Sunday, February 28, 2010

Join Us in Support of Education!




Join the Prince George's County Board of Education in Annapolis on March 10, 2010 as we testify in support of Senate Bill 835 "Equity in State Aid to Counties Act of 2010". Passage of this Bill will GREATLY impact the amount of state aid Prince George's County Public Schools can receive.

The Board of Education will be providing roundtrip transportation from the Sasscer Administration Building in Upper Marlboro to Annapolis on March 10 leaving at 10 a.m.
Reserve your seat on the bus by sending an email with your name and the number of seats you are reserving to constituent.services@pgcps.org by March 4th. Join us in support of education!

Univisión, White House team up to push Hispanic education



By LAURA WIDES-MUNOZ Associated Press

Univisión will announce Tuesday, February 23, 2010, a multiyear campaign to boost academic achievement among Hispanics by teaching parents about what it takes to ensure their children finish high school and graduate from college. The campaign, entitled in Spanish "The Moment is Now,'' comes as statistics show Hispanic high school and college graduation rates are far below the national average, and that the Hispanic unemployment rate is among the nation's highest at 12.6 percent.

With Hispanics making up about a fifth of the nation's kindergarten through 12th graders, that's a major concern for the entire nation, said Univisión Networks President Cesar Conde. The nation's largest Spanish-language network is teaming with the U.S. Department of Education, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and nonprofits nationwide. Conde said Hispanic parents, like most Americans, value education. And many came to the United States to provide better educational opportunities for their children. But once here, they often don't know how to navigate the system.

"We want to raise the standards and the expectations that we in the Hispanic community have for the youth,'' Conde said. "And we want to educate parents who may not think some opportunities are within their children's grasp.''Univisión will use its television and radio networks and its mobile and Internet platforms to provide information to parents about how to encourage high school completion and college readiness, as well as where to turn for college loans and scholarships -- a key component that can be daunting even for those familiar with U.S. financial and academic systems.According to federal data, about 13 percent of Hispanics in the U.S. have a college degree, compared to about a quarter of the population as a whole. Less than half of Hispanics who attend college graduate, compared to a national average of 54 percent.

"When I first arrived in the U.S. 25 years ago, I still remember people saying the worst problem facing the Hispanic community was the dropout rate,'' said Univisión news anchor Jorge Ramos, who will lead the campaign." Twenty-five years later we're talking about exactly the same thing. Something has to be done.

''An exact cost of the program hasn't been determined but is expected to be several million dollars in cash and donations.Among Univisión's first programs will be a March 6 special that brings together children and their families to talk about the obstacles they face in continuing their education. Ramos said at least two of the teen dropouts he featured have since returned to school as a result of their participation in the show.Univisión worked with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to focus its campaign beyond high school graduation to ensuring students have the skills to make it in college, said foundation spokesman Chris Williams. The foundation will help evaluate and make adjustments to the campaign over time.

Juan Sepulveda, head of the White House Initiative on Educational Excellence for Hispanic Americans, said the government will help connect Univisión with experts such as federal officials, educators and grass-roots groups that can provide examples of best practices the company can highlight. Sepulveda said it was important to dispel the notion that Hispanic youths aren't succeeding because they don't speak English, or that such campaigns target those in the country illegally.

"It's really a small population of students with undocumented status,'' he said. "The majority are U.S. citizens.''Sepulveda said the administration chose to work with Univisión because of the success it has had in previous campaigns, including its citizenship and voter-registration efforts in the run-up to the 2008 election.

"No one is saying this is going to be an easy task,'' Conde said of convincing parents to forgo the financial help that a high school graduate can bring to the household if he goes straight into the work force."But we need to ensure our parents and community as a whole understand the long-term benefits of a college degree not just for the individual, but for the family.''

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

YOUTH COUNCIL ENTERPRISE

Black History MonthYouth Enterprise Kick-Off Belated Valentine Celebration
Youth Council Mobilization

Saturday February 20
Jr's ages 6-13
11:00a 12:30p

History, Fun & Games

Sr's ages 14-19

1:30p - 3:00p

Program Overview
Reception $25.00

Registration includes
NAACP YOUTH MEMBERSHIP SOME SCHOLARSHIP AVAILABLE
RSVP
Click on link below to register or email: naacp-umarlboro@comcast.net
Ms. Victory Paige 240-619-5418
Mrs. Robinson 301-894-5368

PARENT ALERT!!!


February 17, 18 and 19, 2010 - Prince George’s County Public Schools (PGCPS) will be on a two-hour delay primarily due to the severe snow and ice conditions of sidewalks and bus stops in the surrounding neighborhoods of schools.



All school activities, with the exception of athletics, have been cancelled through the week. Meals for students including breakfast and lunch will be available at schools. View Procedures for Delayed Openings



Bus transportation will be provided for all student riders. However, if a bus stop is inaccessible because of the snow, parents are asked to call the PGCPS Transportation department at 301-952-6570 to receive an alternate bus stop. Information on bus stop changes will also be available on PGCPS TV channel 96 (Verizon) and channel 38 (Comcast).


Members of the Prince George’s County Police Department will have increased presence at heavy traffic areas to assist students and parents to navigate around the snow and ice while walking and driving to school. More information is available in the press release.

Message from Dr. Hite, Superintendent of Schools



Dear PGCPS Parents, Staff and Community,The last two months have presented challenges in regard to severe winter weather which has placed all Prince George’s County citizens in unfamiliar territory. Most importantly, the December and February blizzards have placed our 129,000 students in the unique situation of missing a total of eight (8) days of critical learning. All of this has had a significant impact on the continuity of learning for all of our students this school year.

As a community, we must now collectively work together to get our students safely back in school as soon as possible. While the County and school system’s operations divisions have done a tremendous amount of work over the past week to clear school properties and roads, there is still much to be accomplished. We need your help! Many sidewalks that our students use to get to school remain not cleared, and impassable. In addition, we need the help of our community in clearing paths for our students to safely make it to their bus stops. As we all know from our own experience in recent days, when we are unable to traverse the two to three feet of snow on the sidewalk, we resort to walking in the streets. This is not a viable option for our children, particularly those that must travel along traffic-laden corridors. Also, please work with our school buses as drivers work to safely transport our students to and from schools. In some instances, roads are still one lane and patience with drivers as they negotiate these roads will be important in the days ahead. Finally and perhaps most importantly, we need all parents to assist your children in getting to and from school safely in light of the current road and sidewalk conditions.

Please look at the area surrounding your house and the school nearest to you – from the perspective of a much smaller, elementary student trying to get there – and do what you can to help carve out a safe path. Neighborhood, civic and public service organizations are being called upon to organize teams to clear the approaches to schools. In addition, our high school students can also join these efforts and earn service learning credit in the process.

Thank you for all you do for our students, and please do not hesitate to contact my office by phone at 301-952-6008 or by email at william.hite@pgcps.org to find out how you can support our schools.

Sincerely,

William R. Hite, Jr., Ed.D.Superintendent of Schools

Thursday, February 4, 2010

How do I find out if schools are closed or closing?


We use many outlets to deliver emergency information about Prince George’s County Public Schools. You can log onto the PGCPS Web site (http://www.pgcps.org/) and find the information listed at the top of the homepage and each individual school page.

Sign up for subscription service from http://www.schoolsout.com/ to receive an email or text as soon as the decision is announced. Watch PGCPS TV96/38 in Prince George’s County. Call the PGCPS Weather Line at 301-952-6000; option 1. Tune into local television and radio stations for information. View Emergency Weather Codes and Plans.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Side by Side Family Academy

Want to help your child be a better reader?


Find 10 ways to help at the next Family Academy¿

Quiere que tu hijo lea mucho? Apprenda diez maneras para ayudarle a ser un buen lector a la próxima Academia Familiar

Parent Session: "Ten Ways to Help Improve My Child's Reading" presented by Jane Hanfman Tema Para Padres: "Diez Maneras para Ayudar a Mejorar la Lectura de Mi Hijo" presentado por Jane Hanfman

Next Academy Night: Feb. 11, 6 - 8 P.M.La Próxima Noche de la Academia: 11 de febrero, 6 - 8 P.M. Deerfield Run Elementary School13000 Laurel Bowie Road (Rt. 197) Free supper (serving from 6 to 6:30 P.M.Cena gratis (servida de 6 a 6:30 P.M.)

Children's activity: live birds such as eagles and hawks! Actividad para niños: aves vivas como las águilas y los halcones Pre-school child careCuidado de niños edad preescolar

It's all free! ¡Todo esgratis! 202-710-5555

sidebyside@sidebysidelaurel.org

http://www.sidebysidelaurel.org/

Friday, January 22, 2010

Opportunity for 15 Week Employment Training

Opportunity for Unemployed and Underemployed Citizens
15-Week Employment Training Program
Next Classes Begin January and February 2010


HURRY!! CALL TODAY!!! (301) 499-8872

The Training Source offers a 15-week comprehensive Office Automation Training program that helps program participants to obtain employment skills that are currently in demand by area employers. This program is available to eligible unemployed or underemployed citizens. The Training Source has provided employment training, individual and group career counseling, job preparation and placement assistance and follow-up services since 1993. Hundreds of citizens have successfully completed training with The Training Source.

The 15-week program includes:

Computer Skills - computer concepts, keyboard/typing, MS Windows and MS Office (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Access, Publisher, and Outlook)

Life Skills - self-esteem and motivation, time/money management, business English, and communication/public speaking

Professional Skills - resume preparation, business correspondence, interview techniques, dressing for success, successful job search strategies, and job survival tips

When and where are Office Automation Training classes held?

Classes are held Monday through Thursday, 9:00 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. for 15-weeks at Located at: The Training Source, 59 Yost Place, Seat Pleasant, Maryland 20743 Conveniently located near the Addison Road Metro Station

What are the requirements for admission?

You must be 18 years of age or older
You must have a high school diploma or GED
You must have a state issued ID

How much does the Office Automation program cost?

All candidates who are admitted Training into the program receive full funding if they are a qualified Maryland or District of Columbia resident.


The Princeton University Summer Journalism Program

Dear Applicant:

Thank you for your interest in the Princeton University Summer Journalism Program. We’re looking forward to reading your application and, if you are selected for the program, getting to know you this summer.

What is the Princeton University Summer Journalism Program? We welcome about 20 high school students from low-income backgrounds every summer to Princeton’s campus for an intensive, 10-day seminar on journalism. After the program ends, counselors stay in touch with students to help guide them through the college admissions process. Counselors assist students in preparing for standardized tests, determining an appropriate list of colleges to apply to, and filling out applications and financial aid forms. The program’s goal is to diversify college and professional newsrooms by encouraging outstanding students from low-income backgrounds to pursue careers in journalism. All expenses, including students’ travel costs to and from Princeton, are paid for by the program. Students who attend the program come from across the country. The program will enter its ninth summer in 2010.

What is the program like? Classes at the program are taught by reporters and editors from The New York Times, The Washington Post, The New Republic, The New Yorker, CNN and ABC News, among other media outlets. Students tour the Times and CNN; cover a professional sports event (in past years, a Yankees, Mets, Jets or Liberty game); cover news events in the Princeton area; film and produce a TV segment; and report, write, edit and design their own newspaper, The Princeton Summer Journal, which is published on the program’s last day. The program is also designed to give students a taste of what life is like at one of the best colleges in the country—students live on campus and eat in one of the university’s cafeterias—and to prepare them to apply to top schools. Students meet with Princeton’s top professors as well as the school’s president and its dean of admissions. Students attend seminars on every aspect of the college admissions process. They also take a practice SAT and attend an SAT class taught by Princeton Review. After students return home, program staff remain in contact with them, assisting them during the college application process and helping them to apply for journalism internships once they are in college.

What have our students accomplished? More than 165 students have graduated from our program during the past eight years, and many return each summer to serve as mentors to our current students. We are proud of their academic and journalistic accomplishments. Four of our alumni are currently enrolled at Princeton. Others have gone on to Harvard, Yale, Stanford, Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Duke, the University of Pennsylvania, Williams, Amherst, Middlebury, Georgetown, Bowdoin, the University of Virginia, Johns Hopkins, New York University and many other selective schools. Their work has been published in college newspapers across the country, including The Daily Princetonian, The Yale Daily News, The Brown Daily Herald, The Columbia Spectator, The Cornell Daily Sun and The Bowdoin Orient. Our alumni have also landed jobs or internships at The New York Times, The New Republic, The Philadelphia Daily News, NBC and CBS, among other outlets. Alumni reflections on the program can be found here.

Who is eligible? This program is intended for low-income students with excellent academic records who are committed to pursuing a career in journalism. To apply for the program, you must meet the following qualifications:- You must currently be a junior in high school. - You must live in the continental United States.- You must have at least an unweighted 3.5 grade point average (out of 4.0).- You must have an interest in journalism.- The combined income of your custodial parent(s)/guardian(s) plus child support payments, if any, must not exceed $45,000.

Note: This program is for students from under-resourced financial backgrounds. If the combined income of your custodial parent(s)/guardian(s) plus child support payments, if any, exceeds $45,000 and you still wish to apply, you may attach a statement explaining why you believe your family qualifies as financially under-resourced.

How to apply. The application process consists of two rounds. For the first round, fill out the application below, and then email it to sjpapplication@gmail.com as a Microsoft Word attachment. (If you do not have Microsoft Word, please just paste the text of your application into the body of the email.) Before emailing us the application, please name the document using the following format: Lastname.Firstname.doc. So, if your name is Mary Jones, the title of your document will be Jones.Mary.doc. In addition, type your name, the name of your high school (including the city and state location) and the email address where you would like to be contacted in the body of your email and put only the name of the Word document (e.g., Jones.Mary.doc) in the subject line of the email. We must receive your application by 11:59 p.m. ET on February 5, 2010. No extensions will be given for any reason.

After we receive the first round of applications, we will select a group to proceed to the second round. If you are selected for the second round, the program directors will arrange to interview you—either by phone or in person—and we will also ask you to mail us printed copies of the following documents:

- Your official high school transcript

- The first page of the income-tax return form (the 1040 or 1040EZ form) for the calendar year 2008 of your custodial parent(s)/guardian(s); or a signed statement by your parent(s)/guardian(s) saying that their income is below the level at which they would be required to file income tax returns. (If the form for calendar year 2009 is available, you may send that instead.)

- A recommendation letter from a teacher

- Clips from your high school newspaper or other publication (if you have them)

Note: From the time they are notified that they have made it to the second round, applicants will have about two weeks to mail these items to us.

Here are some tips about the application process:

1. When sending us your application or when contacting us for any reason, use an email address to which you will have regular access throughout the application process. Do not change your email address or stop checking email in the middle of the application process.

2. Send all applications to sjpapplication@gmail.com — please note that this is a GMAIL address. Send all questions about the program to sjp@princeton.edu — please note that this is a PRINCETON address.

3. Proofread and edit your application carefully before submitting.
4. Most importantly, this program is for students who are interested in journalism—who are planning to write for their college newspapers and who are at least strongly considering an eventual career in journalism. Every year, we receive applications from students who are smart and talented—but who are not really interested in journalism. Apply to this program only if you are serious about pursuing a career in journalism.

A final word: We know that the process of applying to any selective program can be stressful, not to mention a lot of work. But, over the years, the students we have had come through our program have told us that, ultimately, the work they put into their application was worth it.

The program directors are all looking forward to reading your application. If we can answer any question along the way, don’t hesitate to contact us. The best way to reach us is at sjp@princeton.edu.

Sincerely,

Program Staff

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Scholar of the Week: HS Senior Haneen Daham


Quick Facts Grade: 12
GPA: Current 4.0 , Cumulative 4.12
Academics: AP Chemistry, AP World History, AP Language, AP Literature, AP Computer Science B
Extra curricular Activities: Mock Trials Forensics Team, Science and Technology Academic Reformers, National Honor Society, Internship at the United States Department of Agriculture
Future Goals: Plans to attend Georgetown University or University of Maryland Baltimore and Major in Law

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