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
May Day, 2011
Bulletin
#375
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
You can now register online for the
May 25th Adult Education Conference at RI College. Registration
is $25, which includes lunch and a light breakfast.
To register, please go to: http://www.ripdc.eventbrite.com;
to review the conference program in depth, please go to
http://www.brown.edu/lrri/conference2011.doc
for a downloadable word document.
talk about it: via Daphne
Greenberg, list moderator conversation this week:
Have you heard about the Longitudinal Study of
Adult Learning (LSAL)? This study focused on 1,000 high school dropouts
over about 10 years providing
repeated measures to look at issues such as change in
individuals’ educational and occupational goals and experiences,
literacy skills, uses of literacy, social
and economic status.
Starting May 2 through May 6th, Dr. Stephen Reder from Portland
State University will facilitate a guest discussion on his LSAL study
(for more info, go to:
http://lincs.ed.gov/lincs/discussions/readwrite/11Growth
I hope that you can plan to join us and share your questions, thoughts,
and comments with Dr. Reder.
Please invite your colleagues to join us for this discussion
(they need to go to: http://lincs.ed.gov/mailman/listinfo/readwrite#sub
follow the directions in the email to verify their subscription
request).
To prepare for this discussion, he suggests that we may want to
think about the following questions:
1. What are the different ways you measure adults’ literacy
growth over time?
2. How do adults measure their own literacy growth?
3. What is your “logic model” that connects students’
participation in literacy programs with their literacy development?
What measures of literacy growth
will best reflect the impact of your program (or of programs
generally)? Do you expect the impact to be directly related to hours of
attendance?
4. Over what time period will effects of participating in
programs be evident using the various measures?
He also suggest that we may want to read the following:
Reder, S. (2009). Scaling up and moving in: Connecting
social practices views to policies and programs in adult education.
Literacy and Numeracy Studies,
16(2), 35-50. http://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/lnj/article/viewFile/1276/1330
The journal website asks you to register (no cost) before downloading
the PDF.
Reder, S., & Strawn, C. (2006). Self-study: Broadening
the concepts of participation and program support. Focus on
Basics, 8(C), 6-10.
http://www.ncsall.net/fileadmin/resources/fob/2006/fob_8c.pdf
The Reading and Writing Skills Discussion List
Readwrite@lincs.ed.gov
To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to
http://lincs.ed.gov/mailman/listinfo/readwrite
ESOL
practitioner learning
community
(ESOL share) May 18, at
2:30 pm at the Genesis Center, 620 Potters Avenue, Providence.
Materials the work, multilevel classes. please come to
share insights, materials, questions and concerns.
Rhode Island's ninth annual adult education
conference is
being held on May 25th.
The program is almost complete and will include workshops
addressing a wide range of adult learning topics. For program
information, please contact
janet_isserlis@brown.edu
OVAE Connection
archived online at http://www2.ed.gov/news/newsletters/ovaeconnection/index.html
– weekly bulletin from the Office of Vocational and Adult
Education; to subscribe directly, please contact ovaenewsletter@ed.gov
or online at http://www.edgov/about/offices/list/ovae/index.html
Tool for adult education referrals in
Rhode
Island
- An interactive referral website for adult education services in
RI: http://groups.google.com/group/rhodeislandreferrals.
Find profiles of adult education agencies, post class openings or
request help with a student referral. Please update your
agency's profile information,
and if your agency is not listed, contact Karisa Tashjian at
ktashjian@yahoo.com to have your agency added to the list.
This site is open to all agencies who
provide services (educational, social service, etc.) for adult
education students in the state. You only need a Google account
to access and post information.
If you need help setting up an account, please contact
KarisaTashjian or Bernice Morris at BerniceM@pha-providence.com.
learning
opportunity: RIRAL TRANSITION
TO COLLEGE – Monthly Information Sessions
TTC is a partner in the RI Statewide Transition to College (RI
TTC) initiative and a natural segue for GED, EDP, and Advanced ESL
students prior to
post-secondary education.
Information Sessions start at 10:00 am. Please allow 2 -3
hours. Do not bring children.
May
7 June 4 (or by
appointment)
175 Main Street Pawtucket (2nd floor/ Pawtucket Visitor’s
Center/DLT)
Contact: MarieCrecca-Romero@riral.org
Telephone: 722-9800 or 487-9566.
TTC is a comprehensive college preparation program to prepare you
for college. It includes a Free College Reading class (ENGL 0850)
at CCRI in
Providence; student success, career exploration, and mentoring
workshops; academic writing, basic math, and pre-algebra; computer lab
and tutorials;
academic advising, support services, and registration for
college; college application and financial aid preparation.
learning
opportunities
CERTIFIED NURSING ASSISTANT TRAINING - 13 weeks
of work readiness/soft skills training & CNA instruction, Home
Health Aide Certificate,
Resume & Interviewing preparation
Performance-based grant (stipend) CPR for Health Care Providers
120 day temporary license issued after successful completion of
training
Must Attend MANDATORY Info Session to apply Wednesday, May
4 10:00AM-1:00PM CCRI NEWPORT-- AUDITORIUM
BRING COPIES OF DOCUMENTS TO INFO SESSION:
Completed Application (application will be provided at info
session) $5.00 money order (no cash or personal check) made payable to
BCI,
Sign BCI release form (will be provided at info session)
Copy photo identification (government issued or license), Proof
of family size (FIP award letter)
Proof receiving DHS benefits SNAP, Rite Care or FIP
Copies of pay stubs, If working or have worked in the last six
months
Proof of other household members working in the household
For questions contact: Jamoya Ridgell, Case Manager, 401.848.6697
ext. 305 or jridgell@ebcap.org
or Tom Costello, Project Coordinator, 401.851.1656 or
trcostello@ccri.edu
Newport Skills Alliance (NSA) Connecting Work-Ready RI Residents
to Jobs on demand a Workforce Development Program of East Bay
Community Action Program (EBCAP)
The
Goodling Institute for Research in Family Literacy at Penn State and
the National Center for Family Literacy announce the offering of
ADTED 458: Early Literacy
Development and Parental Involvement, which begins on May 11.
ADTED 458 is a three-credit online postbaccalaureate
course designed for adult and family literacy practitioners,
early childhood, elementary, and middle school teachers, and anyone
interested in learning
how parental involvement can enhance early language and literacy
development. The curriculum allows students to tailor course
assignments to meet
the interests and needs of their own practice. For more
information:
http://www.worldcampus.psu.edu/FamilyLiteracyCertificate.shtml or
contact
Dr. Sheila Sherow, Director, Certificate in Family Literacy at
sms20@psu.edu.
Announcing 4 EFF Online
Mini-courses being offered in May - August 2011
Register now - via our new online registration system!
http://www.cvent.com/events/eff-online-courses-may-august-2011/agenda-a002e9403b9c44bcb089e961c483be79.aspx
Each course provides participants one-on-one attention from a
content-expert facilitator, and is designed to be completed on your own
schedule in 8-10
hours over just 2 weeks. Course completion certificate and CEU
credit available.
These online mini-courses offer immediately applicable strategies
on topics targeted to the needs of adult learners.
The following courses are being offered this summer:
How Close is Close Enough?: Improving Estimation Skills May
9 - 23, 2011; Registration Deadline: April 22nd
Dare to Compare: An Introduction to Proportional
Reasoning July 5 - 19th, 2011; Registration Deadline:
June 17th
Building Reading Fluency with Adult Developing
Readers August 1 - 15th, 2011; Registration Deadline:
July 22nd
Vocabulary - Teaching Word Meanings
August 15 - 29th, 2011; Registration Deadline: August 5th
For more information on these courses see the Course Descriptions
or contact us via eff@utk.edu
Cost: $189/person for each course - check/money order/purchase
order only. Group invoicing available.
Information on Course Assignments and Completion information:
http://tiny.cc/rrbyu
Please review our Course Technical Requirements before
registering! http://tiny.cc/enzhp
Register online via: http://guest.cvent.com/d/sdq6p6
Registrants will be invoiced at time of e-mail confirmation,
payment (or proof of payment processing) must be received before course
start.
For questions about these or other EFF services please contact
us: eff@utk.edu or visit our web site at http://eff.cls.utk.edu/
Changing
the way we teach math to adults – Kate Nonesuch's manual for
teaching
basic math to adults, at
http://www.nald.ca/library/learning/mathman/mathman.pdf;
if you’re so inclined, follow Kate on twitter at http://twitter.com/KateNonesuch
about
persistence - online, from Ronna Magy, ronnawrite@sbcglobal.net:
Dear Colleagues,
I'm attaching a link to a paper I wrote recently on learner goal
setting and learner persistence which will I hope will contribute to
our discussion.
In the paper you'll find several suggestions for classroom
strategies for learner persistence and learner goal setting which can
be used at the beginning of the
term and throughout the school year. http://futureenglishforresults.com/materials/Author%20Articles/RMagy_Monograph.pdf
(via David Rosen) Saving workers' lives through literacy Health
and
safety practices are as effective as employees' reading-skill levels
http://www.vancouversun.com/business/Saving+workers+lives+through+literacy/3318109/story.html
and
- the announcement of this year's UNESCO prize-winning adult
literacy
programs:
http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=35452&Cr=&Cr1=
funding
opportunities - large and less large
- grants
posted on the
National Institute for Literacy website:
http://www.nifl.gov/cgi-bin/lincs/search/gsearch/dbsearch.cgi?action=Show%20Results
- 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.
CCRI, Center for Workforce and Community
Education, Department of Adult Education- Part time Staff Assistant,
Bilingual
Part-time Staff Assistant position (19 hours/week) available
immediately in busy frontline non-credit community college office.
Responsible for in-person
and telephone customer service, record keeping and filing, data
entry, and course registration assistance. Will be trained as a GED
test examiner and in use
of college student data system. Some evening and Saturdays may be
part of the scheduled hours. Competitive hourly rate; no benefits.
Higher rate paid for
after hours GED testing time.
Qualifications: Bi-lingual in English and Spanish, Minimum
Associates degree, Experience in customer service
Excellent organizational skills, communication skills and time
management. Must be highly reliable
Please email resumes by May 13th to smiles@ccri.edu. No phone
calls please.
Jobs for Change "seeks to
spark a nationwide movement toward careers in the nonprofit,
government, and social enterprise sectors" – online at
http://jobs.change.org/
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 janet_isserlis@brown.edu
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
RI DLT's
Rhode Island Red job search
feature draws 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
Unemployment
lifeline – from the AFL-CIO,
with locally-searchable links to resources http://www.unemploymentlifeline.com/
online
/ resources available
from the
Council for Advancement of Adult Literacy (CAAL):
Certifying Adult education
students: A survey of state director of adult education certificate
programs in use
This 16-page Information Brief reports on the use of
certification systems, as reported by state education directors, to
validate student attainment in adult
education and workforce skills programs. The survey was
administered and analyzed by CAAL Senior Advisor Garrett Murphy from
June to November 2010.
It provides a partial snapshot of usage at a fixed point in time
and was intended to help identify issues for CAAL to examine in a
future invitational Roundtable
on the topic. CAAL's work in this area is funded by the
AT&T Foundation the Dollar General Corporation, the Joyce
Foundation, and The McGraw-Hill Companies.
http://www.caalusa.org/StudentCert.pdf
Adult Literacy Instruction: A Review of the
Research is a follow-up to the original review of Adult
Education (AE) reading instruction, Research-Based
Principles for Adult Basic Education Reading Instruction,
published in 2002. This new report is an analysis of the AE reading
instruction research base,
designed as a resource for both practitioners and reading
researchers. It focuses on findings that can be derived from the
research and their application in
adult education settings. It includes research findings from
reviews of adolescent reading instruction, reading-writing connections,
English for Speakers
of Other Languages reading and writing instruction, and an
appendix.
Download the PDF version of Adult Literacy Instruction: A
Review of the Research at: http://lincs.ed.gov/publications/pdf/adult_ed_2010.pdf
Breaking the language barrier: A report on
English language services in greater Boston
This new report from the Boston Foundation (92 pp) describes
adult English language services in the Greater Boston area, with
attention to area
demographics, education attainment, service distribution by age
and other variables, elements of the service system, gaps in service,
and system strengths.
It makes numerous policy, research, and service recommendations
to improve future reach and quality of service. The report notes
that the very people
"on which our future depends are facing high hurdles in every
aspect of their lives..." and observes that access to ESL services "can
have a profound and
positive impact on the lives of these individuals and their
families."
http://www.tbf.org/UtilityNavigation/MultimediaLibrary/ReportsDetail.aspx?id=17664
Work after prison: One-year findings
from the transitional jobs reentry demonstration is the first major
evaluation of the multi-year "Transitional
Jobs Reentry Demonstration" project funded by the Joyce
Foundation. MDRC is the lead evaluator in a team that includes
the Urban
Institute and the University of Michigan. The project focuses on
programs that provide temporary subsidized jobs, support services, and
job
placement help. The project's purpose is to test
transitional jobs as a promising approach to regular paid employment
for ex-offenders and other disadvantaged groups.
The 278-page report describes how the program was
implemented--with more than 1,800 men assigned to it in four cities
(Chicago, Detroit, Milwaukee, and
St. Paul). It also looks at results in terms of employment
and recidivism in the first year following entrance into the program.
A key general finding is that transitional jobs, as currently
designed and operated, do not sufficiently help people get or retain
permanent jobs, nor do they
have an impact on recidivism. Only about one-third of the
participants was employed in the formal labor market at the end of a
year. However, it is seen as
a positive indicator that about 85 percent of the men assigned to
the program actually worked in an income-subsidized transitional job,
reflecting genuine
eagerness to work. And the evaluators are inclined to think
that subsidized transitional employment programs could be effective if
they were strengthened
with components that provide basic and workplace skills
instruction and if better job- and post-placement services were built
in.
The project will be followed up for one more year with further
results after which another report will be issued.
full repoirt: http://www.mdrc.org/publications/570/full.pdf
This report is also available as a 14-page executive summary: http://www.mdrc.org/publications/570/execsum.pdf
Opening Doors to Student Success
A Synthesis of Findings from an Evaluation at Six Community Colleges
- Susan Scrivener and Erin Coghlan http://www.mdrc.org/publications/585/overview.html
Khan Academy - have you seen
this? http://www.khanacademy.org/
Opening Doors to
Student Success A Synthesis of Findings from an Evaluation at Six
Community Colleges
- Susan Scrivener and Erin Coghlan
http://www.mdrc.org/publications/585/overview.html
Developing oral
proficiency of adults learning English – resources from CAL http://www.cal.org/adultspeak/
The U.S.
Department of Education Office of Vocational and Adult Education’s
(OVAE) Division of Adult Education and Literacy has a new quarterly
newsletter - Adult Career
Pathways (ACP) News is a part of the department’s effort to provide
technical assistance resources that will revolutionize the
quantity and quality of available career pathways instructional
programming for low-skilled adults. Browse headlines available in this
issue below, and
view the whole article and newsletter online:
Resources from the Field ACP News will be devoted to highlighting
resources of value to local practitioners.
This first issue features recently published resources that have
been recommended by the Technical Working Group (TWG) members. U.S.
Departments of
Labor and Education Partner on Career Pathways Technical
Assistance Initiative
The Career Pathways Technical Assistance Initiative is directed
at strengthening career pathway systems for low-skilled adults and
dislocated workers.
Knowledge is Power - ProvPlan Invites You
to Take a Closer Look at Census 2010
http://campaign.r20.constantcontact.com/render?llr=5qk7mzeab&v=001qwhULkbmHDtNFUfHfpFZNJtf-NJdp5pUGyVTleegoV6kfIc5JeElD7t4g5JZKkyXSoyHwvyoyRK7OdZn4ENkYrZ3YI25Zl-LoMSkkAyH5fLVliwVXED1y5bJZ_4c4Nkk11S_TQT-7ygS10SNI5leSg%3D%3D
updates
form the National Coalition for Advocacy:
http://us1.campaign-archive2.com/?u=2d6768592c02f5717ce038fa8&id=d2dadf552b
fact sheets from the national Coalition for Literacy: http://www.ncladvocacy.org/ffadult.html
and http://national-coalition-literacy.org/advocacy/AdultEducationSupportsNationalPriorities.pdf
Teaching
ESL to Adults
Classroom
- Approaches in Action MaryAnn Florez and Betsy Parrish, ESL
consultants
A SERIES OF 8 TRAINING VIDEOS View online for free or purchase
DVDs at minimal cost
In spring 2010, the New American Horizons Foundation, with the
help of ESL training specialists MaryAnn Florez and Betsy Parrish,
produced its first two
teacher training videos, set in real classrooms led by expert
teachers using evidence-based practices. They were titled Lesson
Planning for Life Skills and
Building Literacy with Adult Emergent Readers. Six more videos
are now available, and you can view online for free and/or own the
complete set of eight
videos on three DVDs at a minimal cost ($5.00 for materials per
DVD plus shipping). The new titles are: Growing Vocabulary with
Beginning Learners,
Working with a Multi-level Class, Developing Listening Skills
with High-intermediate Learners, Teaching Grammar in Real-life
Contexts, Cultivating
Writing Skills at the Intermediate Level and Developing Reading
Skills for Intermediate/Advanced Learners http://www.newamericanhorizons.org
The New American Horizons Foundation is a non-profit organization
dedicated to making adult ESL courses more widely available and
affordable.
Its current priority is to develop high-quality teacher training
resources for adult ESL.
CLASP is pleased to announce the release of
a new report, Beyond Basic Skills: State Strategies to Connect
Low-Skilled Students to an Employer-Valued
Postsecondary Education.
Beyond Basic Skills describes strategies that can be used to
strengthen connections between basic skills education and postsecondary
education to help lower
-skilled adults and out-of-school youth attain the postsecondary
credentials they need to advance in the labor market. This includes
state-level innovations
such as: instructional strategies that provide a strong
foundation in occupational skills required for jobs in the local
economy; acceleration strategies that help
students progress further and more quickly in education and
training programs in a shorter period of time than traditional
approaches, and funding formulas,
assessment policies, and other administrative policies that
support a statewide vision to provide adults and youth with pathways to
better jobs through
postsecondary education. The report also includes examples of
states and local institutions that are effectively implementing one or
more of these innovations.
http://www.clasp.org/admin/site/publications/files/Beyond-Basic-Skills-March-2011.pdf
did you
know? a listing of research and
evaluation projects, and other initiatives funded through OVAE: http://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ovae/pi/AdultEd/englit.html
The proceedings for
the 2009 LESLLA
(Low Educated Second
Language and Literacy Acquisition) Symposium in Banff, Alberta, Canada
are available
at http://www.leslla.org/files/resources/Conference_Proceedings_FINAL_Aug12.pdf.
Thanks to Theresa Wall
and colleagues at Bow Valley College for putting them together.
Reflect 13 - special report on employability;
teaching composition and using poetry; classroom-based research as
Continuous Professional
Development; a phonics debate; how statistics can confuse rather
than clarify; how television is being used to reach adult learners in
Ireland; teaching in
secure hospitals; prisons – creativity space and books for new
readers; the Reflect approach and ESOL; and the role of care support
workers
in developing the literacy, language and numeracy skills of
clients with learning difficulties and disabilities.
http://www.nrdc.org.uk/publications_details.asp?ID=179#
Rhode Island Employment Disability E-News,
newsletter from the Paul V.
Sherlock Center on Disabilities,
available at: http://www.ric.edu/sherlockcenter/onlinepublications.html
the Math
Bulletin, developed by SABES
http://www.sabes.org/resources/publications/mathbulletin/math-bulletin-june2009.pdf
Good geography refresher...and good
mouse skill practice as well.
http://jimspages.com/States.htm
from Kate Northcott, Director, Student Literacy Corps Webster University
line:
LessonWriter.com is
a free website
where teachers can copy, paste and submit any text (an article, essay,
story, etc.) and create comprehensive,
standards -based lesson plans and student materials in minutes.
LessonWriter is a simple, fast and free way to use authentic,
high-interest content to motivate students while delivering the
explicit language instruction that ELL's
need in both English and content-area classes. There are advanced
features that can differentiate instruction for multilevel classes and
class tracking features that will
automatically scaffold lessons.
http://www.lessonwriter.com
Lots to do at the library
Providence
Public Library's calendar of events: http://www.provlib.org/calendar.asp
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
google
literacy site: http://www.google.com/literacy/
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/trainin
19th annual conference on serving
adults with disabilities – April 28, Hartford Marriott
Farmington, CT http://www.crec.org/events.php,
http://www.crec.org/tabs/documents/2011-Learning-Disabilities-Conference-Brochure.pdf
call for
proposals: LESLLA 2011 Call for
Presentations
Low Educated Second Language and Literacy Acquisition (LESLLA)
for Adults is an international forum of researchers who share an
interest in research
into the development of second language skills by adult
immigrants and refugees with little or no schooling in the home
country, low levels of literacy in the
native language, and limited proficiency in the language of the
new country.
LESLLA'ss goal is to share empirical research and information
that will guide further studies on second language acquisition for the
adult immigrant
population with limited formal education. This research, in turn,
is meant to influence educational policy development in all those
countries where
immigrants settle and are likely to need educational support.
LESLLA welcomes presentation proposals for the 7th annual
conference to be held in Minneapolis, Minnesota, September 29-October
1, 2011.
We are anticipating a large conference with a mix of researchers,
teacher educators, program administrators, and practitioners. To best
serve ALL of
our attendees, we invite presentations in the following areas:
1. Classroom Practice
2. Teacher Education for LESLLA Instructors
3. Research
4. Materials Development and Use
5. Socio-Cultural Issues
6. Policy
7. Adolescent Learners, Teaching LESLLA in Secondary
Settings
Please note that only presentations directly related to LESLLA
learners will be considered.
Deadline for Submissions: May 25; To submit a proposal for a
presentation, please visit: http://www.cehd.umn.edu/ci/LESLLA/default.html
17th
Annual Pedagogy and Theatre
of the Oppressed (PTO) Conference
July 20th through 23rd, 2011 Francis W. Parker School, Chicago,
Illinois Conference Theme: We Are Each Other's Harvest
learn more: http://www.ptoweb.org
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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