Needs of ‘Whole Child’ May Factor in ESEA Renewal

Carol’s Summary:
In educating k-12 children—and weighing the financial costs for comprehensive services—we need to take the long view. We are preparing students for college, career and life success, which necessitates developing the whole student now—with analytical, creative and emotional/ social skills. . This balance is crucial to student motivation and, ultimately, graduation rates. Our nation’s current drop-out crises threatens economic growth and global competitiveness. Cutting the dropout rate in half would yield $45 billion annually in new federal tax revenues or cost savings, according to a recent report by Columbia University’s Center for Benefit-Cost Studies of Education at Teachers College. The report also says the achievement gaps in this country are the same as having “a permanent national recession.”
My life’s work and the reason I started LifeBound ten years ago is to address the developmental issues students face at each grade level, 5-12, so that they persist with their educational and career goals. We provide a comprehensive approach to educating children that includes these resources:
o Books to teach healthy habits and self-awareness that lead to real academic gains
o Curriculum that features relevance and rigor activities
o Data assessments so teachers can see the results
o Teacher training on implementing our classroom materials
o Academic coaches training that help educators become leaders and champions of change

We also offer parent programs that help create a culture of learning at home, because regardless of how many services we make available to students, the home remains the primary influence in a child’s life. For more information about LifeBound’s resources, visit www.lifebound.com. I am happy to share these materials, and if you would like to receive review copies of any of our books, call our national toll free # 1.877.737.8510, or email your request to contact@lifebound.com. We look forward to hearing from you.

ARTICLE

Education Week
By Alyson Klein
As Congress gears up for renewal of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, lawmakers and the Obama administration are seeking to address a perennial complaint: that the current version of the law, the No Child Left Behind Act, places too much emphasis on students’ test scores and pays little attention to their health and other needs.

And at a hearing of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee last week, lawmakers agreed that the idea of educating “the whole child” encompasses a wide range of support services, which advocates are hoping could be reflected in the rewrite of the ESEA.

Those include dental and mental health, as well as programs aimed at providing prekindergarten and library services, summer and after-school enrichment, mentoring, college counseling, and increased parent and community involvement. The whole-child concept can also refer to making sure schools attend to students’ nonacademic interests, through programs such as the arts and physical education.

Increasing offerings in such a broad array of programs would almost certainly mean schools would need to increase staffs, said U.S. Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, the chairman of the committee. But he and other lawmakers acknowledged that might be a tall order in tight budget times.

To view the entire article visit
http://bit.ly/cu5yMp

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Can Learning Be Improved When Budgets Are in the Red?

When budgets are in the red, one option for student success is, at $13.95, MAJORING IN THE REST OF YOUR LIFE. This book can be used in the summer bridge program or throughout the year in a student success class. This is the first book I wrote and it contains all of the things that employers expect from college graduates, but few people ever bother to tell freshmen so that they can plan for a bright future. Many of the specific tips raised in this important article point directly at student engagement. If we can’t engage them in thoughts about their future and what it might look like, how can we expect them to persist?

Additionally, every chapter of this book features a student who has an internships. Experience is the most valuable thing a college student can get, but they won’t get it in class. Their leadership activities, volunteer activities and internships is the way their experience and practical knowledge can happen.

For budget-strapped universities, this is the best value for college freshmen.

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
ARTICLE

By W. Robert Connor and Cheryl Ching

A year ago, President Obama set an ambitious goal for American higher education. Alarmed by statistics from the Organization for Economic Development and Cooperation that showed the United States is falling behind other developed countries in that regard, he announced that “by 2020, America will once again have the highest proportion of college graduates in the world.” That’s a commendable goal, but for it to amount to anything, the quality of student engagement and learning has to improve as well. Can that be done at a time when college budgets are under strain on many fronts?

To view entire article visit
http://bit.ly/aeQB2t

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In a World of Ads, Teaching the Young How to Read Them

CAROL’S SUMMARY:

The Bureau of Consumer Protection of the Federal Trade Commission is sponsoring an initiative to educate fourth through sixth grade students in analyzing advertisements. According to the New York Times article below, “The centerpiece of the effort is a Web site called Admongo (admongo.gov), where visitors can get an “ad-ucation” by playing a game featuring make-believe products closely modeled on real ones, among them Choco Crunch’n Good cereal, Cleanology acne medication, Double Dunk sporting goods and the Smile Meals sold at Fast Chef restaurants.” Students are taught to always ask three questions:

1.      Who is responsible for the ad?

2.      What is the ad actually saying?

3.      What does the ad want me to do?”

Scholastic, the educational publishing company based in New York, was recruited by the bureau to work on the materials that will be distributed to teachers and classrooms. Ann Amstutz Hayes, vice president at Scholastic In School, states that the reason the program is targeting fourth through sixth grade students is because that is when “they’re at the stage they’re developing their critical-thinking skills.”

Outside of determining whether purchasing a product or service is in your best interest, developing critical and creative thinking skills is essential to making informed decisions and problem solving, as well as, becoming an effective student and a valued employee.

LifeBound recently published, Critical and Creative Thinking for Teenagers, to help students ask powerful questions to identify a problem, creatively brainstorm solutions, and analyze the outcome to solve problems and inform themselves about the world around them. To request a review copy of Critical and Creative Thinking call our toll free # at 1.877.737.8510 or email contact@lifebound.com.

ARTICLE

By STUART ELLIOTT
Published: April 26, 2010
New York Times
A federal agency is undertaking an effort to school youngsters in the ways of Madison Avenue. The initiative seeks to educate children in grades four through six — tweens, in the parlance of marketing — about how advertising works so they can make better, more informed choices when they shop or when they ask parents to shop on their behalf.

The centerpiece of the effort is a Web site called Admongo (admongo.gov), where visitors can get an “ad-ucation” by playing a game featuring make-believe products closely modeled on real ones, among them Choco Crunch’n Good cereal, Cleanology acne medication, Double Dunk sporting goods and the Smile Meals sold at Fast Chef restaurants.

“Advertising is all around you,” the home page declares in urging youngsters to always ask three questions: “Who is responsible for the ad? What is the ad actually saying? What does the ad want me to do?”

The initiative is being sponsored by the Bureau of Consumer Protection of the Federal Trade Commission, which polices deceptive, fraudulent and unfair marketing and advertising practices. The bureau is enlisting Scholastic, the educational publishing company based in New York, to help distribute materials to teachers and classrooms.

To view entire article visit

http://nyti.ms/9bio6B

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Imagine Cup Finalists Make Video Games and Software to Solve World’s Woes

CAROL’S SUMMARY:

Twenty student teams used video-game and software technology to solve the world’s greatest problems at the Microsoft’s U.S. Imagine Cup finals Monday.

Two teams of college students were selected to represent the United States in Warsaw at the Worldwide Finals in July. In software-design, a project called “Mobilife” won. It uses Windows Mobile platform and computer-assisted intravital microscopy to help diagnose vascular diseases in children of developing countries. In game-design, a quest game called “Sixth” has a child in a developing country move through obstacles to meet a need like finding clean water. The game’s name refers to the one-sixth of the population in developing countries that live in slums.
Director James Cameron attended the awards ceremony and stated, “It’s technology that got us into this mess [climate change] and it’s technology that’s going to get us out.”

Technology has become an increasingly vital part of life. Today’s 21st century student will be expected to adapt to its changes and learn practical applications in order to find a career in tomorrow’s 21st century global marketplace. LifeBound’s titles aim to prepare students, grades 5-12, by helping them discover their strengths and weaknesses, manage emotions, develop critical and creative thinking skills, become healthy and financially independent, learn about the global world and transition into the world of work. For more information visit www.lifebound.com.

ARTICLE:

The Chronicle of Higher Education
April 26, 2010
Imagine Cup Finalists Make Video Games and Software to Solve World’s Woes
By Mary Helen Miller

Washington—At the finals for Microsoft’s U.S. Imagine Cup competition, which took place here today, 20 student teams displayed video-game and software projects that attempt to solve the world’s greatest problems with technology. James Cameron, the Academy Award winner who most recently directed Avatar, spoke at the awards ceremony.

Some projects had a very practical use, such as software that would make medical data more available to researchers around the world. Other projects, however, were designed more for entertainment, such as a video game that lets players fight disease in the human body using tiny robots. Of the teams, which were mostly made up of college students, two were selected to represent the United States in Warsaw at the Worldwide Finals in July.

To view this entire article visit www.chronicle.com

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Intel CFO Sees U.S. Losing Battle for High-Tech Jobs

CAROL’S SUMMARY:

Stacy Smith, CFO of Intel, notes in the CFO.com article below that education of the U.S. workforce has been steadily deteriorating. “Math and science curricula in primary-school systems in the United States are comparatively weak, he said, and the population of university students pursuing math, science, and engineering has dropped.” According to Smith, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 focused on public works and was a good step, but doesn’t come close to China’s stimulus bill, which focused on broadband and wireless infrastructure to close the digital divide.

Technology as a national agenda is crucial to creating a knowledge-worker economy. That is why our revision of Making the Most of High School includes two new chapters, including one on technology in the 21st century. If students learn to work effectively with the technologies of today they will become more versatile and it will be easier to adapt to the frequent advances in technology. To request a free copy of Making the Most of High School call our toll free # at 1.877.737.8510 or email contact@lifebound.com.

ARTICLE:

Intel CFO Sees U.S. Losing Battle for High-Tech Jobs
by Vincent Ryan
CFO.com
April 22, 2010

In the fourth quarter of this year, chipmaker Intel’s new wafer-fabrication plant in the city of Dalian in Northeast China, a $2.5 billion capital investment three years in the making, will come online. The factory will produce chipsets to support Intel’s microprocessor business and will boast a workforce of 1,200 people.

Intel received a typically rich package of grants and tax incentives from China in order to build the plant there, according to Stacy Smith, the company’s CFO. “When we are thinking about building a factory, almost every government of a sizable, mature economy reaches out to us and provides financial incentives,” he told CFO.

To view this entire article visit www.cfo.com

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How Not to Raise a Bully: The Early Roots of Empathy

CAROL’S SUMMARY:

Bullies have a large impact on the people they taunt and torment, but how do you as a parent or teacher encourage children to not become one? In the Time article below it states that “Increasingly, neuroscientists, psychologists and educators believe that bullying and other kinds of violence can indeed be reduced by encouraging empathy at an early age. Over the past decade, research in empathy — the ability to put ourselves in another person’s shoes — has suggested that it is key, if not the key, to all human social interaction and morality.” According to the article, “The first stirrings of human empathy typically appear in babyhood: newborns cry when hearing another infant’s cry, and studies have shown that children as young as 14 months offer unsolicited help to adults who appear to be struggling to reach something. Babies have also shown a distinct preference for adults who help rather than hinder others.”

Instilling empathy into children is part of making them emotionally intelligent. LifeBound’s title PEOPLE SMARTS FOR TEEANAGERS: Becoming Emotionally Intelligent has been used with sixth graders to effectively create a positive classroom culture. To receive a free review copy call 1-877-737-8510 or email cynthianordberg@lifebound.com

ARTICLE:

How Not to Raise a Bully: The Early Roots of Empathy
By Maia Szalavitz
April 17, 2010
Time

Since the Jan. 14 death of Phoebe Prince, the 15-year-old in South Hadley, Mass., who committed suicide after being bullied by fellow students, many onlookers have meditated on whether the circumstances that led to her after-school hanging might have been avoided.

Could teachers have stepped in and stopped the bullying? Could parents have done more to curtail bad behavior? Or could preventive measures have been started years ago, in early childhood, long before bullies emerged and started heaping abuse on their peers?

To view this entire article visit www.time.com

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Want a Higher G.P.A.? Go to a Private College

Grade inflation has risen among private colleges, especially in the last decade. However, my colleagues who teach at a range of colleges from four year to community college to career schools, believe that students have come to expect that because they are paying for college they should be getting—not earning—good grades. Many professors feel that the students have the “you work for me” attitude. You can see how these behaviors, when unaddressed, create problems of expectation and work culture once these students graduate and begin work in a professional environment. Professors can most help students by emphasizing:

1) The extent to which you are challenged—even if you earn a C—is more important than taking an easy teacher where you get An “A”

2) The real-world expects you to challenge yourself in increasingly more complex ways. If you expect your boss to let you off the hook on a non-deliverable or late work, think again. This could cost you a pay increase or even your job.

3) Focus as much on the interesting experiences you can create for yourself as, in the end, these are often more important than your GPA unless you want to become a professor, a research scientist or get into medical school.

4) Ask the question: if you were a manager, would you hire yourself based on these actions?

Bottom line is that we can’t continue to coddle today’s students or we won’t have a strong, resilient, capable and forward-thinking people to solve our greatest problems in business, community, science, and world-wide issues.

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

ARTICLE
Want a Higher G.P.A.? Go to a Private College
By CATHERINE RAMPELL
Over the last 50 years, college grade-point averages have risen about 0.1 points per decade, with private schools fueling the most grade inflation, a recent study finds.

The study, by Stuart Rojstaczer and Christopher Healy, uses historical data from 80 four-year colleges and universities. It finds that G.P.A.’s have risen from a national average of 2.52 in the 1950s to about 3.11 by the middle of the last decade.

http://nyti.ms/9WAXLu

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$3.5 Billion in Turnaround Aid Flowing to States

The federal government is making $3.5 billion in stimulus money available to some of the nation’s lowest performing schools. This pro-active step can help us to close the achievement which starts to nose-dive when students hit fifth grade. Taking measures to help students with academic, emotional and social help will allow students to understand themselves, focus better in class, and learn to have a vision for their future success based on specific goals.

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Community colleges turn to online classes as enrollments spike

Distance-learning has risen in the last year 22% at community colleges. Non-traditional students and students who want the flexibility of on-line courses are powering this trend. If you are a student thinking about one of these courses, here are some things to keep in mind to ensure your success:

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A Way Around the Job Market

CAROL’S SUMMARY:

Hiring fell 22% last year, so this is an especially challenging time for graduates looking for a job. So, how are students and recent grads adjusting? Many are working their way around the job market through entrepreneurship.

As an entrepreneur myself, I can appreciate the creativity and hard work this generation is mustering to make it through such a tough hiring market. For those still in school, I offer summer internships as one way to get experience and learn from my journey as VP of Marketing at Pearson to small business owner of LifeBound, LLC.

If you are interested in launching your own ideas which can grow into a business, you might want to start with a day job which can provide you income and benefits. You will be essentially working two jobs until your dream idea gets launched. If you get venture funding, you can short circuit the day job route, but be ready to be beholden to stakeholders who will expect results within a specific time-frame.

If you are interested in what it is like to work in a small business, there are many companies such as mine for which you can work. To apply for an internship with LifeBound, please email your cover letter and resume to cynthianordberg@lifebound.com.

ARTICLE:

The Wall Street Journal
April 19, 2010
A Way Around the Job Market
by Aditya Mahesh

Last year alone, hiring for recent college graduates fell by 22% (See College Grads’ Outlook Is Grim). Those who were fortunate enough to secure a job upon graduation saw their average starting salary drop by as much as 8%. For someone who just invested over $150,000 in a four-year undergraduate education, these results are alarming.

Yet undergraduate students, a resourceful, motivated and educated group of young people, are looking outside the box now more than ever, to get around this contracting job market. For many, this means entrepreneurship.

To view this entire article visit www.wsj.com

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