Showing posts with label Success. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Success. Show all posts

Monday, October 24, 2011

Public-Private Partnerships Leveraging Resources for Student Success

Duncan speaks with the PSPP panel.Building communities of collaboration on behalf of America’s most vulnerable children is the reason that Secretary Duncan praised public-private school partnerships at the recent Annual Private School Leadership Conference, hosted by ED’s Office of Innovation and Improvement’s Office of Non-Public Education (ONPE).

Duncan noted that independent private schools across America are partnering with public schools and other community organizations to address the academic and social needs of some of our nation’s most vulnerable children. One such example is the Private Schools with Public Purpose consortium, which encourages America’s independent and parochial schools to coordinate and leverage their resources, expertise, and experience with those of the public schools to benefit public school students and teachers.

During ONPE’s recent conference, a panel of PSPP leaders joined the Secretary and described partnerships across the country that aim to level the educational playing field for America’s young people. The panel highlighted the Middle Grades Partnership in Baltimore, where area private schools collaborate with public schools and other community organizations to create support programs for low-income middle school students and professional development for public and private school teachers.

Duncan meets with PSPP Panelists (from left to right) Jacqueline Smethurst, Co-founder, Wingspan Partnerships; Al Adams, Former Headmaster, Lick-Wilmerding High School; Secretary Duncan; Jim Scott, President, Punahou School; and Roger Weaver, President and Senior Consultant, The Weaver Group and President, The Crossroads Community Outreach Foundation.

Another successful example of private-public school collaboration is Horizons National, which is a national network of partnerships between private and public schools that provides multiyear summer enrichment programs for low-income students. In other private-public school collaborations, private school associations, such as the Hawaii Association of Independent Schools, offer coaching, mentoring, and consulting services to public charter schools.

Public-private partnerships such as Private Schools with Public Purpose are a “collective brain trust,” Secretary Duncan told ONPE conference attendees, with such partnerships offering a “huge potential” to improve achievement for high-need students. He encouraged private schools to dedicate resources to assist underperforming schools in high-poverty areas to produce results and ensure all children receive a high-quality education.

To learn more about public and private school partnerships, visit:

Contact the ONPE, ED’s liaison office to the non-public school community, at ONPE@ed.gov for additional information.


View the original article here

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Arne on Teacher Evaluation Metrics and Celebrating Success in STEM

Arne recently sat down to answer a couple of questions posted to his Facebook page. In response to Lori’s question about teacher evaluation metrics, Arne said that we have to look at multiple measures in order to see how much students are improving, and how much they are growing each year. Other measures include peer assistance, principal evaluation, portfolios, what teachers are doing in terms of their own professional development, and what leadership teachers provide to their school and community.

“Whether it is a teacher, a principal, anyone in education, anyone in any other field, you have to look at multiples measures, student’s growth and achievement being a part of that, and a significant part, but just one piece of that overall equation,” Duncan said.

Nils commented on the need to celebrate the success in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) areas just as we celebrate great athletes. Arne agreed and said that a good starting point is to recruit about 100,000 additional STEM teachers over the next decade so that not only high school students, but 4th, and 5th, and 6th graders have a chance to be taught by teachers who are passionate about and love the STEM fields.

Watch the video:


Click here for an alternate version of the video with an accessible player.

Join the conversation in the comments below and feel free to ask Arne a question by checking out his Facebook page.


View the original article here

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Public-Private Partnerships Leveraging Resources for Student Success

Duncan speaks with the PSPP panel.Building communities of collaboration on behalf of America’s most vulnerable children is the reason that Secretary Duncan praised public-private school partnerships at the recent Annual Private School Leadership Conference, hosted by ED’s Office of Innovation and Improvement’s Office of Non-Public Education (ONPE).

Duncan noted that independent private schools across America are partnering with public schools and other community organizations to address the academic and social needs of some of our nation’s most vulnerable children. One such example is the Private Schools with Public Purpose consortium, which encourages America’s independent and parochial schools to coordinate and leverage their resources, expertise, and experience with those of the public schools to benefit public school students and teachers.

During ONPE’s recent conference, a panel of PSPP leaders joined the Secretary and described partnerships across the country that aim to level the educational playing field for America’s young people. The panel highlighted the Middle Grades Partnership in Baltimore, where area private schools collaborate with public schools and other community organizations to create support programs for low-income middle school students and professional development for public and private school teachers.

Duncan meets with PSPP Panelists (from left to right) Jacqueline Smethurst, Co-founder, Wingspan Partnerships; Al Adams, Former Headmaster, Lick-Wilmerding High School; Secretary Duncan; Jim Scott, President, Punahou School; and Roger Weaver, President and Senior Consultant, The Weaver Group and President, The Crossroads Community Outreach Foundation.

Another successful example of private-public school collaboration is Horizons National, which is a national network of partnerships between private and public schools that provides multiyear summer enrichment programs for low-income students. In other private-public school collaborations, private school associations, such as the Hawaii Association of Independent Schools, offer coaching, mentoring, and consulting services to public charter schools.

Public-private partnerships such as Private Schools with Public Purpose are a “collective brain trust,” Secretary Duncan told ONPE conference attendees, with such partnerships offering a “huge potential” to improve achievement for high-need students. He encouraged private schools to dedicate resources to assist underperforming schools in high-poverty areas to produce results and ensure all children receive a high-quality education.

To learn more about public and private school partnerships, visit:

Contact the ONPE, ED’s liaison office to the non-public school community, at ONPE@ed.gov for additional information.


View the original article here

Thursday, October 20, 2011

New Book Reveals How Understanding Memory Processes Leads to Academic Success

Kurt Eby's new book, "Getting an 'A' Without Trying" sounds too good to be true, and at first, it even seems a bit far-fetched, but readers will quickly find that Eby not only has a method to his "madness" but he has actually developed a very logical and simple way of memorizing information through associations that can easily result in earning A's in school. As Eby points out early, even though higher education tends to emphasize critical thinking, first you need to know the material before you can think about it critically, and most "knowing" is simply memorizing facts and figures.

At first glance, the methods Eby suggests may seem outlandish, even nonsensical-they are like crazy cartoons running through our heads-and his classmates concluded, from looking at his notes, that he was either a genius, a cheater, or nuts. But Eby does not claim to be any of the three-he is simply the inventor of a very logical learning method that also happens to be a great deal of fun.

The result of Eby's method was that he received A's in school. In fact, he was only the third person ever to graduate from Palmer College of Chiropractic West with a 4.0, and he did that while only studying 30 percent as much as his classmates. In his book's introduction, Eby tells us, "The point of this story is not to brag about how brilliant I am, but as you will see throughout this book, it is rather about how ordinary I am, and about how anybody can do what I have done."

So what is Kurt Eby's secret? He has taken the time to understand how memory works, and then to build up associations for what he must memorize and to use visual representations of information so they remain firmly in his mind. Really, his method is not much more complicated than that, but the results are astounding, and anyone who reads this book and follows the exercises will quickly discover that he or she can do the same.

As a former professor and someone who has always enthusiastically been able to remember historical dates with little trouble, I think Kurt Eby's method would be very beneficial to students. When a student, I created my own little methods to help me remember things, often associated with stories or using rhythm to remember vocabulary definitions, but I never formulated anything so elaborate as what Kurt Eby has accomplished. Nevertheless, because I have used some similar, though less developed methods, I can definitely see how his process would work effectively.

As a novelist, I also appreciate Eby's methods because I have long known that storytelling is an effective way of learning material. Eby basically teaches us how to create story plots in our heads, associated with the information we need to remember. I think Eby's methods only reinforce how powerful stories are as a way to learn that can also make learning fun as well as educational.

I wish I and all students were taught such a method in elementary school, and this method is so simple that even elementary school children could easily learn it-in fact, I wouldn't be surprised if they excelled at it more than older students because they have spent less years mislearning how to learn.

Furthermore, I think many people, as they read about Eby's methods, will nod their heads and say, "I did something like that to remember X when I was in school." Only, most of us did not take the time to develop such methods further and thereby missed out on the benefits Eby saw as a result.

Finally, I appreciate Eby's practical advice not just about how to learn information, but the importance of the mindset required to learn and to succeed in showing you have learned the information. For example, he states:

Your mental attitude when you go into the examination is also extremely important. When I was a TA, I taught students to develop the attitude of looking at examinations as an opportunity to show off. If you go into an examination fearing it, the exam tends to eat you alive. However, if you go into the examination with the attitude that it is your opportunity to show the world how much you know, you come from a much stronger position.

Beyond strategies for memorizing, Eby also reminds readers how to think like teachers so they can take tests in a way to produce impressive results in their teachers' opinions. Eby gives helpful advice for how to answer questions that might not be as easy as simple memorization, as in the case of writing in-class essays, or how to impress instructors during oral examinations.

This book may look small and its methods may be simple, but its information is revolutionary and life-changing nevertheless; buying this book and spending the small amount of time required to read it is well worth the hundreds of hours of study time you will save and the reward of better grades you will assuredly receive. The path to the A's you have always wanted can easily be found within the pages of "Getting an 'A' Without Trying."

Tyler R. Tichelaar holds a Bachelor's and Master's Degree from Northern Michigan University and a Ph.D. from Western Michigan University. His family's long relationship with Upper Michigan and his avid interest in genealogy inspired Dr. Tichelaar to write his Marquette Trilogy: Iron Pioneers, The Queen City, and Superior Heritage. Dr. Tichelaar is also a professional book reviewer and editor. For more information about Tyler R. Tichelaar, his writing, and his author services, visit:

http://www.marquettefiction.com/


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