
Equity Specialist Donalda Silva worked with K–8 content area teachers on "English Language Proficiency Benchmarks and ELL Outcomes." Ms. Silva's training served as an introduction to English language learner (ELL) Benchmarks, Outcomes, and the Four Proficiency Levels of ELLs. The training also reviewed how teachers can facilitate responsive learning environments and engage in reflection and analysis of their classroom practices. This Category I training took place June 4–5, 2008.
Equity Specialist Phyllis Hardy worked with the South County ELL Network to prioritize goals for improving programming and services for English language learners (ELLs) in their school districts. The districts involved included Barrington, North Kingston, South Kingston, Westerly, East Greenwich, Jamestown, Narragansett, Chariho, and Exeter. Selected staff were asked to complete a "Survey for Reflection and Action" to identify their district's strengths and needs regarding ELL programs and develop appropriate strategies for action.
Schools or districts interested in NEEAC's professional development programs should contact us.
The Education Justice's 8th annual conference brought together plaintiff litigators, education advocates, and policy experts to engage in a multi-faceted exploration of education reform. The keynote address was delivered by Dr. John H. Jackson, president & CEO of The Schott Foundation for Public Education and the luncheon address was given by the Hon. John M. Greaney, associate justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. Participants attended various informational sessions such as: "Empowering Advocates to Transform Education Policy," "Ensuring Equal Opportunity in a Standards and Testing World," and "How Can Low-wealth Communities Get and Keep Teaching Quality?" The conference took place at the SEIU Building in Washington, DC.
For more information, visit: http://educationjustice.org/news/Conference2008_Overview.htm
The symposium, "Bridging the Gap: Cultivating Collaboration Between Internationalization and Multicultural Education" is an effort to begin a national dialogue on using strategies to maximize the common ground between internationalization and multicultural education for institutional and student benefits. The event took place June 25–26, 2008 at the Westin Washington, DC City Center Hotel.
For more information, visit:
www.acenet.edu/AM/Template.cfm?Section=International&Template=/CM/Content
Display.cfm&ContentID=24890
A new practitioner's brief by Beth Harry and Robin Waterman explores the roles of the parents of English language learners (ELLs) in American public schools. The brief discusses the high value that ELL parents place on their children's education as well as the sometimes stagnated desire to participate more fully in school/parent activities such as attending parent-teacher conferences and helping with homework. Language barriers and lack of cultural familiarity are shown as being a few of the challenges that impede effective parent-school collaboration.
Access the brief:
www.nccrest.org/Briefs/PractitionerBrief_BuildingCollaboration.pdf
NCPIE serves to advocate for parent and family involvement in their children's education in the hopes of enhancing the education of America's youth. NCPIE conducts activities that involve the coalition's member organizations and provides resources to help promote parent and family involvement.
To access the resource, visit: www.ncpie.org
This report from the American Association of University Women (AAUW) takes a comprehensive look at girls' educational achievement during the past 35 years. "Where the Girls Are: The Facts About Gender Equity in Education" pays special attention to the relationship between girls' and boys' progress. Analyses of results from national standardized tests, such as the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) and the SAT and ACT college entrance examinations, as well as other measures of educational achievement, provide an overall picture of trends in gender equity from elementary school to college and beyond.
Download the report:
http://www.aauw.org/research/upload/whereGirlsAre.pdf
Equity Specialist Phyllis Hardy presented "Assisting English Language Learners: Developing a Framework for Differentiating Learning Differences from Disability," for teachers in Weston Public Schools, Massachusetts. The training provided an opportunity for educators and administrators to consider the processes, decisions, and communication paths of everyday practice when assisting English language learners (ELLs). A framework was presented for implementing a culturally responsive Child Study Team process when working with ELLs to distinguish learning difficulties from learning disabilities.
Equity Specialist Donalda Silva presented a workshop entitled "Culturally Responsive Teaching—Perspectives in Second Language Learning and Teaching" at the Fairgrounds Elementary School in Nashua, New Hampshire on May 9. This workshop was the follow-up session to the NEEAC supported professional development training day that took place in March 2008.
During the month of May, NEEAC staff offered two Category 1 trainings to teaching staff in Massachusetts. On May 7, Equity Specialist Phyllis Hardy trained teachers of the Conservatory LAB Charter School in Brighton, Massachusetts. A second Category 1 training was presented to Somerset Public High School teachers by Equity Specialists Donalda Silva and Ms. Hardy on May 27.
Schools or districts interested in NEEAC's professional development programs should contact us.
"Playing Games to Awaken Multicultural Consciousness" is the theme of the two-day "Dealing with Difference Institute" at Western Illinois University in Macomb, Illinois. The institute supports the idea that games and simulations can be exceptionally effective in helping individuals recognize the challenges and rewards of communicating with people across cultures. Whether simple ten-minute exercises or elaborate simulations that call for a commitment of several hours, play can make situations and issues "real" in ways that theoretical or directly didactic instruction does not.
For more detailed information, visit: www.wiu.edu/iacd/conferences.shtml
A new analysis by America's Promise Alliance finds that our nation is facing a dropout crisis with the largest cities paying the biggest price. Every 26 seconds, one American high school student drops out of school, which adds up to more than 1.1 million students per year.
Download the report:
www.americaspromise.org/uploadedFiles/AmericasPromiseAlliance/Dropout_Crisis/
SWANSONCitiesInCrisis040108.pdf
This powerful report from Children's Defense Fund documents America's "Cradle to Prison Pipeline," where tens of thousands of children and teens are pushed onto the fast track to prison each year. This national crisis exists at the intersection of poverty and societal neglect where we witness the unfortunate truth that all children's lives are not valued equally. As Connie Curry and Julia Cass report in Part II, countless children, especially poor children "already are in the Pipeline to Prison before taking a single step or uttering a word."
Download the report:
www.childrensdefense.org/site/DocServer/CPP_report_2007.pdf?docID=5041
This Second Edition of "The School Integration Manual: Voluntary K–12 School Integration" from the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund and the Civil Rights Project at UCLA provides valuable guidance and information on how communities and school districts can promote racial diversity and address racial isolation in schools nationwide.
Download the manual:
www.civilrightsproject.ucla.edu/research/deseg/Still_Looking_to_the%20Future_
Integration_Manual.pdf
Columbia's Center for New Media Teaching and Learning and Teachers College have launched, MAAP, a web-based teaching tool that uses video, audio, historic maps and more to bring African-American history in New York City to life. Curriculum and lesson plans are available on the site and adapted for students in different grades. The lessons are organized into themed modules: The development of the African-American community in New York City, Resistance and self-determination in the face of slavery and African-American contributions to building New York City. The MAAP website also acts as a portal to glossaries of concepts and terms, profiles of historical events and figures, videotaped commentary by faculty experts, film and music clips, and historical photographs and artwork.
For more information, visit: http://maap.columbia.edu
A new report from the Pew Internet & American Life Project addresses a major question in education: What connects teens' scholarly writing and the informal e-communication they exchange on digital screens? A considerable number of educators and children's advocates worry that the quality of writing by young Americans is being degraded by their electronic communication, with its lackadaisical spelling, punctuation and grammar, and acronymic shortcuts. Others wonder if this return to text-driven communication is instead inspiring a new appreciation for writing among teens.
Download the report:
www.pewinternet.org/pdfs/PIP_Writing_Report_FINAL3.pdf
Equity Specialist Randy Ross presented "The PIP Strategy" to the Greenfield Public Schools in Massachusetts on April 11, 2008. The strategy uses the "Prevention-Intervention-Protection" plan that Ms. Ross developed to reduce bullying and harassment. This training introduces district educators and administrators to the issues of school bullying and harassment as well as provides various school strategies.
Equity Specialist Phyllis Hardy delivered trainings on second language development for general educators, language evaluators, and special educators at the Providence School Department. Through small group activities and research review, participants built a shared knowledge of second language development and behaviors. Participants experienced the challenges that English language learners face and explored how language proficiency and comprehension levels may vary in different contexts. Fostering sensitivity and awareness of first and second language development and behaviors helps teachers identify teaching and assessment practices that consider a child's English language proficiency.
New Hampshire's White Mountains Regional School District (WMRSD) School Board recently adopted the civil rights policy recommended by the New England Equity Assistance Center. As a result, NEEAC provided technical assistance to the district on implementing the new policy. NEEAC also directed specific attention to the district's mission of improving school climate. Equity Specialist Randy Ross continued her work with WMRSD on April 16, 17, and 18, 2008.
Equity Specialist Randy Ross completed the "Race, Ethnicity, and Gender" module of the cultural competency professional development series for Brookline Public Schools. The entire training, "Strategies for Developing Educators' Cultural Competency," contained three modules: Culture and Human Development; Race, Ethnicity, and Gender; and Language, Culture and Schooling. The most recent module focused on deepening the educators' understanding of how race, ethnicity, and gender impact identity development, school climate, and teacher expectations.
Equity Specialist Donalda Silva gave an informational session at the North Kingstown SOL-PAC Parents' Night on April 23, 2008. The session was titled, "Parent Strategies to Enhance School Achievement of ELL Students." From this session, parents gained more information on how to help their children do better in school. Parents also learned about the types of language learner programs: English as a second langauge (ESL), transition bilingual, and dual language. They also discussed the length of time students should stay in those programs.
Schools or districts interested in NEEAC's professional development programs should contact us.
Educators, parents, students, activists, and community members came from around the country for workshops, panels, networking sessions, action groups, school visits, and more. Conference participants explored the challenges and opportunities to work for social and economic justice through math education. The conference took place April 4–6 at Long Island University, Brooklyn Campus.
For more information, visit: www.radicalmath.org/conference
The 13th Annual New England Conference on Multicultural Education, co-sponsored by The Education Alliance at Brown University, was accepting proposals through April 11, 2008. Join educators, administrators, and community members in exploring this year's theme, "Best Practices in Multicultural Education." The conference will take place on October 8, 2008 in Hartford, connecticut.
For more information, visit: www.necme.org/CallProposals.htm
This professional development resource, featured on the Teaching Tolerance website, addresses the cultural gap that often spans between students and teachers. "The ABCs of Culture" uses video and personal narratives to examine classroom stereotypes and provides educators with strategies to build bridges across cultures.
Access the resource: www.tolerance.org/teach/activities/activity.jsp?ar=915
The National Education Association (NEA) reports on the educational progress of black students that are often overshadowed by the work yet to be done. While the NEA does not seek to minimize the challenges, they do support the assertion that "Black progress over the past decade has been nothing short of spectacular."
Download the report:
www.nea.org/teachexperience/images/blackfocus08.pdf
Current estimates indicate there are more than seven million Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) parents with school-age children in the United States. However, the first comprehensive report to examine the school experiences of LGBT families demonstrates the lack of support for and the exclusion of LGBT families. Involved, Invisible, Ignored: The Experiences of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Parents and Their Children in Our Nation's K–12 Schools was released by GLSEN, the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network, in partnership with the Family Equality Council and COLAGE.
Download the report:
www.glsen.org/binary-data/GLSEN_ATTACHMENTS/file/000/001/1104-1.pdf
This new resource from the National Center for Culturally Responsive Educational Systems (NCCREST) addresses Response to Intervention (RTI) by identifying guiding questions for service providers who determine whether assessment and instruction are linguistically and culturally appropriate for the student's level of language proficiency. In addition, this brief considers student progress in relation to peers with regard to language and cultural background. The authors have also created a flowchart to help practitioners to implement RTI interventions for students who are English Language Learners.
Download the brief:
http://nccrest.org/Briefs/Framework_for_RTI.pdf
The George Lucas Educational Foundation serves to provide detailed articles, studies, documentary segments, expert interviews, and links to hundreds of resources that show best practices in action. The site's "Priority Topics" allow educators and administrators to browse articles and videos related to Assessment, Community Partnership, Emotional Intelligence, Mentoring, Parent Involvement, Professional Development, Teacher Preparation, and more.
For more information, visit: www.edutopia.org/index.php
Roots of Empathy (ROE) is an award winning, evidence-based classroom program that has shown dramatic effect in reducing levels of aggression and violence among school children while raising social/emotional competence and increasing empathy. Within the ROE curriculum, a classroom adopts a participating neighborhood parent and infant for the school year. The class then participates in activities with the infant, using their growing attachment to learn about the needs of others and themselves. ROE teaches children valuable skills in: Emotional Literacy, Perspective Taking, Male Nurturance, Inclusion, Infant Safety, Violence Prevention and more.
For more detailed information, visit: www.rootsofempathy.org/index.html
NEEAC Director Sharon Lloyd Clark, attended the OESE/OSEP 3rd annual "Leveraging Resources" conference, on February 13–14, in Washington, DC. The conference focused on creating collaboration between the OESE Comprehensive Centers, Equity Assistance Centers, and the OSEP Technical Assistance & Dissemination Projects to help state and local education agencies build capacity to implement No Child Left Behind and the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.
On March 5, 2008, NEEAC Equity Specialist Donalda Silva presented a workshop for parents at the Davisville Middle School in Kingston, Rhode Island on No Child Left Behind (NCLB). The workshop focused on the importance of NCLB to parents of native English-speaking students and parents of English language learners. A conversation followed the workshop discussing practices parents can adopt that will help children become more successful students.
This comprehensive workshop provided NEEAC Specialists with more techniques to eliminate common maladaptive behaviors seen in students' home and educational environments. NEEAC staff learned how to empower parents and other authority figures with functional and reliable steps for behavior management through reinforcement methods. Our staff also gained more techniques to address behaviors such as tantrums, noncompliance, oppositional defiance, lying, and insensitivity; skills that will allow them to coordinate the most effective behavioral plan between parents, teachers, and counselors.
Equity Specialist Donalda Silva delivered a two-day professional development training for teachers in Nashua, New Hampshire on March 19 and 20, 2008 at the Fairgrounds Elementary School. The training focused on "Culturally Responsive Teaching for K–5 Content Area Teachers" and addressed the key factors affecting second language acquisition. Ms. Silva also discussed how cultural, language, and learning differences affect classroom organization and instruction. On March 19, Ms. Silva presented information on NCLB in Portuguese, targeting the parents of English language learners of Brazilian families who are new to Nashua.
Program Planning Specialist Phyllis Hardy, continues presenting a series of workshops on "Assisting English Language Learners: Developing a Framework for Differentiating Learning Differences from Disability" for educators in the Northern Rhode Island Collaborative and the Massachusetts Teachers' Education Collaborative. These workshops allow educators and administrators to consider the everyday processes, decisions, and communication paths related to assisting English language learners (ELLs). During these sessions, Ms. Hardy presents a framework for implementing both Teacher Support Team processes and culturally responsive evaluations, when working with ELLs to distinguish learning difficulties from learning disabilities.
For related resources, view: State Guidance Resources, listed below
The 2008 Massachusetts Association for Bilingual Education (MABE) one-day institute, held on March 7, 2008 in Leominster, Massachusetts, carried the theme "Current Approaches in Special Education and Dual Language Education." The special education strand in this institute focused on two overlooked, yet critical, factors reflecting the complexities in the referral and placement process of English language learners: authentic parental involvement and culturally responsive assessment practices. The dual language program strand focused on assessment and instructional practices within a bilingual/biliterate context. For more detailed information about this conference, please download the conference flyer.
Students, educators and support staff convened to discover ways to address the needs of today's Native American high school and college students. This conference explored ways to transform the challenges of generational diversity into opportunity and promise.
The conference was held at the Hyatt Tamaya Santa Ana Pueblo, in New Mexico.
Download the conference description:
www.iaia.edu/college/documents/convening.pdf
This 2008 report examines the magnitude of changes in instructional time in elementary schools in the years since NCLB took effect in 2002. It is also a follow up report to Choices, Changes, and Challenges: Curriculum and Instruction in the NCLB Era that was issued by the Center on Education Policy in July 2007.
Download the report:
www.cep-dc.org/_data/n_0001/resources/live/InstructionalTimeFeb2008.pdf
Published since 1976, The State of Black America is the annual Urban League report that addresses the issues central to Black America in the current year. The publication is a barometer of the conditions, experiences and opinions of Black America. It examines black progress in education and other relevant areas. The publication forecasts certain social and political trends and proposes solutions to the community's and America's most pressing challenges.
For more detailed information, visit: www.nul.org/thestateofblackamerica.html
The website Stance.org.uk offers information for educators as well as parents and teachers on homophobic bullying. STANCE provides a comprehensive resource pack, full of materials that address homophobic bullying. STANCE includes staff training materials (Book 4), information for pupils (Book 5), curriculum resources (Book 6), policy guidance (Book 2), materials to promote a positive social environment (Book 3) and much more.
For more information about STANCE, visit:
www.stance.org.uk/default.asp
These documents, collected from different state departments of education, provide valuable insight on working with English language learners to distinguish learning difficulties from learning disabilities.
Download Resources:
Serving English Language Learners with Disabilities: A Resource Manual for Illinois Educators,
Illinois State Board of Education, 2002
www.isbe.net/bilingual/pdfs/bilingual_manual2002.pdf
Special Education for Culturally and Linguistically Diverse (CLD) Students: Meeting the Challenges,
Realizing the Opportunities, Colorado Department of Education, January 1999
www.cde.state.co.us/cdesped/download/pdf/cld_all.pdf
Special Education Manual, Appendix D, "Assessment Guidelines for English Language Learners," Tennessee State
Department of Education, 2003
http://state.tn.us/education/speced/doc/semanual.pdf
Special Education Eligibility Standards, Appendix G, "Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Students,"
Iowa Department of Education, July 2006
www.aea10.k12.ia.us/divlearn/specialeducation/docs/
spedeligstandardsjuly2006.pdf
Arkansas State Guidelines on Nondiscriminatory Assessment and Addressing Educational Needs of
English Language Learners with Disabilities, Special Education, Arkansas Department of Education, 2003
http://arksped.k12.ar.us/documents/stateprogramdevelopment/
ELLDocument.pdf
Evaluation and Assessment in Early Childhood Special Education: Children Who Are Culturally and Linguistically Diverse,
Special Education, Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction, Washington, January 1997
www.k12.wa.us/specialEd/pubdocs/CLD.pdf
This 2007 guide, developed by the Stupski Foundation, provides an overview of the Content Literacy Continuum (CLC), a replicable district-level model of instruction to meet the differentiated needs of struggling adolescents.
Download the guide:
www.stupski.org/documents/Secondary_Literacy_Instruction_Intervention_Guide.pdf
This report from the Alliance for Excellent Education describes issues that must be addressed as students move beyond achieving basic reading fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension skills to more advanced literacy skills that will enable them to succeed in academic content areas.
This resource pertains to the category: Reading, Grades 6–12
Download the report:
www.all4ed.org/publication_material/reports/literacy_instruction_content_areas
The National Association of State Boards of Education developed this guidance document about state policies and programs that lead to actual instructional changes in the classroom—including actions that must be taken at all levels: state, district, school, and classroom—to impact instructional practices and improve student reading skills.
This resource pertains to the category: Reading, Grades K–12
Download the guidance document:
www.nasbe.org/index.php/file-repository?func=download&id=132&chk=ca6b8a019a7addf
db551c036d49e4c73&no_html=1
This "quick start" guide for principals of both middle and high schools identifies three goals for secondary school literacy initiatives and provides elements of instruction required to meet these goals. It then outlines the critical elements of a school-level literacy action plan.
Download the guide:
www.centeroninstruction.org/files/Principal%20s%20Guide%20Secondary.pdf
This "quick start" guide for elementary school-level instructional leaders is based on scientific research on reading and reading instruction as well as on studies of successful schools and interviews with successful principals. It includes critical elements of an effective reading program in elementary school, critical tasks for principals as literacy leaders, and special considerations for reading instruction after the third grade.
Download the guide:
www.centeroninstruction.org/files/Principals%20Guide%20Elementary.pdf
This report describes Mathematics Curriculum-Based Measurement (M-CBM) including a brief history, basic procedures, implications for practice, and further resources. It also reviews the research that supports the use of M-CBM.
Download the report:
www.centeroninstruction.org/files/CBMeasurements.pdf
The Civil Rights Project is a leading organization devoted to civil rights research. Focusing initially on education reform, it has convened dozens of national conferences; commissioned over 400 new research and policy studies; produced major reports on desegregation, student diversity, school discipline, special education, dropouts, college access, and No Child Left Behind, and published twelve books. Its research has been incorporated into federal legislation, cited in litigation, and used to spur congressional hearings. The project was formerly located at Harvard University, but has since relocated to UCLA.
For more information about the Civil Rights Project, visit:
www.civilrightsproject.ucla.edu/index.html
The website StopCyberbullying.org offers information for students, parents, educators, and law enforcement officials about the growing problem of cyber-bullying — "when a child preteen or teen is tormented, threatened, harassed, humiliated, embarrassed or otherwise targeted by another child, preteen or teen using the internet, interactive and digital technologies or mobile phones." The site is a project of the non-profit organization Wired Kids, Inc., which works against all forms of cyberabuse.
For more information about cyber-bullying, visit:
www.stopcyberbullying.org/index2.html
NABE held its annual conference on February 6–9, 2008, at the Tampa Bay Convention Center, Tampa, FL. The title of the conference was: "Honoring Our Roots and Expanding Our Horizons—Bilingualism for All." The four-day conference featured: internationally renowned keynote and featured speakers; dynamic and state-of-the-art concurrent sessions; major exhibitors and career fair; and networking opportunities to exchange ideas, experiences; successes, and challenges.
This practice guide, from the National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance, Institute of Education Sciences, formulates evidence-based recommendations for teaching literacy to English language learners (ELLs) in the elementary grades based on the current body of studies for each area. The authors evaluated the effect sizes of interventions to measure their impact on programs and practices. The recommendations involve areas such as curriculum selection, sensible assessments for monitoring progress, and reasonable expectations for student achievement and growth, which would be helpful for curriculum directors at the time they make decisions about policy related to literacy instruction for ELLs in elementary grades.
This resource pertains to the category: ELL, Grades K–3
www.centeroninstruction.org/files/Effective%20Literacy%20and%20EL%20Instruction%20
for%20EL%20in%20the%20Elem.%20Gr.pdf
This National Center for Education Research (NCER) practice guide brings together the best available evidence and expertise to provide educators with specific and coherent evidence-based recommendations on how to encourage girls in the fields of math and science.
This resource pertains to the following categories: Mathematics, Grades K–12; Science, Grades K–12
Download the guide:
www.centeroninstruction.org/files/Encouraging%20Girls.pdf
Hispanic students are a significant and growing proportion of the United States student population. This statistical brief provides a summary of the key data concerning this growing segment of students.
Download the brief:
www.nclr.org/files/43582_file_SB8_HispEd_fnl.pdf
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