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LR/RI produces a bulletin roughly every two weeks in order to inform area practitioners of news, events, and calls for participation and also as a forum for posing questions, issues and discussion topics. The current bulletin is posted below. To read previous bulletins, go to Bulletin Archives.



October 15, 2004

Bulletin #188
 

Dear Colleagues, 

Calls for participation, employment, funding, and conference and workshop opportunities, online and other resources.  To post information,  and/or to receive the bulletin via email, please contact LR/RI or leave a message at (401-863-2839). 

Janet Isserlis 
____________________________________________________________

NOTICES



ELCIVICS and ESOL combined share ? October 21st at 2:30 pm at the Genesis Center. Share and discuss ideas for projects, an update from RI VERA, and student debates on civics-related topics.


Reading workshop: November 18, Genesis Center, 3 - 5 pm:
Nancy Fritz will give a summary of findings from her research project on teaching reading in the ESOL classroom. She will outline some specific recommendations for teaching reading that are supported by specific research.  To preview these findings, please go to 
http://www.brown.edu/lrri/fritz.doc
Sandy Jacobi will give an overview of what she does when she teaches phonics in her ESOL classroom. She will describe the six syllable types that are important to know when teaching reading, and will also give an overview of the Phonics Workshop series that she is will offer again from January to March.  That workshop series will be given on Thursday afternoons from 3 to 4:30 pm beginning January 6th. (Specific dates are Jan. 6 and 20, February 3 and 17, and March 3 and 17). The series will be held at The Genesis Center. Participants must be practitioners in Rhode Island and will be paid a stipend of $30 per session attended. Information on registering for the workshop series will be available in December.


Maintain support for the National Institute for Literacy,  the only federal agency dedicated to adult literacy and language learning.  If you've used the LINCS website, participated in any of its lists, etc., please make your voice heard:  To learn more about the critical effort to preserve NIFL, go to http://savenifl.org/


Call for participation: Adults with Learning Disabilities Speakers Bureau
Application Form: (Please limit the answers to no more then 1.5 (one and a half) pages.) You may include a full Vita or Resume as an attachment.)
Name: (Photo Optional) 
Contact Information: (Address, phone E-mail website, etc.)
Preferred Airport(s): 
Special Needs (Accommodations, allergies, foods, etc.):
Background: Education and/or Professional Degrees; LD Training (College, Bridges to Practice, Orton Certification, etc.); 
LD Work Experience (Job title, responsibilities, dates); Examples of past presentations/efforts on LD (Keynotes, contracts with States, etc.)
Service offered.:   Areas of Expertise: (Short titles based on issues such as Transition, TANF, Workplace, LD basics, etc.  Limit to no more than 8 areas.)
Types of Training Offered: (workshops, keynotes, all day seminars, etc.) 
Target Audiences for Presentation/ Training: (Mangers, Frontline, Teachers, Consumers, etc.); 
Fees: (Be specific on what fees for what type of event.)
Do you accept Government Rates for per diem and driving? If driving to present, what is the mile limit you will drive? 
If interested in applying, please complete the form and return to  Glenn Young, 505 East Braddock Rd # 608, Alexandria VA 22314 703-684-1750 email: gyoungxlt@comcast.net


The Providence Public Library in collaboration with Quisqueya in Action, Inc. and Instituto Duartiano/ Biblioteca República Dominicana present The Dominican Family Journey

Children, pre-teens and teens and their parents are invited to this program which includes book and film discussions, games, and digital art projects to document and celebrate Dominican culture. This program is open to all, Adults and children over 3 years old
Guest speakers, gifts and dinner provided every night.
Knight Memorial Branch, 275 Elmwood Avenue,
Wednesdays, from Oct. 6th - Nov. 3rd  5:30 pm  - 7:30 pm. For more information and to register for this free program,  please call  Evelyn Castillo at (401) 455-8041
This program is made possible by a grant from Libraries for the Future and the Metlife Foundation



ESOL share - September 30th at 2:00 pm at the Genesis Center.  What have you been doing,, thinking about, planning for the coming year?  Join us to catch up, think ahead and begin to plan for future sessions. OCTOBER share: 10/21, 2:30 at Genesis.
Since 1997, Literacy Resources/RI, with support from the RI Department of Education, has worked with adult educators to develop a range of professional development activities and initiatives, including practitioner-based research projects, mini-grants, workshops, sharing/ discussion groups, and (since 2003) an annual conference. Many of us in the adult education community have participated in the past year's discussions and in working groups geared towards strengthening a system for adult education. 

As it is highly likely that significant changes will occur with the coming fiscal year, it seems particularly important to consider how to utilize relatively limited professional development funding for this current year ? as we look back at what's been useful and ahead to what we hope to build and maintain for ongoing professional development work.  It's critical that we continue to be participants in the ongoing process of strengthening the adult education system across the state - including deciding where/how to focus our energies in the coming year - as well as in working
out processes for broadening professional development opportunities in years to come.
To that end, an informal meeting was held  on Friday, October 1st to gather input and ideas around a focus or points of focus for this year.
Should we offer support for inquiry projects?  Develop study circles?  Bring in outside people/workshops?  Some of each?  Consider other options?  We already know that funding has been secured for the 2005 annual conference (to be held on May 12th).  While the conference
provides wonderful opportunities for networking and new learning, what other efforts do we want to undertake to support our own ongoing learning and professional development? 
A report  on that meeting will appear in the next bulletin.



Many of you have followed the progress of the  Governor's Adult Literacy Task Force and/or have participated in the process over the last six months. Through your hard work, the Governor has accepted Task Force's recommendations to expand and enhance the adult basic education system in RI. There is much work to do to refine and implement those recommendations; the field's input is critical. It's time to sign on to a work group and help shape the future of the adult education system in our state.  3 work groups are continuing the work around: learner assessment and learning standards, program quality and performance standards, and state-wide professional development 

Please contact Judy Titzel if you are interested in participating in a work group, or if you have further questions. Email Judy at Judy@ripolicy.org or call 521-3120 ext 125. Meetings will start over the next several weeks. If you would like more information, check out the project's web site at: www.ripolciy.org/literacy/ for notes and reports documenting work to date. 
Part-time adult educators will be paid a small stipend for their participation in the work groups.



The Change Agent, a newspaper for adult educators about teaching for social justice, is calling for articles for its next issue on the theme of "transitions."  Adult Learners and Educators: In this issue we want to hear and learn from people who have made successful transitions, and
overcome obstacles. We also want to hear and learn from teachers and counselors and other program staff who assist students in this process. We are looking for student writings, lessons, activities and reflections addressing the theme of educational and life transitions such as from GED to post-secondary education or training, from incarceration to community, from public assistance to economic independence, from country of origin to the USA, and from one stage of life to another.
Questions for students and teachers to think about: If you yourself decided to make a transition, what motivated you to do it?  What was your life like before, during and after the transition? What have you learned through this experience? What issues have come up for you during the transition? How were they resolved?  What social programs and supports helped you or hindered you during the transition? What teaching or counseling strategies and resources have been helpful?  What could an adult education program do to best facilitate students' transitions and help them take the next step? What advice would you give to adult learners who want to make life changes?
All articles must be received by November 12, 2004. All articles will be considered. Suggested length is 500-1,200 words. Final decisions are made by The Change Agent editorial board. A stipend of $50 will be paid to each student whose work is accepted for publication in this issue. Please send material (by email or PC disk) to:  Angela Orlando, Editor New England Literacy Resource Center/World Education, 44 Farnsworth St., Boston, MA 02210 Phone: 617-482-9485 fax: 617-482-0617 email: angela_orlando@worlded.org


Disability Mentoring Day comes RI for the first time on October 20th. 
We need your support for part of the day to be a host organization and/or mentor for mostly high school juniors and seniors. Their aspirations may be just what you are looking for in a future employee. Share the positives and minuses of working in your field and your company too. They can then tailor their course of study to ramp up to job success for them and maybe even at your organization as an intern or full employee later. RI Disability Mentoring Day is that first step and your joint success. Whether you are a profit or non profit worker, company manager, police officer or teacher, they need your help...and you need great workers. Disability Mentoring Day 
enables students and job-seekers to spend part of a day visiting a business, organization or government agency that matches their interests and have one-on-one time with volunteer mentors. It's an opportunity to underscore connections between school and work, evaluate personal goals, target career skills for improvement, explore possible career paths, and develop lasting mentor 
relationships. The history of the program shows that students and job seekers participation in Disability Mentoring Day can result in an internship opportunity with the host employer, function as a firsiinterview on the way to a part-time or full-time employment offer, or 
even an on-the-spot firm job offer. 
Disability Mentoring Day provides public and private employers with an opportunity to recruit interns, tap a pool of potential future employees, learn more about the experience of disability, develop lasting relationships with disability community leaders, demonstrate positive leadership in their communities and attract positive media attention. Additionally, employers can get involved by enabling employees to serve as volunteer mentors, functioning as a Local Coordinator for their local community, and supportive sponsoring the RI Disability Mentoring Day at the state level.  .Arthur M. Plitt, President of Checklist International, is the RI Coordinator for this event and can be reached by email at kingarthurarthur@yahoo.com or ridisabilitymentoringday@yahoo.com


RI VERA TASK FORCE UPDATE SEPTEMBER 2004 - Your Vote is Your Voice!

Help adult learners be a part of Decision 2004: VERA (Voter Education Registration and Action.) is a non-partisan effort among the 6 New England States and Adult Literacy providers to encourage Adults to vote and it is heating up! rams include ABE, ESOL, GED and others covering the state from Woonsocket to Newport.  We welcome more agencies to join this very important regional effort.  Voting is one of our most basic civil rights and responsibilities. Yet, barely one half (51.3%) of voting age adults voted in the 2000 United States presidential elections (Federal Election Commission, 2003). The United States voting rates are among the lowest of any democracy in the world. We should not allow another presidential election to go by with only one half of the voting age population bothering to go to the polls. We will support you with: Five copies of the March 2004 issue of The Change Agent focused entirely on voting in the 2004 elections for each class signed on to the campaign ; Workshops for teachers who want to maximize use of The Change Agent resource (someone can come out to visit your site) ; Support from state task forces in New England set up to help coordinate campaigns and connect participants with partner organizations ; Packets of teacher tools and State Voting Information will be handed out  and they include web links to useful resources and organizations . We will remind your student to vote with a brief and friendly phone call in English or Spanish. Also we will be
able to tell adults where their polling place is located. Participant buttons will be distributed in October. 
The commitment for RI Adult and FamilyEducators/Agency Directors is:  teach about representative democracy, voting, and topical election issues ; encourage and help eligible students and staff register to vote by October 3rd, get to the polls and vote; encourage non-eligible students to talk to family members and friends who can vote ; track how many students voted and how many voted for the first time (Which will be useful to track for the NRS reporting system), and submit a brief report to NELRC due Nov 30, 2004.
Please go to the VERA website address and register your program. www.nelrc.org/VERA Or if you are registered, call to get assistance. Pat Bellart 401.762.3841  pat@conversent.net , Kristen McKenna  401.455.8066  kmckenna@provlib.org


The Better Questions, Better Decisions Voter Education Initiative offers a non-partisan, skill-building educational strategy engaging more low-income citizens as voters that can complement existing approaches. Many voter participation efforts focus on the important logistical work of getting information out to a target audience, getting people registered and getting them to the voting booth. This initiative starts at an earlier point by investing in people's ability to make their own connection to the value of voting. Through a series of simple exercises that build sophisticated critical thinking skills, low-income citizens discover new links between their lives and the value of voting. http://www.rightquestion.org/betterdecisions/index.html.  Also see, for more on voiting: http://www.pbs.org/pov/pov2004/election/index.html


We are happy to announce that ALM is starting a refereed online journal, ISSN 1744 - 1803. The ALM Journal will be published twice a year. The first volume is planned to be published by the end of this year.

"Adults Learning Mathematics - An International Journal"  is an international refereed journal that provides a forum for the online publication of high quality research on the teaching and learning, knowledge and uses of numeracy/mathematics to adults at all levels in a variety of educational sectors. Submitted papers should normally be of interest to an international readership. We invite contributions in the following areas:
Research and theoretical perspectives in the area of adults learning mathematics/numeracy. Debate on special issues in the area of adults learning mathematics/numeracy; Practice: critical analysis of course materials and tasks, policy developments in curriculum and assessment, or data from large-scale tests, nationally and internationally. Both full-length articles and shorter reports may be submitted. No preference is given to any particular research methodology. For more information, please visit www.alm-online.org Contributions can be send to alm-journal@alm-online.org On behalf of the editorial team Mieke van Groenestijn



Special-Topic Issue, Autumn 2006 Race and TESOL. Edited by Ryuko Kubota and Angel Lin
TESOL Quarterly invites TESOL professionals worldwide to submit abstracts for the 2006 special-topic issue focusing on how issues of race affect English language learning and teaching. 

Abstracts should describe previously unpublished work that bridges theory, research, and practice and uses language that is accessible to TESOL Quarterly's broad readership. In addition to abstracts for full-length articles, authors are invited to submit descriptions of shorter papers for Brief Reports and Summaries and the Forum, as well as reviews of cutting-edge books. Articles are sought on a broad range of topics that explicitly address race and TESOL from theoretical, empirical, and pedagogical perspectives, especially work that focuses on race's interrelationship with other categories, such as gender, class, and sexual identity. Topic areas include:
Learner/teacher identities and race: How do racialized identities get constructed in various settings (e.g., K-12, postsecondary, adult learners, ITA training, teacher education)?
Race in curriculum, instruction, materials, and technology: How do local and global education practices reproduce racial norms, racism, and other racial meanings? How do antiracist pedagogies challenge these meanings?
Language policies/ideologies and race: What significance do racism and other racial meanings have for linguistic imperialism, English only, standard English, and other hegemonic ideologies that affect English language teaching?
Whiteness, native speaker myth, and the teaching of language and culture: How can the relationship between linguistic and racial privileges be theorized? How is it reflected in practice? What does it imply for teaching and learning?
Critical (classroom) discourse analysis and race: How are racial domination, subordination, and resistance manifested in the discourses of the classroom and other teaching and learning contexts?
Please send a 600-word abstract for a full-length article, a 300-word abstract for a Brief Report or Forum article, and a 150-world abstract for a book review. For all submissions, send three copies of the abstract without author name(s). On a separate sheet, include each author's name, affiliation, mailing address, email address, telephone and fax numbers, and 50-word biographical statement. Send abstracts and inquiries to Ryuko Kubota, School of Education, CB#3500, Peabody Hall, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3500. rkubota@email.unc.edu Abstracts are due December 31, 2004.


learning opportunities


Mentor Non-traditional Adults Returning to College
Project RIRAL's Transition to College project is currently seeking volunteer mentors and/or tutors to support our non-traditional adult students in their endeavor to prepare themselves for the rigors of  college. If you are interested in becoming a Mentor and/or Tutor, please
contact Marie@transitiontocollege.org or call 722-9800.

TTC is currently accepting students for the spring 2005 session.   Registration and Placement Testing will be held on Friday, November 19 at  1:30 at 175 Main Street Pawtucket, RI (Pawtucket Visitor's Center bldg -   2nd floor).  Detailed directions and information about the
program at: htttp://www.transitiontocollege.org. Please contact Marie if  you are interested in enrolling in the spring session. Hurry, enrollment  is limited.



P E O P L E ' S   S C H O O L F A L L   W O R K S H O P S
Workshops start October 18th and end on December 9th, 2004. All workshops are free!
Register online: http://www.peopleschool.org/pagetool/index.php?name=workshops
or call us at 401.467.7336 to register over the phone. Registration is preferred, but not required.
Child care is available during workshops.

Direct Action for Rights and Equality (DARE) is offering a "Women at Work" workshop free of charge to labor and community organizations, and we're looking for groups to participate. Women at Work is a project of DARE's Jobs with Dignity Campaign, whose goal is to build women's leadership in the labor movement. In order to build connections between women workers and advance the issues that are important to women workers, this project conducts workshops which focus on efforts to preserve health care and to win community access to good, living wage jobs. If you'd like the DARE workshop team to come to a meeting, class, or other event and lead the 30-minute workshop, please contact Eric Larson at Eric_D_Larson@brown.edu.

ASTHMA WORKSHOP AND ESOL LESSON 
This workshop fuses key, simple vocabulary and grammar into a lesson-like format tailored for ESOL learners.  The workshop is one to one and a half hours long, and includes information about the main characteristics of asthma, its symptoms and triggers.  Through a participatory and interactive environment, learners not only become aware of basic information relating to asthma, but they also learn English.  This workshop can also include data on how asthma affects Latinos, and local community resources where they offer bilingual help.
The workshop is free of cost and its language is applicable to all levels.  This is a workshop that could easily be integrated into a health unit or delivered as an isolated informative session and lesson.  If you and your learners would like to schedule a workshop, please feel free to contact me via e-mail or by phone.  Thank you. - Erick Garcia, ESOL Facilitator, American Lung Association, 401.935.8736 erickdgarcia@hotmail.com


funding opportunities - large and less large


The NIFL ESL Special Collection is now accepting applications for mini-grants of $250.  Mini-grants are awarded to instructors who use the materials found on the ESL Special Collection to create lesson plans.  The purpose of the Mini-Grants is to promote innovative practices, and share those projects via the ESL Special Collection. For all of the details, visit www.literacynet.org/esl/minigrants/index.html The deadline to apply is November 5.


The UPS Foundation funds volunteer management, hunger and literacy efforts.
http://www.community.ups.com/community/philanthropy/focus/main.html.

The federal government's new one stop grant site: http://www.grants.gov/


The Poverty & Race Research Action Council (PRRAC) announces another round of education reform grants in areas of social science research.  PRACC is particularly interested in issues such as high classroom turnover/mobility and its disproportionate impact on low-income, minority, and farm worker students.  However, other issues will be considered as well.  To apply, send PRRAC a proposal outlining the planned research and methodology, the advocacy work it is designed to support, a budget, timeline, and qualifications of the researchers.  Maximum grant: $10,000.  No application deadline. http://www.prrac.org/grants.htm


Funding Solutions for Small Nonprofit Organizations
A collection of resources to help small nonprofit organizations fundraise including ways to motivate your board, sample fundraising letters, phonathon advice, and tips to improve your direct mail solicitation. http://www.nonprofit-innovations.com/


employment opportunities



Substitute list: if you would like your name added to the list, please see contact LR/RI.  The list needs to be updated so that it can function more usefully for teachers and programs hoping to work with them. (http://www.brown.edu/lrri/sub.html)

Rhode Island Community Jobs (RICOMJOB) is a public e-mail announcement list that seeks to raise the profile of meaningful work in Rhode Island by helping non-profit and public interest employers publicize openings effectively. Anyone seeking a job that makes a difference in Rhode Island can join the list.  Any non-profit, government or private sector employer advertising a paid position related to the public interest or community concerns can post a free job listing.  Positions must be paid but may be part-time, full-time or temporary.

To join the list as a job seeker or to post a job as an employer go to: http://www.ricommunityjobs.org

Rhode Island Community Jobs is supported by the Swearer Center for Public Service at Brown University and the Rhode Island Campus Compact.  If you have questions about this service, please contact us at ricomjob@brown.edu 


online / resources

Literacy President: a non-partisan, collaborative initiative among grass roots organizers, The Change Agent, Voice for Adult Literacy United for Education  and other national organizations.  We seek to increase national awareness of adult literacy regardless of which
candidate is elected. http://www.litpresident.org/

The LD OnLine Report offers news about learning disabilities and about the latest events on our Web site.  To  receive LDOnline's monthly newsletter, and/or check out their site: http://www.ldonline.org/

 from Public Education Network: CHILDREN OF IMMIGRANT FAMILIES focuses on the growing number of immigrant families in US, and the challenges faced by their children as the next generation of Americans. For the most part, children of immigrants benefit from having
healthy, intact families, strong work ethic and aspirations, and a cohesive community of fellow immigrants to ease their transition. But they also often face obstacles, including poverty, discrimination, limited language skills, and lack of access to quality health care and education
resources. Even though most children of immigrants are born in the US, and therefore are entitled to services and benefits the same as every other US citizen, they often are not able to take advantage of these supports. As a result, though children of immigrants may start out
with good health and high educational aspirations, these strengths can dissipate by adolescence. At each stage of their development, further efforts are needed to ensure that children in immigrant families have access to the resources they need to help them stay on positive pathways to success. http://www.futureofchildren.org/pubs-info2825/pubs-info.htm?doc_id=240166


Resource: from author  George Demetrion: Conflicting Paradigns in Adult Literacy Education will soon be released by Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.  The following link provides a good short overview and the list of chapters: 
https://www.erlbaum.com/shop/tek9.asp?pg=products&specific=0-8058-4624-7  The book, an examination of the intersection of pedagogy, policy, and politics at the national level, is
the result of about 6 years of reflection, reading and writing on the field.  In short, I put a lot of time in this book, which is a good distillation and synthesis of my NLA posts and articles. I believe it will be of interest to a wide array of readers, which at the least provides a decent history
and a raising of critical issues that merit further consideration.



Getting the word out: We're pleased to invite your organization to  apply now for a Google Grant, which provides a minimum of three months of  free Google AdWords (https://adwords.google.com) advertising for nonprofit  organizations with 501(c)(3) status. The Google Grants program is  designed to help nonprofit organizations like yours further their goals and  objectives through targeted, online advertising on Google.com. Past  Google Grant recipients have used their grants to publicize services and  awareness, recruit staff and volunteers,
promote special events, sell  merchandise related to their organization or cause, and much  more.
There is no deadline to apply, but if you are selected for a Google Grant award, we will ask you to create your account by a specific  date. So  you should apply when your organization is able to take full  advantage of the AdWords program. To learn more about the Google Grants
program and apply, please visit our program page,  http://www.google.com/grants/


http://writenet.ca/ - a new website devoted to writing.
 The goal of Writenet.ca is to promote the use and value of writing in literacy and social/special programming.  Based on years of experience working with new and/or reluctant adult writers, we believe that writing is a fun and effective way to increase literacy skills, feel part of the  community and make healthy changes in our lives.  A dedicated group of Writing Out Loud Literacy Instructors from across Canada has worked together to develop and build Writenet.ca as a place to find a wealth of information and support to help bring writing to your learning settings in new and engaging ways. What makes Writenet.ca different than other websites about writing?  Well, in short, it's the growing community of like-minded people who recognize that writing is more than just spelling and grammar.  You'll quickly feel apart of this community when you join in the dynamic and educational discussions on the Writenet.ca Bulletin Boards.   Writenet.ca as is stands now, is a starting point.  This space is designed to change and grow according to the needs and interests of the membership.  We look forward to sharing information and learning together as we go along.  Please visit the site to read about us, register for discussions and join us in this
exciting learning adventure. Deborah  Morgan,  Writenet.ca Project 4802  50 Avenue Camrose, Alberta T4V 0R9 (780) 672-6289


Living in Poverty slideshow does the math: what does it take to live at the poverty level.
http://www.nccbuscc.org/cchd/povertyusa/tour2.htm


RI Foundation online scholarship directory - searchable by city/town, intended field of study, current high school, and more. http://scholarship.rifoundation.org/



Securing the Right to Learn
An internationally-produced guide to advocacy- adult educators from 10 countries met to produce an advocacy guide for use by adult educators in increasing demand for adult learning at local, national and global levels and in a variety of geographical and societal contexts. http://www.niace.org.uk/projects/RightToLearn/



YouthBuild USA Learning Network has links to Web sites and full-text documents, and  includes a section on "Authentic Materials/Engaged Learning/Constructivism/Contextual Learning/Project-based Learning." http://www.youthbuild.org/learningnetwork/professionaldev.html



Providence Community Resource Network (PCRN) http://www.provplan.org/pcrn
Spanish language version of PCRN is up and running.  You can access the site from the PCRN home page, http://www.provplan.org/pcrn, or go straight to http://www.provplan.org/pcrnespa. The Web pages, online instructions, and the content of the database have all been translated.


Civics 101 -  website of the RI Secretary of State, at http://www.rules.state.ri.us/civics_101/; a high school curriculum that may be adaptable for adult learners and/or useful for initiating critical
reflection about citizenship and communities.



conferences and workshops - conferences and workshops are listed chronologically and are updated with each bulletin


Rhode Island - Training/events around employment issues for people with disabilities http://www.ric.edu/uap/training.html


CALL FOR PRESENTERS 2nd Annual (Net)Working Conference on Women & Literacy
WE LEARN (Women Expanding—Literacy Education Action Resource Network) is pleased to announce the Second Annual (Net)Working Conference on  Women & Literacy on March 11-12, 2004 in Providence, RI.
The theme for this conference is: Women’s Literacy….. Strengthening the Web
Proposals for presentations are invited from learners, teachers,  tutors, administrators, professional developers, researchers,  activists, and policymakers in adult basic education (ABE), GED, ESOL,  Family literacy, Health literacy, Citizenship, Prison literacy,  Workplace literacy and other alternative educational programs that serve women. The conference seeks Papers, Workshops, Poster Sessions, Panels,  Roundtables, Demonstrations, Art, and Readings about Promising  Practices and Issues like:
- Effects of Welfare reform, Immigration reform, War on Terrorism on  women’s literacy
- Economic literacy and/or women’s leadership development -- Violence and women’s learning
- Spirituality and women’s literacy --Health and Parenting issues 
- Civic engagement and social action
- Popular education and participatory learning approaches
- Effects of social oppression on women (race, ethnicity, gender,  social class, sexuality, age, ability)
- Math, Science, and/or Technology and women’s literacy 
- Writing and the Arts in women’s basic education
- Literacy and Literacies in the world
Guidelines for Submission:
1. If  selected, the presenter(s) agree to register for the conference  and provide handouts to participants.
2. Send a copy of the following by November 30, 2004:
Proposal Form, Abstract of Presentation (maximum of 100 words) that describes goals and/or learning objectives, content, and how audience will participate. 
EMAIL or MAIL proposals to: Mev Miller, Ed.D., WE LEARN, 182 Riverside Ave, Cranston, RI  02910. EMAIL: welearn@litwomen.org DEADLINE: NOVEMBER 30, 2004
To download the form, please go to:  http://www.litwomen.org/conferences/2005callpresent.pdf
Conference registration information will be available later in November.- WE LEARN Women Expanding: Literacy Education Action Resource Network http://www.litwomen.org/welearn.html


Literacy Changes Lives -  The 14th Annual  National Conference on Family Literacy, sponsored by the National  Center for Family Literacy (NCFL), to be held in Louisville,  Kentucky; April 25-27, 2005. http://www.famlit.org


The annual conference of the American Association for Adult and Continuing Education (AAACE) will be held in Louisville, Kentucky, from November 2 through 6.  http://aaace.org


Making Knowledge: Democracy, Cultural Partnerships, and the University 
University of Pennsylvania, November 5 - 7 

What happens when democracy, imagination, and scholarship converge? Drawing on the groundbreaking work of the University of Pennsylvania's Center for Community Partnerships, this year's conference will explore the collaborative production of new knowledge for the public good. Citizen scholars, working in and with universities, push the limits of community-based work in the arts and humanities. Based at the University of Michigan, Imagining America: Artists and Scholars in Public Life is a national consortium of colleges and universities committed to fostering campus-community partnerships in the arts and humanities. The conference program will showcase new research produced through cultural partnerships. Sessions will focus on innovative projects at the Center for Community Partnerships and major Imagining America initiatives, including the Tenure Transformation Team, research on excellent campus-community collaborations, and Sekou Sundiata's "dramatorio" in progress, The America Project. For more information, please contact Kristin Hass at kah@umich.edu,call (734) 615-8370, or see? http://www.ia.umich.edu.



December 9-11   A MEETING OF THE MINDS SYMPOSIUM
The National Center for the Study of Adult Learning and Literacy (NCSALL), the California Department of Education (CDE) Adult Education Office, and the California Adult Literacy Professional Development Project (CALPRO) of the American Institutes for Research are pleased to announce A Meeting of the Minds: A National Adult Education Practitioner-Researcher Symposium.
Scheduled for December 9-11, 2004, in Sacramento, California, the symposium is designed to provide opportunities for adult education practitioners and researchers to share and discuss the most current research findings and practitioner wisdom. It will engage practitioners and researchers with questions related to goals, accountability, and efficacy and efficiency in policy, practice, and research. The ultimate goals of the symposium are to enhance literacy practice and increase student learning gains. The theme of the symposium is Supporting  Student Success: What Does Research Tell Us?  Each session will be structured so that the research presentation will be followed by a panel of practitioners who will discuss implications for practice or policy. In addition, conference attendees will have opportunities for small group interaction and networking with researcher-presenters to discuss not only how research can inform practice and policy, but also how practice and policy can inform and suggest a research agenda.    For more information, visit the symposium Web site at www.researchtopractice.org.  -Mary Ann Corley, Ph.D. Symposium Coordinator and CALPRO Director, American Institutes for Research


other events and conferences http://www.nifl.gov/cgi-bin/Calendar/calendar_world.cgi

TESOL worldwide calendar of events http://www.tesol.org/isaffil/calendar/index.html



from previous bulletins: REMINDERS, RESOURCES


SABES Resource Lists Available.  From Carey Reid [full message here]:
As you might know, Massachusetts now has a rigorous, stand-alone ABE teacher's license.  SABES, the System for Adult Basic Education Support, is a state-wide staff development system funded by MassDOE. 
Ö[S]months ago I asked if NLA subscribers were interested in helping SABES build resource lists, by standard, in support of teachers seeking the new license here in Massachusetts.  Many of you helped out, thank you, and we've also worked with small groups of people locally to build these 29 lists, now with over 150 resources--books, articles, websites, and videos.  The lists are now available on SABES's  license support website at http://www.sabes.org/license.  You can get quickly to the lists by clicking on the "new resources added" link under What's New, or at any time by using the resources link on the bottom of every webpage.  When you arrive at the chart listing the 29 standards, click on any standard to go to the resource list we've compiled for it.   The lists are annotated; with the annotations, teachers who wish to improve their knowledge and skills in respect to a particular standard can be more assured they're getting the resource they want or need.  If the resource can be viewed or downloaded on the Net, we've provided a link. 

Additionally, we want to improve these lists, so please email me if you'd like to suggest additions or changes.  BTW, the full list of resources is also collected in a ProCite bibliography file, so if you use that software and would like to have your own "instant" database, let me know and I'll email you the file. As stated earlier, SABES is funded by the Massachusetts Department of Education.  To avoid confusion, the website is not an official DOE site but rather one of SABES's means of supporting license-seeking teachers in our state.  Links to Massachusetts DOE webpages, however, are provided on the site.



breathe - everyday yoga at your desk. http://www.mydailyyoga.com/yoga/everyday_yoga.html


what do you think? LR/RI has had an online survey on its site forever.  Previously, those who may have come across the survey were asked to copy and paste it into an email message, or to print it and complete it.  Thanks to the brilliant technical support and inservice learning provided by Brown University, the survey can now be completed on line.  I'd be grateful if you could please take the time to complete it.  While occasional word comes back about the work LR/RI has done, this survey attempts to be somewhat more systematic in considering the work that's done and the work that needs to be accomplished.  Please complete the survey at http://www.brown.edu/lrri - scroll down and click on the link to the survey.  If you lack web access and wish to complete the survey, please contact LR/RI to receive one via snail mail or fax.

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