Early College

Current Events in Education

Inthenews

There are few things more exciting than what I percieve to be outstanding use of technology in education. Andrew Pass' blog The Current Events in Education demonstrates such use.

Discussion Starters for both young and older children provide prompts that present often difficult subject matter in an enlightening manner and more elaborate vocabulary is called out for study.

Mr. Pass' has a gift for designing inquiries that draw thoughtfulness and debate while refraining from sharing his own opinions. Very commendable. We can learn a lot from his suggestions as well as from the manner in which he conducts himself. Thank you!

Reading Resource: Spelling & Vocabulary PK-12+

Oops, almost forgot this great reading resource.
Dig around the site a little for Spanish, Hebrew and more language games and learning tools. Gracias y Toda Raba Jacob Richman!

Learning Vocabulary Can Be Fun

Reading Resources

Starfall Learn to Read
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Click Here for Preview
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ARTICLE: Read All About It  NEW!
Technology motivates students to read.
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When Kids Can't Read: A Guide for Teachers 6-12


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Students learn 90% more
with 72% retention.

Vocabulary Cartoons
http://www.vocabularycartoons.com
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The Perfect Gift

20 Reasons Books are the Best Gifts!
by Ruth Smith, Director UBAH

 

20. Books don’t need to be assembled.
19.
Books don’t need batteries.
18.
Books never come in the wrong color or size.
17.
Books don’t need to be serviced by a dealer.
16.
Books won't need replacement parts.
15. Books are easier to gift wrap than footballs.
14. Books don’t bite, scratch, or kick.
13.
Books don’t need watering or fertilizing.
12.
Books don’t irritate your allergies.
11.
Books don’t go out of style.
10.
Books look good with any decor.
9. 
Books don’t get aphids or attract ants.
8. 
Books aren't noisy and won't annoy family, friends, and neighbors.
7. 
Books don’t shrink, stretch, or fade.
6. 
Books don’t need extension cords.
5. 
Bookswon’t scratch the coffee table.
4. 
Books don’t cause cavities or get stale.
3. 
Books take you places without even leaving home.
2. 
Books are gifts which can be opened again and again.
1. 
Books, no matter how much you use them, are never empty.

Order before December 15th and receive before Christmas!

College in High School

Boy, a little Fall cleaning of the electronic files and I'm finding a lot of good stuff.
The following is a school that I highlighted previously on another blog and very much worthy of sharing again here. What do you get when you combine a public school, a community college and a hospital?

The Wake Early College of Health and Sciences, a new, hybrid high school and technical college jointly operated by Wake County Public Schools, Wake Technical Community College and WakeMed Hospital in Raleigh, NC.

This 5 year school will produce graduates meeting the following high school, college and workplace standards: Watch Video Here.

  • High School diplomas
  • Internships in Health Care
  • Associate degrees in health care related vocations.

Because this is a public high school, students will get a free 2 year college degree and be one year ahead of their peers if they choose to enter college as juniors upon completing the program. If they do not continue on to college, they will have skills and experience in high demand careers that will probably offer starting salaries of at least $20/hour.

Hats off to the Raleigh Public Schools and their partners for finding a true win-win-win solution for educating our children, helping them fulfill their dreams and meeting the present and future needs of society.

Learning Beyond the Classroom w/ NUMB3RS

If you are not familiar with NUMB3RS, please consider learning more as this resource is phenomenal!


"Spree Part 1"
Friday, September 22, 10PM ET/PT on CBS

While Don and his team are faced with trying to capture a 30-year-old teacher (Dickens) and her 17-year-old boyfriend/student (Gallagher), who are on a violent cross-country crime spree, one of their own gets caught in the crossfire. This is part one of a two-part, third-season premiere of NUMB3RS.

This Week's New Lesson Plans

NUMB3RS Activity: The Missing City
In this activity, students will examine a map of a crime spree, similar to one Charlie makes in the episode. Students will be asked to compute the mileage between the pairs of cities along the route and make a conjecture about the location of a “missing city” that Charlie thinks the criminals visited, but did not commit a crime.

NUMB3RS Activity: Traveling in Good Circles
In this activity, students will find the shortest great circle distance between two cities. Students will investigate and use a formula that uses the latitude and longitude of each city to find this distance.

NUMB3RS Activity: The Chase
In this activity, students will be introduced to pursuit curves, in the context of Agent Edgerton chasing a pair of criminals. Students will examine how Agent Edgerton's path changes as he pursues the couple.

NUMB3RS Activity: The Four Bug Problem: Step on No Pets
This activity also examines pursuit curves, in the context of a classic problem called the Four Bug Problem. This includes a class activity in which four students will take a walk along a pursuit curve in a simulation of this problem.

To see all available activities for current and past episodes, visit cbs.com/numb3rs.

Season One Activities In the Works

Due to popular demand, TI and the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM) have announced plans to create activities for Season One of the hit television series. The lessons will focus primarily on Algebra and Geometry fundamentals.

Stay tuned for more details!

Website Refreshed

The “We All Use Math Every Day” web site is back this year with a brand new look and feel. You can find the site by going to cbs.com/numb3rs.

Inside the site, you'll find activities from Season Two and Three for use in the high school classroom. We'll also be testing out a few program ideas, including having some activities in Spanish. And, our parent site will be expanded as the year goes on. In particular, keep an eye on the “Insiders” section where you'll find information about the “We All Use Math Every Day” program and the people behind it.

Please feel free to direct other educators to the site to download the free activities as well as sign up to receive a Teacher's Getting Started Kit which includes program information, sample classroom activities, a classroom poster and bumper sticker. In addition, educators can sign up to receive this weekly “We All Use Math Every Day” e-newsletter packed with classroom activities and exclusive insider information about the educational program.

The Inside Scoop with Andrew Black

Andrew Black, math researcher for NUMB3RS, took a moment to sit down and discuss Season Three and what's in store for Charlie's math-oriented crime solving skills:

We are all eagerly awaiting the return of NUMB3RS, are there any new math elements we should expect to see this season?

“Charlie again applies some nifty math logic to hunting down a variety of bad guys. The two-part season premiere has Charlie helping the FBI track down two criminals on a multi-state crime spree. Charlie applies Pursuit Curves to predict the criminals' most likely path of escape – and their ultimate destination.

In other episodes, the FBI enlists Charlie's help after a series of seemingly random highway attacks (resulting in several murders) grip LA. Charlie disentangles the concept of "random" in order to find a true underlying pattern, leading to the takedown of the killer. And later, Charlie helps the FBI track down a stolen work of art from an LA museum. We get into the subtle intricacies shared between math and art.”

What advice would you give educators who are looking to incorporate something new in their math classrooms?

“The show is just a springboard to get students to think about math in a different, real-world way. We hope Charlie's use of math will show students that math really is used everyday, that math is all around us, and that it's often used without us even being aware of it. Hopefully Charlie's applications will engage both teachers and students, expanding math beyond the textbook.”

Tags: , , , , ,

The word rose, no matter how it's spelled, does not smell.

Although inconsistent in how they're spelling it (text-messaging vs text messaging and eMail vs  e-mail), the messages from all three are the same.

USA Today reports:
Text-messaging replacing eMail among youth
In the era of instant gratification, students and recent graduates are used to being plugged in 24/7, and view eMail as a slower, less convenient means of communication...

Associated Press reports:
'E-mail has become the new snail mail' as younger set goes with text messaging

Mercury News reports:
SITES LIKE MYSPACE OFFERING `INSTANT' SOCIAL SCENE, FAST MESSAGING ATTRACT YOUNG USERS, STUDY SHOWS

CHICAGO -- E-mail is so last millennium. Young people see it as a good way to reach an elder - a parent, teacher or a boss - or to receive an attached file. But increasingly, the former darling of high-tech communication is losing favor to instant and text messaging, and to the chatter generated on blogs and social networking sites such as Facebook and MySpace. 

Email is FORMAL correspondence?

That said, no one is predicting the death of e-mail. Besides its usefulness in formal correspondence, it also offers the ability to send something from "one to many," says Anne Kirah, a senior design anthropologist at Microsoft who studies people's high-tech habits. That might include an announcement for a club or invitation to a party. 

Many college students are logged on 24/7 and the shift is starting to creep into workplace communication, too.

Chintan Talati, who is 28, often uses instant message with other younger peers at his work, a California-based Web site that provides automotive information to consumers. He prefers IM over e-mail. "It's a way to get a quicker answer," he says.

And how do we help students make transitions to college and the world of work?:
 

"Nine to 5 has been replaced with 'Give me a deadline and I will meet your deadline,"' Kirah says of young people's work habits. "They're saying 'I might work until 2 a.m. that night. But I will do it all on my terms."'

Invasion of the Robots: CONTEST

Contest InfoHdr_compete_right02_2

Create conversational robots, or BOTs, for MSN® Messenger and Windows Live™ Messenger.
The most original, useful robots collect $40,000 in total prizes.

Robot Gallery

Watch out! A mob of brilliant robots has us surrounded. And it’s growing larger every day.

Check out the entries and while you’re here, vote! You can vote as often as you like. Feel free to choose your own robot. The BOT with the most popular votes on September 15th wins the $500 User’s Choice Award!

Virtual Crime. Real Money.

Start Here. Go Places.
www.startheregoplaces.com

www.catchmegame.com

CATCH ME if you can!
The case is virtual. The $2,500 reward is real.

Can you solve the Case of the California Con?
You’ll have to trust your gut (and no one else)
to investigate and indict the guilty employee
of a surf rocker’s night spot.

Compete for the highest score to win:

Grand Prize: $2,500
1st Prize: Sony 42" 3LCD Rear Projection Television
Ten (10) 2nd Prizes: 60G Video Apple iPod®
The contest only runs for 3 weeks —
and with these prizes, it’s a crime not to enter.
Play now — it’s free.

It's in the NUM3ERS

www.education.ti.com

This Week′s Lesson Plans for NUMB3RS episode "All's Fair," airing March 31: 

5 year High School = College Degree

While AP courses have been around for years, college and high school have been generally separate from one another. A recent story indicates this may be changing.

Wake County Public Schools, Wake Technical Community College and WakeMed Hospital in Raleigh, NC are jointly opening a new, hybrid high school and technical college: The Wake Early College of Health and Sciences. Watch the Video Here.

The new 5 year school will produce graduates meeting the following high school, college and workplace standards:

  • High School diplomas
  • Internships in Health Care
  • Associate degrees in health care related vocations.

Because this is a public high school, students will get a free 2 year college degree and be one year ahead of their peers if they choose to enter college as juniors upon completing the program. If they do not continue on to college, they will have skills and experience in high demand careers that will probably offer starting salaries of at least $20/hour.

"Elizabeth Ogle, 14, of Knightdale, knew she wanted to enroll despite the school's lack of frills: no sports teams, no prom, no social clubs. She wants to be a pediatric nurse and said school comes first. "I can still go to games and dances with my friends," she said. "My future is more important.""

Hats off to the Raleigh Public Schools and their partners for finding a true win-win-win solution for educating our children, helping them fulfill their dreams and meeting the present and future needs of society.

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Young Success

  • Ephren Taylor II
    Ephren W. Taylor (Overland Park, KS) founded his first company at the age of 12, became a millionaire at 16, and was the CEO of a multimillion-dollar corporation by the age of 23. Today, he is one of the youngest CEO's to ever run a publicly traded company. He leads City Capital Corp. which manages diversified investments.

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