Sunday, December 9, 2012

I really will get around to posting some info about our last meeting and our next meeting, but I wanted to quickly share with you one of my favorite "Top Ten Book Lists".  It's from (big surprise) Oliver DeMille!  Here's the link:  http://www.tjed.org/2012/07/july-2012-inspire/#wife .  My purse is much heavier after reading this article.

Friday, December 7, 2012

Anyone Want to go to Lunch on December 13th?






Be our guest for lunch on December 13th at the Grand America Hotel in all of its "Holiday Splendor" and deck the halls with other education reform enthusiasts who support student-centric solutions! Register TODAY.


PCE_logo_NEW_FINAL400

3rd annual education symposium 

onesizefitsall

you are invited
Grand America Hotel
december 13, 2012
11:45am - 1:15pm 
 
 
register  here
www.pce.eventbrite.com 
 

attendance is free
lunch is provided
limited seating
 
invitees: Utah Legislature and education stakeholders, including the public
 
 
featured speakers
  these super student advocates constitute a 
dynamic duo of education policy wit and wisdom 
 
Dr. Jay P. Greene
Dr. Matthew Ladner

 
master of ceremonies
Rod Arquette
knrs talk radio host

PCE's 2012 "Advocates for Innovation in Education" will be recognized.
 


Jay_P_Greene

Jay P. Greene has been the Department Head and 21st Century Chair in Education Reform at the University of Arkansas since 2005. He currently serves as a Fellow in Education Policy at The George W. Bush Institute. Greene is one of the nation's most highly regarded empirical analysts of education issues and is skilled in the construction of data-based indicators that enable policy makers and interested laypersons to more quickly and deeply grasp complex trends and trouble spots in America's education landscape. He conducts research and writes about education policy, including topics such as school choice, high school graduation rates, accountability, and special education. 

Greene has been a professor of government at the University of Texas at Austin and the University of Houston. He received his Bachelor of Arts in history from Tufts University in 1988 and his Ph.D. from the Government Department at Harvard University in 1995.

Greene is the author of "Why America Needs School Choice" and co-author of "Education Myths". His research was cited four times in the Supreme Court's opinions in the landmark Zelman v. Simmons-Harris case on school vouchers. His articles have appeared in policy journals, such as The Public Interest, City Journal, and Education Next, in academic journals, such as Education Finance and Policy, Economics of Education Review, and the British Journal of Political Science, as well as in major newspapers, such as the Wall Street Journal and the Washington Post. Greene is author of the award winning blog jaypgreene.com  
 

 
ladner 
Matthew Ladner is the Senior Advisor of Policy and Research for the Foundation for Excellence in Education and a Senior Fellow at the Goldwater Institute. He previously served as Vice President of Research at Goldwater Institute. Prior to joining Goldwater, Ladner was director of state projects at the Alliance for School Choice. He is a graduate of the University of Texas at Austin and received both a Masters and a Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Houston.

Ladner has written numerous studies on school choice, charter schools and special education reform. He has testified before Congress, the United States Commission of Civil Rights and numerous state legislative committees. Ladner is a regular guest blogger on jaypgreene.com.




Tuesday, November 20, 2012

What is the New Mathematics Common Core?

Over the last couple of years I've heard rumblings and grumblings about the new common core.  Although I taught math for several years in a public junior high, I've been out of the scene for five years now and before formulating my own opinions, I am in need of some research.  For those who want to read the 90+ page document, here is the link:

http://www.corestandards.org/assets/CCSSI_Math%20Standards.pdf


Wednesday, November 14, 2012

I just added my first gadget to a blog!  This is big.  This is really, really big.  And I thought gadgets were just things you kept in the junk drawer. 

Our first book is A Thomas Jefferson Education: Teaching A Generation Of Leaders For The Twenty-First Century by Oliver DeMille. This book can be purchased at www.tjed.org or on Amazon. It can also be checked out at the library, but the waiting list for it is generally several weeks long. I would like to follow it up with Leadership Education: The Phases of Learning, also by Oliver DeMille, as the two books really should be one. The first is a very short introduction and the second helps flesh it out. I am afraid that a reading of the first only will rob us of the real meat I outlined in the first email I sent out to you. Helen Sullivan has made a suggestion for the second author for us to explore, John Holt. I know that these books will lead us into an infinite number of books, articles, and other resources to explore.
The reading in the TJED book to be completed for November 27th is chapters 1-6 (pages 1 through 96). They set forth some principles which will be illustrated in public school, college, career, and public service settings in later chapters. As you read, remember how writing can enhance your learning. Writing in the book itself ensures that you have a conversation with the author, and that future readers of the book will be able to have a conversation with both the author and you! Pay particular attention to the phases of learning described in chapter 3, the 7 Keys of Great Teaching in chapter 4, and the importance and roles of classics found in chapter 5.
Possible questions to consider for your writings might be:
What phases am I operating in right now? What about my children? Which phases are best nutured in my current family culture? (Think about the fact that we don't move from phase to phase, leaving one behind to enter another. Rather, we build phase upon phase, like concentric circles, and use all the phases we have experienced each day.) What phases could we revisit that might help us with current challenges we face in our family?
Which of the 7 keys seem the most natural to me, and why? Which are difficult for me to understand or accept? In what ways do I use or neglect these keys as I teach my family? If I were to choose one key to focus on for the next few months, which would it be and how would that focus look in our family's daily life?
If a classic is anything we return to again and again because every time we do we are deepened, then what are my personal classics? (A classic can be a book, song, work of art, activity, place, person, etc.) What are our family classics? Are there classics from my childhood I want to incorporate into my family culture? What would be my system for incorporating those classics (what would that incorporation look like on a daily/weekly/monthly/yearly basis?)
Who are my mentors? Who looks to me as a mentor? How many mentors can I identify for each of my children? Which of the five environments of mentoring do my children experience on a regular basis? How could I incorporate more of them into our family's culture?
What inspirations did I receive while reading, or what ideas and themes were impressed upon me?
Why the heck is Jenny such a verbose and addled writer?
These questions are just helps. Write about what YOU need to write about. You will have the opportunity to share your writings through the blog and through the discussion, but that will not be expected or required. The important thing is to invest yourself in your learning by recording, pondering, and expressing your thoughts, impressions, and plans as you read. This is easier to do if you have access to chocolate or a bubble bath. Or both.
I would also like to introduce one more element into our discussions each month. We all have resources (our classics) we couldn't do without as we teach our families and as we learn ourselves. Let's share them with each other!! In order to do this in an organized, thoughtful way, I'd like to suggest we "show-and-tell" topically. To get us started, let's begin with something fun, simple, and (if you are Helen) straightforward: MATH. If you have something you use to teach or learn math, would you bring it to share on Nov. 27th? We will have a table there to display our math treasures, and everyone will have one minute to introduce their classic. It can be a toy, game, book, program, movie, website, tool, outing, article, person, whatever deepens you as you learn/teach math. If you don't have something that comes to mind, don't worry! You don't need to share something every time. This is just to be able to sample the great things that are out there without doing a ton of research or spending a bunch of money. We can decide the show and tell topic for the next month at each meeting (from discipline to books to art to life skills to writing to service to faith to fill-in-the-blank!) , and hopefully get a chance to incorporate Lori Koerner's great idea and address individual concerns along the way. We can also summarize our topical classics each month on the blog and add to them as we find more.
Finally, Amy Rich proposed giving our group a name. If you have an idea, email it to me or post it here.  We can vote on our favorites.  Some of Amy's suggestions and one from Helen are posted below.
For my part, I'm going to take a class on communicating more ideas with fewer words. That way, my posts won't become our readings themselves.
See you after Thanksgiving!!!
Admiring You All,
Jenny

Thursday, November 8, 2012

We all learn something new every day.  Today I post on a blog for the first time.  My tech-impairment is overcome by my esteem for all of you!

Naming Ourselves

Helen didn't mention her name idea, proffered in an email to me, which I'll share here: PEEK=Peaceful Explorers of Education and Knowledge

My suggestion is Investigating World Class Education Principles.  Does IWCEP mean something in another language?  Our quest is ambitious enough that we might as well invent another language while we are at it.

Thursday, November 1, 2012

What Shall We Call Ourselves?


Amy's copious and energizing suggestions are:

SEEK = Searching for Educational Excellence and Knowledge

FREE = Friends Researching Educational Excellence

LOOKERS = Learning Of Other Kinds of Educational Resources Society

RISE = Read, Investigate, and Study Education

AWAKE = Adults Working and Advocating for Kids Education

FLAME = Fundamentals of Learning And Mastering Education

LEAP = Learning of Educational and Academic Principles

SEARCH = Seeking Educational Answers Regarding Children

OPEN = Our Principles in Education Network

PEERS = Principles of Educational Excellence and Research Society

FOR ALL = Fostering Our Return to A Love of Learning

SNUPE = Society of Neighbors for Understanding Principles in Education, OR Study Network for Universal Principles in Education

FIRE = Friends Interested in Real Education

SPARK = Studying Principles to Acquire Real Knowledge

So what do YOU think?  Anyone want to add to the list?