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Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Study: Minority Students Lack Adequate Access to Ed. Opportunities




Posted By Editor On August 10, 2011 (12:45 am) In Education

Low-income, African-American and Hispanic students continue to face significant disparities in access to quality educational opportunities and resources at the K-12 level – including access to services critical for college success, new data from the U.S. Department of Education show.

The study sample of 7,000 school districts and more than 72,000 schools in the Civil Rights Data Collection says many students have uneven or poor access to rigorous courses at many schools.

“Despite the best efforts of America’s educators to bring greater equity to our schools, too many children — especially low-income and minority children — are still denied the educational opportunities they need to succeed,” Russlynn Ali, U.S. assistant secretary of education for civil rights, says in a news statement.

Daria Hall, K-12 policy director for The Education Trust, says the data are important even if they are not surprising. “It provides more actionable information on the ground,” she says. “It’s a tool to empower parents and advocates and a strong vehicle to force conversations.”

“The evidence is clear. The single greatest predictor of college success is success in rigorous high school courses,” Hall says. She contends that the issue is not only access but success. “Just putting kids in courses with the right title isn’t enough. There must be highly trained teachers and school plans to promote success.”

The data examine the extent of high-level, college- and career-ready math and science courses at schools as well as the number of school counselors, the number of first- and second-year teachers in schools, availability of pre-kindergarten programs, and the extent of written policies prohibiting harassment and bullying. Among the findings: Schools serving mostly African-American students are twice as likely to have teachers with less experience — just one or two years in the profession — compared with schools in the same district that primarily serve White students.

While limited English proficient children are only 6 percent of high school students, they represent 15 percent of those for whom Algebra 1 is the highest-level math course taken in high school. In addition, 3,000 schools serving nearly 500,000 students offer no classes in Algebra 2, a key component of the SAT and other indicators of college readiness.

Only 22 percent of local districts reported offering pre-kindergarten or other early learning programs for low-income children.

Only 2 percent of students with disabilities are taking at least one Advanced Placement course. With education funding potentially in jeopardy in budget-reduction discussions in Washington, D.C., one leading Democrat said the new study provides a sober reminder of the important federal role in ensuring equal educational opportunity for all students.

“This new information reiterates that the federal government’s role in ensuring equal education for all students is just as critical as ever,” Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., ranking Democrat on the House Education and the Workforce Committee, says in a news release. He added that the report signaled a need for “serious, comprehensive” reform efforts in the federal Elementary and Secondary Education Act — the renewal of which is bogged down in Congress.

“Many schools aren’t educationally where they need to be, which ultimately means many students won’t graduate ready to succeed in a career or in higher education,” he says.

Elsewhere, the study noted that more than 2 million students in 7,300 schools had no access at all to calculus classes, a staple of many high-achieving high schools.

The report also found some gender differences, with girls underrepresented in physics and boys underrepresented in Algebra 2.

“This information is not really new to me. But I think it’s important to recognize the problems and the magnitude of the problems,” says Antonio Flores, president of the Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities. “At a time when policymakers are engaged in a budget cutting frenzy, I think it’s critical to recognize the need to stop de-investing in education.”

Flores adds that adequate education funding is critical. “Money does matter, especially in lower-income communities that lack the facilities and staffing to offer the rigorous courses needed for colleges and beyond.”

While the government has conducted this data collection for several years, the new report reflects broader changes in its collection. The sample included school districts of all sizes as well as state-operated juvenile justice facilities.

A second phase of data later this year will include information on course completion rates, retention information by grade and teacher absenteeism, among other topics.

The Department of Education is offering most of the major findings online in a format that allows web users to examine findings by individual school and district, Ali noted.

Source: Charles Dervarics, DiverseEducation.com

For example, a check of the system finds that in Brookline, Mass., an affluent suburb of Boston, 19 percent of all students took at least one AP class in 2009. In Detroit, however, the rate that same year was only 3 percent.

“Transparency is the first step toward reform and for districts that want to do the right thing,” Ali says. The surveys provide detailed information back to schools to show “where they can improve and how to get better.”

To learn more about the Civil Rights Data Collection project, visit http://ocrdata.ed.gov/

Read more at DiverseEducation.com

Article taken from Diverse Business News - http://www.diversebusinessnews.com/

URL to article: http://www.diversebusinessnews.com/?p=1454
















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Find PDF Websites - Free PDF Books



  

Find PDF is a free book search engine. You can search, read PDF online or download free ebooks easy.


http://www.findpdf.us/
 
http://www.findpdf.net/
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UCLA’s Educational Technology Initiatives: Enhancing Learning and Teaching


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Free Software, Free Society: Selected Essays of Richard M. Stallman Second Edition


Richard M. Stallman


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University Business: Why It's Imperative That Everyone Have Access to Higher Education (blog)

Shortly after I became chancellor of the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) over two years ago, I convened a town hall meeting on campus to discuss the ongoing state budget crisis.

The Huffington Post

Shortly after I became chancellor of the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) over two years ago, I convened a town hall meeting on campus to discuss the ongoing state budget crisis. In the audience was a young man -- like many UIC students, the first in his family to attend college -- who asked if he could come to visit me sometime. Of course I agreed. When he arrived at my office for our scheduled appointment, he was out of breath, his reddish-brown hair was disheveled, his T-shirt was dirty and he looked exhausted. He apologized and explained that he had worked just before our meeting and had run all the way across campus in between classes.

I was awed by this young man and how hard he was willing to work to achieve his goal. At the same time, I felt a huge sense of responsibility as chancellor, as I realized that an essential part of my job leading a university campus during the Great Recession of the 21st century would be keeping the doors of opportunity open for this young man and thousands like him at UIC. Many of our students hold down one or more jobs to finance their educations to realize their dreams.

I am very grateful to Sheila Johnson for her invitation to join the ranks of contributors to HuffPost BlackVoices, an exciting new addition to the world of online news and commentary. As head of Chicago's largest public research university (with 27,300 students), a member of the board of directors of the Coalition of Urban-Serving Universities, and a member of the Institute of Medicine and the New York Academy of Medicine, my goal is to use this important new forum to share my perspectives about access to higher education, health care, and economic opportunity for our nation's young people.

Full Story

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Campus Technology C-Level View Strategic Discussions on Technology: "Narrate, Curate, Share:" How Blogging Can Catalyze Learning



By W. Gardner Campbell08/10/11
The framework for a new program-wide blogging initiative at Virginia Tech's Honors Residential College encourages students to "narrate, curate, share" their stories of learning. This fall, the College will integrate blogging into its traditional program as a means to foster self-aware learners and promote digital citizenship.
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Campus Technology, Moodlerooms & Dell Webinar: 6 Steps to a Seamless LMS Transition


The challenges that come with changing learning management systems are often reason enough for an institution to stick with its legacy system, however dissatisfied they may be with it. But two colleges that recently moved to Moodlerooms' learning management platform prove that the transition can be a positive experience, if your process adheres to a few key steps.


The New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT), a public research university with some 6,000 undergraduates and another 3,000 graduate students located in downtown Newark, has offered courses online since the mid-1970s-it now offers 75 or so online courses each semester. State University of New York (SUNY) Delhi is a technology-focused institution located in rural Delaware County. The school serves just under 3,000 on-campus students and offers about 60 to 80 online courses each semester; some 750 students took at least one online course during the spring semester.

For both schools, their learning management system is mission critical. Neither could risk losing functionality, faculty support, or student participation in the change-over. Each had been invested in their legacy LMS anywhere from five to eight years before deciding to make the switch. And each, in its own way, engaged in a set of best practices that enabled the school to seamlessly move its campus over to a new system. Here's their advice.

1. Give yourself a full year.... Or two.
A one- to two-year transition reduces the stress on the IT department and allows instructors and students alike to acclimate to the new system. Blake Haggerty, assistant director of instructional design at NJIT, says that his campus's two-year transition from their legacy LMS to Moodlerooms saved IT from support bottlenecks, and allowed user training to be paced over several semesters. "It allowed us to reach out to faculty members individually and help each one," he notes. The year-long transition at SUNY Delhi similarly "gave instructors time to poke around" in Moodle, says Clark Shah-Nelson, coordinator of online education.

2. Start small.
Both schools realized the value of trying out the new system with a test case of users. Delhi began testing Moodlerooms in 2007 with a limited number of courses, opening it for general use in early 2008. NJIT self-hosted Moodle for a 38-course pilot. It learned through that experience that support would be more effective and less costly with a hosted solution, which led them to select Moodlerooms.

3. Run both systems concurrently.
During their year test-case, Delhi ran both LMSs concurrently. Early adopters started using the new LMS immediately; a few faculty predictably stayed in the legacy system until the end. Part of moving the stragglers, Shah-Nelson says, involved simply explaining the new system carefully. "Some faculty members were looking to do things in the same way as before and simply needed more information before making the leap." he says.

At NJIT, running courses simultaneously through the legacy system and with Moodle gave faculty a chance to compare the two. "They liked the toolset, they liked the product, they liked the continuous improvement" offered by the Moodle community, Haggerty says. That early exposure helped win over faculty to the new system.

4. Integrate fully with student information systems.
One reason keeping content current in two systems at once was easy at Delhi, says Shah-Nelson, is because of Moodle's seamless integration with the school's SIS, SunGard Banner. "We had the same Banner feed going to both places, so an instructor could just choose a system, log into either one, and use it." In fact, the selection of Moodle at Delhi came after the university looked at other LMSs-Moodle's tight integration with Banner was a proving point.

At the time NJIT was looking at new LMSs, the university was also upgrading from SunGard SCT Plus to Banner, also a SunGard product. Thus, it was crucial that the new LMS work with the upgraded SIS. For instructors, the integration means that courses are automatically created in Moodle, complete with instructor and students, once they have been set up in the SIS. Students who register for a course can access that course in Moodlerooms within a day; if they add or drop a course, the change is immediately reflected in the LMS without having to be entered in both systems. The integration saves time for IT staff, who previously had to transfer adds and drops manually, as well as set up new courses and assignments.

5. Ease the content move.
Moving course content from one LMS to another can be a major task during the transition process. SUNY Delhi found helpful instructions in a Moodle wiki that explained how to export courses from WebCT, then used an export tool from the legacy system that created unencrypted ZIP files. They then used an import tool built by someone in the Moodle community. Shah-Nelson says his staff of student helpers then did some work on course files between the export and import processes.

At NJIT, importing content involved a team of students and recent graduates helping migrate the majority of content. The upgrade to a new system actually proved a bonus in that it allowed the instructor, Haggerty and another instructional designer on campus, to look through course material and help instructors refine it. "It gave us a reason to go through the content and make sure everything was up to date," he explains.

6. Support faculty every step of the way.
NJIT focused first on early adopters. "We created a spreadsheet of all users, looked at the courses to be migrated, and reached out to each [instructor] individually and help each one," he explains. Remaining faculty were brought on board gradually, with IT providing a sympathetic ear to the reluctant faculty. Eventually, says Haggerty, "Everyone realized we were migrating for a reason." In addition, for a sum of ($800), the school paid to have a custom theme created that gives Moodle a friendly, warmer look that Haggerty says helped welcome new users to NJIT's Moodlerooms.

SUNY Delhi offered plenty of faculty development training in varying lengths, including 90-minute workshops, short lunchtime segments, and videos. Perhaps its most successful training offering was a portal, Get Technical Help. Created as a one-stop-shop for help with Moodle, the portal won an award from The Sloan Consortium for its effectiveness. When a SUNY Delhi user asks for help in Moodlerooms, a new window opens that searches Moodle's help wiki for answers. The help portal also offers live chat with staff at SUNY Delhi via instant messaging, or a "click and call" option using Google Voice. Users can also take a more conventional route and submit a trouble ticket through the portal, which allows them to attach a file or screenshot, and to copy the instructor.

Both schools were won over by the around-the-clock professional support at Moodlerooms, which helped ensure the system was always up and running. That kind of 24/7 support-crucial for students taking online courses and potentially logging on at all hours-was something the schools' small IT staffs couldn't have offered without sizable personnel increases.

Looking ahead, both schools are running Moodle 1.9 but eyeing 2.0, the Moodle version released late last year. True to form, both plan gradual moves, with plenty of user preparation and consultation. "We'll pay close attention to educating our user base" before any migration, Haggerty says, adding that he may run a small 2.0 pilot this fall while discussing the move and its repercussions at length with users. Substantial growth in Moodlerooms use continues at both schools. At SUNY Delhi, "teaching styles are moving more toward embracing online tools," Shah-Nelson says, resulting in less use of paper in classrooms-all of it aided by students pushing instructors toward the LMS.

Of course, transitioning out any kind of a complex data system that's critical to the life blood of an institution is never a simple matter, but as NJIT and SUNY Delhi show, it doesn't have to be a traumatic experience either. Colleges and universities no longer have to stick with an LMS that is not serving their needs simply because they are concerned about making the switch. Following these common sense best practices means that any school can choose the learning management system that is right for them-and win over faculty, students, and administration in the process.

Webcast: Past, Present, and Future: The Evolution of Enterprise Moodle in Higher Education (August 18, 2011)

See how Moodlerooms can help you achieve your e-learning goals. Sign up for their August 18 webcast Past, Present and Future: The Evolution of Enterprise Moodle in Higher Education to get answers and an action plan on how you can bring Moodle to your campus.

Moodlerooms
190 West Ostend Street, Suite 110
Baltimore, MD 21230


Past, Present and Future: The Evolution of Enterprise Moodle in Higher Education
Date: 08/18/11
Time: 11:00 AM PT
Duration: 1 hour
Sponsored By Moodlerooms, Dell

Moodle has become a mainstream alternative to legacy learning management systems (LMS). Yet, for those institutions that have adopted Moodle as a part of an enterprise, fully supported platform, how have their goals for e-learning changed over the years? How has use among faculty shifted, and what are their plans for the future regarding Moodle 2?

Get answers to these questions and more on August 18 when Campus Technology holds a panel discussion with Moodlerooms and academic technologists from SUNY Delhi and the New Jersey Institute of Technology on the past, present and future of enterprise Moodle.

Presented by:
Clark Shah-Nelson, coordinator of online education, SUNY Delhi
Blake Haggerty, assistant director, Instructional Design, New Jersey Institute of Technology
Moderated by: Linda Briggs, contributing editor, Campus Technology
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iLibrarian: 8 Simple Ways To Share Data Online



David Strom at ReadWriteBiz creates a list of 8 Simple Ways To Share Data Online. If you’re interested in working collaboratively on data sets and spreadsheets, you’ll want to check out this guide to online services and applications which enable you to share these files. Pricing information, customer support, storage limits, and distinguishing features are discussed for each online spreadsheet sharing service. I would just add one other that I didn’t see on the list which is Zoho. Zoho Office has over 4 million users and offers a free spreadsheet application as well as a database creator which is free for one user, both of which might be useful for these types of projects. Here are the services discussed in the post:


Spreadsheet Live
Google Docs
Microsoft Live
Smartsheet
Longjump
TrackVia
HyperBase
QuickBase


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ResourceShelf: New Workshare University Offers Free Educational Resources



June 29, 2011 14:44

From the press release:

Workshare, a leading provider of document collaboration software, today launches Workshare University, an online repository for free information, tools and articles on document collaboration, comparison and management. Workshare has been solving business challenges for more than 12 years, and as a result, has compiled this comprehensive collection of the most common mistakes, time saving tips, and solutions to overcome document management challenges.




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MLK Dedication Weekend August 2011 - Information Purposes Only


Colleagues:


The MLK memorial dedication will happen on the 48th anniversary of the Civil Rights March on Washington, August 28, 2011. For more information about the memorial and the events scheduled leading up to the unveiling, please visit http://www.dedicatethedream.org/site/c.4nJHJQPoEiKWE/b.6715605/k.BDE7/Home.htm

I am not sure if many of you are planning to attend this historic event, but I wanted you to know that there are hotel rooms available for $114 at the Hilton Garden Inn (1225 1st Street NE – near Union Station and the New York Ave Metro Station). If you use the rate, please use the group name “Alpha Psi Charitable Foundation, Inc.”

If you are planning to attend, I look forward to seeing you in Washington, DC. Have a great day!

Jerome

Jerome Offord, Jr., MS,MLS
University Librarian and Head, Department of Library Science
Lincoln University (MO), Inman E. Page Library
712 Lee Drive, Jefferson City, MO 65101
Tel: (573) 681-5501 Fax: (573) 681-5511




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Academic Impressions Webcast: iPad: Effective Use in the Classroom



October 4, 2011 12pm-1:30pm CDT

Learn how you can integrate iPad technology into your teaching and learning.

The iPad offers endless possibilities for teaching and learning, but that doesn't mean it is always an effective learning tool. A faculty member's purpose for using the iPad is the most significant factor in determining successful use in the classroom.

Join our instructors online as we discuss a framework to help you think about the iPad's potential in your classroom, including:


Exploring iPads

Purposeful uses for learning

Pepperdine's five-step process to help guide faculty members' use of iPads in the classroom

Adding one more step: Assessment

Getting started

Sharing case studies


RELATED WEBCAST

iPad: IT Support Considerations
October 6, 2011 :: 1:00 - 2:30 p.m. EDT

Learn how you can plan for the adoption and implementation of iPad use on your campus.

Register for both events to receive a discount!

REGISTER FOR THE LIVE SESSION, PURCHASE A CD

Register online or call 720.488.6800. Want to share this valuable information with your entire staff? A CD recording of the live webcast is also available for purchase. Questions? Call us to help determine if this event is right for you.








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