recruit engineers in Europe and Asia to find the right skill sets. That's why I am a big believer that the U.S. needs to create more opportunities to get children to study math and science."  I love that thought and agree with it 100%.

We've been having similar experiences in having a hard time finding programmers with the right skill set and great work ethic. It seems they're either missing one or the other. Can we compromise and deal with it? Sure. However, I feel strongly that in order for us to create a high quality product, we cannot allow such compromise. Recently too, I read an article hat the U.S. pumped $120 billion into rebuilding schools in Iraq. That infuriated me. It's sad that our money is going out of the country when so many of our own public schools are failing. Is everything about the U.S. education system wrong or bad? No, I'm certainly not saying that. What I'm saying is that we can always improve and we should be wanting to improve so we can keep our global competitiveness and advantage up. That's where we are failing our future generations! So how do we change that? Demand better curriculum and teachers in your schools! The parents do have the power. After all, parents are the ones who vote for our leaders who in turn create and maintain these public policies. Aside from that, always challenge your kids. Don't be afraid to. It teaches your child to learn to be competitive and not be afraid to fail. Failure is alright as long as they learn how to climb back up. Children are like sponges and can absorb information way better than an adult can! Trust that your child can be challenged and do not be complacent with simply what is taught in school!!! Supplement! Supplement! Supplement!

Global Competitiveness Ranking: International Business Times.
On a side note, The children's abridged literary classics are back at the Target dollar section! Grab yours today!

Friday, August 5, 2011

Valuing Quality Teachers

Education Secretary Arne Duncan talks with NBC’s Andrea Mitchell about the state of the country’s education system and the importance of good teachers.






Monday, August 1, 2011

Do U.S. Students Lack International Skills?

Education Nation posted a story explaining whether U.S. students are falling behind in "global" education. What are your thoughts?


Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Innovation starts at a young age!

Design studio aruliden, together with Bernhardt Design, conceived Tools at Schools as an initiative to teach eighth graders the value of design as a problem-solving tool at The School at Columbia University. Forty-four eighth grade students were immersed in the entire design process, from research to ideation to 3D modeling and ultimately launch. What started as a simple effort to get involved in the community grew into a much larger realization that design has a role in the classroom. Their success was not only in their concepts, but in the awareness each student gained in the process. The result was a collaborative vision of today’s classroom – designed for kids by kids. Wouldn't you love to see programs like this at your local schools?


Tools at Schools : Introduction to Project from Tools at Schools on Vimeo.

Tools at Schools : Research and Big Ideas from Tools at Schools on Vimeo.


Tools at Schools: Final Design and Mockup from Tools at Schools on Vimeo.


Tools at Schools: 3-D from Tools at Schools on Vimeo.


Tools at Schools : Modeling from Tools at Schools on Vimeo.


Tools at Schools: Final Project Launch at ICFF from Tools at Schools on Vimeo.

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