Ideas for Classroom Instruction (education)


Edutopia: What Works in Education. The George Lucas Educational Foundation
Edutopia
Follow EdutopiaEdutopia on Facebook 
Edutopia on Twitter Edutopia on Pinterest Edutopia on YouTube Edutopia on Google+ RSS feed link
September 19, 2012
Best Practices: Ideas for Classroom Instruction

Boy using post-it notes in his reading assignment

Tools for Teaching: The Amazing Sticky Note 
Can a simple piece of paper really be such a powerful learning tool? Educator Ben Johnson shares some great ideas for how teachers can use sticky notes -- as a way to flag accomplishments, as a tool for assessing learning, and to help students storyboard complicated ideas.

Five Tips to Help You Soar This September 
Educator and blogger Danielle Moss Lee shares a few tricks to help you lay a solid foundation for a successful school year. 

New Teacher Support: Delivery of Instruction 
From the archives: Blogger Lisa Dabbs invites veteran teacher Paula Naugle to illustrate some best practices for delivery of instruction.

Find more blogs on best practices for the classroom. 



Most Popular Blogs Last Week:



What's Hot on Facebook:

Paintbrush on paper with Fact. 90 percent of parents reported that the arts motivated their kids to learn



This week we're giving away the newly released Kindle Fire HD (a $199 value)! You could be the lucky winner.Enter by Sunday, September 30 for a chance to win.

Female teacher from Mesquite
Video Spotlight:
Saving Money, Sustaining Excellence 

Budget cuts -- you can't get around them, but you can find ways to reduce the pain. Here's how to teach lean, make supplies last, and not shortchange your kids.



Advertisement
USC Rossier School of Education. Transform your classroom. Inspire your students. Earn a Master's of Education in Advanced Instruction Online.


Illio of a silloutte of a boy wearing ear budsCheck out our latest pinboard that includes resources to keep you up-to-date with the latest on BYOD, 1:1 programs, education apps, and more.

Follow this board. 




Illio of a pink monsterDownload of the Week:
Guide: Home-to-School Connections 

Get valuable tools and resources for strengthening the bonds between schools, families, and communities for student learning and success.

 


Advertisement
Free Social Studies Lessons. Election 2012. Free lessons. Mimio.




GRANTS & RESOURCES
The George Lucas Educational Foundation is a nonprofit operating foundation and is not a grant-making organization. However, in order to realize the potential of 21st-century education, we are fully aware that our community needs to secure grants and be aware of other exciting opportunities in education, such as the following:
  • The George Lucas Educational Foundation Grant Information List
  • K-12 Aerospace Education Grants: The Air Force Association is sponsoring $250 grants for K-12 programs that significantly influence aerospace and STEM learning in the classroom. Deadline: October 17, 2012.
  • Using Music to Teach Mathematics Grants: Grants of $3,000 will be awarded to PreK-2nd grade teachers or groups of teachers seeking to use music to enhance math learning. Applicants must be members of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM) before October 15. Sponsored by NCTM and the Ester Mendlesohn Fund. Deadline: November 15, 2012.
  • Online Graduate Credits: The American Museum of Natural History is offering a fall lineup of online courses in their Seminars on Science series. Up to four graduate credits are available in several subjects -- Earth, Evolution, Ocean System, Water and Solar System -- and courses run Oct. 1-Nov. 11 or Oct. 29-Dec. 9.
  • "If We Were President": Pearson and WeAreTeachers are teaming up to engage student in the 2012 Presidential Election with the "If We Were President" contest. The project-based contest asks K-12 classes to develop a project in any media that answers what they would do if they were president. The winning classroom receives an inauguration party, and the teacher takes home $500 and an iPad 2. Deadline: October 18, 2012.
Conferences Unconferences Webinars

Resilient Youth (education)

Resilient Youth: Protective Factors in School, Family and Community

Why is it that some youth succeed in life despite great odds? Why do some teens “bounce back” when others do not? “Resilient” is the term prevention researchers use to describe these young people. Resilient youth are said to have “assets” that act as protective factors to sup-port and encourage healthy development, and help teens avoid negative behaviors like dropping out of school, using alcohol or other drugs, teen pregnancy, and incarceration.

The growing body of research in resiliency indicates that even severely at-risk youngsters can develop into confident, competent and caring adults if families, communities and schools define important assets and partner on strategies to promote resiliency. 

Resiliency-Building Partnerships
Promoting youth resilience is best begun in the early grades before students are pressured to engage in risky behaviors. These efforts should continue through adolescence. Schools, families and communities that support resilient youth tend to have three common characteristics : caring and supportive relationships, positive and high expectations, and opportunities for meaningful participation .

Protective Factors in Schools: A supportive and respectful environment within the school, opportunities for before and after-school activities, an inviting atmosphere for parents and community as well as participation, and a climate of connectedness.

Protective Factors in Families: Positive role models, parental involvement in school, monitoring of out-of-school time, positive communication within the family, respectful and consistent rules and consequences, and spending time together.

Protective Factors in Communities: Effective prevention policies, positive and clear community norms and values, a view of youth as resources, and opportunities for young people to make positive contributions and gain a sense of connectedness to the community.

True or False Quiz/Connecting with Teens

Most teens turn to their parents for advice.
True: 78% of teens say in times of need they first turn to their parents. There is a drop-off as children get older. 90% of 12 and 13-year-olds say they rely on parental advice.

“Not having enough time together” with their parents is a top concern among teenagers today.
True
: Family time is tied with education for first place on teens’ list of concerns.

Teens have enough after-school activities in their communities.
False
: 52% of teens say they wish they had more after-school activities in their community, and 62% of unsupervised teens say they would participate in after-school programs if they were available.

When teens participate in after-school programs they avoid risky behavior and do better in school. Teens that don’t participate in after-school activities are five times more likely to be “D” students, three times more likely to use drugs, and twice as likely to get into a fight at school.

Sources: Talking With Teens: The YMCA Parent and Teen Survey Final Report and After School for America’s Teens: A National Survey of Teen Attitudes and Behaviors. Both available at www.ymca.net
.

Result: Youth develop a sense of purpose and meaningful goals, communication skills, conflict resolution and problem solving skills, personal responsibility, coping and stress reduction strategies, and empathy toward others. These protective factors enable teens to succeed in challenging times and sustain them into adulthood.  

For more information on resiliency and developing assets, visit the SEARCH Institute at www.search-institute.org  

Risk Factors
Domain
Protective Factors
Early Aggressive Behavior
Individual
Self-Control
Lack of Parental Supervision
Family
Parental Monitoring
Substance Abuse
Peer
Academic Competence
Drug Availability
School
Anti-drug Use Policies
Poverty
Community
Strong Neighborhood Attachment

40 Developmental Assets® for Adolescents (ages 12-18)
Search Institute® has identified the following building blocks of healthy development—known as
Developmental Assets®—that help young people grow up healthy, caring, and responsible.
This page may be reproduced for educational, noncommercial uses only.

EXTERNAL ASSETS
SUPPORT:
1. Family support—Family life provides high levels of love and support.
2. Positive family communication—Young person and her or his parent(s) communicate positively, and young person is willing to seek advice and counsel from parents.
3. Other adult relationships—Young person receives support from three or more nonparent adults.
4. Caring neighborhood—Young person experiences caring neighbors.
5. Caring school climate—School provides a caring, encouraging environment.
6. Parent involvement in schooling—Parent(s) are actively involved in helping young person succeed in school.

EMPOWERMENT:
7. Community values youth—Young person perceives that adults in the community value youth.
8. Youth as resources—Young people are given useful roles in the community.
9. Service to others—Young person serves in the community one hour or more per week.
10. Safety—Young person feels safe at home, school, and in the neighborhood.

BOUNDARIES AND EXPECTATIONS:
11. Family boundaries—Family has clear rules and consequences and monitors the young person’s whereabouts.
12. School Boundaries—School provides clear rules and consequences.
13. Neighborhood boundaries—Neighbors take responsibility for monitoring young people’s behavior.
14. Adult role models—Parent(s) and other adults model positive, responsible behavior.
15. Positive peer influence—Young person’s best friends model responsible behavior.
16. High expectations—Both parent(s) and teachers encourage the young person to do well.

CONSTRUCTIVE USE OF TIME:
17. Creative activities—Young person spends 3 or more hours per week in lessons or practice in music, theater, or other arts.
18. Youth programs—Young person spends three or more hours per week in sports, clubs, or organizations at school and/or in the community.
19. Religious community—Young person spends one or more hours per week in activities in a religious institution.
20. Time at home—Young person is out with friends “with nothing special to do” two or fewer nights per week.

INTERNAL ASSETS
COMMITMENT TO LEARNING:
21. Achievement Motivation—Young person is motivated to do well in school.
22. School Engagement—Young person is actively engaged in learning.
23. Homework—Young person reports doing at least one hour of homework every school day.
24. Bonding to school—Young person cares about her or his school.
25. Reading for Pleasure—Young person reads for pleasure three or more hours per week.

POSITIVE VALUES:
26. Caring—Young person places high value on helping other people.
27. Equality and social justice—Young person places high value on promoting equality and reducing hunger and poverty.
28. Integrity—Young person acts on convictions and stands up for her or his beliefs.
29. Honesty—Young person “tells the truth even when it is not easy.”
30. Responsibility—Young person accepts and takes personal responsibility.
31. Restraint—Young person believes it is important not to be sexually active or to use alcohol or other drugs.

SOCIAL COMPETENCE:
32. Planning and decision-making—Young person knows how to plan ahead and make choices.
33. Interpersonal Competence—Young person has empathy, sensitivity, and friendship skills.
34. Cultural Competence—Young person has knowledge of and comfort with people of different cultural/racial/ethnic backgrounds.
35. Resistance skills—Young person can resist negative peer pressure and dangerous situations.

POSITIVE IDENTITY:
36. Peaceful conflict resolution—Young person seeks to resolve conflict nonviolently.
37. Personal power—Young person feels he or she has control over “things that happen to me.”
38. Self-esteem—Young person reports having a high self-esteem.
39. Sense of purpose—Young person reports that “my life has a purpose.”
40. Positive view of personal future—Young person is optimistic about her or his personal future.

Copyright © 1997, 2006 by Search Institute, 615 First Avenue N.E.,
Suite 125, Minneapolis, MN 55413; 800-888-7828; www.search-institute.org. All Rights Reserved.
The following are registered trademarks of Search Institute: Search Institute®, Developmental Assets® and Healthy Communities • Healthy Youth®.

Attend Harvard Free (education/opportunity)

Harvard University
Announcement 
No tuition and no student loans
 
Harvard University announced over the weekend that from now on undergraduate students from low-income families will pay no tuition. In making the announcement, Harvard's president Lawrence H. Summers said, "When only ten percent of the students in elite higher education come from families in the lower half of the income distribution, we are not doing enough. We are not doing enough in bringing elite higher education to the lower half of the income distribution." 

If you know of a family earning less than $60,000 a year with an honor student graduating from high school soon, Harvard University wants to pay the tuition. The prestigious university recently announced that from now on undergraduate students from low-income families can go to Harvard for free... no tuition and no student loans! 

To find out more about Harvard offering free tuition for families making less than $60,000 a year, visit Harvard's financial aid website at:
http://www.fao.fas.harvard.edu/or call the school's financial aid office at (617) 495-1581. 
SEND TO SOMEONE WHETHER THEY CAN USE OR NOT. THEY JUST MIGHT KNOW SOMEONE WHO CAN.

Hoopa High Students Win Gates Scholarship (education)

Five graduating seniors from Hoopa Valley High School are the only Native American recipients from the entire state of California who are Gates Millenium Scholars this year.

Elisha Flores, Darian Ferris, Ashtyn Colegrove, Orion Cosce and Ryan Matilton have received full college scholarships, including living expenses, tuition, fees, books and materials, to complete their undergraduate college educations.

Trustees Trustable? (education)

Show Me The Money

June 12, 2012 - 3:00am

A seat on a private university board comes with a lot of authority. Trustees hire presidents, approve budgets, often have final say on academic programs, and are increasingly vested with the responsibility of determining how to invest giant sums of money.
But giant sums of money tend to mean giant questions.
Maintaining strong returns on university investments has become pivotal to the long-term health of many colleges and universities. As a result, individuals with experience and connections in financial management have become common on governing boards. But having people on the board who have connections to the financial world raises the possibility of conflicts of interest – board members privately benefiting by placing the college’s investments in their own firms.
In the wake of the 2008 financial crisis – when colleges with endowments greater than $1 billion lost an average of 20.5 percent, leading to significant cuts and the disruption of local economies – employees, students, and community members have begun to criticize the high-risk strategy endowment managers adopted over the past few decades. They have also questioned whether those managers are making investments with their institutions’ best interests in mind, highlighting instances where trustees invested an institution’s money with firms in which they had a personal financial stake.
There have been several instances of groups alleging that board members acted illegally or unethically, the most recent example being an allegation, under review by the New Hampshire attorney general, that surfaced last month at Dartmouth College that the board was steering the college’s $3.4-billion endowment to its members’ firms.

Read more: http://bit.ly/DartmouthTrustees
Inside Higher Ed 

Tuition Waiver (education)

On a morning this April that threatened rain, Davonne Teri John lined up with more than 400 other Fort Lewis College seniors to accept her baccalaureate degree.

Bright blue and red beads of her powwow regalia peeked through her graduation gown, and a silver and turquoise stone bracelet gleamed on her wrist.

As a member of the Navajo tribe, John is one of hundreds of Native American students at the college who qualified for free tuition because of a century-old promise made by the state of Colorado.

Full story @: http://bit.ly/TuitionWaiver

NCAI Education Newsletter (education)

NCAI Education Newsletter
May 30, 2012
Edition 18

Table of Contents

·         Other News and Commentary
·         Trends, Data, and Reports

Applications for the Tribal-State Education Partnership (STEP) Pilot Program Now Open

The Department of Education is currently soliciting applications for the State-Tribal Education Partnership (STEP) pilot. Under the pilot, the Department will award $1.97 million in competitive grants to Tribal Education Agencies (TEAs) to increase their role in the education of American Indian and Alaska Native students. Funding for the pilot program comes from the fiscal year 2012 appropriation, under the Indian Education National Activities authority.

Specifically, the purposes of these grants are to:
a)      Promote increased collaboration between TEAs and state educational agencies (SEAs) in the administration of certain state-administered formula grant programs; and
b)      Build the capacity of TEAs to conduct certain state-level administrative functions under those programs for eligible schools located on reservations.

The pilot will fund the implementation of collaborative agreements between TEAs and state educational agencies (SEAs). Under these agreements, SEAs will transfer to TEAs some state-level functions related to the administration of certain Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) programs for eligible schools located on reservations. The Department of Education will not grant formula funds to TEAs as a part of this pilot program.

Deadline for Notice of Intent to Apply: June 12, 2012
Dates of Pre-Application Meetings: June 1, 2012, and June 5, 2012
Deadline for Transmittal of Applications: July 13, 2012

For more detailed information and how to apply, please see the following resources:
·         Federal Register Announcement
·         Press Release
·         Grant Information

Department of Education Contact:
Joyce Silverthorne, Director, Office of Indian Education
(202) 401-0767 or joyce.silverthorne@ed.gov

Department of Education Announces 2012 Race to the Top, District Level Competition

Last week, the Department of Education released its proposed criteria for the 2012 Race to the Top District (RTT-D) competition. The $400 million competition invites school districts to create plans for individualized classroom instruction aimed at closing achievement gaps and preparing each student for college and careers. The focus is to move beyond one-size-fits-all models of schooling and to personalize instruction to meet students' individual needs and interests. Districts can apply on their own or in consortia, and together they must serve at least 2,500 students, with 40 percent or more qualifying for free or reduced price lunch.

Though the Department of Education has waived rulemaking for this new program, it is gathering input via an online form:http://www.ed.gov/comment/reply/12250#comment-form. Comments are due by next Friday, June 8, 2012, at 5:00 p.m. Eastern.

Please see detailed information about the competition here (http://www.ed.gov/race-top/district-competition) and here (http://www.ed.gov/sites/default/files/rttd-executive-summary.pdf).

NCAI is still reviewing the proposed criteria, but at this point we have two major concerns. First, the Bureau of Indian Education (BIE) is not eligible for the competition; and second, districts are not required to consult with tribes when drafting their applications. We will distribute our comments outlining these concerns via this newsletter before the deadline so others can draw from them for their own comments.

Eight More States Receive No Child Left Behind Waivers

Yesterday, the Department of Education announced that it has approved No Child Left Behind (NCLB) waivers for eight additional states. This round of waiver approvals brings the total number of states with waivers to 19. Eighteen additional applications are still under review.

Newly Announced Waivers: Connecticut, Delaware, Louisiana, Maryland, New York, North Carolina, Ohio and Rhode Island.

States Previously Granted Waivers: Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Tennessee.

For more information, see the Department of Education’s press release here and waiver applications and related documents here.

Let's Move! in Indian Country Anniversary Celebration To Be Webcast (June 1)

Over the past year, Let’s Move! in Indian Country has worked with stakeholders across the country to help connect communities, schools, and tribal leader to resources, funding, trainings and programs that will help improve the health of the Indian Country’s next generation

In order to recognize this progress and the great work of leaders across Indian Country, the White House will host a panel discussion with individuals whose work has helped build a healthier future for American Indian and Alaska Native youth.

On Friday, June 1, 2012 at 1:30 p.m. EDT, several of these leaders will share their stories on how they have inspired youth in their own communities to live healthier lifestyles and how they have left a lasting footprint on the road to towards building a healthier future for all Native people. The panel discussion will include athletes, tribal leaders, program directors, healthcare professionals and others who will share their stories and provide insight on how their efforts can be expanded to communities across Indian Country. The discussion will be streamed online at www.WhiteHouse.gov/live

Webinar: Improving Educational Outcomes for American Indian Children (June 13)

The Investing in Innovation Fund (i3) project, "Improving Educational Outcomes for American Indian Children," provides services to American Indian children, ages prenatal to 3 years, and their families. Its goal is to improve educational outcomes for children from birth through 3 years and is supported by evidence from prior evaluations with various populations. This free webinar on Wednesday, June 13, at 2:00 p.m. EDT will describe the project and its impact on American Indian children.

Opening Remarks:
·         Robert Mahaffey, Communications Director, Rural School and Community Trust
·         Arthur Mallory, Parents as Teachers Board Member and former Missouri Commissioner of Education

Presenters:
·         Marsha Gebhardt, Parents as Teachers, BabyFACE Project Director
·         Judy Pfannenstiel, Senior Research Associate, Research and Training Associates, Inc.

Other News and Commentary

·         Mitt Romney Releases Education Agenda: Presidential candidate Mitt Romney recently released his education agenda. School choice and charter schools are among his top priorities.

·         New Mexico Translates Special Education Rights Into Navajo: Last week, the New Mexico state education department released a Navajo translation of a notice of rights for special education students.

·         Secretary Duncan at Navajo Technical College: Secretary of Education Arne Duncan visited Navajo Technical College in Crownpoint, New Mexico, to deliver a commencement address to 2012 graduates.

Trends, Data, and Reports

·         The Condition of Education 2012 (National Center for Education Statistics): The Condition of Education 2012 summarizes important developments and trends in education using the latest available data. The report presents 49 indicators on the status and condition of education, in addition to a closer look at high schools in the United States over the past twenty years. The indicators represent a consensus of professional judgment on the most significant national measures of the condition and progress of education for which accurate data are available. The 2012 print edition includes indicators in three main areas: (1) participation in education; (2) elementary and secondary education and outcomes; and (3) postsecondary education and outcomes.

·         2010 Census Coverage Measurement (US Census Bureau): The Census Bureau has released the results of its Census Coverage Measurement (CCM), which measures the quality of the decennial census. There appears to be a rise in the undercount on reservations from 2000 (4.88 percent undercount, statistically significantly different than zero). There was a 12.22 net undercount for American Indians and Alaska Natives on reservations in 1990. However, the CCM estimates an overcount for American Indians and Alaska Natives off reservations.

·         The Importance of Being in School: A Report on Absenteeism in the Nation's Public Schools (Everyone Graduates Center at John Hopkins University): Chronic absenteeism in American schools is a largely unnoticed and unmeasured problem affecting the educational outcomes of millions of students and undermining critical school improvement efforts, according to this new report. The report found only a handful of states measure and report on chronic absenteeism, which the report defines as missing at least 10 percent of school days in a given year, or about 18 days. It estimates that 10 to 15 percent of students nationwide are chronically absent. That adds up to 5 million to 7.5 million students who miss enough school to be at severe risk of dropping out or failing to graduate from high school.

·         Resource Document on Restraint and Seclusion (Department of Education): This document outlines principles for educators, parents, and stakeholders to consider when developing or refining policies and procedures to support positive behavioral interventions and avoid the use of restraint and seclusion. The goal of this resource document is to help ensure that schools are safe and healthy environments where all students can learn, develop, and participate in instructional programs that promote high levels of academic achievement. 

·         Raising the Bar from Ready by 21 to Credentialed by 26: Highlights from Community and State Efforts (The Forum for Youth Investment): The brief from the Forum for Youth Investment looks at two initiatives focused on increasing postsecondary success by aligning the work of stakeholders and helping different sectors work together. One, the Credentialed by 26 Community Challenge, helped leaders in four selected communities jump-start local conversations and identify strategies to improve postsecondary success. The second initiative, the Credential by 26 Policy Roundtables, consisted of policy surveys and structured discussions to help leaders in three states identify low-cost policy solutions for increasing supports for low-income college students. The brief includes summaries of the discussions and a sample of policy changes that can improve success.

·         What Teacher Preparation Programs Teach About K-12 Assessment (National Council on Teacher Quality): This report provides information on the preparation provided to teacher candidates from teacher training programs so that they can fully use assessment data to improve classroom instruction. The purpose of the report is to encourage teacher preparation programs, along with the federal and state agencies supporting and overseeing these programs, to focus more on the importance of future teachers' knowledge and skills in the increasingly critical area of assessment.

Firstbook (opportunity/education)

By the end of this year, First Book will have distributed 100 million books to kids in need-andwe want to reach more programs in California!  Can you help us spread the word?

If you know a local program or school that serves children from low-income families and may be interested in receiving brand new books, encourage them to register with First Book.  Registered programs have immediate and unlimited access to low cost books on The First Book Marketplace and free books from the First Book National Book Bank.

Know someone that may be interested? Forward this email to them, or send them this link to register: www.firstbook.org/register.

Thank you! 
First Book

NCAI Education (education)

NCAI Education Newsletter
May 11, 2012
Edition 16
·         Trends, Data, and Reports

NCAI Op-Ed: Stopping the Student Loan Interest Rate Hike Is Critical for Indian Country Too

The following opinion piece by Jefferson Keel, NCAI President, was published in Indian Country Today.

Over the last week President Obama, in public events at high schools and speeches throughout the country, has led the charge to ensure that higher education for all students from all backgrounds is affordable. The President has done this because on July 1, 2012, if Congress doesn’t act, interest rates on federally subsidized student loans will double from 3.4 percent to 6.8 percent. He has also made a direct tie between access to education and the rebuilding of the economy. What has received very little attention, however, is the impact that such an increase would have on access to education, educational achievement, and ultimately the already fragile economy of Indian Country.

Native college enrollment has more than doubled between 1976 and 2006. Education after high school, whether it be at a tribal college, a vocational training program, community college, or a four-year institution, has become a real option for the next generation of tribal citizens to advance their knowledge and skills. The number of our young people seeking those opportunities will only increase in the years to come, as 32 percent of the American Indian and Alaska Native population are 18 years old or younger.

Financial aid is critical in helping our young people pursue higher education and earn their degrees. Today approximately 63,000 Native students and their families rely on federal loans—a large percentage of which are subsidized Stafford loans—to help pay for college.  With already increasing costs, the steep rise in interest rates would come at a time when Native people need access to higher education more than ever. 

College has become more expensive for Native students: between 1995 and 2008, the cost of a full-year education at an undergraduate institution increased from $11,500 to nearly $20,000. Couple those increasing costs with a higher interest rate, and the rate increase will burden students, including Native students, with an average additional $1,000 per school year in student loan debt.

As Indian Country knows all too well, this dramatic cost increase will make higher education even more expensive for those who already struggle to afford it. Twenty eight percent of American Indians and Alaska Natives lived below the federal poverty line in 2010, compared to 15 percent of the general population. Poverty rates are even more pronounced on Indian lands at 38 percent. To afford the rising expenses of college, Native students rely on financial aid of all forms to reach graduation.

College is America’s “economic imperative,” as President Obama has stated, and the stakes are even higher in Indian Country. The profound value of higher education for tribal nations extends beyond just economics: it is essential to ensuring our cultural economy, our political survival, and the vitality of our sovereignty.

Today’s generation of Native youth presents a tremendous opportunity to transform Native nations through higher education. Tribal nations need Native college graduates to bring their skills back home, boost available human capital and thereby attract new businesses, reduce unemployment, stimulate reservation economies through direct spending, and launch their own entrepreneurial ventures.

Yet, the United States Congress could stand in the way of the next generation of entrepreneurs and lawyers, natural resource managers and engineers, agribusiness managers and artists, who all are looking to bolster tribal economies, strengthen our communities, and lead our governments.

Congressional inaction threatens to saddle Native students with even more student loan debt. The rate hike will not only push higher education beyond the reach of many American Indians and Alaska Natives, but will also make it more difficult for Native students to return home after graduation. With higher student loan debt, our young people will be forced to take higher-paying jobs in areas away from Native communities. We can’t afford this loss – culturally or economically.

That’s why, for the sake of economic recovery and our collective future, the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI) is calling on Indian Country to pick up your phones, write letters, and urge Congress to maintain these crucial investments in higher education and keep college within the reach of all Americans by taking immediate action. Tell members of Congress to stand up against doubling the interest rates for subsidized Stafford loans.

The need is clear: if Native nations are to participate in the global information economy as equal partners and make a robust contribution to America’s economic recovery, more of our citizens must obtain postsecondary degrees. For Native nations to seize this opportunity and significantly increase college completion rates, however, one considerable barrier to higher education must be torn down: cost.

The consequences are not something Indian Country—nor the entire nation— can afford. Congress must act now to ensure that all Americans, including American Indians and Alaska Natives, have a fair shot at higher education.

Jefferson Keel is the President of the National Congress of American Indians, the nation’s largest and oldest American Indian and Alaska Native advocacy organization and serves as the Lt. Governor of the Chickasaw Nation, located in Oklahoma. President Keel earned his Bachelor’s degree from East Central University and Master’s degree from Troy State University. He is a veteran of the U.S. Army

Founded in 1944, NCAI is the oldest, largest and most representative American Indian and Alaska Native organization in the country. NCAI advocates on behalf of tribal governments and communities, promoting strong tribal-federal government-to-government policies, and promoting a better understanding among the general public regarding American Indian and Alaska Native governments, people and rights.

BIE Funded Schools Are Eligible to Apply for New Farm to School Program

On April 17, 2012, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Deputy Secretary Kathleen Merrigan announced that the USDA will be investing in farm to school programs nationwide to help eligible schools improve the health and wellbeing of their students and connect with local agricultural producers.

The Farm to School Grant Program is part of the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act (Act), which authorized and funded the USDA to assist eligible entities, through grants and technical assistance, in implementing farm to school programs that improve access to local foods in eligible schools. The new investments will assist schools in procuring food from local producers. Farm to school initiatives can also include agriculture and nutrition education efforts such as school gardens, field trips to local farms, and cooking classes.

Letters of Intent are suggested, but not required, by May 18, 2012, while proposals are due June 15, 2012.

Please see the attached announcement for more information. If you have questions, please contact Brandi Sweet, BIE Program Analyst, by email at brandi.sweet@bie.edu, or by telephone at (202) 658-9593.

Webinars

USDA will host two webinars to assist eligible entities in preparing proposals.

·         On Tuesday, May 15, 3:00 pm EST (note: this is a time change), USDA will offer an Implementation grants webinar.
·         On Thursday, May 17, 1:00 pm EST, USDA will offer a Planning grants webinar.

BIE funded schools are highly encouraged to participate in the trainings and apply.

Both webinars will be presented by Deborah Kane, National Farm to School Director, FNS, and Greg Walton, Grants Management Specialist, FNS. The webinar will help to explain to interested applicants the details of the grant and will include a brief Q&A session. Interested parties may submit questions ahead of time via the registration link below. These sessions will all be recorded and posted on the Food and Nutrition Service website shortly following the sessions.

Questions: Deborah.kane@fns.usda.gov or farm2school2013@fns.usda.gov or submit them to the webinar via the registration link.

Department of Health and Human Services Announces Available Funding for Construction and Renovation of School-Based Health Centers

During her remarks at a Healthy Schools Campaign and Trust for America’s Health event, Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Kathleen Sebelius announced the availability of funding for the construction and renovation of school-based health centers. 

These new investments, totaling up to $75 million, are part of the School-Based Health Center Capital (SBHCC) Program, which was created by the Affordable Care Act, the health care law of 2010. 

School-based health centers are an important component of the nation’s health care safety net. The centers enable children with acute or chronic illnesses to attend school as well as help to improve the overall health and wellness of children and adolescents through health screenings, health promotion and disease prevention activities. By making the connection to health care easy, school-based health centers ensure that children have access to the services they need to lead healthy lives.

“President Obama’s health care law is helping keep kids healthy and as a mother, I know how important a child’s health is to how they do in school.  Whether establishing a new site or upgrading an existing facility, the availability of funding for school-based health centers that we’re announcing today will help kids more easily get the health services they need to thrive,” said Secretary Sebelius. “The goal is to keep our children healthy so they can learn, grow and prosper.”

The Affordable Care Act appropriated $200 million for the SBHCC Program to address capital needs in school-based health centers. The funding opportunity announced today is the third in a series of awards that will be made available to school-based health centers through the Affordable Care Act. The Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) oversees the SBHCC Program.

“It is critical for children and adolescents to be healthy so they can maximize their potential, and being healthy starts with access to primary and preventive care,” said HRSA Administrator Mary K. Wakefield, Ph.D., R.N.  “These grants will greatly improve that access and help make our children, and America’s future strong.”  

The Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), part of the U. S. Department of Health and Human Services, is the primary Federal agency for improving access to health care services for people who are uninsured, isolated, or medically vulnerable. For more information about HRSA and its programs, visit www.hrsa.gov.  For more information about Affordable Care Act investments in community health centers, visit www.HealthCare.gov.

Department of Education Releases Vision Document on Reforming the Teaching Profession

The RESPECT Project, which stands for Recognizing Educational Success, Professional Excellence and Collaborative Teaching, is the Obama Administration’s effort to honor and elevate America’s educators. A vision document for reforming the teaching profession created by active classroom teachers working temporarily for the U.S. Department of Education has been posted for public comment on the Department’s website today as part of Teacher Appreciation Week. The 14-page document reflects input from more than 2,500 teachers across the country who participated in approximately 200 roundtable meetings over the past six months.

The vision document, titled “The RESPECT Project: Envisioning a Teaching Profession for the 21st Century”, is available for public comment June 19, 2012 athttp://www.ed.gov/documents/respect/discussion-document.doc.

We R Native Script Writing Contest

We R Native, a comprehensive health resource for Native youth, is hosting a script writing contest for Native youth. American Indian and Alaska Native youth ages 13-21 years old are invited to write an original script that includes one of the following themes:

·         I strengthen my Nation.
·         A young adult helping their community.
·         A young adult standing up to peer pressure.
·         A young adult impacted by drugs or alcohol.
·         A young adult impacted by bullying.
·         Or another health-related topic of your choice.

Entries are due to native@npaihb.org by June 1, 2012. For more information, please see this flyer.

Trends, Data, and Reports

·         Major Accountability Themes of Second-Round State Applications for NCLB Waivers (Center for Education Policy): This report analyzes the NCLB waiver applications submitted by 26 states and Washington, D.C. to the U.S. Department of Education in February 2012. Among the findings in the report is that, like the first round of applications, these states are proposing new accountability systems that will lead to greater complexity both within states and between states, but at the same time will be more integrated with states’ own existing accountability systems. Nearly all the state applications propose annual achievement targets and performance levels that are more nuanced than what is currently in place under NCLB. On the other hand, 19 of the 27 applications analyzed will use a combined subgroup for accountability decisions, rather than all of the student subgroups mandated under NCLB. None of the states analyzed will continue to require school choice and SES in schools identified for improvement.