The future is now.

The future is now.
Click on picture for link to Website.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Dept. of Defense seniors call for more $ for education for our youth!!!

The Pentagon’s ‘Mr. Y’ And National Security
Two Special Assistants to Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Mike Mullen say (unofficially) it’s time, strategically, to spend more on education and less on guns. We’ll hear them out.
A National Strategic Narrative
A National Strategic Narrative
What if the United States has started a new century stuck in the last one, pouring resources into its military and short-changing what should be the real heart of its strength – that is, strength at home?
A strong economy.  A strong society.  The point is raised and made powerfully in a new essay from – of all places – the heart of the Pentagon.
Two top U.S. military strategic thinkers under the pen name “Mr. Y” are pushing hard for a new American vision.  Less bristling with guns.  More spending on education.  For real prosperity and security.
This hour: a Pentagon call for change at home.

Full article and podcast at: http://onpoint.wbur.org/2011/04/26/pentagon-security
- Tom Ashbrook


Grand opening of Southside Library!

  The most beautiful library in S.A.!  Grand opening this Saturday @ 9:30 for Mission Library located on Roosevelt Ave.  -next to Mission San Jose.
  Don't miss the party!

Sunday, April 17, 2011

YA author speaks on filtering

Student Empowering Assessment with Clear Learning Goals

Taken from: Alvin's Edu. Tech. Blog
http://www.trustyetc.com/trustyblog/category/edtech/

Saturday, March 12th, 2011
[a guest post by Anjie Trusty, MEd, Education Program Coordinator, The Ohio State University at Lima]
In Northwest Ohio students have just finished their first full week of school without a cancellation or delay in weeks. This winter has been especially challenging for educators with snow, ice and flood waters impacting the amount of time students have been in school. This time of year, hours in school are crucial and the urgency of covering content increases in classrooms as the date of the state achievement tests looms. Teachers typically revert to traditional teaching methods to “cover” the required content before the tests, postponing hands-on, project or inquiry based activities until May, after the tests.
Should all of April be spent this way in our student’s classrooms, focusing so much attention and effort on a once-a-year summative assessment that does not directly inform teachers about the individual day-to-day learning progress of their students? I suggest that more time and effort spent on formative assessments, or assessments for learning would benefit students by increasing their learning. Results on once-a year summative assessments will, in turn, reflect this learning.
Effective assessment must be accurate and it must be used to benefit students, not merely to grade and sort them. Formative assessment or assessment for learning happens while learning is underway. The focus is not on “grades,” but improving learning. Components of effective formative assessment include having clear learning targets, communicating those with students, and then using appropriate assessment types for the kind of activity in the lesson. Clear, descriptive, criterion-based feedback is also an important part of formative assessment. If we want to use assessment as a tool for learning, students must understand learning targets, know where they are in relation to the target, and have a plan for closing the gap. Information from formative assessments allows students to monitor the quality of their work as they are doing it, helping them take control and responsibility for their own learning without worrying about a “grade.” Isn’t this the ultimate goal for our students?
Learning targets are commonly known as content standards, benchmarks, grade level indicators, lesson objectives, or learning outcomes. Whatever the label, they must be clear statements of intended learning that students understand. More often than not when I ask my 5th grader what she learned in school today, she describes an assignment or activity that was done in class rather than explain the concept that she learned. If teachers explained learning targets in language that made sense to students, and shared this explicitly with them, students would be more likely to vocalize what they actually learned instead of only what they did. They would also have a clearer understanding of their own learning goals.
The following standards are the new Ohio Common Core standards for Language Arts; Reading for Literature and Reading for Informational Text for 1st grade translated into “kid-friendly” language. These are the standards our students will be expected to master. It makes sense that teachers should explicitly share these goals with students in age-appropriate language that they will understand. In order to “translate” standards, words or phrases in standards are defined, and then restated in age-appropriate language. In this example, standards are translated into words familiar to 1st graders, stated in goal oriented statements.
Reading for Literature: Key Ideas and Details
1. Ask and answer questions about key details in a text.
Define:
key details in a text- chief; major; important; essential; fundamental; pivotal
Student friendly learning goal:
I can ask and answer questions about the main ideas in a story.
2. Retell stories, including key details, and demonstrate understanding of their central
message or lesson
Define:
retell- to relate (a story, etc) again or differently
demonstrate understanding- to describe, explain, or illustrate by examples
central message- main, principal, or chief; most important
Student friendly learning goal:
I can tell a story I have read and explain the most important parts of it.
The remainder of the Ohio Common Core standards for language arts Reading for Literature and
Reading for Informational Text translated into student friendly language can be found here:

Thinking outside the box or stair

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Ideas for the library

I just want to post some ideas I have gathered and think are great -let me know what you think please.


   1. We can have gaming in the library and thereby introduce games that require more critical thought.


   2. We can offer bookmarks of trusted websites via Diigo, etc. as students prefer convenience for research.

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Teaching students Copyright w/CC and Ethical Behavior with Information:

Severson's 4 ethical principles and 4 steps to help students follow these principles:
https://s9443-unx1-shsu-edu.ezproxy.shsu.edu/login?url=http://vnweb.hwwilsonweb.com.ezproxy.shsu.edu/hww/jumpstart.jhtml?recid=0bc05f7a67b1790ed628e1641cdd3f96d9a7a65273e14ff49d7abc7e7f54410d1e79ba6077c64417&fmt=H
Dow, M. Teaching Ethical Behavior in the Global World of Information and the New AASL Standards. School Library Media Activities Monthly v. 25 no. 4 (December 2008) p. 49-52

Creative Commons video on copyright with the the band -White Stripes and why CC was created:
http://creativecommons.org/videos/get-creative

other CC educational videos:
http://creativecommons.org/videos/

Every wonder if there were guidelines for having dialogue on hot button issues? -Here are a few great principles.

Click below to read 'Change from the Radical Center of Education':
https://s9443-unx1-shsu-edu.ezproxy.shsu.edu/login?url=http://vnweb.hwwilsonweb.com.ezproxy.shsu.edu/hww/jumpstart.jhtml?recid=0bc05f7a67b1790ed628e1641cdd3f96d9a7a65273e14ff45dd96ace116e28a8f6c66f8f467aeeb0&fmt=H
Johnson, D. Change from the Radical Center of Education. Teacher Librarian v. 35 no. 5 (June 2008) p. 14-19

Friday, April 8, 2011

The Gypsy Librarian: Haves and Have-Nots

The Gypsy Librarian: Haves and Have-Nots: "I haven't posted this past week because I was busy running my school's book fair. With the elevator out of order and the library on th..."

Hear Teens bring the words that move S.A.!

Fresh Ink -Out Loud
Poetry Slam   - first ever @:
John Jay High School
Thursday April 14th
7-9
in the auditorium
Only $2 -Helps support the S.A. slam team to compete in Brave New Voices on HBO.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Are you liberated?

Our choice today - Oppression or liberation?

   Is individual freedom or liberation tied or interdependent with community or to the liberation of others?  I know that when one becomes liberated then one can guide others to liberation. Or to say it another way, how can you help guide others to their higher-selves if you yourself are lost or fearful or anxious?  So is it the other way round as well – is the liberation of others inextricably linked to your liberation?  It appears that this is the case as where else are you to live except on this beautiful planet with others?  Let’s keep our home livable and help guide our world family to freedom and true happiness.
                       How are we oppressed?
                       Here are a few ways:
1.        Lack of funding for education- A good example of this is Texas public schools.  Many class sizes are too large already – over 27 students per class. And the newly re-elected Governor of Texas –Rick Perry, wants to cut funding to public education by $8 billion and not use the rainy day fund to help alleviate some of the pain so that he can keep the appearance that he did not assist in mismanaging the state gov. the past few years he served as governor. - (Some say he wants to run for President.) 
                  Many of schools in Texas and perhaps the country are still based on the 1950’s and 60’s model of education –we can see evidence of this in the fill in the blanks State testing.  The 1950’s model which was partly based in fear of the Soviet Union’s advancements in science began to replace progressive education with more authoritative and controlling and that was much less student centered and more teacher centered.  Progressive education as modeled in the Hull House in Chicago near the turn of the century was less interested in rote learning and believed in engaging children via following the student’s interests.
                      Progressive philosophy was based on an optimistic view of human nature. Progressive schools avoided the regimentation that characterized most schools of the era. The children who attended progressive schools learned in informal settings. These schools enlisted the spontaneous interests of the pupils and adapted the curriculum to the interests and needs of each child. The authoritarian approach was replaced by a more democratic mode and the ultimate goal, in Dewey's terms, was for the classroom to be an “embryonic community” that would provide a model for a more democratic larger society. “   (-excerpt from the Encyclopedia of Chicago -http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/1012.html)


2.        The largest cultural influence in America is hip-hop culture and none of the top executives at the 4 mega-record companies are a person of color.  Even though hip-hop was founded on the principles of the poor and everyday people challenging the status quo and Black improvement.  So these white rich execs. via owning and controlling the record companies, distribution, radio and media, advertising, etc., control much of what is said.  -If not what is said they suppress what they want us to hear via control of distribution.  So how can a rich white exec. who is focused on profit as the bottom line and not improvement of people – listen to the lyrics of the hip-hop music that makes the airwaves! – You know! - tell us about the struggle of the poor and people of color or just everyday people period?
“The most potent weapon in the hands of the oppressor is the mind of the oppressed.”     -Steve Biko
More of this list to come. . .





Friday, April 1, 2011

San Antonio Current - ARTS: April is National Poetry Month; Slam the Town in San Antonio

San Antonio Current - ARTS: April is National Poetry Month; Slam the Town in San Antonio

Lesson on: Is protecting free speech that is offensive right?

Lesson plan at: http://www.pbs.org/newshour/extra/teachers/lessonplans/us/july-dec10/freespeech_11-05.html?contactID=174428995&gwkey=F5EOTUH9YH

Is hip hop music sampling stealing? -Video

Several videos about copyright and history of music sampling.
http://www.pbs.org/teachers/connect/resources/7710/preview/?contactID=174428995&gwkey=KNWXT9JN45

Science breakthrough: Getting skin to heal and grow in 4 days. Get students thinking!

Less money for both schools and students = lower student performance

Check out this short article in the Wall Street Journal:
Academic Success Versus High Poverty
  on the disparity between well-off and poorer schools and students.
Poverty is a huge factor in student performance.  I imagine many factors of oppression and status quo of both the 1950 and 60s model of education hand in hand with the poverty of schools.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704893604576200701272119020.html?mod=WSJ_Opinion_MIDDLEThirdBucket