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
144 Bignall Street Warwick, RI
02888
12 July,
2012
Bulletin #410
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).
Also, see the RIAEPDC's website and calendar at : http://www.riaepdc.org/Pages/default.aspx
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.riaepdc.org/Pages/default.aspx
Job Development Specialists and
other interested practitioners: While there will be no JD
morning meeting in July, there will be a combined meeting
for Case Managers and Job Developers -- and anyone else
interested in or responsible for supporting, encouraging and preparing
students toward employment
goals on Thursday, July 19th from 1:00 to 3:00 p.m. at the
Warwick Public Library. As we begin the new fiscal year
with a focus on assessment and screening,
we will spend the summer months participating in and critiquing a
variety of activities and games which you may introduce during
intake/orientation/assessment.
This year's goal of the CM PLC is to develop and pilot an Intake
Packet that will help you (more immediately) develop a deeper insight
into the students / clients
you will support. I hope you'll join us.
Please reply to Robin Adams at RAdams@riaepdc.org
starting a class: Julia
Gandrud, who has worked with adult learners in Providence, is currently
enrolled in a class to teach writing to non-native speakers, at
UMass Boston's Applied Linguistics program. Julia
hopes to build a field project that involves teaching literacy to
adults whose native language is French or
French Creole; her work is informed by research that asserts that
it is more effective and efficient to begin with literacy in the native
language, no matter
what the language, and then move to English after some groundwork
has been established, including working by translation if necessary.
(http://www.ncela.gwu.edu/files/rcd/BE019750/Transferring_Literacy.pdf)
Her classroom objectives would be either that the students write
a self introduction, or that they tell a story that they would like
later generations to hear
from their lives. The class will be held at either the St. Paul
Catholic Church in Cranston, by the William Hall Library, or at St.
Michael's. Julia will begin
by helping them write in French or French Creole (there are
people who can help with the Creole at the Catholic Church), and then
go from there to write
in English. The lesson time is completely independent from the
church, relying only on their generosity in sharing their space.
If you or anyone you know
would want to help Julia meet potential participants please
contact her at julia@julialikesfrogs.com http://julialikesfrogs.blogspot.com/
The
Economic Progress Institute (formerly the Poverty Institute) publishes
enew regularly: the current issue includes information about food
eligibility, summer options and
more. http://www.economicprogressri.org/
from the
Center for Family Literacy, fyi (some of these will have come and gone,
many are archived):
Join edWeb.net this summer for new webinars on a variety of
topics. Join a community to be invited to a free webinar and live chat
each month and receive a CE certificate
for participation. The community is a support network and
learning center with online discussions, recorded webinars, CE quizzes,
and resources you can access at any time.
Use your summer break to catch up on over 120 webinars from the
past year. Go to: http://tinyurl.com/c8gd256
summer
reading, thinking, writing
- discussion lists at the LINCS site: http://lincs.ed.gov/pd/professionaldev.html
- have a look around
- fiction, poetry, things that make you wonder, think, consider
something(s) in new ways.
- reflection, walking, pausing.
ideas you'd like to share? janet_isserlis@brown.edu
From
extraordinary literacy practitioner, Kate
Nonesuch:
I have just started blogging at http://www.katenonesuch.com
It's all part of my goal to share everything I know about teaching
before I retire. And it;s all
free. I hope you’ll take a look at my blog, and post some
comments, or click the button that lets you follow the blog by e-mail.
Here are some recent posts:
Refuse to be Bored, Yahtzee, and Respect, Resistance and Reality
Also on the site, I’ve gathered up links to most of the things I’ve
written over the years
—Changing the Way We Teach Math, Family Math Fun!, various
articles, and videos.
(editor's note: brief, well written, thought provoking,
useful. please do have a look. you can thank us later).
information: Despite the fact
that at least 93 million adults in the U.S. may need basic skills
services to improve their economic prospects, funding for these
services is stagnating at the federal level and being slashed in
statehouses and state agencies across the country.
New findings from a national survey of adult education state
directors, conducted jointly by CLASP and the National Council for
State Directors of Adult
Education (NCSDAE), shed light on key financing and tuition
policies, including how programs are funded and how much money is
propping up the system
from all levels of government, local programs, and students
themselves. http://www.clasp.org/admin/site/publications/files/Sinking-or-Swimming-State-Adult-Education-Tuition-and-Financing-Policies.pdf
Keeping adult education affordable is not only critical for
student access, but essential to our nation’s economic recovery. Though
economists are predicting
a future in which the vast majority of jobs will require some
postsecondary education, a large proportion of the country’s workers
continue to suffer from
basic skills deficiencies or limited English skills. Investing in
these workers not only helps them achieve greater economic
self-sufficiency but also establishes
a greater pool of skilled workers to meet the growing demand.
Website
for the Rhode Island Adult Education Community.
Connect
with us and let us know how you like it! http://riaec.com/default.aspx
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.co
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
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
from the
Center for Study of Education and Work at OISE in Toronto:: http://www.csew.ca.
PHOTOVOICE MANUALS IN COMMUNITY-BASED RESEARCH
Based on lessons learned over a decade of Canadian
community-based research, Prairie Women's Health Centre of Excellence
is offering its step
by step PhotoVoice guide to teach others how to bring together
small groups of women to capture their stories. See previous exhibits:
http://www.pwhce.ca/program_poverty_photovoice.htm
After training from a professional photographer, women use a
disposable camera to take pictures that represent their experiences of
living in poverty, and the
policies and programs they would like tochange or keep. The women
meet to share their pictures and talk about what the photos mean to
them. Their
powerful images can be showcased in public showings, to broaden
awareness of the realities of living in poverty and stimulate action
for just social and
economic policies to improve women's lives. Order your PhotoVoice
Manual for $12 using the online form at
http://www.pwhce.ca/publications_order.htm,
or phone (204) 982-6630.
learning
opportunities
The LINCS
Region 1 Professional Development Center is hosting two freewebinars
for local program staff and volunteers this summer.
Participants and asked to register in advance for the webinars
and test their systems. Please let us know if you have questions.
Helping Students
Stay: Exploring Program and Classroom Persistence Strategies
A facilitated
on-line course
Description: When we focus on helping students stay in programs,
we address all the ingredients of program quality and effective
instruction. Student
persistence is, in fact, an indicator of program strength.
In this six-week course, we’ll use the six core “drivers” of
persistence, identified in the New
England Learner Persistence Project, to organize and review a
wide range of successful persistence strategies, and to prioritize the
ones that might
have the most impact in our own programs. This course is
sponsored by LINCS, and is therefore free to participants. New England
practitioners
have priority access to slots until
August 8, 2012.
Course Schedule: September 4 – October 15, 2012
Registration: To register on-line, go to: http://professionalstudiesae.worlded.org/registerpersistence.html
The LINCS Region
1 Professional Development Center is hosting two free webinars for
local program staff and volunteers this summer.
Participants are asked to register in advance for the webinars and test
their systems. Please let us know if you have questions.
Preparing Students for
College-Level Math
We will explore various strategies to prepare adult education
students for success in college-level mathematics. Math anxiety,
math journals, goal setting,
college placement exams, and math labs are some of the topics
that will be explored in this interactive session.
August 7, 2:00–3:00
pm EDT Registration: http://bit.ly/MOli9j
Presenter: Pam Meader
Advance Reading: Meader, P. (2006). Preparing students for
college-level math.
Available at http://www.collegetransition.org/promisingpractices.briefs.collegelevelmath.html
Project-Based Learning 2.0
We all have some experience working on projects in the classroom,
but what makes classroom projects authentic, project-based learning in
2012?
This webinar reviews key components and the strategies for
creating engaging, project-based learning (PBL) using technology.
The PBL approach
supports certain key characteristics of adult learning. Recent
models of PBL enrich and strengthen communication skills, improve soft
skills such
as critical thinking and teamwork as well as incorporating Web
2.0 technology skills. This session provides practical ideas for using
these concepts in your classroom.
September 25 2:00–3:00 pm EDT Registration:
http://bit.ly/MsHnic
Presenter: Steve Quann
Pre-webinar Assignment: Read the following scenario and offer
constructive advice to a colleague, using a reading from Focus on
Basics that might guide you.
1. Scenario: Your friend Maria is excited about the project
activity she is doing with her ABE class. She asked learners to use the
Internet to research the topic
of Climate Change and then present their findings to the class
via PowerPoint.
2. Question: What kind of feedback might you give your colleague
to improve her project-based learning activity?
3. Reading: Wrigley, H. S. (1998, December) Knowledge in
action: The promise of project-based learning. Focus on Basics, 2(D),
13–18.
Available at http://www.ncsall.net/?id=384
- Kaye Beall, kaye_beall@worlded.org and Cynthia Zafft,
cynthia_zafft@worlded.org, Co-Directors, Region 1 LINCS Regional
Professional Development
Center http://lincs.ed.gov A
Project of World Education/U.S. http://www.worlded.org
Course registration is also open for other 2012-13 offerings of
math/numeracy online professional development courses from
www.professionalstudiesae.org.
Number Sense: Teaching
About Parts and Wholes
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.
September 17 to October 26, 2012 Course fee: $179.00
Registration link: http://www.newreaderspress.com/Items.aspx?hierId=6503
Course instructor: Rebecca Strom
Geometry: Teaching About
Shapes and Their Measures
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.
October 29 to December 14, 2012 Course fee: $179.00
Registration link: http://www.newreaderspress.com/Items.aspx?hierId=6511
Course instructor: Barbara Goodridge
Teaching Reasoning and
Problem Solving Strategies
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.
January 28 to March 8, 2013 Course fee: $179.00
Registration link:
http://www.newreaderspress.com/Items.aspx?hierId=6508
Course instructor: Amy Vickers
Data: Helping Students
Interpret Statistical Representations
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
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. March 11 to April 26, 2013
Course fee: $179.00
Registration link: http://www.newreaderspress.com/Items.aspx?hierId=6514
Course instructor: Pam Meader
Algebra: Introducing
Algebraic Reasoning
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.
April 29 to June 14, 2013 Course fee: $179.00
Registration link: http://www.newreaderspress.com/Items.aspx?hierId=6515
Course instructor: Barbara Goodridge
Group discounts available! Call (888) 528-2224 ext. 221 or email
prodev@proliteracy.org for more information.
Questions? Please e-mail 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. - Kaye Beall. Project
Director
World Education kaye_beall@worlded.org
summer
learning opportunity:
We are pleased to announce registration is now open for our
Summer
Seminar for educators: Teaching Students to Ask Their Own
Questions.
The seminar
builds upon the concepts and theories outlined in Make Just
One Change: Teach Students to Ask Their Own Questions (Harvard
Education Press) co-authored by
the Directors of the Right Question
Institute, Dan Rothstein and Luz Santana.
The seminar is designed for educators, coaches and administrators
working with K - 12 students in-school and out-of-school, across
content areas, grades and
levels of academic readiness.
Seminar Schedule: Session 1: July 16 - 17 Session
2: July 23 – 24, at Suffolk University Law School Boston
The cost of the seminar is $325 for individuals and $300 per
person for
groups of 4 or more if registered before May 20.
To
Register: http://rqisummerseminar.eventbrite.com/
Please contact Steven Flythe with questions about the Summer
Seminar
(summer@rightquestion.org).
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)
read all
about it: the Times in plain English http://www.thetimesinplainenglish.com/wp
funding
opportunities - large and less large
Promise neighborhood grants: The
U.S. Department of Education has released the 2012 application for the
Promise Neighborhoods program, which will
provide $60 million to continue support for existing
implementation grants and award new planning and implementation grants.
Adult education providers are eligible. As part of the White
House Neighborhood Revitalization Initiative, Promise Neighborhoods
seeks to direct federal
funding to transform neighborhoods of concentrated poverty into
neighborhoods of opportunity.
Applications are due July 27,
2012, by 4:30 p.m. EST. Awards
announcements will be made in December.
Planning grants will support cradle-to-career services for
high-need communities.
Implementation grants will support efforts to enlist and
coordinate better education, health, and safety services; provide young
people the opportunity to be
successful in school and everyday life; and boost family
engagement in student learning and access to learning technology.
Funds may be used to improve learning inside and outside of
school; build support staff; secure additional and sustainable funding
sources; and establish data
systems to record the community's development and progress.
Go to: http://tinyurl.com/28jsjg4
- 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.
The
Commission on Adult Basic Education (COABE) has an Employment
Opportunities Bulletin Board at
http://www.coabe.org/html/employmentbulletinboard.html
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/
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/
working
hard for the money: RI DLT on the job training opportunities:
online
/ resources available
The Times in plain English –
plain language news resource http://www.thetimesinplainenglish.com/wp/
Featured Resource: Second Language
Acquisition in Adults: From Research to Practice
This brief outlines how SLA research can inform adult ESL
instruction. Research in three areas of second language acquisition is
discussed: the effect of
learner motivation, the role of interaction, and the role of
vocabulary. The research presented includes experimental,
correlational, and descriptive studies,
as well as theoretical articles that analyze the results of other
research. Not a new, but a useful resource.
http://www.cal.org/caela/esl_resources/digests/SLA.html
Teaching Excellence in Adult
Literacy
(TEAL) Just Write! Guide
The U.S. Department of Education, Office of Vocational and Adult
Education, and the American Institutes for Research announce the
publication of the
TEAL Just Write! Guide. The culmination of two years of work in
identifying research-based instructional practices in the content area
of writing, this
guide is a resource for ABE teachers. It is intended to increase
familiarity with evidence-based writing instruction and facilitate
translation of research
findings into teaching practices and products that will enhance
the quality of instruction delivered to adult learners.
PDF version of the TEAL Just Write Guide!: https://teal.ed.gov/documents/TEAL_JustWriteGuide.pdf
HTML version of the TEAL Just Write Guide!: https://teal.ed.gov/tealGuide/toc
-Mary Ann Corley, Ph.D. Principal Research Analyst and TEAL
Project Director American Institutes for Research, Washington, DC
from our
colleague Kate Nonesuch in British Columbia: My free online book Family
Math Fun! has been on the list of the Top 20 downloads at
http://www.nald.ca/ every month
since it first came out in 2009, but last month it fell off the list.
Before it goes away quietly, I'd like to make sure that every person it
was written for has a chance to see it. Do you know someone who works
in a school or in a daycare or pre-school program? (Teachers,
secretaries, principals, home-school co-ordinators, PAC members, and so
on. Parents, too.)
I'm writing to people I know to ask you to pass this link on to
everyone you know who works with kids.
http://www.nald.ca/library/learning/familymath/cover.htm
Family Math Fun! A
manual for educators and parents who want to promote math thinking in
kids of all ages. Things to do in the kitchen and on a walk, rhymes,
games, and things to make, all to promote math thinking and
learning. Math for the whole person: spirit, heart, body and mind
are all connected in the activities in this book. When these are in
balance, math becomes part of our whole lives, not a beast or a
barrier. Patterns, recipes, and hand-outs all included (109 pages).
Funded by the Office of Literacy and Essential Skills, HRSDC. Download
it free at http://www.nald.ca/library/learning/familymath/cover.htm
Kate Nonesuch Victoria, BC
read all
about it, via EstherPrins: summary of National Research Council report
on improving adult literacy instruction:
http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=13242
The
Paul V. Sherlock Center announces its recently revised Guide to
Accessing Employment Supports from the RI Division of Developmental
Disabilities.
This free, 1-page, easy to read flow chart and resource list is a
great way to introduce professionals and families with children with
developmental disabilities
to available employment resources. For your convenience,
active resource web-links are included in the on-line PDF version of
the Guide.
ORDER FREE Hard Copies of the Guide to Accessing Employment
Supports from RIDDD by January 30 & receive FREE Shipping:
ORDER ONLINE: http://sherlockcenter.publication-order-form.sgizmo.com/s3/
or call 456-8072.
Free PDF download: http://www.ric.edu/sherlockcenter/publications/DDEmploymentSupports.pdf
To view other resources available visit http://www.sherlockcenter.org
- Publications Resources of interest
Getting the Most From Employment Services
http://www.ric.edu/sherlockcenter/publications/employmentguide.pdf
Transition Folder:
http://www.ric.edu/sherlockcenter/publications/TranFolder.pdf
http://www.ric.edu/sherlockcenter/publications/DDEmploymentSupports.pdf
resource available: The Life Skills, College and Career
Readiness Guide for ESOL Learners, developed by the
Massachusetts Dept. of Adult and
Secondary Education, the System for Adult Basic Education
Support, and several Mass practitioners, with technical assistance from
the Center for
Applied Linguistics. The Guide provides teachers with
sample activities to use in their classrooms to help ESOL students
develop the skills and
knowledge they need to achieve their "next steps" employment,
academic, or life skills goals. This resource is NOT a list of
skills, of which there
are many examples, but a resource that translates those skills
into interesting classroom activities.
The Guide is actually three guides, one each for Basic (SPLs
0-3), Intermediate (SPLs 4-5), and Advanced (SPL 6) ESOL learners.
The Guide developers felt strongly that even Basic Level ESOL
students can practice next steps skills in the classroom. While
this
resource was especially designed for ESOL learners, the
activities can be easily adapted for ABE and Transitions students as
well.
The Guide is available in PDF but also in Rich Text Format, so
that teachers can isolate particular activities, add new ones, or amend
those that are provided.
The RFT version also allows teachers to tailor listed activities
for whole classes, groups of students working together, or an
individual student.
http://www.sabes.org/curriculum/esol/caela-guide-2011.pdf
http://www.sabes.org/curriculum/esol/caela-guide-2011.rtf
If any teachers are willing to take on the task of adapting this
resource more specifically for ABE learners, please contact Carey Reid
at creid@worlded.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
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.
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
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
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
2012 National Refugee and Immigrant
Conference
The 2012 Conference will be held in Chicago on October
18-19, more here: http://www.thecenterweb.org/alrc/refugee.html;
questions? please contact losheff@cntrmail.org
Read.Write.Act 2012 Virtual Conference Call
for Conference Presenters & Virtual Posters
The Student Coalition for Action in Literacy Education (SCALE) is
currently seeking proposals for presentations and virtual posters from
interested parties
for The Read.Write.Act 2012 Virtual Conference. In honor of an
election year, this year the theme is Literacy as a National Priority.
SCALE is looking for individuals who are interested in presenting
a session that is approximately 50 minutes long during the conference
days, November 1st
– 3rd, 2012. Conference presenters will use Elluminate
software for these presentations. SCALE will provide training and
technical support.
If you are interested in presenting during the virtual
conference, please complete this form: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/viewform?formkey=dEdDLWgtejFhYWV4WTY0dy0tMEVuaXc6MQ
SCALE is also looking to include virtual posters for this year’s
Read.Write.Act 2012 conference. We would like to encourage interested
undergraduate,
graduate, and PhD students to create virtual posters”that
describe literacy programs they are involved in or communicate original
research. If you are
interested in creating a virtual poster for this year’s
Read.Write.Act virtual conference, please complete this form: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/viewform?formkey=dEp0U0xkTldocnZ0Y1pJOWJXUUhNanc6MQ
More information: http://readwriteact.org/rwa2012.
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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