The Rhode Island Adult Education Professional
Development
Center produces a bulletin roughly every
two
to three 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, please
go to Bulletin
Archives. To receive the bulletin via email, contact LR/RI.
To learn more about professional development
opportunities,
please
contact the RI AEPDC at (401) 456 -2838 or (401) 863-2839
December 5,
2008
Bulletin
#286
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 the AEPDC or leave a message at
(401-863-2839).

Janet Isserlis
NOTICES -
– in
addition to events listed here, a recently updated list of events
(including workforce development workshops, new practitioner
orientation, standards overview - and rescheduled events) can be
found at http://www.ric.edu/aepdc/calendar.php
ESOL share Wednesday,
January 21st, 3 pm at the Genesis Center, 620 Potters Avenue,
Providence.
Swap Shop – write up an activity, strategy or
lesson plan you've used that's worked particularly well.
Include key pieces – time needed to implement, time needed to
prepare, level(s) at which the activity
works, materials needed as well. Please bring at least 8 copies
to share. If you don’t have time to write
your piece, that's fine – but please be prepared to walk us
through it.
Standards
Rollout – December 12th
If you've not yet participated in the introduction
to RI's adult education content standards, consider spending the
morning (from 9 to 1) with us to
learn more about them. For more information, and/or to reserve
space, please contact Jessica Ortiz (jortiz@ric.edu
) by December 8th.
A
reminder to those attending the Persistence Conference on
October 17th, and an open invitation to all interested others
- the second follow up session to the conference will be
held on Friday, December 19th,
at noon. (location to be announced).
As well, if you've not completed a work plan or evaluation,
please contact Jessica Ortiz (jortiz@ric.edu) for an electronic copy of
these documents.
8th Annual Adult Education Fair
CCRI, Providence Campus, January 15, 9:00 AM – Noon
This event will give students and practitioners the opportunity
to learn about adult education and training programs. All students and
agency staff are invited to
attend. Please contact Yvette Kenner with number of attendees,
and if you
would like to staff a table.
(Tables are on first come, first serve basis for registered
agencies). For more information, please contact: yvette@lvari.org
College Goal Sunday: On January
25th, The RI Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators,
in conjunction with the Lumina Foundation for Education,
will be hosting College Goal Sunday at four RI locations: CCRI
Lincoln, CCRI Providence, CCRI Newport, and Central Falls High School.
The Purpose of College Goal Sunday is to assist the college-bound
students and parents in our communities with the college financial aid
process. So many
students are either intimidated or unaware of how it all
works. We are here to help. Families will be able to
receive assistance with filling out financial aid
forms, have their questions answered, and most of all, they will
leave the program with a sense of ease, accomplishment, and
knowledge. (College Goal Sunday
focuses on assisting with the completion of the Free Application
for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA). This form is required for any
student seeking federal financial
aid, including grants and loans, at educational institutions
nationwide.) This is a free service to citizens of Rhode Island.
For information or for families to register
on line: http://www.collegegoalri.org
or contact: Gail Walker, gwalker@risla.com or Andrea Swain,
aswain@cpcri.org.
learning
opportunities
If you're
interested in growing your skills in technology for the purpose
of teaching ESL, consider participating in Becoming a Webhead,
a free, well-
structured online training opportunity offered by TESOL's CALL
interest section (computer assisted language learning). http://www.call-is.org/moodle/
The session starts in January and is part of TESOL's Electronic
Village Online. For six weeks, participants can engage with ESOL
experts in collaborative,
online discussion sessions or hands-on virtual workshops of
professional and scholarly benefit. These sessions will bring together
participants for a longer
period of time than is permitted by the four-day land-based TESOL
convention and will allow a fuller development of ideas and themes of
the convention
or of professional interest in general. The sessions are free and
open to all interested parties. You do not need to be a TESOL member to
participate.
Certificate in Family Literacy
graduate courses through flexible online learning at Penn State
University
Spring 2009 classes run January 21, 2009, through April
22, 2009, and registration is underway. Certificate courses offered
this semester include:
ADTED 456, Introduction to Family Literacy, which probes
comprehensive family literacy services as a way to break the cycle of
intergenerational poverty
and under-education.
ADTED 459, Interactive Literacy: Parents and Children that
prepares educators to understand, plan and practice interactive
literacy strategies in intentional and
strategic ways. There is an ongoing focus on effective learning
strategies for all children and families, including English language
learners.
For more information visit
http://www.worldcampus.psu.edu/FamilyLiteracyCertificate.shtml or
contact Dr. Sheila Sherow at sms20@psu.edu
http://www.worldcampus.psu.edu/StudentServices_GettingStarted.shtml
National
Priorities Project analyzes
and clarifies federal data so that people can understand and influence
how their tax dollars are spent.
Numeracy, critical thinking and technology: have a look http://www.nationalpriorities.org/costofwar_home
funding
opportunities - large and less large
National
Program Improvement Grant
Opportunity
Learn effective and innovative ways to tell your community and your
funders about your program's effectiveness with the help of ProLiteracy
and your peers!
Apply to join Year Three of the Dollar
General/ProLiteracy Performance Accountability (DGPA) Initiative
As a
one-year participating program, your program gets:
Ideas tested by your
literacy peers; a stipend to help offset travel and reporting
requirements; two places at one of six regional trainings,
"Communicating Success to
Stakeholders," scheduled for February and March 2009; Access to
practical resources and support through the DGPA wiki and online
discussion list and
the opportunity to test and evaluate new strategies
Applications
available November 2008 For information e-mail Marie Cora, DGPA
Project Manager at
mcora@proliteracy.org This project is made possible
through the generous support of the Dollar General Literacy Foundation
grants
from the Public Education Network: http://www.publiceducation.org/newsblast_grants.asp
- 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.php
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
employment opportunities are generally sent as they
arrive via email; if you would like to receive this bulletin, and those
updates by email please
contact janet_isserlis@brown.edu.
GED Testing Service is building Content
Coordinating Teams to assist us in the review of new test items
being developed for the 2012 Series GED Tests.
This is an opportunity for specialists in the content areas
assessed on the GED test battery to have a real and lasting impact on
the items that will ultimately
appear on the new tests. We will be putting six content
area teams together (one each for the five GED Test content
areas--language arts-reading, language
arts-writing, mathematics, science, and social studies--plus a
sixth team for the Canadian Social Studies GED Test), and hope to have
the teams in place by
January 30, 2009. Teams will begin meeting, either in person or
virtually (via WebEx), beginning in the first quarter of 2009. details
and application form: http://www.acenet.edu/Content/NavigationMenu/ged/about/GEDTS_Contractor_Opp.htm.
(You can also navigate to this link by going to our web site,
http://www.gedtest.org/ > About GED Testing >
Opportunities with GED Testing Service > Content Coordinating Team
Consultant.)
For more information: Martin D. Kehe, Director of Test Development,
GED® Testing Service, American Council on Education, One Dupont
Circle, NW Ste 250,
Washington, DC 20036 (202)939.9701
martin_kehe@ace.nche.edu
Substitute
teaching: The
Genesis Center is interested in adding to its substitute list.
If you
are an ESOL instructor who is interested in occasional work as a
substitute, either day, evening or
Saturday hours, please call Nancy
Fritz or Pat Clarkin at 781-6110.
Jobs in
Literacy –
nation wide postings on the National Institute for
Literacy's LINCS site: http://www.nifl.gov/cgi-bin/lincs/jobs/jobs.cgi
Substitute
list:
if
you would like your name added to the general
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 available
from Jobs for the Future:
An Agenda for the Obama Administration and the 111th Congress:
Ten Ways the Federal Government can restore economic vitality and
increase competitiveness
through education and skill development http://www.jff.org/Documents/AdvicetoObama.pdf
- and –
Education Sector also offers more education ideas for the next
president, including recommendations on revamping the federal role in
education human capital
and revising NCLB to provide more high-quality public school
options to the students who need them the most.
Revamping the Federal Role in Education Human Capital by
Co-director Andrew J. Rotherham
http://www.educationsector.org/analysis/analysis_show.htm?doc_id=727538.
In Need of Improvement: Revising NCLB’s School Choice Provision http://www.educationsector.org/analysis/analysis_show.htm?doc_id=727885.
For more information about Education Sector and our work, please
visit http://www.educationsector.org
lots of sites – from NIFL ESL
discussion list
The Best Places To Learn About Christmas, Hanukkah, & Kwanzaa
http://larryferlazzo.edublogs.org/2008/11/19/the-best-places-to-learn-about-christmas-hanukkah-kwanzaa/
The Best Personal Home Page Creators
http://larryferlazzo.edublogs.org/2008/11/26/the-best-personal-home-page-creators/
The Best Tools To
Make Simple Graphs Online
http://larryferlazzo.edublogs.org/2008/11/28/the-best-tools-to-make-simple-graphs-online/
The Best Resources To Teach & Learn About The Terrorist
Attacks In India
http://larryferlazzo.edublogs.org/2008/11/28/the-best-resources-to-teach-learn-about-the-terrorist-attacks-in-india/
The "Best" Articles About Education —
http://larryferlazzo.edublogs.org/2008/12/01/the-best-articles-about-education-2008/
The Best Sites For Learning About New Year Celebrations
http://larryferlazzo.edublogs.org/2008/12/03/the-best-sites-for-learning-about-new-year-celebrations/
The Best Map-Making Sites On The Web
http://larryferlazzo.edublogs.org/2008/12/03/the-best-map-making-sites-on-the-web/
- Larry Ferlazzo, Luther Burbank High School Sacramento, CA
and you? What website, print or other resources are you using?
What's useful? not so good? please tell us –
janet_isserlis@brown.edu
from the National Institute for
Literacy: Adults wanting to learn or improve their English skills can
log on to a new free Online English Portal called
USALearns.
The U.S. Department of Education's Office of
Vocational and Adult Education, through its Division of Adult Education
and Literacy, oversaw the design of
USALearns. Launch of the site completes a goal set by President
Bush in his August 10, 2007 announcement of initiatives to address
border security and
immigration challenges in the United States - a plan to have the
U.S.Department of Education develop and launch a free, web-based portal
to help immigrants
learn English, expand their opportunities, and make effective
contributions to American society." http://www.USALearns.org;
fact sheet at http://www.nifl.gov/nifl/publications/pdf/USALearnsFactSheet08.pdf.
a manual of family numeracy activities, ready
to use in early literacy programs, day care centres, primary grades and
Adult Basic
Education/Literacy programs. Patterns, recipes, and hand-outs all
included (109 pages). Download your free copy:
http://www.nald.ca/library/learning/familymath/cover.htm
Math for the whole person: Spirit, heart, body and mind are all
connected in the activities in this book. When we balance the spirit,
heart, body and mind, math
becomes part of our whole
lives, not a beast or a barrier.
Activities for the whole family: Things to do in the kitchen and
on a walk, rhymes, games, and things to make, all to promote math
thinking and learning.
For more
information: Kate.Nonesuch@viu.ca.
Funded by The Office of Literacy and Essential Skills, Human
Resources and Skills Development Canada
Beyond the
checklist: Using reflective practice to remove barriers infamily and
community literacy by Cheryl Brown and Wendell Dryden – while
specifically
examining an intergenerational literacy project, the article
poses a number of considerations useful in thinking about learner
persistence across learning spheres:
http://www.literacyjournal.ca/literacies/9-2008/pdf/brown&dryden.pdf
English
for your health: A Health
Literacy
Curriculum for Beginning ESOL Learners, a site designed to teach
high-beginner to
low intermediates preventive health care and to interact with
health care providers.
http://www.queenslibrary.org/index.aspx?page_nm=ALP_English_Health
From Marie
Cora, moderator of the assessment discussion list hosted by the
National Institute for Literacy: Please join the Assessment List for a
discussion on
Using Your Data to Improve Your
Program Services from December 8 – 12.
To subscribe to the assessment discussion list, go to: http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/Assessment
The full announcement for this discussion is at: http://www.nifl.gov/lincs/discussions/assessment/08data.html
The discussion panelists would like to receive any questions or
comments you may have prior to the opening of the discussion next
Monday.
Please send your questions/comments to
marie.cora@hotspurpartners.com. I will compile your contributions and
forward them to the panelists so that they can
respond in advance. Note that there are a number of resources to
review and use before the discussion begins.
from Thursday notes, December 4, 2008
Minnesota Launches ABE
Disabilities Web Resource
Minnesota has launched its adult basic education disabilities
Web site offering resources available 24 hours daily, seven days
a week, for ABE instructors and
programs that serve clients with disabilities. The Web site
contains information frequently requested by Minnesota’s adult
education instructors and is accessible
by users with disabilities. The material helps equip ABE
managers, teachers, volunteers and tutors to provide learning
experiences and basic skills that improve the lives of
students with disabilities. http://www.mnabedisabilities.org/
Apply to Join OVAE's
Accountability Staff
OVAE is looking for a highly motivated mid-career management and
program analyst to work with the Division of Adult Education and
Literacy's (DAEL) accountability
team. The person will be responsible for analysis and advisory
assignments related to the effectiveness of federal adult education
programs. The new employee also will be
involved in DAEL's efficient management of federal operations,
such as state reporting and making state grant awards. This position is
open to all U.S. citizens, and the
application closes Dec. 11. See announcement OVAE 2009-0007 for details.
http://jobsearch.usajobs.gov/jobsearch.asp?sort=rv&vw=d&brd=3876&ss=0&customapplicant=15513,15514,15515,15669,15523,15512,15516,45575&q=OVAE+2009+0007
OVAE to Approve
State Assessment Policies For New Program
Year
OVAE recently announced its approval process for state assessment
policies that are required under 34 CFR 462.40 – 462.44. States must
submit, as part of the
Data Quality Certification on Dec. 31, 2008, a state assessment
policy for Program Year 2009-10. This assessment policy establishes the
rules under which local
programs will report educational gain data in the National
Reporting System from July 1, 2009 through June 30, 2010. Previously,
states submitted assessment
policies in effect during the preceding program year in which
statistical data were reported. http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2006/06-8709.htm
RI DLT's
Rhode Island Red job search
feature is now drawing job postings from ALL local jobs boards (except
Monster.com).
To access this resource visit RI RED http://www.dlt.ri.gov/rired/
-- under quick menu click job search; choose location search criteria,
provide job title or other
criteria. Source codes are listed at the bottom of the page
Guidance documents from the UK's Skills
for Life – http://excellence.qia.org.uk/page.aspx?o=Guidance
– contextualizing work for those with clearly identified learning
difficulties (defined as): physical and sensory impairments – for
example those with mobility difficulties or hearing or visual
impairments; unseen
disabilities such as health conditions, mental health
difficulties and dyslexia; those whose disrupted learning experiences
(for example those in offender establishments) and difficulties with
learning have led them
to work at a significantly lower level than the majority of
their peers.
numeracy resources:
The Problem Solver, Massachusetts math newsletter, online at http://www.sabes.org/resources/publications/problemsolver/index.htm;
Massachusetts also produces a math newsletter that focuses on
research: the SABES Math Bulletin.
You can access
copies of that publication at: http://sabes.org/resources/publications/mathbulletin/index.htm
Radical
Math is a resource for
educators interested in integrating issues of social, political, and
economic justice into math curriculum and classes
RadicalMath.org has
the goals of raising mathematic literacy and simultaneously
developing
ways to address a range of community issues. The website supports
educators to teach many different types of math within the
context of studying social, political, and economic justice
issues.
RadicalMath.org also contains teaching materials on important
financial
topics for youth such as owning a credit card, paying for college, and
avoiding subprime lenders, as
well as materials on Ethnomathematics.
Visit http://www.radicalmath.org/
for more or email info@radicalmath.org
Lots to do at the library Providence
Public Library's calendar of events: http://www.provlib.org/calendar.asp
Educating
the Public and Elected
Officials about Adult Education: Report on Adult Education
Advocacy Efforts in New England by the New
England Literacy Resource
Center at World Education
This report takes stock of the program, policy and
legislative context for adult education in each of the six New England
states. It discusses local and
statewide advocacy strategies by adult educators. The
findings show that adult education
advocacy efforts in New England are multi-faceted, and growing in
sophistication and reach. The report discusses the
principal challenges and related promising strategies revealed through
interviews with leading adult education
advocates in New England.
They are grouped into four areas:
1) Visibility;
2) Framing the Message;
3) Student Involvement; and 4) Increasing and Sustaining Advocacy
Efforts.
Available for downloading (as a PDF file): http://www.nelrc.org/expertise/civic.html#educating
(For a word doc version, please contact
janet_isserlis@brown.edu)
Seven
habits and more:
a recent online discussion about reading and ESOL (and English
speaking) learners, led to a number of resources being shared,
including Heide Spruck Wrigley's
Seven Habits of Successful Readers, http://www.cal.org/caela/esl_resources/7Habits.pdf.
To follow the entire conversation, go to http://www.nifl.gov/pipermail/englishlanguage/2008/date.html
and follow the conversation thread that begins on May 12th (you’ll need
to scroll down the page).
UK National Curricula for
ESOL, Literacy and Numeracy, with associated material and
support for teachers, including the competencies for each skill at each
level.
As well, a significant number of resources for working with
people with a range of disabilities. (See, for example): http://www.dfes.gov.uk/curriculum_literacy/access/workwith/principles/
http://www.dfes.gov.uk/curriculum_esol/
http://www.dfes.gov.uk/curriculum_literacy/
http://www.dfes.gov.uk/curriculum_numeracy/
Workplace
Essential Skills and
GED Connection series Now Available Through VIDEO-ON-DEMAND
The adult learning series Workplace Essential Skills and GED
Connection are available online through the Rhode Island PBS video
streaming portal. In 25 half-hour segments, the Workplace
Essential Skills series
presents refreshers in fundamental reading, writing, and math
skills as they relate to getting, keeping, or advancing in a job.
Lessons also cover job applications, resume writing, and job
interviews. An orientation
segment touches upon the use of the different components included
in this series. Lessons are written at a pre-GED level, and can help
prepare adults for the GED tests. Four workbooks accompany the series.
In 39 half-hour programs, the GED Connection helps learners
prepare for the GED exam. Episodes cover subjects and skills related to
work, community, and home life. Practice tests help learners know what
to
expect, see which skills they need to strengthen, and build
confidence.
Access to Workplace Essential Skills and GED Connection series
through RI PBS video streaming is free. Users access VOD through an
account and passcode, available by email request to
Education@ RIpbs.org or by calling Education Services at
401-222-3636 x 211. Video streaming, also known as video on demand
(VOD), allows users the convenience of watching lessons at any time
from an Internet-connected computer. VOD is also flexible,
allowing users to watch several episodes in one sitting, or repeat
lessons as often as desired.
Both the Workplace Essential Skills and the GED Connection series
are also broadcast on RI PBS LEARN, digital 36.2 and Verizon 787. The
Workplace Essential Skills broadcasts Fridays at
12:30 PM and the GED Connection series broadcasts Mondays,
Tuesdays, and Sundays at 12:30 PM. For Workplace Essential Skills
and the GED Connection broadcast dates
please visit: http://www.pbs.org/tvschedules/
For information about RIPBS Education Services please visit out web
pages at http://www.ripbs.org/Education/
- Dr. María D. Velásquez de Tondreau Education Director
Rhode Island PBS 50 Park Lane Providence, RI 02907 Phone: (401)
222-3636, ext. 211 Fax: (401) 222-3407 Education@RIpbs.org
National Research and
Development Centre for Adult Literacy and Numeracy,
dedicated
to conducting research and development projects to improve literacy,
numeracy, language and related skills and knowledge. On this site you
will find information on all our activities, including:
Research and development projects <http://www.nrdc.org.uk/projects.asp>
Creative routes to specialist teacher qualifications <http://www.nrdc.org.uk/creativeroutes>
The Voices on the Page storybank is now live! Read all of the 640
stories here <http://www.nrdc.org.uk/voicesonthepage.asp>
Research reports and reviews <http://www.nrdc.org.uk/content.asp?CategoryID=329>
Latest e- newsletter <http://www.nrdc.org.uk/content.asp?CategoryID=671>
News and events <http://www.nrdc.org.uk/news.asp>
While the work originates in the U.K., much of it has usefulness
and
validity for work in this country.
google
literacy site: http://www.google.com/literacy/
outstanding resource: http://www.youthliteracy.ca/
- Youth Literacy work in Canada
Shannon Gavin, a senior graduating from Brown this year, has developed
a new website, as her capstone project in Middle East Studies,
called Arab Perceptions of the United
States:
Video Interviews from Amman, Jordan and Damascus,
Syria.You can view them, and supporting text at http://arabperceptions.wordpress.com
The U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) - The U.S.
Civics and Citizenship Online: Resource Center for
Instructors is available online at:
http://www.uscis.gov/portal/site/uscis/menuitem.eb1d4c2a3e5b9ac89243c6a7543f6d1a/?vgnextoid=b36e663784bcd010VgnVCM100000d1f1d6a1RCRD&vgnextchannel=b36e663784bcd010VgnVCM100000d1f1d6a1RCRD
The U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants (USCRI),
Assisting
Refugees with Disabilities Program : Resource Guide for
Serving Refugees with Disabilities
available at http://www.refugees.org/DisabilityGuide
The guide, written for refugee case managers
and those serving refugees with disabilities, includes 139 pages of
information about resources for serving adults and children with
disabilities,
housing for refugees with disabilities, assistive technology,
medical resources, citizenship and disability, benefits for refugees
with disabilities and more.
If you have any questions or technical assistance needs, please
contact Xuan Nguyen, Director of USCRI Health and Human Services at
xnguyen@uscridc.org or at 202-347-3507 ext 3056.
Resources from
EdChange family of Web
sites:
A new Classism and Poverty Awareness Quiz http://www.edchange.org/multicultural/quizzes.html
;
Newly designed
Social Justice News Service site http://mail.socialjusticenews.net/mailman/listinfo/news_socialjusticenews.net-
email-based news service, periodic email digests of links to articles
related to equity,
social justice, and multiculturalism from sources
all over the world.
New essays and links to essays http://www.edchange.org/publications.html
New essays in the Multicultural Education Research Room http://www.edchange.org/multicultural/papers.html
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/
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
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
NAASLN's Mid-Atlantic Regional Conference - Access to
the Workforce for Adult & Adolescent Learners with AD/HD and
Asperger’s Syndrome
February 22–23
This regional conference will draw adult education practitioners,
transition specialists, community college faculty, workforce
counselors, disability advocates,
and others from New York to Virginia. The self-contained
conference site and tight format lends itself to ample time for
small-group discussions of how these
breakthrough strategies apply to the evolving economy; issues
affecting the new workforce; transition to postsecondary education and
the workforce; advocacy
issues and techniques; webinars; leadership options; and
more. The conference will feature three plenary sessions:
ADD and Entrepreneurism...A Curriculum that Works!
presented by Richard Cooper, Ph.D., Learning Specialist
Asperger’s Syndrome, Part I: The Adult Education Class presented
by Bevan Gibson, M.S. Sp. Ed., Director
Southern Illinois Professional Development Center
Asperger’s Syndrome, Part II: Transitioning to Postsecondary Education
presented by Melissa Arnott-Cox, Ed.D., L.P.C.,
C.A.C., Director Academic Success Center, Rowan University,
Glassboro, NJ Registration is limited to 70 overnight registrants
and 80 day-only registrants.
Full registration of $250 covers a day-and-a-half of sessions,
overnight accommodations, all meals, and 24-hour access to a
hospitality suite.
Day-only registration of $135 covers one day of sessions and two
meals.
For full session information, site description, accommodations,
driving directions, or to register online, visit NAASLN at
http://www.naasln.org/Regional_2009_conference.htm
still want
to present? MATSOL has extended its call for proposals for its spring
conference to Monday, December 8th - http://www.matsol.org
March
6-7, 2009 - URI, Providence
Campus: WeLearn - 6th
Annual (Net)Working Gathering &
Conference on Women & Literacy
http://www.litwomen.org/conference.html
- more online –
deadline – December 6th.
Sharing Skills – Building Connections,
March 11, in Worcester - Commonwealth Workforce Coalition’s 6th annual
conference. Registration materials will be
online after January 7th:
http://cwc.cedac.org/
Call
for ABE Student Writing Women's
Perspectives 2009 - Issue #4
Theme: Transition / Transformation details, lesson plans and
pre-writing activities:
http://www.litwomen.org/perspectives.html
Deadline: 12/5/08.
MATSOL
Annual Conference :
May 7-8, 2009 at the Sheraton Four Points in Leominster,
MA.
The 2009 conference theme is Multiple Literacies: Launching
English Language Learners into a New Era. There will be a K-12
strand on both days and an Adult,
Workplace and Higher Education strand on Friday, May 8. Our
keynote speakers will be Stephen Krashen and Jim Cummins.
COABE
Conference 2009, Louisville, KY
April 17-22,
2009
Commission on Adult Basic Education (COABE), Kentucky Association
of Adult & Continuing Education, and Kentucky Adult Education
Council on Postsecondary Education
are pleased to announce a Call for Proposals for the 2009 COABE
national conference. . The goal of the Annual
COABE National Conference is to provide best practices and
program guidance to adult basic education professionals.
http://www.coabeconference.org/
For more information, contact: Lorena Lasky, COABE 2009
Concurrent Sessions Chairperson, Jefferson County Adult &
Continuing Education
Lorena.Lasky@kentuckianaworks.org 502-574-4123
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
breathe - everyday yoga at your desk. http://www.mydailyyoga.com/yoga/everyday_yoga.html
street yoga -
Through the teaching of free yoga, meditation and wellness classes we
seek to help homeless youth increase their physical, emotional and
spiritual strength, stamina
and flexibility so they can better meet their own core needs. We
work closely with those service providers striving to help homeless
youth secure safe housing, nutritious food,
accessible health care, employment, clean clothing, educational
choices and human dignity.
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