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) 863-2839
August 10,2011
Bulletin
#385
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
New
website for the Rhode Island Adult Education Community. Connect
with us and let us know how you like it! http://riaec.com/default.aspx
from
Lenore Balliro: The second issue of Program Notes,
a publication of the Managing Stress to Improve Learning project at
World Education in Boston, is now online.
Read about teachers' and students' experiences with yoga in the
classroom, creating altered shoes as art, feedback theater, and Brain
Gym. Lots of cool pix, too.
http://www.nelrc.org/managingstress/program%20notes%2002%20july%2021%20with%20corrections.pdf
TRANSITION TO
COLLEGE - A Division of Rhode Island Regional Adult Learning
Next Weekend Program begins in October. If college is your goal,
call today to enroll in a free program to prepare for the transition to
college.
TTC is a natural segue for GED, EDP, and Advanced ESL students to
prepare for continuing education at the college level.
TTC free College Reading (ENGL 0850) at CCRI in Providence;
Student Success Workshops, Career Exploration Workshops, Mentoring,
Academic Writing,
Basic Math and Pre-algebra classes, Computer lab and tutoring,
Academic Advising, Student Support Services, College Application and
Financial Aid preparation.
Info Sessions: Sept. 10,
Oct. 1, Nov. 5, Dec. 3 at10:00 am, 175 Main Street Pawtucket
Phone 722-9800 Email or call 722-9800 to register for the
Information Session.mariecrecca-romero@riral.org
Please allow 2 -3 hours for assessment. Please
do not bring children
30th Anniversary Adult Literacy Mini Conference
Saturday, September 17 Coventry Town Hall Council Chambers, 1670 Flat
River Road Coventry, RI
Questions: LVKC - (401) 822-9103 Dorothy
(401) 822-9462 Email: lvkc@coventrylibrary.org
featured presenters include:
Dr. Judy Blankenship Cheatham, Reading Is Fundamental vice
president of literacy services, previously Jefferson Pilot Professor of
English at Greensboro
College, as well as coordinator of the Modern Languages and
Literatures division and director of the Master of Arts program, and
was dean of Professional
and Graduate Studies. Active in family and workplace
literacy, she has trained tens of thousands of tutors, teachers,
volunteers, and parents.
A volunteer tutor herself, the four books she authored in the
literacy field are geared toward tutors, teacher aides, and parents who
work with children and
families.
David C. Harvey is president and CEO of ProLiteracy, the largest
nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing the cause of adult
literacy and basic
education programs in the United States. Harvey has led efforts
to strategically reposition the organization with a focus on
innovation, expanding its
public policy work and advocacy presence in Washington, D.C., and
fostering new foundation, corporate, and federal funding
partnerships. Other
key initiatives include diversifying ProLiteracy’s internal staff
and board of directors, and relocating its headquarters to Syracuse's
New West Side
–one of the poorest census tracts in the US. Internationally,
Harvey has led a review of ProLiteracy’s portfolio of literacy for
social change projects
in 52 emerging countries, and helped to sponsor an adult literacy
forum in South Africa and has a long history of working on behalf of
vulnerable
populations and disenfranchised communities.
Dave Whitaker has been working in the adult literacy field for
over thirteen years, and is the former Executive Director of the
Literacy Center for the
Midlands in Omaha, Nebraska. During that time, he also worked for
Literacy Volunteers of America as a Liaison for the Missouri Valley and
as an
accreditation surveyor. He has tutored two Basic Literacy
students and two ESOL students. Whitaker joined ProLiteracy Worldwide
in 2003 by
overseeing the three-year project, Increasing Intensity of
Instruction in Volunteer-Based Literacy Programs and later the two-year
project, Volunteers in ABE/ESL.
In 2009, Whitaker became ProLiteracy’s Accreditation and Trainer
Certification Coordinator.
talk about
it: Using Video in Teaching and
Staff Development —A two-part discussion hosted on the
Professional Development and Technology and
Distance Learning Discussion Lists
http://lincs.ed.gov/lincs/discussions/professionaldevelopment/11video_part1
Part II: Using Video with Adult
Learners August 15-19
To participate, subscribe (free): Technology and Distance
Learning
Discussion List
Description: Join us to learn how video is being used with adult
learners. While this technology has been around for some time, we will
explore how the increase in access
to the creation, editing, and sharing of videos through cell
phone technology and social media sites like YouTube, as well as
relatively inexpensive video cameras like the
Flip, is making it easier and more fun to include video in
instruction. We will also discuss how the use of premade video content
is being used in classrooms and at a distance
. Tools, techniques, and content discussed will be shared on Adult
Literacy Education (ALE) Wiki as an ongoing resource. The ALE Wiki is a
social media tool connecting
research and professional wisdom in adult literacy education; it
is supported by the New Jersey Association for Lifelong Learning.
Engaging Young Adults in Learning
September – December 2011 - Free of charge
Goal: The overall goal of the New England Adult Education PD
Network is to build the capacity of ABE, ASE/college transition and
ESOL providers to
offer the highest possible quality instruction and related
services that enable adult learners to meet their educational and life
goals.
Major Topics Covered:
1) Teaching the Millennial Generation
2) Evidence-based practices for engaging young adults in learning
Teaching basic and classroom management strategies;
Using social media and technology to engage youth;
Principles of effective youth-adult partnerships
3) Program design options and policy considerations – optional
webinar geared to administrators
Modes of Delivery: Four-week, facilitated online course (8 hours)
Face-to-face, interactive workshop (6 hours) Webinars (6
hours) Virtual community of practice (4 hours) and Readings (2
hours)
Stephanie Korber is the Director of Youth Education at Center for
Literacy (CFL) in Philadelphia. She provides professional development
opportunities
for teacher and program administrators. Stephanie designed and
taught two online courses: Young Adult Education: Strategies and
Materials for Ensuring
Success and Young Adult Education: Program Design. She is also
the lead author of the Toolkit for Serving Out-of-School Youth with Low
Literacy Levels
published by the Center for Literacy. This opportunity will be
coordinated in Rhode Island through the RI Adult Education Professional
Development Center
(the PDC
For questions and more information: Jill Holloway at
jholloway@ric.edu or at 456-2833
To Register: Contact Jessica Ortiz at jortiz@ric.edu
a flyer containing more information is here
(word doc).
Registration
Open for 2011 Supporting Meaningful Employment Course - a Person
Centered Approach to Career Planning, Job Development and Job
Retention
Approved National ACRE Certificate Program Course begins
September 9
Center on Disabilities, RI College and sponsored by the RIDHS-
Office of Rehabilitation Services.
For more information about the Supporting Meaningful Employment
course, please contact Vicki Ferrara, (401) 456-8092 or
vferrara@ric.edu .
Obtain a brochure: http://www.ric.edu/sherlockcenter/publications/sme.pdf
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.
also online:
resources from MN that may be helpful for teachers working with
low-literate English language learners
- the Study Circle Guide For Teachers of Low-literacy Adult ESL
Students: http://www.atlasabe.org/professional/adult-esl
The Council for the Advancement of Adult Literacy has
released the first of two papers slated for publication on Adult
Numeracy education.
ADULT NUMERACY: A READER (122 pp.) is available at the CAAL
website http://www.caalusa.org/Adult.pdf
and contains four papers from CAAL's January 2011
invitational Roundtable on Adult Numeracy. Included are
Adult Numeracy Demand & Provision by research scholar Lynda
Ginsburg of Rutgers University; Policy to
Improve Math Teaching & Learning in Adult Basic Education: A
Perspective from Massachusetts by Bob Bickerton, Senior Associate
Commissioner, Massachusetts
Department of Education; Basic Skills in the United Kingdom: How
It Has Evolved Over the Past Decade by Sue Southwood, Programme
Director, Literacy,
Language and Numeracy, National Institute of Adult and Continuing
Education (NIACE) in London; and More Than Rules: College Transition
Math Teaching
for GED Graduates at the City University of New York by Steve
Hinds, Mathematics Staff Developer, Adult Literacy/GED Program and
College Transition Initiative, CUNY.
(CAAL's own report on its adult numeracy project will be
available by September.)
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 http://www.edgov/about/offices/list/ovae/index.html
learning
opportunities
Building Economic Security for Workers and
their Families – free workshop: Dates and Locations:
http://www.eventbrite.com/event/1497291439
Thursday, September 15th,, Warwick Public Library 9:00 am –
Registration 9:30 - 12:30 pm - Workshop
Thursday, September 22nd, Woonsocket Public Library 9:00 am
– Registration 9:30 am - 12:30 pm - Workshop
Monday, September 26th, Newport Public Library (map) 1 pm –
Registration 1:30 pm - 4:30 pm - Workshop
Trainers: Linda Katz and/or Rachel Flum, The Poverty
Institute
Workshop Description:
In this workshop we will provide an overview of the eligibility
and application processes for the key work supports for low and
moderate income families
and individuals in Rhode Island: RIte Care/RIte Share,
Child Care Assistance Program, SNAP and the Earned Income Tax
Credit. We will also review
key provisions of the RI Works Program that relate to workforce
development and to receipt of cash assistance benefits. Finally,
we will demonstrate
the Poverty Institute's Guide To Government Assistance Programs,
an on-line tool that can help staff refer families and individuals to a
variety of resources
to help meet basic needs.
reading training:
Bristol Community College Attleboro ABE program is hosting a two day
training seminar for Reading Horizons Reading Software in our
Attleboro Computer lab. August 31 and Sept 1, 9-4pm. We have up
to15-18 slots available for any New England Area Practitioners that
would like to learn
how to use the Reading Horizons Program.
Reading Horizons Adult Reading program is designed to instruct
adults with a 0-5 GLE in reading. BCC Attleboro piloted the program for
6 months at BCC and we
saw an 80% improvement among adults who began within those
reading levels. We are now able to offer the program to our students
and will train our own teachers
and staff with the help of Reading Horizon’s trainers. The
additional computers in our lab will allow us to train area teachers at
a reduced cost. The cost of the two
-day training is $180 per person for the training which includes
breakfast and lunch on both days. Parking is free.
Please call Jan Hagan at 1-800-333-0054X. 111 at Reading Horizons
to register your place in this great opportunity before August 17,2011.
Many states are requiring programs to use the STAR system which
is designed for the 6-8 GLE students and this program many be a great
preliminary program to move more students up to the level where
STAR will benefit them. Please register with Jan and if you have
location
questions or you need accommodations please contact me at this
e-mail address. Please forward to potential interested programs.
-Kristen P. McKenna, Adult Education Program Director BCC
Attleboro 11 Field. Rd Room 215A Attleboro, MA 02703 508-678-2811x3531
free online Social Media Workshop 2011
http://larc.sdsu.edu/social-media-workshop/
August 8 – 12
Attend onsite in Califormia or online (via Elluminate)
Online participants must have access to high speed Internet, head
set with microphone, and web cam.
Online social media tools inherently mediate communication,
community building, publishing, and sharing in a plethora of languages
and medias, which
makes social media well-suited for second language learning and
instruction. Despite their inherent functionality and intended
user friendliness, social
media tools don't come with a guide book for best classroom
practices, teacher technology training, or proper integration into
standards based language instruction.
This is where principled, standards-driven intervention is needed.
From August 8th to 12th, the Language Acquisition Resource Center
at San Diego State University will host its annual free week-long
Social Media
Workshop in a blended live and online format and continue the
exploration and instruction of social media for the language classroom.
The workshop will
provide real classroom examples and hands-on practice, through a
series of language educators demonstrating their classroom uses of
social media, the language
learning objectives, instruction on how to use the tool, and
finally an activity that allowed participants to sign up and experiment
with the new tool.
learn more at the link above
access other ongoing self-paced
online
courses (available at no cost) here: http://207.10.202.20/home/
The Goodling Institute at Penn State University and the National
Center for Family Literacy are pleased to offer the following
post-baccalaureate
professional development opportunity: ADTED 457: Adult
Literacy is a three-credit post-baccalaureate course
that examines adult literacy issues, research, theory,
and
instructional practices in the context of family literacy.
The course
studies the literacy needs of adults as they pertain to the roles of
parent, worker, and community member. Parents' involvement in their
children's
education is an ongoing theme, with a focus on how to engage
parents with low-level skills in literacy activities with their
children at home. Research related to teaching English as a
Second
Language is also discussed in the context of adult and family literacy.
The course begins on September 7. More information about the
Certificate can be found at:
http://www.worldcampus.psu.edu/degrees-and-certificates/family-literacy-certificate/overview
or you may contact Dr. Sheila Sherow at sms20@psu.edu.
Course
registration is open for the 2011-12 offerings of Teaching Adult
Numeracy online professional development courses from
http://www.professionalstudiesae.org.
Courses are offered at $179; group rates available.
Foundations of Teaching Adult Numeracy September 19 to October 31, 2011
In this foundational course you’ll learn how to keep students at the
center of numeracy instruction. You’ll explore the components of
numeracy, how to address the needs of students with learning gaps, how
students’ styles of learning math and levels of math knowledge affect
their math skills, and ways to build student’s success in learning
math. You’ll plan classroom activities, test them with your students,
and share your experiences with fellow teachers.
Registration link: http://www.newreaderspress.com/Items.aspx?hierId=6528
Course instructor: Brooke Istas
Teaching Reasoning and Problem Solving Strategies October 31 to
December 19, 2011
Numerate adults do more than calculate figures. They think about the
relationships between mathematical concepts and real-life situations.
They look for patterns, make predictions, and evaluate their
conclusions. They can form problems, represent them, and solve them.
They apply critical thinking skills. This course examines mathematical
reasoning and problem solving strategies and provides numerous teaching
strategies and activities that you can apply to your teaching right
away.
Registration link: http://www.newreaderspress.com/Items.aspx?hierId=6508
Course instructor: Barbara Goodridge
Number Sense: Teaching About Parts and Wholes January 9 to February 20,
2012
Teaching students how to use estimation, mental math, benchmarking, and
calculators will enhance their conceptual understanding of numbers and
what numbers represent. This course focuses on helping adult students
develop number sense by addressing two key questions: When is it
necessary to have an exact answer, and when is an estimate sufficient?
When calculation is necessary, which tool is appropriate to use? You’ll
design math activities that are permeated with estimation, mental math,
and reasonableness strategies.
Registration link: http://www.newreaderspress.com/Items.aspx?hierId=6503
Course instructor: Jean Stephens
Geometry: Teaching About Shapes and Their Measures February 13 to March
26, 2012
Adult basic education students need foundational geometry and
measurement skills not only to succeed in GED math, but also in the
workplace. In this course, you will explore key topics in geometry,
such as area, perimeter, and volume, and their importance in everyday
life. You’ll look at numerous instructional activities for teaching
about angles, spatial relationships, similarity, and figure
transformations on a coordinate graph system.
Registration link: http://www.newreaderspress.com/Items.aspx?hierId=6511
Course instructor: Barbara Goodridge
Data: Helping Students Interpret Statistical Representations March 19
to April 30, 2012
Data, or numerical information, can be described, represented,
analyzed, and interpreted in various ways for various purposes. This
course looks at some common uses (and misuses) of data. Learn about the
measures of central tendency statistics, graphs, and probability.
Through the course readings, activities, and discussions, you’ll review
basic concepts and explore strategies for introducing and teaching
these concepts to your adult students. Course instructor: TBD
Registration link: Watch http://www.newreaderspress.com/Items.aspx?hierId=6500
Algebra: Introducing Algebraic Reasoning April 23 to June 4, 2012
Research suggests that math topics, including algebra, should be taught
at all levels, not just when a student is ready for GED preparation. In
this course, you’ll learn how to introduce algebraic reasoning to your
students, and you’ll experiment with strategies for teaching numeric
patterns, relationships, and functions based on real-life situations.
You’ll also explore strategies to help students model quantitative
relationships using graphs, tables, words, and equations.
Registration link: http://www.newreaderspress.com/Items.aspx?hierId=6515
Course instructor: Barbara Goodridge
Questions? prodev@proliteracy.org; ProfessionalStudiesAE.org is a
partnership of World Education, Inc., and ProLiteracy/New Readers
Press.
Visit http://www.professionalstudiesae.org
for a complete listing of available courses.
brief, interesting article:
The relative benefits found for students with and without
learning disabilities taking a first-year university preparation course
- Maureen J. Reed, Deborah J. Kennett, Tanya Lewis, and Eunice
Lund-Lucas Active Learning in Higher Education 2011;12 133-142
http://alh.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/12/2/133
via Donna Brian, moderator,Workforce Competitiveness Discussion List.
(note; if you have problems accessing the full text, please
contact lrri@brown.edu)
ELL-U is a free,
innovative online
training and professional development community for adult ESOL
professionals. This Web site provides users with a
variety of learning activities and social networking
opportunities designed to create a community of professional practice
focused on improving ELL
instruction. ELL-U's first online course, Second Language
Acquisition: Myths, Beliefs and What the Research Shows, is available
online.
The course consists of four sections that can be completed
independently. Each section will take about 20 minutes to complete and
provide opportunities for
extended learning activities. To register for the course, visit
the Online Courses page under the Academics section. Registered users
can access the course learning
page to chat with other participants and engage with the course's
author, Dr. Martha Bigelow, through ELL-U office hours.
The office hours will take place online and are an opportunity
for participants to ask questions.
Once you've completed the course, please complete the online
survey and check out additional ways to interact with the ELL-U
community.
http://www.ell-u.org/member/login
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
read all
about it: the Times in plain English http://www.thetimesinplainenglish.com/wp
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
Work documented by Barbara Piccirilli Alsabek and Nancy Fritz –
read and learn:
http://www.nelrc.org/persist/instruction_evid_h.html
funding
opportunities - large and less large
Grant opportunity: Barbara Bush Foundation
for Family Literacy's 2012 National Grant Competition for
programs supporting the development
of literacy skills for adult primary caregivers and their
children. Organizations must meet the following criteria for grant
consideration:
The organization must have current nonprofit or public status and
must have been in existence for two or more years as of the date of the
application.
The organization must have maintained fiscal accountability.
The organization must operate an instructional literacy program
that has been in existence for at least two years and must include one
or more of the
following components: literacy for adults, parent education,
pre-literacy or literacy instruction for children pre-k to grade 3,
intergenerational literacy activities.
The foundation will award approximately $650,000. No grant
request should exceed $65,000. Applications are due September 9, 2011.
To learn more, visit the foundation’s Web site for instructions
and application guidelines.
Request
For Proposal Posted on July 22,
2011
Deadline: August 22, 2011 (First Stage Applications)
National Center for Family Literacy Offers Grants for
Implementation of New Online Resources
The National Center for Family Literacy is accepting grant
applications
from education and community organizations working to provide support
for Latino
and other families whose members want to earn college
degrees. Made possible with funding from the MetLife Foundation, the
grants are designed to expand
the reach of the Family Literacy -
Community College Partnership Initiative to communities and programs
across the U.S.
http://foundationcenter.org/pnd/rfp/rfp_item.jhtml?id=346300034
- 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.
reading
specialist: Job Reference Number: 05191641
Special Programs Coordinator (SABES Curriculum, Assessment and
Reading)
Duties and Responsibilities:
Responsible for planning, coordinating, program and staff
development activities/provision of technical assistance to Adult Basic
Education (ABE)
Practitioners throughout the region. Serve as a member of
statewide teams involved in developmental projects and facilitate
communication between all
providers of ABE services.
Serve as a member of multiple statewide teams involved in
developmental projects, workgroups carrying out Massachusetts
Department of Elementary and
Secondary Education (MADESE) initiatives and facilitating
communication between all providers of ABE services. Visit programs to
provide technical
assistance and support; facilitate groups, develop and provide
training; communicate with administrators, teachers, and counselors on
an on-going basis
to identify needs of the programs and practitioners; provide
leadership in the design and implementation of content-specific areas.
Qualifications:
Required: Masters
Degree in reading instruction or related field; substantial experience
in the field of Adult Basic Education; demonstrated expertise in
reading instruction and curriculum development; strong communications
skills; ability to generate minutes, reports and training materials;
ability to prioritize tasks and manage multiple assignments; ability to
supervise training consultants and coordinate training logistics;
ability to address small and large audiences; willingness to travel and
flexibility in working hours to facilitate contact with day and evening
programs; proven ability to develop trainings and provide technical
assistance, training and support to staff and programs in the areas of
reading instruction and curriculum development and the Massachusetts
ABE Curriculum Frameworks; create appealing brochures and flyers for
training events and workshops and to organize staff development events
regionally; experience using Microsoft WORD and EXCEL.
Preferred: Expertise
in Massachusetts ABE Assessments; certified STAR Teacher or Trainer, a
demonstrated familiarity with the existing network of SABES programs
and processes, a proven ability to develop trainings and provide
technical assistance, training and support to staff and programs in the
areas of high and low stakes assessment and to organize large,
statewide, staff development events.
Supervision Required: Reports to the SABES Regional Director.
Position Status: (MCCC) unit position with benefits; actual
salary is dependent on the compensation guidelines per the MCCC contract
(pending availability of funds)
Salary: $46,000.00 prorated. This is a 37.5 hour per week, grant
funded (MCCC) unit position with benefits.
Screening will begin with applications received and will continue
until the position is filled. Only online applications will be
considered.
Please send a letter of intent, resume, and the names, addresses
and telephone numbers of three references to Mr. Tafa Awolaju, Vice
President of Human Resources and Affirmative Action.
You can apply on the Bristol Community college website. Click on
the jobs link and look for this position. http://www.bristolcc.edu
QUESTIONS ABOUT THIS POSTING - PLEASE CONTACT BCC’s Job
Phone Line at 508.678.2811 x3142.
Bristol Community College is committed to a policy of
nondiscrimination and affirmative action in its education programs,
activities and employment practices. In an effort to
improve ethnic diversity, Bristol Community College encourages
minorities and women to apply. Accredited by the New England
Association of Schools and Colleges.
Bristol Community College changes the world by changing lives,
learner by learner.
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
July 28th newsletter of the Council for the Advancement of Adult
Literacy: The Font for People With Dyslexia . According to a
study by the
University of Twente (Netherlands), people with dyslexia read
with much greater ease and get better results using a new typeface
called "Dyslexie".
The Twente website shows how the visual representation of
letters, including orientation and shape, is altered to make the font
more user friendly.
http://www.studiostudio.nl/project-dyslexie/
online:
from Esther Prins. Associate Professor and Co-Director Goodling
Institute for Research in Family Literacy
The Center for Rural Pennsylvania has released the final report
for our study, GED Preparation through Distance Learning in Rural
Pennsylvania.
http://www.rural.palegislature.us/GED_DL_2011.pdf
The fact sheet is appropriate for distribution to policy makers,
funders, and program administrators, while the brochure presents
highlights of the study.
These items will soon be posted on the ISAL/Goodling Institute
website. We hope you'll find these resources to be useful,
The Media Library of Teaching
Skills (MLoTS) has a new Adult Secondary Education/GED classroom
video, Writing: the Five Paragraph Essay, with
Clinton Massachusetts GED teacher, Brenna Kane and some of her
GED students. We have other Adult Secondary Education, ESOL/ESL, Family
Literacy,
Numeracy, Reading and Writing classroom videos, and we link to
over 70 adult education videos made by others. MLoTS is the "go to" web
site for adult
education professional development videos, a "video window on
other teachers classrooms." You will find copies of a lesson plan
aligned to state curriculum
frameworks and standards, upon which each lesson was designed,
and questions for you and other adult education teachers to use in
professional development discussions.
If you only have a half hour for professional development, you
and other teachers at your program could download a discussion guide,
view a streamed or downloaded
video and discuss it. Each short, edited, authentic classroom
video ranges from two to 15 minutes. With permission, the videos can be
incorporated in online or face-to-face
professional development courses and workshops. MLoTS, now over
four years old, is free; It is the only such video collection devoted
exclusively to classroom and
tutorial learning for adult education professional development. I
hope you will have a look at http://mlots.org,
and that you will add your comments and questions to
the video web pages. In some cases, the teachers in the videos
will respond.
[Note: some versions of the Internet Explorer browser may not be
able to be used to view the videos. We suggest you use a Safari,
Firefox or Chrome
browser, all free and easily downloaded. See http://mlots.or for
links to downloads of these browsers.] We eagerly await your comments
on the new GED
essay writing video, and others. - David J. Rosen,
President djrosen@mlots.org
The Ontario Adult Literacy
Curriculum Framework, now available, includes a competency-based
curriculum framework and related assessment and learning
material resources that help adult learners transition to their
goals of work, further education and training, or independence. It
provides practitioners with
guidance and support to make closer connections between literacy
programming and the skills, knowledge, and behaviours learners need to
reach their chosen goals.
http://www.tcu.gov.on.ca/eng/eopg/oalcf/index.html
http://www.tcu.gov.on.ca/eng/eopg/publications/OALCF_Curriculum_Framework_Mar_11.pdf
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/
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.
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
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
The
National Center for Family Literacy (NCFL) is calling for proposals for
concurrent presentations at the 21st National Conference on Family
Literacy to
be held in San Diego, California, March 25-27, 2012. Concurrent
sessions are hour long sessions that focus on topics relating to
literacy practices.
NCFL welcomes proposals from program staff, partners, students
and others interested in the field of literacy. Deadline for submission
of proposals
is September 30, 2011.
To learn more about the conference, visit http://www.famlit.org/conference/
Submit your proposal at http://www.famlit.org/call-for-proposals/
The Center
for Health Literacy in collaboration with the American Public
Health Association presents its second annual conference,
Plain Talk in Complex
Times September 22-23, Arlington, VA
speakers include: Christopher Gibbons, MD, physician
informatician and expert in urban health and healthcare disparities.,
Kevin Pho,
MD, practicing physician, and social media's leading physician
voice, KevinMD. Debra Roter, DrPH, Johns Hopkins professor of public
health and expert in physician-patient communication. Jared
Smith, of WebAIM, leading expert on Web accessibility and
Christina
Zarcadoolas, PhD, sociolinguist and internationally recognized
expert in health literacy.
Workshops: eHealth literacy, writing for the web, usability
testing, design for readability, social media for engagement and
outreach, and storytelling
for usability. Continuing Education (CE) credits available.
REGISTRATION Early-bird registration ends July 31; agenda
updates: plaintalkconf.com.
LESLLA 2011 registration open
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.
http://www.cehd.umn.edu/ci/LESLLA/default.html
VALUEUSA's 7th National Adult Learner
Leadership Institute October 9 - 11, 2011, in
Sacramento, California,
Featuring Danny Glover as guest speaker. more information -
http://valueusa.org
VALUEUSA is a national, non-profit organization dedicated to
strengthening adult literacy programs in the United States
through learner involvement and leadership. VALUEUSA is governed
and operated by current and former adult learners.
VALUEUSA is the only national organization run by students of
adult education.
HOSTED BY VALUEUSA in partnership with the California State
Library
2011 National Refugee and Immigrant
Conference Call for Conference Workshop Proposals
We are pleased to announce the 2011 National Refugee and
Immigrant Conference: Issues and Innovations to be held in
Chicago on November 7-8, 2011.
The Save-the-Date flyer and Call for Conference Workshop
Proposals are posted at the conference website http://www.thecenterweb.org/alrc/refugee.html.
Please contact losheff@cntrmail.org if you have any questions
about proposal submissions. -Sue Barauski
, Judith Diamond, Lynn Osheff - Adult Learning Resource Center, 2626
South Clearbrook Drive Arlington Heights IL 60005 Direct:
224.366.8632
The National College Transition
Network at World Education invites you to submit a proposal for
its fifth annual national conference on Effective
Transitions in Adult Education to be held on November 14 - 15,
2011 in Providence (Warwick), RI. The conference is geared towards
adult and postsecondary
educators and administrators. The proposal submission deadline is
June 10, 2011.
Please visit http://collegetransition.org/conferences.national2011.callforpresenters.html
for the submission guidelines and to access the proposal form.
Do feel free to contact us if you have any questions.
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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