Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Math camps, SAT classes, Tutoring (all subjects/grades), ACT/HSPT Preparation




End the school year with a bang! Sign up for tutoring or summer enrichment camps with Educational Excellence and have your student end the year on a positive note. Educational Excellence LLC provides tutoring and enrichment services in all subjects and grade levels from K through college! We also provide individual test preparation services throughout the summer and school year for a variety of tests including the SAT, ACT, GED and private high school exams such as the HSPT, ISEE and SSAT exams.
This summer, Educational Excellence will also host small group classes to help students prepare for the SAT and Mathematics Enrichment Camps for students entering grades 5-8. Space is limited! To reserve a seat in one of our classes, contact us directly at info@educationalexcel.com or call 240-381-9514 for additional information. You can register for our summer camp through the link below. You may also visit our website at www.educationalexcel.com for more information on our tutors and services. Educational Excellence also provides educational consulting services and teacher training/professional development. We look forward to working with your students and helping them to achieve educational excellence.
Math Summer Camp Registration link:
Dr. Alycia Marshall
CEO/Founder Educational Excellence LLC
240-381-9514

Online Virtual College Fair - Free of Charge!



CollegeWeekLive.Com is an Online Virtual College Fair featuring hundreds of colleges across the nation! Please register today for their huge Spring College Fair March 21-22nd 10am – 10pm!! It’s free of charge!

This is an awesome way to see college campuses, chat with representatives & students and learn about the college & financial aid process & never leave your computer or laptop!

Monday, March 12, 2012

Attention District 8 Residents:



You can now read Council Member Obie Patterson’s newsletters online.

Please see the link below to access your newsletters online.

http://www.princegeorgescountymd.gov/FY2012/CountyCouncil/District8

Click on the links in the top right corner under “Newsletters”

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Special Incumbent Forum













The 2012

Interactive Board of Education Candidate Forums

Special Incumbent Forum

Candidates:

  1. Edward Burroughs : District 8 (Confirmed)
  2. Patricia Eubanks: District 4 (Invited)
  3. Henry Armwood: District 7 (Confirmed)
  4. Verjeana Jacobs: District 5 (Invited)

Date: March 11, 2012

Time: 8pm-9:10pm

Location: Parent Talk Live

Call in Number: (347) 215-6161

Listen Live: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/living-education-enetwork/2012/03/12/parent-talk-live-the-value-of-education

Participate/Submit Questions via Tweeter: http://twitter.com/DrMikeRobinson

Participate/Submit Questions via Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/DrMikeRobinson

Friday, March 9, 2012

Duncan Tells PTA of Plans to Double Parent-Engagement Aid

|

Parent engagement, like so many areas of education, could benefit from more money—and U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan spoke about that this week before some highly engaged parents attending the National PTA Legislative Conference in Arlington, VA.

"One area where I think we've desperately under invested, and where we're part of the problem, is around parent engagement," Duncan told a gathering of PTA representatives on March 7 before they dispersed to lobby for their agenda on Capitol Hill. "I don't think we've put enough resources there."

Duncan said the U.S. Department of Education has asked Congress to double the budget for parent engagement programs in fiscal year 2013 to about $280 million, from about $135 million.

"The goal is not for me to design programs, or have Washington design programs. We simply want to take to scale those programs at the local level that have made the difference," he said.

The goal will be to replicate programs that help increase student graduation rates—both from high school and college—and that make more children career-ready. Proven programs where parent engagement helps reduce dropout rates would be targeted for more funding, too.

The department also is asking Congress to give flexibility to states to put an additional option of 1 percent of their Title 1 money behind parent engagement. Duncan estimates that would mean an increase from $280 million to $415 million.

"So it's never enough. I wish it was more, but if we can double and potentially triple the amount of resources there, we think that's part of the solution," he said.

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Prince George's Public Schools Stamp Out Student Dissent on Budget Cuts

SHAME ON THE GROWN-UPS: Prince George's Public Schools Stamp Out Student Dissent on Budget Cuts


Provided by: www.marylandjuice.com

UPDATE: Thanks to the Internet-based publicity surrounding Prince George's school officials' ("PGCPS") attempts to silence student dissent over budget cuts, politicos are now weighing in on the matter. Not surprisingly, one incumbent School Board member is defending the Iron Fist tactics of PGCPS officials. The Real Prince George's County blog prints several responses:
  1. District 7 School Board incumbent Henry Armwood says the crackdown on student protesters is about their safety (uh huh),
  2. District 7 challenger Carletta Fellows stands with the students for trying to highlight "horrendous conditions,"
  3. District 4 challenger Micah Watson raises questions about whether PGCPS officials should be allowed to invade student privacy by monitoring their Twitter accounts for political dissent, and
  4. PGCPS Student Board member Faith Jackson says she is supposed to stay silent, but risks getting in trouble in order to stand by the students who elected her.

Numerous blogs and email lists are lighting up in anger over reports that Prince George's County Public School ("PGCPS") officials are using Iron Fist tactics to silence student protestors. Hat tip to AFL-CIO Union City email list and the Real Prince George's County blog for flagging the article below. It comes to us from the website for The Black Star Project. Their website states their mission as follows:
Founded in 1996 by Phillip Jackson, The Black Star Project is committed to improving the quality of life in Black and Latino communities of Chicago and nationwide by eliminating the racial academic achievement gap
The Black Star blog reported the following news about PGCPS officials Iron Fist tactics:
Thursday, March 1st was a National Student Day of Action in which students around the country organized demonstrations protesting education budget cuts, educational inequality, and advocating for quality and affordable education for all. Students at Northwestern High School in Prince George’s County Maryland planned a walkout and rally as part of the National Student Day of Action.

Over 300 students planned to walk out to protest unsanitary conditions in their school, enormous class sizes, cuts to the ESOL program, and denial of promised pay raises for their teachers. The students also were asking for more teacher/parent/student input in the curriculum and demanding an apology for a group of Filipino teachers who were fired and deported after not having their work visas renewed.

The Administration at Northwestern discovered the walkout plan early in the day by trolling Twitter and put the school on lockdown. Police blocked the doors and canine units waited in the school’s parking lot. They held student leaders in the Principal’s office all day, threatened them with expulsion, and at the end of the day suspended four students for 5 days requiring that when they return their parents must accompany them to classes all day.

Northwestern is a high school where a majority of the students are Black and Latino. The student organizers’ mission was to walk out for a better school and a better education. Instead the Administration violated their civil liberties, squashed these students’ free speech, and punished them for wanting to improve the school environment for themselves and their teachers. Instead of having a dialogue with students, the Administration at this school chose to make an example of several students and punish them harshly knowing this could affect these students ability to get into college.

Monday, March 5, 2012

The Podcast of Five Interactive Board of Education Candidate Forums

The Podcast

Download

Interactive Board of Education Candidate Forums

Forum One

Candidates:

  1. David Murray: District 1
  2. Dennis Smith: District 4
  3. Orlando Bego: District 8

Aired on: February 15, 2012

Website: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/educationaljournal/2012/02/16/parent-talk-live-the-pgcps-boe-candidate-forum-one

Forum Two

Candidates:

  1. Mike McLaughlin: District 1
  2. Raaheela Ahmed: District 5

Aired on: February 22, 2012

Website: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/educationaljournal/2012/02/23/parent-talk-live-the-pgcps-boe-candidate-forum-two

Forum Three

Candidates:

  1. Carlette Fellows: District 7
  2. Sherine Taylor: District 5

Aired on: February 26, 2012

Website: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/educationaljournal/2012/02/26/parent-talk-live-the-pgcps-boe-candidate-forum-three

Forum Four

Candidates:

  1. Deidre Jackson: District 5
  2. Sandy Vaughns: District 4

Aired on: February 29, 2012

Website: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/educationaljournal/2012/02/29/parent-talk-live-the-pgcps-boe-candidate-forum-four

Forum Five

Candidates:

  1. Micah Watson: District 4

Aired on: March 4, 2012

Website: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/educationaljournal/2012/03/04/parent-talk-live-the-pgcps-boe-candidate-forum-five

Saturday, March 3, 2012

2012 Parental Engagement Survey for Parents



Hello Engaged Parents and Dedicated Educators,


Parental engagement makes a significant difference in the educational outcomes of children and young people; parents have a key role in raising educational standards. The more involved and engaged parents are in the education of their children the more likely their children are to succeed.

Forest Of The Rain Productions is committed to expanding the partnership between home and school. We believe increased communication between parents, families and school will serve as the pathway to increasing student achievement. To expand this discussion on the value of the home school partnership, we invite you to participate in our 2012 Parental Engagement Survey for parents. Your views, opinions and thoughts on the importance of parental engagement are priceless and represent one half of the team assigned to impact the academic achievement of children.

Please take a few minutes to complete our open-ended, narrative based survey. Your comments will be confidential. We have limited our response number, so please respond quickly if you aspire to have your voice included in this year’s study.

The link to the survey is listed below.

Thanks for your participation.

http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/26BQN5J

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Can having dinner as a family, prevent your teen from using drugs and alcohol?

By Tracy A. Stanciel,

February 24, 2012 at 6:00 am What happened to old fashioned family dinner time? We live in an age where everything is fast-paced and electronic. Families dine in their cars after visiting fast food restaurants instead of eating at home. When families do eat at home, everyone is doing their own thing. Someone is watching TV, someone else is working on an iPad or a laptop. I have even heard of family members texting one another while having dinner.

I was shocked to hear that there were kids who had never sat down and had dinner as a family. This phenomenon is completely foreign to me. I am the youngest of six children and we had dinner as a family everyday. My Dad did not have dinner with us during the week because he worked from 3:00pm until 11:00pm, but he was at the dinner table on the weekends. My children don't know any other way to eat dinner. There are occasions when my husband works late and we eat without him, but it doesn't happen very often.

We use dinner time to have really important discussions. The dinner table can be a great venue to have good discussions because you have a captive audience. Dinner time is used to talk about everyone's day and anything else that may be on our minds. My husband and I have had some really great parenting experiences at our dinner table. If you can't think of anything to talk about, tell your kids a funny story. Ask everyone to go around the table and talk about something that happened at school or work. There is no TV or electronic devices at the dinner table. Have an open forum for questions with no limits. It makes me feel good as a parent when my children feel comfortable asking questions about any and everything at the dinner table.

Family dinners don't have to take place at home. We are fortunate to live close to the lake front and downtown. When the weather is nice, we will pack a picnic dinner and walk or ride our bikes to the lake front for dinner. Millennium Park has great concerts in the summer. We will order take out food and take the bus or ride our bikes downtown for a concert in the park. Family dinners have always been an important part of our lives.

A study by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University has found that the more often children have dinners with their parents, the less likely they are to smoke, drink or use drugs. The study also states that parental engagement fostered around the dinner table is one of the most potent tools to help parents raise healthy drug-free children. The study compares teens who have family dinners 5-7 times per week to teens who have fewer than 3 family dinners per week. Teens who have family dinners fewer than 3 times per week are twice as likely to use tobacco, nearly twice as likely to use alcohol and one and a half times as likely to use marijuana. According to the study, teens who say that they talk to their parents about what's going on in their lives over dinner are less likely to smoke, drink or use drugs. This study also ties family dinners to academic success, access to drugs & alcohol and friendships with others who use drugs & alcohol.

I would like to encourage everyone to start having family dinners. If you plan to start having family dinners, you may need to start by doing it one day a week and gradually work up to 5-7 days. It can have a great impact on your family even if your children are too young to worry about drug and alcohol abuse. You will be amazed at the topics of conversation that can take place when you are sitting at a quiet table with no distractions.

Happy Family Dinner Time!!

COPE and the Metro Washington Council Announced Their Endorsements for PGCPS Board of Education

The following candidates were selected for endorsement by the Prince George's and Montgomery County COPE and Metro Washington Council.

District 1 - David Murray

District 4 - Sandy Vaughns

District 5 - Deidre Jackson

District 7 - Carletta Fellows

District 8 - Edward Burroughs

Photos of the 2010 Parental Engagement Conference

Your pictures and fotos in a slideshow on MySpace, eBay, Facebook or your website!view all pictures of this slideshow

The Middle School Years

Visits From Engaged Parents and Dedicated Educators