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Mailing List
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From
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IAES NEWS
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announcements
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All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
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krysko@uiuc.edu
Jean Krysko
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1:03:37 PM 10/22/97
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IAES NEWS
1) The IAES is getting ready to publish the second edition
of the Essential Bulliten. We are looking for contributing
writers. We would like to publish:
* Exciting news or happenings at your school
* Exemplary practices being demonstrated at your shool
* Lesson plans that you are willing to share with other
essential teachers
* Information that you feel would be helpful for
administrators or teachers
To contribute, email Jean Krysko at krysko@uiuc.edu with
your name, school/district, and article.
2) Compaq is offering numerous grants for teachers. To find
out more information, visit their web site at
http://www.compaq.com/education/promos/devgrant.html.
3) Does your school have a teacher or program that is doing
an outstanding job which should be recognized? Besides
submitting an article to the bulliten (see above), you could
ask the IAES to visit your school and videotape that teacher
or program. We will do all the work, and we will also press
the video onto a CD-ROM so that it may be shared with other
teachers. This is a chance to show off the stars in your
school or district!
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Good News for School Reform
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announcements
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All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
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krysko@uiuc.edu
Jean Krysko
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3:16:56 PM 1/23/98
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Good News of School Reform!
The most complete guide to school reform ever written!
"Reclaiming Our Nation at Risk" features:
*In-depth interviews with 44 of the nation's top school
reformers and educational leaders.
*20 proven reform models
*35 proven "best practices" in 15 states and 18 cities
*Easy-to-read, engaging narrative
*Extensive research conducted by the late former U.S.
Secretary of education Terrel H. Bell, along with co-authors
Kent Lloyd and Diane Ramsey, of the Bell Knowledge
Network.
To order or for more information, call 1-800-610-9120.
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Upcoming Technology Conferences
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announcements
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All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
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krysko@uiuc.edu
Jean Krysko
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9:50:36 AM 2/12/98
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Upcoming Technology Conferences
ICE 1998
February
24-27 The Role of Technology in Education XVIII
Conference-The Kids' Connection hosted by North Cook
Intermediate Service Center at Pheasant Run Resort, St.
Charles, Illinois. Questions concerning the Technology
conference may be directed to the Technology Department,
North Cook ISC. Phone: 847/419-5065.
March
5-8 Kentucky Education Technology Conference; Louisville,
KY; Kentucky Department of Education, Office of Education
Technology, 1932 Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, KY 40601;
502/564-7168; fax 502/564-6470; email:
ketc98@kde.state.ky.us;
http://www.kde.state.ky.us/ketc98/.
9-11 METC'98, St. Louis, Missouri. Midwest Education and
Technology Conference sponsored by The Cooperating School
Districts. The conference offers professionals throughout
the United States an opportunity to meet and exchange ideas
on the present and future of educational technology. The
focus is on successful technological applications used in
today's classrooms as well as the emerging technologies of
the future. http://info.csd.org.
20 The Seventh Annual "Engaging the Future of Education"
Technology Conference, Charleston High School, Charleston,
IL. ICE Members will receive a $5 discount off registration
fee. To find out more: call the ROE/School Assistance &
Support 217/348-0151 or email: brichard@roe11.k12.il.us.
April
17-19 Teacher Education and Technology Conference (TETC);
Indiana University, Bloomington, IN; Martha Zuppann,
812/856-8212; http://22NCRELSGI.ncrel.org/tet/tet.htm.
26-28 School Tech Exposition & Conference, New York
City, New York. Participate in three days of high-impact
workshops, speeches, demonstrations, and discussions
sponsored by Technology & Learning magazine. For more
information: Phone: 415/905-2200; Fax: 415/908-6604, or
http://www.techlearning.com.
June
22-24 National Education Computing Conference, San Diego,
CA, hosted by California State University, San Marcos
California Computer Using Educators, Inc., and San Diego
Computer Using Educators. Sponsored by the National
Educational Computing Association, Inc. For up-to-the-minute
conference details and to join our mailing and announcement
service, please call us toll-free (1-800-280-6218) and visit
our web site at http://necc98.csusm.edu.
October
29-31 TEL-Ed '98. ISTE's seventh international conference on
telecommunications and multimedia in education will be held
in New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S.A. and Victoria, British
Columbia, Canada. Punch in the ISTE Web site
(http://www.iste.org) or call toll-free (1-800-346-6218) for
more information or participation, rates, and how you can
finish your next year on a high note, too.
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On-Line Service for Educators
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article review
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All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
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krysko@uiuc.edu
Jean Krysko
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2:27:06 PM 9/24/97
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"On-Line Service to Offer Education News, Ideas for
Classroom Teachers"
Article by Andrew Trotter
Education Week
September 3, 1997
Teachers who rely on the Internet for professional news and
classroom ideas but dislike the drudgery of revisiting World
Wide Web sites may soon get a boost from an on-line service
scheduled to begin this fall.
The service-called Educast-will offer information from
newspapers including Education Week and USA Today, the U.S.
Department of Education, and other groups and publications.
It will be published by Davidson & Associates, based in
Torrance, Calif.
The service, which is currently available in a trial
version, is an example of what is known as "push"
technology.
Most Web browsers and search engines are "pull"
technologies, in that the user must visit Web sites, type in
key words, or consult indices and actively download-or
pull-selected information onto the computer.
Push Web services perform those tasks for the user-and
usually when he or she isn't even at the computer. Users
must register for these services, install special software
on their computers, and select information categories and
on-line publications about which they would like to receive
updates.
The software activates the computer's connections to the
Internet at designated times and downloads requested
information and Web links-in addition to topic-related
advertising, which foots the publisher's bill for the free
service.
The service also will deliver weekly lesson plans, grouped
by grade and subject areas, and announcements of conferences
and grants. Educators can download the trial version of
Educast by going to the service's Web site at
http://www.educast.com.
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computers and teacher training
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article review
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All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
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krysko@uiuc.edu
Jean Krysko
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11:24:42 AM 9/29/97
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ìComputers Have Little Use Without Teacher
Training, Study Saysî
Article by Millicent Lawton
Education Week
July 9, 1997
If computer technology is to be a cost-effective aid to
improving schools, educators must focus as much on
supporting and training the people who use it as they do now
on buying hardware and software, a private foundation
concludes in a recent report.
Todayís high-tech innovations will have little effect
on education if schools adopt them without building a
ìhuman infrastructureî that includes adequate
training for teachers, according to the study released June
25 by the Washington-based Benton Foundation.
The report, ìThe Learning Connection: Schools in the
Information Age,î warns that ìtechnology alone
is no panacea.î
The six-month study looks beyond initiatives to wire schools
to the Internet ìto ask harder questions about how to
make this effort work for kids, classrooms, and
communities.î
The Benton report says that perhaps the biggest obstacle to
the effective use of computers in the classroom is
inadequate teacher training. Technology puts more demands
than ever on undertrained teachers with little or no extra
time on their hands, the study found.
Educators must address five issues when it comes to using
computers in the classroom: the content of the Internet,
curriculum reform, assessment of student learning, equitable
availability of technology, and community involvement.
Efforts must continue to be made, the report says, to make
the Internet more useful for teachers and students. The
Internet is not necessarily the place to turn students
loose. Students need to learn how to evaluate information
and to have a structured research formula before they use
the Internet.
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Technology Spending
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article review
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All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
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krysko@uiuc.edu
Jean Krysko
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1:20:06 PM 9/29/97
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ìSchool Technology Spending on the Rise, Survey
Predictsî
Article by Kerry A White
Education Week
September 3, 1997
The nationís schools are projected to spend an
estimated $5.2 billion on educational technology during this
school year, up 21 percent from 1996-97 spending, a survey
suggests.
That would be the largest such increase since 1994-95 when
technology spending rose 29 percent over the previous year,
according to the 1997-98 Technology Purchasing Forecast, a
survey of school districts by the Denver-based research firm
Quality Education Data.
The marked growth in projected school district spending
comes from a political consensus that ranks technology a
high priority for schools and a ìdramatic
increaseî in cash from both government grants and bond
issues. The expected increase reflects ìa bipartisan
interest in school technology investments.î
The study also forecasts an increase from last year on
software expenditures, with 49 percent of the districts
surveyed reporting an increase, compared with 34 percent in
1996-97. Microsoft Corp. leads the list of companies that
districts are planning to buy software from this school
year.
A related article:
ìSurvey Finds Strong Public Support for More
Technology in Schoolsî
Article by Andrew Trotter
Education Week
July 9, 1997
Most American voters would support a federal tax increase if
it were earmarked for computers and other technology in the
nationís schools, according to a survey released by
the Milken Family Foundation National Education Conference.
The survey, conducted in May and June by Dr. Peter D. Hart
Research Associates, Inc., was paid for by the Santa Monica,
Calif.-based Milken Family Foundation.
Among the findings is that over 90 percent of voters think
schools that are well-equipped with technology have a major
advantage over other schools in access to information and in
preparing students for entering the workplace.
Sixty-one percent of voters polled said they would pay $100
more in federal taxes a year to meet schools' technology
needs-more than twice the percentage who would not. More
respondents supported using tobacco, corporate, or sales
taxes to generate the needed revenue than favored using bond
measures or property taxes.
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hands-on physics
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article review
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All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
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krysko@uiuc.edu
Jean Krysko
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1:17:18 PM 10/7/97
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ìNew Adventures In Hands-On and Far-Out
Physicsî
Article by Bob Albrecht and George Firedrake
Learning and Leading With Technology
October 1997, Vol. 25, No. 2
Another school year brings another year of mentoring at
C-TEC, a project-based learning community at Piner High
School in Santa Rosa, CA. This article is about using
computer power tools in math and science tasks,
investigations, and projects-tools that help learners learn
and teachers teach.
C-TEC is a project-based school. Ninth graders take an
integrated science course in which they work in teams on six
projects, each lasting five or six weeks. Sophomores,
juniors, and most seniors are members of year-long project
teams. The authors will work with the math teacher to
develop and run Hands-On and Far Out Physics.
The authors discovered Rice Universityís Galileo
Project on the Web. It will be their primary resource in
developing and doing the class. This site reports on Rice
University history students who are replicating some of
Galileoís experiments. The Galileo Web site is
http://es.rice.edu/ES/humsoc/Galileo/index.html/. Galileo
did hands-on and far-out physics using rudimentary
equipment. The students in the class will be able to use his
ìequipmentî to carry out experiments of their
own.
The power tools needed for these experiments are getting
smaller, more powerful, and even more portable than ever
before. The authors use Texas Instruments graphing
calculators to perform several tasks. For information about
Texas Instruments graphing calculators, visit
http://www.ti.com/calc/.
The authors use several ìdata grabbersî to
assist in their experiments. The CBL is a handheld,
battery-powered instrument that connects to a T1 graphing
calculator. Data-grabbing sensors are attached to the CBL,
which is then connected to a graphing calculator. A program
in the graphing calculator tells the CBL what to do. Data
grabbed by the sensor is stored in the graphing calculator
and graphed on its display. You can use a hardware and
software package called Graph-Link to connect the graphing
calculator to a computer and download the data stored in the
calculator from the computer. The best place to get CBL
information is at http://www.ti.com/calc/docs/cbl.htm.
An MBL consists of data-grabbing sensors attached to an
inferface box that is connected to a computer. The interface
box must also be connected to a power source. A program in
the computer tells the interface/sensor package what to do.
The data being captured is stored in the computer and can be
graphed on the computerís display in real time or
saved for later use. To process and graph data, you can use
software written specifically for the MBL, or you can use
general-purpose power tools such as Excel, Works, or
ClarisWorks. MBL information can be found at
http://www.sensornet.com, http://www.teamlabs.com, or
http://www.vernier.com.
Bob Albrecht (one of the authors) can be reached at
DragonFun@aol.com.
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Memories in Living Color
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article review
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All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
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krysko@uiuc.edu
Jean Krysko
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2:40:31 PM 10/7/97
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ìMemories in Living Colorî
Article by Ken Kwajewski
Learning and Leading With Technology
October 1997, Vol. 25, No. 2
Traditional yearbooks try to capture the passage of time and
store images that can be reviewed in the future and evoke
fond memories. The traditional yearbook is certainly worth
keeping, but there is also another method of preserving
those memories: multimedia yearbooks. This is a great
activity for eighth graders, and these yearbooks can be
distributed on disk or videotape. All you need is a digital
camera, HyperStudio, or another multimedia authoring
program, and a dash of creativity.
Using HyperStudio, each student designs his or her own
yearbook card complete with a digital photo, layout
backgrounds, graphics, text, clip art, and original artwork.
This project should be started early in the year. The goal
is to create a HyperStudio yearbook stack that has one
multimedia card for each student in your graduating class as
well as some candid photos. Link all of these together, and
demonstrate this yearbook to your students at the end of the
school year. Then you can save the yearbook to disk or
videotape for students to take with them. If you use
HyperStudio 3.0 on an AV computer, exporting the final stack
to video is a snap.
You can use a digital camera to take computerized photos of
the students. Save the photos as PICT files, and have the
students paste them into their HyperStudio Stacks. Students
also use the digital camera to take candid photos on field
trips, assemblies, and other special events at school.
Ken Kwajewski of West Middle School in Andover, MA can be
reached at kentheq@aol.com.
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Recommendations for NCATE
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article review
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All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
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krysko@uiuc.edu
Jean Krysko
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1:54:08 PM 10/14/97
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ìNCATE Told to Emphasize Technologyî
Article by Ann Bradley
Education Week
September 17, 1997
New teacher graduates arenít fully prepared to use
technology, warns a report released that calls for the
national organization that accredits education schools to
take ìvigorous actionî to remedy the
problem.
The report, ìTechnology and the New Professional
Teacher: Preparing for the 21st Century Classroom,î
was written by the task force convened by the National
Association for Accreditation of Teacher Education. NCATE is
a Washington-based coalition of 30 organizations that sets
standards for education schools and accredits about 500
institutions. The 20-member task force included classroom
teachers, professors, and education experts from consulting
and testing companies.
The task force agreed that NCATE should revise its standards
to require education schools to have a vision and plan for
technology that fir with their overall model of teacher
education. Institutions should spell out both how they will
use technology to prepare new teachers and how those
teachers will be expected to use it in their classrooms.
Currently, the report says, many colleges and universities
are making the same mistake that was made by pre-K-12
schools: ìThey treat ëtechnologyí as a
special addition to the teachers education
curriculumÖbut not a topic that needs to be
incorporated across the entire teacher education
program.î
Technology Recommendations for NCATE:
1) Stimulating Effective Use of Technology in Teacher
Education
* NCATE should require schools, college, and departments of
education to have a vision and plan for technology that
reinforces their conceptual model for teacher education.
* NCATE, working with other professional organizations such
as the American Association of Colleges for Teacher
Education, should encourage each school, college, and
department of education to establish and explore the use of
modern communications technology in carrying out its various
functions and responsibilities.
* NCATE, working with other professional organizations such
as AACTE, should identify and make available to all
interested institutions exemplary practices of technology
use in the preparation of teachers for the 21st century.
2) Improving the Current Accreditation Process
* NCATE should revise its standards to require institutions
to articulate, as part of their conceptual model, the role
they envision technology will play in the preparation of
teacher candidates and how these candidates are expected to
use technology when they assume teaching responsibilities in
elementary and secondary schools.
* NCATE should establish pilot projects with a few
institutions to implement and evaluate state-of-the-art uses
of technology in the current accreditation process.
* NCATE should encourage the various principals in the
accreditation process to use electronic means to communicate
and to store and retrieve data.
* NCATE should continue to expand its Web site as it
identifies additional functions and sources of information
that can be made available through Web technology.
* NCATE should pilot the use of electronic folio reviews in
the accreditation process.
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Recommendations for NCATE
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article review
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All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
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krysko@uiuc.edu
Jean Krysko
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1:57:09 PM 10/14/97
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ìNCATE Told to Emphasize Technologyî
Article by Ann Bradley
Education Week
September 17, 1997
New teacher graduates arenít fully prepared to use
technology, warns a report released that calls for the
national organization that accredits education schools to
take ìvigorous actionî to remedy the
problem.
The report, ìTechnology and the New Professional
Teacher: Preparing for the 21st Century Classroom,î
was written by the task force convened by the National
Association for Accreditation of Teacher Education. NCATE is
a Washington-based coalition of 30 organizations that sets
standards for education schools and accredits about 500
institutions. The 20-member task force included classroom
teachers, professors, and education experts from consulting
and testing companies.
The task force agreed that NCATE should revise its standards
to require education schools to have a vision and plan for
technology that fit with their overall model of teacher
education. Institutions should spell out both how they will
use technology to prepare new teachers and how those
teachers will be expected to use it in their classrooms.
Currently, the report says, many colleges and universities
are making the same mistake that was made by pre-K-12
schools: ìThey treat ëtechnologyí as a
special addition to the teachers education
curriculumÖbut not a topic that needs to be
incorporated across the entire teacher education
program.î
Technology Recommendations for NCATE:
1) Stimulating Effective Use of Technology in Teacher
Education
* NCATE should require schools, college, and departments of
education to have a vision and plan for technology that
reinforces their conceptual model for teacher education.
* NCATE, working with other professional organizations such
as the American Association of Colleges for Teacher
Education, should encourage each school, college, and
department of education to establish and explore the use of
modern communications technology in carrying out its various
functions and responsibilities.
* NCATE, working with other professional organizations such
as AACTE, should identify and make available to all
interested institutions exemplary practices of technology
use in the preparation of teachers for the 21st century.
2) Improving the Current Accreditation Process
* NCATE should revise its standards to require institutions
to articulate, as part of their conceptual model, the role
they envision technology will play in the preparation of
teacher candidates and how these candidates are expected to
use technology when they assume teaching responsibilities in
elementary and secondary schools.
* NCATE should establish pilot projects with a few
institutions to implement and evaluate state-of-the-art uses
of technology in the current accreditation process.
* NCATE should encourage the various principals in the
accreditation process to use electronic means to communicate
and to store and retrieve data.
* NCATE should continue to expand its Web site as it
identifies additional functions and sources of information
that can be made available through Web technology.
* NCATE should pilot the use of electronic folio reviews in
the accreditation process.
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Building Schools As Communities
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article review
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All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
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krysko@uiuc.edu
Jean Krysko
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10:25:52 AM 10/15/97
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ìBuilding Schools as Communities: A Conversation
with James Comerî
Article by John OíNeil
Educational Leadership
May 1997
What children need as much as computers or books, says James
Comer, is relationships with caring adults. After a
quarter-century, the School Development Program is
continuing to model how educators can work with families to
create caring communities in schools.
Below are quotes from James Comer as he spoke with John
OíNeil:
ìMany people misunderstand what intelligence is.
Intelligence is really the capacity to gain and use
knowledge to solve problems and promote well being. It has
several components: the cognitive, the affective or
emotional, and the expressiveÖTo be successful, one
needs a threshold level of cognitive ability. But many other
things are just as important; creativity, personal
discipline, the ability to relate to other people. I call
this ëeffective intelligenceí-all the things
that come into play in problem solving.î
ìIf you talk to employers, theyíll tell you
they want employees who are able to think, take initiative,
get along well with other people, solve problems, be
disciplined and responsible. But schools are being
influenced by another factor: the demand to produce high
test scoresÖWe have overemphasized the cognitive-we
think we can measure it, although Iím not sure we
even do that very well.î
(In the late 60ís, the School Development Program
began in New Haven. This is a description of the
program)
ìFirst, we immersed ourselves in the schools and
tried to understand what was wrongÖNext, we built a
structure that enabled parents, educators, and other
specialists, to develop a comprehensive school plan
together. The plan had both a social-emotional and an
academic component. As we created a good social climate in
the school, we then were able to integrate academic learning
and social emotional development.î
ìOur School Development Program contained the
essential elements of school-based management. Parents
served on the governance and management team, and they had
their own parent team. The parents helped design a program
to support the academic and social program that the school
planning and management team came up with. The parents and
the teachers worked closely together on those
activities.î
ìOur idea was to bring all the adults together to
support childrenís growth along the developmental
pathways- the social interactive (how to interact well with
other people), the psycho-emotional (how to control your
emotions or handle your impulsively), the moral-ethical, the
linguistic, the intellectual-cognitive, and the physical. It
is growth along all those pathways that facilitates
intellectual academic growth.î
ìSome people who want great change believe that test
scores are important and that we need to teach for deep
understanding. I believe that you can do both. If the school
climate is supportive enough, you can teach in a way that
will enable the young people to pass whatever exam is out
there and still help them become deep thinkers and problem
solvers.î
For more information, contact Cynthia Savo, School
Development Program, 53 College St., New Haven, CT 06510;
(203) 737-1020 (email: cynthia.savo@yale.edu). The SDP Web
site is http://pandora.med.yale.edu/comer/welcome.html.
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NYC Web Site
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article review
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All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
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krysko@uiuc.edu
Jean Krysko
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11:23:31 AM 10/29/97
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N.Y.C. Internet Site Links City Schoolsí Wish List
with Benefactorís Gifts
Article by Jessica L. Sandham
Education Week
October 15, 1997
Last spring, the New York city-based Public Education Needs
Involvement in Learning, known by its catchy acronym-
PENCIL, teamed up with the New York Daily News to launch a
resource bank on the Newspaperís Web site. The
service lets New York public school principals post wish
lists for their schools. The Web site organizes the schools
by location and grade level, and principals make requests
ranging from scissors to air conditioners.
In 1995, Lisa Belzberg founded PENCIL, which uses corporate
and foundation funding to run various programs designed to
bring private sector involvement to the New York Public
School system.
Recently, Veba AG, a large German conglomerate that opened
on the New York Stock Exchange earlier this month, gave
PENCIL a $50,000 grant to help various area schools acquire
new art materials. PENCIL will use the money to buy art
supplies for all the schools on the Web site that requested
them.
PENCILís Web site is
http://mostny.agt.com/most/pencil/
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the NAC
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article review
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All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
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krysko@uiuc.edu
Jean Krysko
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10:22:31 AM 11/4/97
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ìLittle-Known Center Offers Schools Its Video
Gemsî
Article by Karen Abercrombie
Education Week
October 22, 1997
Itís home to countless hours of educational
programming, yet the National Audiovisual Center remains a
mystery to many of the nationís educators. The NAC,
located in a suburb of Washington, D. C., disseminates
federally produced videotapes, slides, and audiotapes of
educational programs, as well as technical and engineering
information.
The center houses 9,000 audiovisual products. Many of the
programs come with teacherís guides that include
question-and-answer sessions. Some of the films in the NAC
vault have won Academy awards. The National Educational Film
Festival and the American Film Festival have honored
others.
To make the process as easy as possible, center officials
will conduct free searches for schools looking for tapes and
other materials. Schools and other organizations may
purchase copies of most NAC tapes and slides for prices
ranging from $20 to more than $100 for complete training
packages. If teachers or librarians have heard about a
particular program, they can call the NAC and have it
tracked down.
Schools can request a free catalog from the National
Audiovisual Center by calling (800) 553-NTIS. For a search
by an audiovisual specialist, call (703) 487-4603. The NAC
Web site is at www.fedworld.gov/ntis/nac/nac.htm.
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Reports on Tech Usage
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article review
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All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
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krysko@uiuc.edu
Jean Krysko
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10:23:58 AM 11/4/97
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ìFew U.S. Schools Use Technology Well, 2 Studies
Reportî
Article by Debra Viadero
Education Week
October 15, 1997
Only 3 percent of U.S. schools are effectively integrating
technology into all aspects of their educational programs,
while most others fall short of that goal, a report from a
group of 21 business and education leaders concludes.
Most schools - 59 percent- ranked at the lowest end of the
scale developed by the CEO Forum on Education and
Technology. ìSchool Technology and Readiness Report:
From Pillars to Progress,î is one of two studies
released this month that help fill in a national picture of
schoolsí progress in integrating technology- an issue
the Clinton administration and many state policymakers have
emphasized.
The CEO Forum report is the first of four by the group,
whose members include technology companies such as Apple
Computer, nonprofit entities such as National Public Radio,
and educational organizations such as the National Education
Association and the National School Boards Association. The
group derived its criteria from the ìfour
pillarsî of school technology use articulated in 1996
by President Clinton: hardware, connectivity, digital
content, and professional development.
Schools designated ìtargetî users of technology
(the highest ranking) show strength in all four categories.
They have at least one computer for every three students,
on-site technical support, high-speed Internet access, and
teachers with more than 71 hours of professional development
in technology use. In addition, many of the computers must
have multimedia and CD-ROM capabilities. In target schools,
the teachers act more as guides to students rather than as
traditional lecturers.
The other report was conducted by Cable in the Classroom, a
public service initiative launched by the cable-television
industry which analyzes the explosive growth over the past
five years in schoolsí use of the Internet. Nearly 48
percent of the 400 teachers surveyed by Cable in the
Classroom said they use the Internet in their teaching-most
often to do research or access curriculum materials. But, of
that number, only 37 percent could name three Web sites that
they found particularly helpful. The report concluded that
teachersí use of the Internet is still in the early
stages of development.
For the report by the CEO Forum on Education and Technology,
go to www.ceoforum.org. The Cable in the Classroom study is
accessible through
www.ciconline.com. Also, individuals can find out how their
schools rank in Quality Educational Dataís database
by going to www.educationnetwork.com/teachmeas.html and
sending an email query.
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E-rate program information
|
article review
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All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
|
krysko@uiuc.edu
Jean Krysko
|
9:45:27 AM 1/26/98
|
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'E-Rate' Program Information
Provided by Andrew Trotter
Education Week
January 14, 1998
Authorized under the federal Telecommunications Act of 1996,
the "education rate" program will offer up to $2.25 billion
in discounts per year on a wide range of telecommunications
services that schools and libraries plan to use for
instruction.
Education Week put together some commonly asked questions
about how the new program will work.
When can schools apply for an "E-rate" discount?
Once the World Wide Web site of the administering agency,
the Schools and Libraries Corp., or SLC, has been activated.
That is expected to occur shortly, possibly this week. Check
the Web site: www.slcfund.org.
What does a school need to apply?
Application forms and instructions are available at the Web
site of the National Exchange Carrier Association, at
www.neca.org/funds.
To participate, a school or its district needs a three-year
technology plan that shows how the requested
telecommunications services and equipment relate to other
technologies and educational objectives.
The plan, which doesn't have to be complete for the first
application form to be submitted, must be approved by a
state agency-in most states, the department of education-or
have passed muster in one of several federal technology
programs.
Which form should be filled out first?
The school-or a designated district or state official-should
first complete Form 470, which summarizes its request for
telecommunications services or equipment.
Form 470 may be completed on the SLC Web Site or mailed to
the SLC's processing center, at PO Box 4217, Iowa City, IA
52244-4217.
Is it better to mail the form or complete it on-line?
SLC officials say they will not give preference to either
method. But the Web site will offer "Help" screens, and
on-line application may be posted a few days sooner on the
Web site.
Where can a school go for more help?
In most cases, a few officials at the school district and
state levels will be versed in E-rate rules and procedures
and may be organizing informational meetings.
For general queries, a Help service offered by the
Educational and Library Networks Coalition is available at
800-733-7870 or the Web site: www.eratehotline.org.
More detailed help is available over the SLC hot line at
800-203-8100, or by email at question@SLCfund.org.
Additional questions and answers are available on the
Education Week web site at www.edweek.com.
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conference web sites
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article review
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All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
|
krysko@uiuc.edu
Jean Krysko
|
9:20:12 AM 2/2/98
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Conferences-Going a Step Further
By Beth Buchler
ICE Cube
December 1997/January 1998
Last month, numerous educators attended the Ice Breaker '97
Conference. The following is a list of sites that relate to
some of the many topics presented at the conference.
ICE Web Site
www.iceberg.org
The Thornburg Center
www.tcpd.org
New Explorers
www.pbs.org/wttw/web_newexp
The Exterminator Mystery Project
http://pop.life.uiuc.edu/~meadow/exterminator.html
ClarisWorks
www.claris.com/support/products/ClarisWorks/index.html
ISBE Technology Information Plan
http://www.isbe.state.il.us/ncsa/k12/html
Maya Quest '97
http://www.mecc.com/mayaquest.html
Engaged Learning
http://www.ispin.k12.il.us/el.html
http://206.166.51.29/Engaged/
Lego Dacta
http://www.lego.com/products/dacta.html
HTML
http://www.dist214.k12.il.us/214homepage/technology/html.html
(This page was developed by K. Wiseman of District 214 and
can be accessed also through the DuPage ROE site at
www.dupage.k12.il.us under Learning Technologies)
QTVR
http://qtvr.quicktime.apple.com/
That's a Fact Jack
http://www.fsc.follett.com/products/tfj/more.html (free demo
offered)
FAQ on emates
http://www.training.apple.com/online/dave97/pages/ematefaq.html
PBL
http://206.166.51.29/LINC/
Stockmarket
http://www.katy.isd.tenet.edu/it/katyless/hudson/hudson.html
Lesson Plans
http://www.katy.isd.tenet.edu/it/katyless/index.html
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Charities post web sites
|
article review
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All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
|
krysko@uiuc.edu
Jean Krysko
|
9:50:57 AM 2/2/98
|
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"As Schools Gain Internet Access, Charities Post Lesson
Plans on Web Sites"
Article by Susan Gray
The Chronicle of Philanthropy
January 1998
As more and more schools and libraries gain access to the
Internet, a growing number of non-profit groups are using
the medium to get their messages across to schoolchildren
around the world.
Environmental groups and museums have been among the leaders
in the effort to develop educational materials for the
Internet. Partly that's because those groups have
historically had a strong educational component in their
work.
The National Wildlife Federation in Washington, for
instance, offers schoolteachers free lesson plans they can
use to teach environmental science. The federation's
curriculum called "Animal Tracks," is available through the
Internet (http://www.nwf.org/nwf/atracks) and includes 55
lesson plans for elementary- or middles-school teachers to
use to teach environmental science.
Amnesty International has posted lessons on teaching human
rights to elementary- and secondary-school students on its
World Wide Web site
(http://www.mightymedia.com/EduNet/orgframe.cfm?CID=6).
By using the Internet, organizations are able to reach more
widely in a geographic sense to schools in Alaska and Puerto
Rico. Plus, the information is available 24 hours a day.
Using the Internet is relatively inexpensive also.
Organizations save thousands of dollars from publishing on
the Internet rather than printing and mailing the
materials.
Similarly, the Franklin Institute (http://www.fi.edu), a
leading science museum in Philadelphia, has found that the
Internet has been a low-cost way to deepen the public's
understanding of science-and to introduce schoolchildren and
others to the museum. It has posted science lessons which
range from how the weather is forecast to a step-by-step
illustrated guide to dissecting a cow's eyeball.
While many non-profit groups have developed their Web sites
with good intentions for educating students, some
organizations simply put up research results that are not
rigorous and are often biased, experts say. What's more, too
many organizations do not take academic requirements or
other needs of educators into account. However, for those
who can do right, the Internet presents an extraordinary
opportunity.
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Computer Donations Pose Dilemma for Educators
|
article review
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All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
|
krysko@uiuc.edu
Jean Krysko
|
11:14:04 AM 2/5/98
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"Computer Donations Pose Dilemma for Educators"
Article by Andrew Trotter
Education Week
January 28, 1998
Deciding whether to accept computer donations is likely to
become a more common dilemma for educators. Companies and
government agencies across the nation report plans to
replace thousands of computers and related equipment over
the next couple of years with the latest models. Much of the
older equipment will be offered to schools.
The resale value of older technology is slight. Giving the
equipment away saves the companies the cost of warehousing
or dumping it. Plus, beginning this month, donors have
another financial incentive. A federal tax break passed in
the Tax Relief Act of 1997 lets anyone write off a portion
of the value of a computer that is two years old or newer
and is donated to a school. A number of states have, or are
weighing, similar tax breaks. Tax breaks add fuel to the
charge that recycling programs soak up funds that would be
better spent on new equipment, training, and other
essentials of good technology use.
The government launched a Web site last fall to consolidate
and publicize requests for federal computers from schools
and non-profit organizations. The address is
www.computers.fed.gov/. So far, several hundred schools have
posted requests, which will be considered by all federal
agencies.
Schools' experiences with donated computers have been mixed.
Education technology experts say a school should consider
accepting used computers only if they are compatible with
its technology plan, if the school can get adequate software
that works on the machines, and if it has a way to keep them
up and running. Some donations programs give a replacement
guarantee for their computers.
A school should be cautious if it is required to put up
money for the computers, experts say. Some foundations
expect nothing at all, although those might provide
computers that are not extensively upgraded. The experts
also caution that hardware and software are only a portion
of the cost of using technology as well; schools will also
need an equal investment in staff training and ongoing
upgrades.
Of course, where school leaders stand on the issue of
accepting used computers depends greatly on where they sit
financially. Many don't want to seem ungrateful, but so many
computers have limited capacity and the district would have
to spend extra money to upgrade or repair them. Many
districts that don't have the funds to purchase new
equipment don't have those funds either.
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An Assessment Tool for Measuring the Impact of Technology
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article review
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All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
|
krysko@uiuc.edu
Jean Krysko
|
1:06:46 PM 2/5/98
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"Good Tools are Hard to Find: An Assessment Tool for
Measuring the Impact of Technology"
Article by Elizabeth A. Carlson
ICE Cube
December 1997/January 1998
When technology people get together, the conversation always
comes to the point where they share useful ideas. As part of
the conversation in this column, the author would like to
pass along information about a tool she's discovered to be
quite valuable. It's the National Study of School
Evaluation's (NSSE) Technology: Indicators of Quality
Information Systems in K-12 Schools. This 140-page
publication has many potential uses and benefits for
curriculum coordinators, members of technology or curriculum
committees, along with superintendents and directors of both
curriculum and technology programs, and evaluators of
technology programs.
This book actually describes and explains a systemic
approach for analyzing student performance in light of
instructional and organizational factors. Instruments
included in the book allow assessment not only of student
performance, but also of the instructional and
organizational capacity of the school to provide the
conditions necessary for student learning. The book takes
readers through a valuable and necessary process: assessing
the status of current technology programs and creating goals
for improving the program.
The assessment process is divided into three parts. Part one
discusses assessing the current technology program using
indicators for four goals, and identifying target goals for
improving student achievement. The second part addresses the
assessment of the capacity of the school's instructional
system to support student learning goals, and the
identification of target goals for increasing the capacity
of the school's instructional system. The third part guides
readers through the process of assessing the capacity of the
organizational system to promote student learning and how to
target goals in this area as well.
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Subsidies for Internet Access: How They Work
|
article review
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All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
|
krysko@uiuc.edu
Jean Krysko
|
10:44:29 AM 2/12/98
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"Subsidies for Internet Access: How They Work"
Article by Susan Gray
The Chronicle of Philanthropy
January 15, 1998
Under the Telecommunications Act of 1996, schools,
libraries, and rural hospitals are now eligible to get
subsidies, provided through a program called "universal
service," are designed to make sure that all Americans,
especially children, can have access to the Internet.
Here is some basic information about the program:
Who is eligible:
Public schools, private schools with endowments below $50
million, public libraries, and public or non-profit rural
hospitals.
How institutions qualify:
Schools and libraries must fill out applications furnished
by the Schools and Libraries Corporations, a non-profit
organization set up by the federal government.
Hospitals must fill out applications furnished by the Rural
Health Care Corporation, another non-profit group set up by
the government.
All applications must include a summary of an institution's
technological needs, such as the installation of wiring and
help with paying monthly Internet-access costs.
How discounts are determined:
For schools and libraries, the amount of a discount is based
on an institution's need. Need is determined by two factors:
the percentage of children (attending the school or within
the library's circulation area) who qualify for the federal
government's free or reduced-price school-lunch program, and
how far the institution is from an Internet-service
provider.
For rural hospitals, need is based on how distant they are
from providers.
How much an institution can get:
The poorest schools and libraries will get 90% discounts on
Internet access; the lowest discounts are 20%.
For hospitals, discounts will be limited to covering the
additional costs they incur, compared with urban hospitals,
because they are far from an Internet-service provider.
What the discounts cover:
Wiring, Internet connections, and other technology that is
needed to link to the Internet. They do not cover the cost
of a number of related needs, however, such as computers,
modems, training teachers and librarians to use the
Internet, or developing educational materials for the
Internet.
How to get more information:
Schools & Libraries Corporation, P.O. Box 4217, Iowa
City, Iowa 52244-4217; 888/203-8100; email:
question@slcfund.org; World Wide Web sites:
http://ww.fcc.gov/learnnet and http://www.slcfund.org.
Rural Health Care Corporation, Federal Communications
Commission, 1919 M Street, N.W., Washington 20554;
888/225-5322; World Wide Web site:
http://www.fcc.gov/healthnet.
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Web Site for E-Rate Goes On-Line
|
article review
|
All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
|
krysko@uiuc.edu
Jean Krysko
|
11:14:14 AM 2/12/98
|
|
"Web Site for 'E-Rate' Discounts Goes On-Line"
by Andrew Trotter
Education Week
February 4, 1998
The launch last week of a Web site administered by the
Schools and Libraries Corp. formally opened the filing
period for "the E-rate," the new federal discounts for
schools and libraries on telecommunications services for
learning.
To apply, school officials must complete two forms-either
online at the web site or on paper versions mailed to the
SLC processing center in Iowa City, Iowa. The web address is
www.slcfund.org.
Discounts for eligible projects will be handed out on a
first-come, first-served basis-with the important exception
that all applications received by April 14 will be given
equal priority. The final $250 million of this year's fund
is reserved for the poorest schools, if necessary.
Help is available on-line and via the SLC hot line at
888/203-8100.
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On-Line Job Service for Students
|
article review
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All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
|
krysko@uiuc.edu
Jean Krysko
|
9:36:41 AM 2/16/98
|
|
"NAASP to Offer On-Line Job Service for Students"
Article by Adrienne D. Coles
Education Week
February 11, 1998
A new on-line service offered by the National Association of
Secondary School Principals will link students and graduates
in search of jobs with potential employers. SCRIBE, or
School and College Records on the Internet for Better
Employment, will allow high school and college students to
post a record of their education and work experience on a
World Wide Web site. Employers seeking full- or part-time
workers will be able to post job listing and monitor the
site for candidates.
Students must pay a $10 fee to post their "employer
friendly" transcripts which will include a summary of
academic performance and work experience. The transcripts
also include a section for commendations and honors, all of
which can be updated as a student moves on to postsecondary
education and work. Identification numbers, electronic
"firewalls," and passwords will safeguard the personal
information that students supply for their records.
The NASSP also asks that students include results from the
ACT Inc.'s Work Keys assessment, a skills test designed to
help employers identify qualified applicants. Work Keys
testing is available across the country and cost $9.60 per
test. The NASSP will encourage schools to provide waivers
for students who cannot afford the fees.
Students will also be able to access jobs posted on the
SCRIBE network. Job positions on the network will likely
range initially from summer work to part-time positions.
High schools and colleges can join the service at no cost to
help their students compile or update their records. The
system will also enable the schools and colleges to use the
service at no cost to alert students to scholarships.
Companies that are part of a business or trade association
that has signed up with the network can participate without
paying a sign-up fee. Unaffiliated companies can sign up for
$25.
The SCRIBE Web site is located at www.scribenet.org.
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Web Site Home to Banned School Journalism
|
article review
|
All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
|
krysko@uiuc.edu
Jean Krysko
|
10:58:18 AM 2/16/98
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"Web Site Is Home to Banned School Journalism"
Article by Andrew Trotter
Education Week
February 11, 1998
A principal now has something new to think about before
spiking an article from a school newspaper: The story might
appear on the Web. The "Bolt Reporter," which calls itself
"America's Online High School Newspaper," is looking for
solid journalism that has been censored from school papers,
said the Web site's producer, Parker J. Stanzione. She hopes
the publication will be a beacon to alert students to the
perils of censorship and the power of careful journalism.
The "Bolt Reporter," published by Concrete Media Inc., a
company based on New York City, went on-line last fall. The
Web address is www.boltreporter.com.
The "Bolt Reporter" boasts of a 100 percent-uncensored
section entitled, "Banned on Bolt." Some of its articles,
while not necessarily banned from school papers, push the
edge of what some administrators might feel comfortable
about publishing. Current articles on the main web site
explore campus bias against gay students, teen suicide, and
medicinal-cannabis clubs. The site also includes movie and
music reviews.
On essay in the "Banned on Bolt" section is by Adrian S.
Holovaty, the chief editor of the North Star student
newspaper in Naperville, IL. Mr. Holovaty tried to publish
an article last fall about a teacher at Naperville North
High Scholl who was fired after being charged with having
sexual contact with a female student. Principal Douglas F.
Cameron told the newspaper staff it could not write about
the incident because of his concern for the welfare of the
student, who still attends the school, Mr. Cameron said.
But the students turned to the Student Press Law Center in
Arlington, VA for advice, and the local and national media
took up their cause. Eventually, after the teacher pleaded
guilty to felony charges, the principal allowed the students
to print an article on the situation. In his "Banned on
Bolt" essay, Mr. Holovaty urges other student journalists to
stand up to school censors. The Web site also includes the
North Star's original article, a succinct, factual account
that five reporters labored over.
Censored articles must pass careful legal and factual
scrutiny before they are published in "Banned on Bolt," Ms.
Stanzione said. For example, quotations are verified by
reading them back to the people being quoted.
Mark Goodman, the executive director of the student Press
Law Center feels that censorship by school principals has
been on the rise since the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed
school officials' right to prior review of official student
newspapers in Hazelwood School District v. Kuhlmeier in
1988. But Mr. Goodman said the Internet's vast and widely
accessible World Wide Web has practically repealed
administrators' power to suppress student expression.
However, Linda J. Puntney, the executive director of the
Journalism Education Association and an assistant journalism
professor at Kansas State University, feels that the ability
to publish on-line won't remove the intimidation factor of a
disapproving principal, and that one of the greatest threats
is self-censorship by students.
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Beta Test: Investigating the Solar System
|
Astronomy curriculum
|
Alliance-Teachers@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
|
sandy-levin@uiuc.edu
Sandy Levin
|
1:11:54 PM 2/2/98
|
|
Call for Beta Test Sites
Deadline: February 28, 1998
Astronomy Village: Investigating the Solar Systemô is
recruiting teachers from schools throughout the U.S. to
participate in its
Beta Testing program. Interested middle school science
teachers may apply by completing the Online application form
or by
sending for an application form.
Join the Astronomy Village: Investigating the Solar
Systemô Project and Transform
Science Education!
The Center for Educational Technologies (CET) at Wheeling
Jesuit University announces an opportunity for middle school
science teachers and students (grades
6-8) to participate in the design and evaluation of a
four-week multimedia curriculum supplement called Astronomy
Village: Investigating the Solar Systemô. The
supplement involves students in a process that is based on
what astronomers actually do when conducting research. The
project is an extension of Astronomy
Village: Investigating the Universeô, developed by the
NASA Classroom of the Future Program at the CET. Middle
school students will use hands-on
experiments and computer simulations to conduct
investigations that focus on current topics about our solar
system while making use of software tools and data
similar to those used by real astronomers. The students will
be supported by extensive multimedia and telecommunications
resources. The CET invites you and
your students to join this exciting project and be at the
cutting edge of science education reform.
How Can Your School Participate?
Schools that participate in this project must have a
commitment to science education reform, to professional
development, and to the integration of technology into
the classroom. Please read the project description
thoroughly. Make sure you understand the commitments your
school must make in order for you to join the
Astronomy Village: Investigating the Solar Systemô
project. CET seeks to collaborate with schools whose
organizational goals are well-matched with our own.
Your answers to Section IV in the application are of
particular importance in determining this match.
How Can You Apply?
By U.S. mail, please send requests for applications to
Brigitte D. Gegg
Teacher Liaison
NASA Classroom of the Future
Wheeling Jesuit University
316 Washington Avenue
Wheeling, WV 26003
By World Wide Web, please fill out and submit the form.
http://www.cotf.edu/av2/
Questions?
Contact Brigitte D. Gegg
By Phone: 304-243-4306 or 1-800-WJC-COTF
(1-800-952-2683)
By E-Mail: gegg@cotf.edu
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Technology and learning Conf.
|
conference
|
All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
|
sandy-levin@uiuc.edu
Sandy Levin
|
8:45:53 AM 10/6/97
|
|
Below is the Call for Presentations for the 1998
Technology + Learning
Conference in Nashville, TN next October 29-31, 1998. Note
that they're
particularly looking for proposals from school
districts.
TECHNOLOGY + LEARNING CONFERENCE
ISSUES "CALL FOR PRESENTERS"
ALEXANDRIA, VA, September 1997 -- The National School Boards
Association's
Institute for the Transfer of Technology to Education (ITTE)
invites
workshop session proposals from school districts interested
in showcasing
innovative uses of technology in education at the 12th
Annual Technology
Learning Conference, October 29-31, 1998, at the Nashville
Convention
Center, Nashville, Tennessee.
The Technology + Learning Conference, sponsored by ITTE
and
co-sponsored by more than 20 leading education
organizations, is the
leading national event for education decision makers who
select and
implement technology for teaching and learning in K-12
schools. Last year,
more than 2,000 school leaders throughout the United States
and Canada
attended the event which is designed to highlight the many
effective
strategies for responding to the nation's challenge for
improved education
through the wise use of technology.
School districts are invited to share their experiences in
using
technology with their colleagues from around the nation.
Proposals are due
to NSBA by February 6, 1998. Workshops must serve the
interests of
conference attendees and present information in a variety of
formats.
Educators are encouraged to submit more than one
proposal.
Applications for proposals are avail-able through NSBA's
Technology
Department (Fax - 703/548-5560) and on the Internet at
http://www.nsba.org/itte. For additional information
regarding school
district workshops at the Technology + Learning Conference,
contact Cheryl
Williams, Director, Technology Programs, at 703/838-6213.
Completed
proposals should be sent to ITTE, attention: Kristin
Barnard, 1680 Duke
Street, Alexandria, VA 22314.
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|
CyberFair 98
|
contests
|
All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
|
sandy-levin@uiuc.edu
Sandy Levin
|
8:38:21 AM 2/12/98
|
|
Date: Wed, 11 Feb 1998 17:49:45 -0800
To: cyberfair@gsn.org
From: Yvonne Marie Andres (http://www.gsn.org)
<yvonne@gsn.org>
Subject: CYBERFAIR> Calling All Schools! 18 Countries, 31
US States - , http://www.gsn.org/cf
Sender: owner-cyberfair@gsn.org
Precedence: bulk
Attention Education, Technology and Community Leaders!
Don't miss the chance to showcase your local community,
learn about the
World Wide Web and win prizes for your school!
International Schools CyberFair 98
sponsored by Cisco Systems, GTE & the Global
Schoolhouse
For complete details see http://www.gsn.org/cf
=>Schools must register by February 28, 1998
=>Projects must be completed by March 31, 1998
=>Peer review takes place April 6 - April 24
=>On-line Awards Event on May 13, 1998
What is CyberFair 98?
=====================
- CyberFair is a school-based, global learning project for
all grade
levels (K-12)
- Students do research about their local communities in one
of eight
different categories and then publish their findings on the
world wide web
- Schools participate in a peer review, using a web-based
evaluation rubric
- EVERY school that participates receives "thank you" for
playing prizes
- Grand prizes are awarded the to best entries in each of
the eight
categories (Note: the best entries will reflect the best
community-building projects)
- ALL schools are invited to one hour on-line Awards
Ceremony, via audio
bridge, or Internet videoconferencing
Prizes
======
Grand Prizes Include:
-8 Apple eMates
-40 Cisco Microweb Servers
-24 $300 cash grants
-8 Alpha Smart Keyboards
-24 White Pine CU-SeeMe
-8 ten-packs of MovieWorks
-Adobe PageMill, Photo Deluxe, Acrobat
-plus more...
EVERY School will receive AT LEAST one of the following:
-Career Explorer Subscription
-Microsoft FrontPage
-Apple Web Construction Kit
<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<*>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
We are pleased to announce there are currently registrations
from 18
Countries and 31 US States
CyberFair Registrations Listed By Country
=========================================
Argentina
Austria
Australia
Bosnia
Brazil
Canada
Alberta
BC
Manitoba
New Brunswick
Ontario
Ecuador
Germany
India
Japan
Latvia
Mexico
Singapore
Slovenia
South Africa
Spain
United Kingdom
USA
Alabama
Alaska
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Mississippi
Missouri
Nebraska
Nevada
New Jersey
New York
North Carolina
Ohio
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Tennessee
Texas
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<*>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
IMPORTANT! Currently there are NO schools who have
registered from the
following states, so please help get the word out!
Arizona
Arkansas
District of Columbia
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Minnesota
Montana
New Hampshire
New Mexico
North Dakota
Oklahoma
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Utah
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<*>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
PS. Please help spread the word about the fantastic NEW
Global Schoolhouse
membership program. Membership is open to all educators for
**FREE**
To register and learn more visit http://www.gsn.org/join
____________________________http://www.gsn.org_____________________________
Yvonne Marie Andres President/Curriculum Director
http://www.gsn.org/who/team/ya.bio.html
Global Schoolhouse/Global SchoolNet Foundation
7040 Avenida Encinas 104-281, Carlsbad, CA 92009
yvonne@gsn.org Voice 760/433-3413 or 760/721-2972 FAX
760/721-2930
__________________We Give You a Reason to be
Connected______________________
---------------------------------------------------
International Schools CyberFair 98
(http://www.gsn.org/cf)
*featured project of Community Share Web
(http://www.gsn.org/csw)
*sponsored by Cisco Systems, GTE and Global SchoolNet
---------------------------------------------------
Email questions to cyberfair-mod@gsn.org. To unsubscribe
send "unsubscribe cyberfair" to majordomo@gsn.org.
|
|
Discipline issues and grant opportunities
|
discipline, grants
|
All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
|
sandy-levin@uiuc.edu
Sandy Levin
|
2:44:08 PM 10/27/97
|
|
From the Educational Resources newsletter:
Educators often ask for information on discipline issues.
Research is
difficult to find, but we have found a recent list of
articles
describing discipline programs that have worked for some
schools and
districts. See
http://landmark-project.com/CGIs/lasso.acgi
================
U.S. MATH REPORT
================
The report "Math Equals Opportunity," published this week by
the U.S.
Department of Education, summarizes the importance of
mathematics for
college, course-taking patterns in middle schools, parent
and student
attitudes about math and science, international comparisons,
and
promising practices. The full report is available at
http://www.ed.gov/pubs/math/
In brief, it reports that mastering math is one of the
factors that
contributes significantly to students' going to college, and
that this
is especially true for for students from low-income
families. The key
appears to be taking algebra by 8th grade to be ready for
rigorous math
and science classes in high school. Currently only 25
percent of U.S.
students take algebra in 8th grade. Achievement depends on
the courses
the student takes, not on the type of school the student
attends.
Middle-school mathematics may be a weak link in the U.S.
education
system. The middle-school math curriculum in the U.S. is
less
challenging than the curriculum in other countries.
The reports recommends six things that educators, policy
makers and
communities can do to improve this situation:
1. Give all students the opportunity to take algebra I in
8th grade and
more advanced courses in math and science during high
school.
2. Build the groundwork for 8th-grade algebra with a
rigorous math
curriculum in grades K-7.
3. Make sure all parents, teachers, counselors and students
understand
the importance of early study of algebra.
4. Provide professional development to teachers of
mathematics to
increase their knowledge and skills.
5. Support math achievement outside of class through math
clubs,
tutoring and job shadowing for students who need extra
help.
6. Support parent involvement.
=============================
GRANT APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE
=============================
Information and applications for the following grants can be
found at
http://ocfo.ed.gov/fedreg/announce.htm
Visiting Scholars Fellowship Program: For individuals
engaged in
educational research to work at one of the five Office of
Educational
Research and Improvement national research institutes for up
to 18
months.
The Bilingual Education Graduate Fellowship Program:
Fellowships for
graduate students studying instruction of
limited-English-proficient
children and youth.
Bilingual Education Comprehensive School Grants: Grants to
implement
school-wide bilingual education programs or school-wide
special
alternative instruction programs in schools serving all
limited English
proficient children and youth.
|
|
e-rate survey
|
e-rate
|
All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
|
slevin@uiuc.edu
Sandy Levin
|
4:19:34 PM 1/20/98
|
|
Subject: [RURAL:152] The e-rate people want to know who
will apply
This is from the Schools and Libraries Corporation (SLC),
which administers
the U.S. telecom discount program (e-rate) for schools and
libraries.
**********
SLC NEWSFLASH
1/20/98
Schools and Libraries Corp. Seeks Early Indicators of
First-Day, First-Week Application Flow
As a gauge of schools and libraries plans to apply for the
Universal Service
Program at the earliest available opportunity, the Schools
and Libraries
Corporation is conducting an informal survey of entities who
intend to submit
their applications within the first day and first week of
the application
period. If you plan to apply (either electronically or on
paper) on the day
the SLC web site opens or within the first week after its
opening, please send
an e-mail message ASAP to VP for Outreach Mickey Revenaugh
at
MREVENA@slcfund.org. Your response to this informal survey
will in no way
affect consideration of your application and is not binding
in any way. Many
thanks for your help!
------------------------------------------------------------------
Bill Wright, Exec. Director Tel: (202) 466-0533
Int'l Telecomputing Consortium (ITC) Fax: (202) 466-0523
1250 24th St. NW, Suite 300 E-mail: wright@itc.org
Washington, DC 20037 URL: http://www.itc.org
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
more e-rate info
|
e-rate
|
All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
|
sandy-levin@uiuc.edu
Sandy Levin
|
8:59:28 AM 2/5/98
|
|
Subject: [RURAL:158] e-rate services eligible for
discounts
Status: U
This is news from the Schools and Libraries Corp. (SLC)
(To subscribe to or leave the rural online mailing list see
below.)
******
SLC NEWSFLASH
2/3/98
UPDATED LIST OF E-RATE ELIGIBLE SERVICES
NOW AVAILABLE FROM SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES CORP.
To help educators and librarians through the E-rate
application process,
the Schools and Libraries Corp. has just released an updated
list of
services eligible for discounts under the Universal Service
Fund. The list
includes more than 50 items under the broad categories of
telecommunications
services, Internet access, and internal connections.
The Schools and Libraries Eligibility List (CC Docket No.
96-45) clarifies
the status of a wide array of technology services and
equipment in terms of
eligibility for Universal Service discounts, which can range
from 20% to
90% depending on a school or library's concentration of
low-income children
and its rural or urban location. Many items on the list were
brought to the
attention of SLC and the Federal Communications Commission
through
inquiries by schools and libraries to the SLC| customer
service hot line
(toll-free 888-203-8100) and through scores of local,
regional, and national
workshops.
The new list does include some items for which FCC decisions
about
eligibility are still pending. These include Channel Service
Unit
(CSU)/Data Service Unit (DSU) and satellite dishes. Final
determination on
these items is
expected within the next month.
One item originally declared ineligible -- the conduit that
may house
internal wiring in a local area network -- has been
certified as eligible
under specific conditions: if the wiring itself is eligible
and if the conduit
is located inside an eligible building or between eligible
buildings on a
single campus. Several other items, such as multiplexing and
firewalls,
are also eligible only under certain conditions specified on
the list.
Schools and libraries are urged to check this list of
eligible equipment
and services before completing their applications for
Universal Service Fund
discounts. The list is available at http://www.neca.org and
via the
toll-free SLC customer service line (888-203-8100).
Later this week, the SLC expects to release two other
clarifying
documents to support schools and libraries in the
application process: a
fact sheet on billed entities and guidelines for figuring
aggregated
discounts. A
document relating to Wide Area Networks is also under
development.
|
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Reforming America's schools
|
education reform
|
All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
|
sandy-levin@uiuc.edu
Sandy Levin
|
4:53:31 PM 1/20/98
|
|
Subject: EDUCATIONAL RESOURCE NETWORK E-LETTER # 50
January 18,1998
Mime-Version: 1.0
Precendence: bulk
Sender: ern_eletter-owner@mailhost.ernweb.com
Status: U
.
=============================
REFORMING AMERICA'S SCHOOLS
=============================
The Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown
University promotes and
advocates the redesign of American schooling. Its goal is to
assist in
creating and sustaining schools that - in collaboration with
their
communities - help all students reach high levels of
learning. The
Institute is committed to the belief that all students can
and must be
successful in school, and works to develop and support
reform strategies
that include schools serving urban, minority and low-income
youth.
For information about ongoing projects in schools and
districts, a list of
meetings and conferences and a library of information,
see:
http://www.aisr.brown.edu
===================
E-RATE INFORMATION
===================
EdLinc, a coalition of more than 35 national education and
library
organizations, has established an E-Rate Hotline. Lines are
open weekdays
from 10 am to 9 pm (EST). To call the E-Rate Hotline, dial
1-800-733-6860.
===========================================
FAMILY INVOLVEMENT IN CHILDREN'S EDUCATION
===========================================
This 150-page book describes strategies that 20 Title 1
schools are using
to involve parents in school planning and governance and as
volunteers.
Topics include:
Parents as educational partners in a rural setting
Overcoming time and resource constraints
Home visits that target hard-to-reach parents
Providing information and training to parents and school
staff
Support for learning at home
Training for volunteers.
The complete book is available online at:
http://www.ed.gov/pubs/FamInvolve
|
|
funding listserv
|
funding
|
All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
|
sandy-levin@uiuc.edu
Sandy Levin
|
8:38:29 AM 1/30/98
|
|
From: ALEXANDER DYANNE
<DALEXAND@smtp.isbe.state.il.us>
To: sandy-levin <sandy-levin@uiuc.edu>
Subject: FW: Special News Brief: FEDIX OPPORTUNITY ALERT
Date: Wed, 28 Jan 1998 14:49:00 -0600
X-Priority: 3
MIME-Version: 1.0
We are currently conducting a major drive to expand
the number of people at your institution
who benefit from FEDIX Opportunity Alert and we need your
help.
Please take just a few moments to forward the following
description
of our free email service to any and all colleagues whom you
feel
would benefit from receiving research and education
funding
opportunities.
Thanks for your assistance in this important effort.
_______________________________________________________
To better compete for research and education funding,
subscribe to FEDIX
Opportunity Alert!!! (FOA), our free e-mail service that
automatically
delivers targeted research and education funding
opportunities within
your specific areas of interest.
The Federal Government is funding this free resource, and
thousands
of educators and researchers nationwide are taking advantage
of it.
Since March 1996, FEDIX Opportunity Alert has grown to a
total of
more than 55,000 subscribers who have received over 15
million
opportunity alerts.
Don't be left behind! To participate in FEDIX Opportunity
Alert!!!
simply:
1. Register for FOA on FEDIX at location:
http://www.rams-fie.com/opportunity.htm
2. Select the keywords that identify your areas of
interest.
Beginning with the next business day, a daily search of new
federal
opportunities will be conducted on your behalf and those
that match
your areas of interest will be automatically e-mailed to
you.
Don't miss out on a great opportunity that thousands of your
colleagues
have found to be an enormous and timely help in today's
competitive
funding environment. Importantly, surveys show that by a 6
to 1 margin
our subscribers find FEDIX Opportunity Alert to be better
than
searching the Internet for opportunities themselves. Please,
take just
a few moments to register for FOA and begin taking advantage
of this
valuable resource.
Sincerely,
Paul Carton, Ph.D.
RAMS-FIE
|
|
funding for rural communities
|
funding
|
IAES-Center@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
|
sandy-levin@uiuc.edu
Sandy Levin
|
9:13:23 AM 1/30/98
|
|
From: David Bruce <dwbruce@mta.ca>
To: Multiple recipients of list <rural@itc.org>
Subject: [RURAL:155] Funding Available for Communities
The funding program described below is a 50/50 cost share
approach between
the program and the community for professional/technical
services, with the
program covering all of the administrative and travel
costs.
--------------------------------
The Community Economic Development Technical Assistance
Program
-CEDTAP-
Empowering Communities and Building Technical Assistance
Capacity
The Community Economic Development Technical Assistance
Program or CEDTAP is
a four-year, national initiative to promote high-performance
community
economic development (CED) among local organizations and
professionals
across Canada. Funded by The J. W. McConnell Family
Foundation and operating
out of CSTIER (the Centre for Study in Training, Investment
and Economic
Restructuring) at Carleton University in Ottawa, CEDTAP will
support small
and medium-sized technical assistance assignments (worth
$5,000 to $25,000)
for and with local organizations that are building community
as a means to
economic development. These assignments are intended to
strengthen
communities that are organizing themselves to create and
retain jobs,
develop local enterprise, and enhance local self-reliance --
especially
those communities and groups that have been economically or
socially
disadvantaged. The program aims to assist 125 communities
across Canada by
2001.
Empowering Communities
The CEDTAP approach enables communities to select the
planning, technical
assistance (TA) and training that they decide is most timely
and suitable.
The program empowers communities to design and manage
customized
interventions which suit their own needs, and which draw on
proven CED
expertise and tools from anywhere in Canada. Professional
resources will be
selected from a pre-established directory, and a mix or
"hybrid" of TA
providers may be proposed by communities for assignments.
Communities will
participate as full partners in planning, implementing and
evaluating
specific technical assistance assignments and they will
share costs with
CEDTAP for technical assistance and training.
Program Approach
Assignments at the community level may involve face-to-face
consultations
with providers, "distance consultation" via telephone, fax,
or e-mail,
training workshops, study-tour exposures to other
communities and projects,
and other approaches. Activities could include community and
business
planning, marketing, financing, enterprise management,
investment
mechanisms, institution-building, human resource
development,
board development, trade opportunities, information
technology, and other
areas.
CEDTAP's role will be to maintain the provider directory,
initiate or
facilitate discussions between providers and communities
when necessary, act
as a clearing house for lessons learned and good practice,
track and
disseminate innovations generated by program participants,
and monitor the
achievement of project results. All of this is intended to
strengthen and
mainstream CED nationally and to promote a positive policy
environment for
CED in the longer term.
How to Get Involved
Communities and groups across the country are invited to
send expressions of
interest, beginning in mid-January 1998. Eligible proponents
include
non-profit community development corporations, community
loan funds, social
sector agencies, women's organizations and other
not-for-profit associations
and groups. Groups need not be legal entities to submit an
expression of
interest, although they will need a reference or
"guarantor".
There is no deadline for community proposals. They will be
considered on a
continuing basis throughout the year, based on the extent to
which they show
potential for significant employment, economic and social
impacts in regions
and communities that have traditionally been marginalized.
Other criteria,
such as participation and financial contribution, are also
key.
If you are a CED technical assistance provider there are a
number of ways in
which you can become involved in CEDTAP. If you would like
to submit a
proposal for the provision of TA services in future, please
contact the
CEDTAP Secretariat for more information on program
requirements and criteria
for providers. Not only should providers have a proven track
record, but
CEDTAP seeks to ensure representation from each region of
the country, as
well as a range of sectoral and technical expertise,
institutional structure
and language capability. In the interim, we can register you
as a CEDTAP
associate, and invite you to stay involved with the program
through
contributing to and receiving our bulletin, sharing lessons
learned and
innovations with other providers, and participating in
provider meetings.
Staying in Touch
For further information on the program, or to receive the
directory of
technical assistance providers and guidelines for submitting
an expression
of interest, please contact:
Ms. Barbara Levine
Coordinator
Community Economic Development Technical Assistance
Program
Centre for the Study of Training, Investment and Economic
Restructuring
Carleton University
1125 Colonel By Drive
Room 214 Social Science Research Building
Ottawa, Ontario K1S 5B6
Phone: (613) 520-2600-1588
Fax: (613) 520-3561
E-Mail: cstier@carleton.ca
David Bruce
Senior Research Associate
Rural and Small Town Programme
Mount Allison University
76 York St
Sackville NB Canada
E4L 1E9
tel 506-364-2395
fax 506-364-2601
dwbruce@mta.ca
http://www.mta.ca/rstp
|
|
Dept. of Ed. Initiatives
|
Government
|
All@alliance.ed.uiuc.edu
|
sandy-levin@uiuc.edu
Sandy Levin
|
4:37:20 PM 10/3/97
|
|
**************
ED Initiatives...
*************************************************************
A biweekly look at progress on the Secretary's
priorities
*********************************************************
October 3, 1997
> Helping All Children Read Well by the End of 3rd
Grade
> A Talented, Dedicated, Well-Prepared Teacher in
Every Classroom
> Charter Schools -- Making Every School Strong,
Safe,
Drug-Free & Disciplined
> New American Consensus About How to Improve
Education
> Satellite Teleconferences
> Star Schools Awards
> Budget
> U.S. Nonprofit Gateway Announced
> New Online
------------------------------------------------------
HELPING ALL CHILDREN READ WELL BY THE END OF 3rd GRADE
------------------------------------------------------
Nearly 100 organizations have joined the President's
Coalition for the America Reads Challenge, and each is
deciding how it can help ensure that every child reads
well
& independently by the end of 3rd grade. The
American
Booksellers Assoc. has partnered with Scholastic &
the
Assoc. of Booksellers for Children to provide 100,000
free
copies of Rosemary Wells' new book, "Read to Your
Bunny."
These copies will be distributed by participating
bookstores
to parents & guardians of young children as part of
"Prescription for Reading Partnership" promotion,
beginning
in November. Phi Theta Kappa, the International honor
society of 2-year colleges, will provide members with
background materials on the America Reads Challenge,
ideas
for implementing programs at the chapter level, a Q&A
sheet
about why the America Reads Challenge is needed, and a
list
of national organizations & programs with whom they
can
partner. For more information on the America Reads
Challenge, please see:
http://www.ed.gov/inits/americareads
------------------------------------
A TALENTED, DEDICATED, WELL-PREPARED
TEACHER IN EVERY CLASSROOM
------------------------------------ More than 100 State
Teachers of the Year & other award-winning teachers will
be
asked *5 questions* during focus group sessions next week
in
the Nation's Capitol at the 5th annual National Teacher
Forum, "Making Teaching a True Profession." Teachers
&
other education-minded Americans are invited to respond
to
those 5 questions -- & read others' responses, as well
as a
background paper -- at:
http://www.ed.gov/comments/nationalforum97/
--------------------------------------
CHARTER SCHOOLS -- MAKING EVERY SCHOOL
STRONG, SAFE, DRUG-FREE & DISCIPLINED
-------------------------------------- Last month the
President announced $40.4 million in grants to help meet
the
growing demand for starting public charter schools.
"These
funds will continue our plan to help America create
3,000
charter schools by the next century," the President
said.
Two states, Pennsylvania & South Carolina -- and 2
schools
in Hawaii -- are receiving 1st-year grants (under the
3-year
grant program) to support start-up & development of
additional charter schools. Nine states are receiving
2nd-
year grants (AK, CT, DE, FL, IL, KS, NJ, NC & WI, plus
DC,
Puerto Rico & a school in NM) while 10 states are
receiving
their 3rd & final year of support under the program (AZ,
|