Thứ Ba, 31 tháng 7, 2018

Auto news on Youtube Jul 31 2018

Visit full blog form link in description

For more infomation >> Tophat - EdTech Startups Changing the Education System (No.9) #SCADbytrootech - Duration: 0:25.

-------------------------------------------

November ballots will ask about investment property taxes going to education - Duration: 2:08.

For more infomation >> November ballots will ask about investment property taxes going to education - Duration: 2:08.

-------------------------------------------

Growth of education Moment in History 134 - Duration: 1:56.

moments in history 134 growth organized education

the much prized system of public schools so Universal today did not come into

existence an early date in Virginia a statewide school system was proposed in

1779 by Thomas Jefferson in his bill for the general diffusion of knowledge but

it was not until 1825 they succeeded with a part of the program with the

opening of the University of Virginia in Massachusetts it was not until the work

of Horace Mann during the 1840s that education becoming universally available

the middle states between 1815 and 1860 gradually perfected school system by the

South good schools for everyone did not come until after the Civil War however

there was wide public education almost from the first in the West the period

witnessed the rise of the Academy the founding of many colleges and

universities and the beginning of the great state university system first in

the south then in the southwest and then into the West

you

For more infomation >> Growth of education Moment in History 134 - Duration: 1:56.

-------------------------------------------

Question 7 - Jamie Strange to the Minister of Education - Duration: 2:07.

For more infomation >> Question 7 - Jamie Strange to the Minister of Education - Duration: 2:07.

-------------------------------------------

Question 5 - Hon Nikki Kaye to the Minister of Education - Duration: 4:46.

For more infomation >> Question 5 - Hon Nikki Kaye to the Minister of Education - Duration: 4:46.

-------------------------------------------

Inside Education S19 E1 | Back-to-School Basics for 2018-2019 School Year - Duration: 26:46.

On this back-to-school

edition of Inside Education,

a new school year, a new superintendent,

new budget cuts and new schools.

Before the doors officially open,

we'll take you inside

one of the School District's

brand new elementary schools.

"You know, right now it's a building

"but the day the kids show up,

"it will be a school."

Then are your students registered?

It's quick and easy, but so very important.

We'll show you how to register your kids

for both class and bus service.

Plus a closer look at recent budget cuts.

We talk to the author of an analysis

published by the Kenny Guinn Center

for Policy Priorities.

By the way, she's a CCSD student.

Plus we're here at the School Nutrition

Association national conference.

This is where school districts

come to meet with food vendors

to find out what's new for breakfast

and lunch on school menus.

We'll take you on a tour

coming up on Inside Education.

"The cornerstone of education

"is getting to know a student first."

We want to make sure we're supporting

families and students.

"I think the community should know

"that their voice counts."

Reading is the doorway to everything

that we do in education.

♪♪♪

Thank you for joining us

for this edition of Inside Education.

I'm your host, Mitch Truswell.

Are you ready? Hard to believe

but summer is almost over

and a new school year is about to begin.

The first day of school for the Clark County

School District is earlier than usual.

Classes start on Monday, August 13.

But before the first bell rings

for some 323,000 students,

there are things students, parents,

staff and community members should know,

and we're here to help.

During this special back-to-school episode,

we'll get an inside look at some

of the new schools that will open in August

and let you know how to register your child

for class if you haven't already.

We'll also provide answers

about bus service, school lunch

and recent budget cuts and let you know

about other important resources.

We begin with a big change

for the fifth largest school district

in the nation, a new superintendent.

Dr. Jesus Jara started his new job as head

of the Clark County School District in June.

He is spending his first months on a listening tour

meeting with the Board of School Trustees,

District employees, families

and community leaders to learn firsthand

about the needs of students, employees,

families and the community.

We'll get a chance to sit down with Dr. Jara

in two weeks for a special School Matters

edition of Inside Education.

Dr. Jara will be joined by School Board

President Deanna Wright.

That episode of School Matters

with the new superintendent

airs on Thursday, August 9

at 7:30 p.m. here on Vegas PBS.

We hope you tune in.

The new superintendent has a big job,

but some of the biggest challenges he'll face

may likely be the effects

of the recent budget cuts.

This summer District leaders approved

approximately $68 million in cuts

from its 2018-2019 general operating fund,

and $47 million of those cuts

came from individual school budgets.

The Kenny Guinn Center for Policy Priorities

recently put out an analysis of these cuts

authored by a CCSD student.

Joining me now is Nancy Brune,

executive director of the Guinn Center,

and Paulina Kerrigan, the author,

also a student from Las Vegas Academy.

Welcome to both of you.

This seems like a really big job, Paulina,

and you were able to put all the facts

and figures together.

It seems like this would take a really long time.

(Paulina Kerrigan) Yes, it took a very long time.

I believe I was working on it for about a week,

like eight hours a day, and towards the end,

another intern also helped me

with the school budget part

and it was very time consuming.

-Nancy, this is part of the mission

of the Guinn Center.

What are you trying to do by putting together

projects like this analysis?

(Nancy Brune) The Guinn Center is a statewide

bipartisan policy institute,

and our goal is to provide data-driven

analysis to decision-makers.

By providing this data, we hope that folks

in the community will have a better

understanding of what's going on.

We hope to drive conversations

and help people look for solutions

to some of the issues facing

the Clark County School District

and other folks in the education space.

-So Paulina, what did you learn,

or what should we take away from this analysis?

You went in to see how these cuts

affected all the schools,

so what did you find out?

-I found pretty much that the cuts

were equitable across levels of schools,

so elementary, middle and high schools

were cut equitably across themselves.

High schools were cut more because high schools

and 7th and 8th grade don't have any

restrictions on class sizes,

but elementary schools have very strict

restrictions so they need more teachers

automatically, and magnet schools

and Title 1 schools were cut less.

-So were you thinking possibly you'd find

some schools, some areas were hit less?

Was that kind of what you were thinking

was going to happen?

-I thought it might, especially when

I was looking at the budgets.

The budgets for some of the schools

didn't look right, 75 schools didn't

have budgets that looked quite right,

but when we looked at the data overall,

it looked fine and equitable overall.

-And Nancy, your thoughts on this?

Do you think this is something

the School District should use to promote

that they're being very fair?

-Yes. I think I had the same hypothesis

or my thinking was the same,

that we thought there would be discrepancies

or inequities across Trustee districts.

But clearly after we saw the data,

the District did a lot of hard work

and good thinking in making sure

that the pain was spread across

geographic districts, different types

of schools, and Title 1 schools.

So I think the community really can appreciate

the hard work and thinking that leadership did

within the District to make sure

that the pains were distributed evenly.

-So Paulina is an intern, we should let people know.

Why was it important for her

to do this project for the Guinn Center?

And you said you'd hire her if you could.

-Yes. Her analysis was impeccable

and the rigor with which she looked at the data.

Based on our work on workforce development,

we think it's really important

for our students in Clark County

to have internships and apprenticeships

so when they graduate, they're job

and skill ready to go into the workforce.

We were happy to have Paulina,

and we hope to have other interns

from other area schools next summer.

-Well, good work, Paulina, keep it up.

Thanks so much for your time today.

You can read the analysis for yourself

and you can also find other research

on tax cuts, Medicaid funding,

and federal revenue streams in Nevada

on the Kenny Guinn Center for Policy

Priorities website, GuinnCenter.org.

Clark County School District leaders

will open four new elementary schools

to start this 2018-2019 school year.

Kenneth Divich

at Farm Road and Jensen Street,

Robert and Sandy Ellis

at Beltrada Avenue and Via Italia,

Dennis Ortwein

at Dean Martin Drive and I-15,

and Shirley Barber Elementary School

at Spencer and Pyle Avenue.

Inside Education's Kathy Topp recently

took a tour through the soon-to-open

Barber Elementary School.

Kathy, we hope those schools

are ready for students.

(Kathy Topp) They are. Mitch, the schools are built

using funds from the bond program,

a different source of money

than the operating budget

that saw the recent cuts.

In 2015 the state legislature allowed

for 10 years of bonding authority

to construct new schools

and renovate existing schools

in some of the District's

most overcrowded areas.

As you may recall, several schools opened

during the last school year,

and four new elementary schools

will officially open their doors on August 13.

"Very few have an appreciation

"for how big this school district is."

And it's only getting bigger.

"Here's a literacy classroom,

"and this is gifted and talented..."

Barber Elementary is one of four

new elementary schools to open this August.

"We have three weeks before the kids arrive."

Each new school is approximately

100,000 square feet and cost $30 million each

to build and furnish.

(Blake Cumbers) Many of the schools in this area are overcrowded,

and there's a lot of development

going on at the same time.

(sounds of hammering)

Crews are busy putting bookshelves together

in the new school library,

and teachers are already starting

to move in supplies.

Barber Elementary's new principal, Nicole Coloma.

That's what we're all shooting for,

and that's what we're working for is that

this is an amazing place the kids get to come.

They're going to be in awe because

this building is so amazing,

and it has every technological feature

that you could want.

Like state-of-the-art classrooms,

a kindergarten wing,

and even a water fountain equipped

to refill water bottles.

The kids and the parents are going

to walk through here and be amazed.

But first parents need to make sure

their students are registered.

"It's really important that parents

"register for the new school year."

At CCSD's Student Records Services Department,

staff is busy tracking registrations

all over the School District.

(Greg Manzi) It's extremely easy to register your child.

If you're using the Parent Portal,

we've prefilled that application for you

with the information that we have

from Infinite Campus, making it five minutes

or less to complete that registration

as an existing family, and if you're new,

we tried to streamline the process as well.

We've moved a lot of questions to the household

level that apply to all the students

that are going to be registering.

New students will still need to visit their school

to show proof of identity, residency

and immunization records.

I've been in a portable at a remote location

waiting to move in, so I've only been

in this building a week and a half.

Back at Barber about 600 of the projected

750 students are registered,

and final projects are being tackled by crews.

It's mostly just paving and landscaping

and some fencework that needs to be done

on the exterior of the school.

Pretty much the building is done.

The school will be ready for students

come August 13-- a new school

for a new school year about to begin.

Every kid that comes in here will be lucky

to be attending Shirley Barber.

-The four new schools aren't the only projects

going on right now.

Students at nearly 20 other schools

will be moving from portable classrooms

to new classroom additions,

and there are projects like new

air conditioning, new roofs

and playground surfaces going on as well,

so it's a very busy time of year.

We wanted to give you a few links

for that registration information.

You can find links for both school

and bus registration on CCSD's website,

CCSD.net.

The School District also has a special website

dedicated to the Capital Improvement Plan

with maps of new and planned schools,

information about the bond

and even video of the construction process.

You can find that

at CapitalImprovement Plan.CCSD.net.

Mitch? -Kathy, thank you.

If you prefer not to go online to learn about

or prepare for the new school year,

mark your calendars for the upcoming

Cox back-to-school fairs being held

at valley shopping malls.

The fairs are free and open to the public

and are a one-stop shop for everything

back to school; for example,

you can learn about things like registration,

zoning and Infinite Campus,

and there will even be immunization clinics.

Upcoming fairs are scheduled for Saturday,

July 29 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

at the Boulevard Mall,

Saturday, August 5 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

at Meadows Mall,

and Saturday, August 12 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

at Downton Summerlin.

Registering for school or even attending school

is a challenge for those students

who are considered homeless.

The Clark County School District has a department

whose mission is to remove barriers

for homeless students so they can attend school

and become successful.

Kelly-Jo Shebeck is coordinator

of the program Title 1 HOPE,

and Teresa Butler is a CCSD graduate

who was helped by the program.

Thanks to both of you for being here today.

Kelly-Jo, let's start with you.

There are many different conditions

that a student could be in

that would define them as homeless.

Can you give us a couple of those so we understand.

(Kelly-Jo Shebeck) Our largest population of students are living

in a doubled-up or multifamily

living situation, so that means

they are living with other families

or relatives, friends or neighbors,

because their family has lost housing

or been forced out of their homes.

So we have two or three families living

in a two-bedroom apartment,

children living on the floor oftentimes,

and I've seen families living in garages.

That would be our largest population.

Then we also have our hotel/motel families

living in the weeklies so they don't pay

first and last months' rent,

so they're just making it week by week.

And then we work very closely with our shelters

so we identify students who are living

in the shelters, and then unsheltered,

so living in cars, parks or on the streets.

-Wow, that's quite a lot of conditions.

Teresa, when you were in high school,

and you're now at UNLV in the scholars program

because you did so well in high school,

but you actually came in contact with Title 1

in high school because you were homeless.

What did they provide to you

that made the process of getting to school

and getting what you need easier?

(Teresa Butler) I didn't even know about Title 1 HOPE,

but I remember getting bus passes from them.

Then I needed more help, and my counselor

directed me toward well, do you need clothes?

I ended up talking to the staff there,

and I ended up getting more help

than I really thought I could ever get,

getting more clothes and more support,

and even help getting into college.

-Did it make a difference?

I mean, had you not come in contact with them?

I don't know if you can define how much

more difficult it would be to get

through high school, which is hard enough.

-I definitely would not be in college right now.

I don't even want to think about

where I would be if I didn't have them,

because they made it so much easier.

No one else could have helped me the way they did.

-Kelly-Jo, I asked you approximately

how many students are defined as homeless,

and you said more than 15,000 in CCSD alone.

What kind of services can you provide to students?

-Primarily we're an enrollment program.

We're helping students get in school

without proper documentation.

Last year we had a lot of families come in

from the California fires and the Houston floods,

or we have families that flee domestic violence

or are somehow forced out of their homes

and they're leaving their documents behind.

It's very difficult to get enrolled in school

or prove who you are or where you live

without that documentation,

so our program really helps support them

to make sure students are enrolled

so they can be successful.

-Right. It's whatever it takes

to get them into school. -Right.

So the enrollment piece, and then we also provide

like she said the bus passes,

talking about school of origin,

so that's another big part of our program.

If you're enrolled in school

and you lose your home and you have to go

to another school zone, our program helps you

stay at that school to provide stability

for you to be successful.

-I understand every school has a Title 1

HOPE advocate, so that's how students

are basically referred to you under normal

circumstances. -Absolutely.

With such a large school district,

we rely heavily on our school personnel.

So our advocates, we ask them every year

to share information with teachers,

or sometimes our advocates are counselors

or social workers so we ask them

to share our information with their staff,

because they're the ones that see students

and the changes in what they're wearing,

or did they come to school every day

and now they're not coming to school on time.

Those little changes are red flags

that they say there's this program

that may be able to assist.

-Teresa, before we go, what would you say

to someone who's watching this that knows someone

or is a homeless student themselves,

should they reach out and get help?

-Title 1 HOPE is the necessary step

to make it out of the situation you have.

I think without that, that's where

all of this becomes stagnant

and they help us move forward

from the situation we're not meant to be in.

-We appreciate your time, both of you,

and continued success.

If you would like to learn more

about the Title 1 HOPE program,

you can find it at the address on your screen.

You can also call Title 1 HOPE

at 702.855.6682.

Nearly two-thirds of School District students

are eligible for free or reduced-price meals.

The program is part of the National

School Lunch and Breakfast Program

that provides meals every school day.

Eligibility is determined

by family size as well as income.

Applications for meal benefits

must be completed each school year,

and only one application is needed per household.

A reminder that it takes 10 operating days

to process an application.

You can apply online at MySchoolApps.com

or also in the main Food Service office.

If you have questions about benefits,

you can also call 1.800.819.7556.

Speaking of school meals, have you ever thought

about how something actually gets on the menu

in the Clark County School District?

All public schools must provide foods

that meet some pretty strict dietary guidelines

required by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

It just so happens there is a conference

that helps districts offer healthy

and enticing meals, and this year

it was held here in Las Vegas.

Deep inside an exhibit hall

at Mandalay Bay is where thousands

of food service directors and staff

from school districts across the country

are on the hunt for something new.

The School Nutrition Association's

national conference is where you can find it.

Hundreds of food vendors, some with very

well known names, are offering breakfast

and lunch items that first,

meet school guidelines and, second,

are aimed at the sometimes picky clientele--

students.

"This is the highlight in school nutrition,

"an annual school nutrition conference.

"All the vendors come out,

"and luckily it's in Las Vegas this year."

Among the thousands attending the conference

is Christine Saheb,

a registered dietitian with CCSD.

We tagged along as she searched

for new menu items, new ideas and new recipes.

(Christine Saheb) I just love these concepts they have here.

Here's a pulled pork-type slider.

It looks like they've mixed it

with carrots, tomatoes and lettuce.

It's simple, but that's what the kids like.

They put on Carolina Gold barbecue sauce.

They also have a really interesting

cheeseburger meatloaf, and if you try it,

it's even better than just a regular burger.

Also catching her eye at the Tyson booth,

a sweet and sour chicken

and a chicken and waffle combination

where the batter tastes like a waffle.

Saheb is also looking for more ethnic

and spicier options because students,

especially high schoolers, ask for it.

So you wanted to come over here and sample this,

the Szechuan chicken?

-Yes, this is a spicy Szechuan chicken.

This was really appealing to me just because

the chow mein is 51% whole grain,

which it needs to be whole grain

to be on our menu, and the incorporation

of the vegetables is very appealing to kids.

They're going to want to eat the celery,

the onions, and the carrots

when they see it in here.

You want to take a try? -Yeah.

-Tell me what you think. -Try them together.

Oh, yeah, that's good.

Also in demand by a growing number

of students, vegetarian and vegan options.

How do you know if the students will like it,

a taste test?

-We'd do all the taste testing.

We'd purchase this and take it out.

We have almost 1,000 student workers,

and we test it with them.

It has to get at least a 7 or greater

from a 1 to 10 scale.

If they like it, if it gets a 7 or greater,

we try it on the menu.

In addition to entrees, Saheb alsos keeps

an eye out for things she's not seen before;

in this case, a type of healthy sorbet.

I thought this food was pretty cool

because what it's doing is it's a little treat

for the kids but it counts as a half cup of fruit.

Among all the new items and options available

at the convention, Diane Pratt-Havener

of the School Nutrition Association

says some trends are clear:

Students increasingly want menu variety

and the kind of options

they often find at a restaurant.

Achieving that, that's the tough part.

(Diane Pratt-Havener) School meals have to meet federal

nutrition standards, so every school lunch

has to offer fruits, vegetables, milk,

whole grains and lean proteins,

and the trick is to offer all those foods

on a limited budget in way that's appealing to kids.

-We should mention there are many other

educational sessions at the convention

that help keep food service staff up to date

on a number of important food issues.

Joining us now to discuss some of the changes

coming to the CCSD menu this year

are Christine Saheb and Lory Hayon,

both registered dietitians

and licensed nutritionists with the School District.

Welcome, or welcome back, I should say,

because you come on here and we love to have you.

One of the big changes this year, Lory,

is the way parents and students

will access the menu-- there's a change coming.

(Lory Hayson) There certainly is. We're using a new

software platform called "Nutrislice,"

and it will be a way that the parents

can see realtime information on the menus,

so nutrition information and allergens,

"Taste It Tuesday" items and our new items.

-This is available then on a laptop

or a phone, text? -Oh, yes.

For people that want to do it the old way,

I'm sure they can find it somewhere.

-They find it in the same location.

So if they're used to printing it,

there will be an option to print the menu.

-Wonderful.

Let's talk about some new menu items.

Christine, talk about that.

We have a couple things you can talk about now.

(Christine Saheb) Yes, I can let you know a couple.

For August we have cheeseburger nachos,

like the fusion of their two favorite items

and putting them together,

and that's going to be for secondary.

-So that's high school? -Yes, and middle school.

Then for breakfast we'll have French toast,

and we've made these homemade warm peaches

that will be paired with it.

For our salad bars, we wanted to come up

with different themes each month.

We're going to have a new theme to keep it exciting

to keep them wanting to go back to the salad bar.

-Yes, because I know you're pushing

the fresh fruit and that sort of thing.

When you say "themed," what do you mean,

like it's going to be-- can you divulge?

-We already have it planned out.

We're starting with a nice Waldorf salad,

so it has the grapes and celery.

We're a nut-free facility so there's no nuts,

and then we have things like

barbecue chicken salad, Mediterranean salad

and an Asian salad. -Sounds good.

-And Caesar. -Great.

Lory, the USDA requires a lot of things,

like school meals have been to be low in fat

and sodium and things, whole grains.

What is the toughest part about finding new items?

Is one of those more difficult than the others

in finding new items that are appealing?

-There is. It's generally sodium

because there's a lot of fat replacements,

like you can bake something

and put applesauce in it.

Sodium, everyone's used to that taste profile

so to find things lower sodium

that are palatable and students like

has been quite a challenge.

So we hunt around at the shows to see

what we can find that tastes good

or if we could find something

that we could enhance the taste.

-Yes, by adding some spice.

Kids like spice, that's something I learned.

-Yes, very spicy.

A lot of Asian foods are pretty spicy,

like the Szechuan chicken.

-And that's something that's asked for.

-Yes, at the secondary level mostly.

-All right. So what else do parents

need to know coming up this year, anything?

-Oh, goodness. I think we're just

really excited about the new platform.

Going digital and saving paper is a good thing,

so it's something that's pretty exciting.

-Well, we appreciate the update,

and continued success in the Food Service

department and thanks

for being here today. (both) Thank you.

A reminder that you can find your school's

lunch menu online either on the website

of your child's school or you can search

for your child's school to find

that month's menu calendar at

CCSD.Nutrislice.com/Menu.

We want to thank you for tuning in

to this special back-to-school edition

of Inside Education.

By the way, Thursday is our new night

so we hope you continue to tune in

every other Thursday at 7:30.

As always you can catch this episode

and past episodes of Inside Education

on the Vegas PBS website or YouTube page.

A reminder that the new school year

starts on Monday, August 13.

It is coming up fast,

so enjoy the rest of your summer break

and get ready for a new school year.

We'll see you back here in two weeks.

♪♪♪

For more infomation >> Inside Education S19 E1 | Back-to-School Basics for 2018-2019 School Year - Duration: 26:46.

-------------------------------------------

Marion County Board of Education announces future release of S.T.E.A.M. buses - Duration: 0:54.

For more infomation >> Marion County Board of Education announces future release of S.T.E.A.M. buses - Duration: 0:54.

-------------------------------------------

Inside Education S19 E1 Clip | What's New for Lunch? - Duration: 4:15.

-We should mention there are many other

educational sessions at the convention

that help keep food service staff up to date

on a number of important food issues.

Joining us now to discuss some of the changes

coming to the CCSD menu this year

are Christine Saheb and Lory Hayon,

both registered dietitians

and licensed nutritionists with the School District.

Welcome, or welcome back, I should say,

because you come on here and we love to have you.

One of the big changes this year, Lory,

is the way parents and students

will access the menu-- there's a change coming.

(Lory Hayson) There certainly is. We're using a new

software platform called "Nutrislice,"

and it will be a way that the parents

can see realtime information on the menus,

so nutrition information and allergens,

"Taste It Tuesday" items and our new items.

-This is available then on a laptop

or a phone, text? -Oh, yes.

For people that want to do it the old way,

I'm sure they can find it somewhere.

-They find it in the same location.

So if they're used to printing it,

there will be an option to print the menu.

-Wonderful.

Let's talk about some new menu items.

Christine, talk about that.

We have a couple things you can talk about now.

(Christine Saheb) Yes, I can let you know a couple.

For August we have cheeseburger nachos,

like the fusion of their two favorite items

and putting them together,

and that's going to be for secondary.

-So that's high school? -Yes, and middle school.

Then for breakfast we'll have French toast,

and we've made these homemade warm peaches

that will be paired with it.

For our salad bars, we wanted to come up

with different themes each month.

We're going to have a new theme to keep it exciting

to keep them wanting to go back to the salad bar.

-Yes, because I know you're pushing

the fresh fruit and that sort of thing.

When you say "themed," what do you mean,

like it's going to be-- can you divulge?

-We already have it planned out.

We're starting with a nice Waldorf salad,

so it has the grapes and celery.

We're a nut-free facility so there's no nuts,

and then we have things like

barbecue chicken salad, Mediterranean salad

and an Asian salad. -Sounds good.

-And Caesar. -Great.

Lory, the USDA requires a lot of things,

like school meals have been to be low in fat

and sodium and things, whole grains.

What is the toughest part about finding new items?

Is one of those more difficult than the others

in finding new items that are appealing?

-There is. It's generally sodium

because there's a lot of fat replacements,

like you can bake something

and put applesauce in it.

Sodium, everyone's used to that taste profile

so to find things lower sodium

that are palatable and students like

has been quite a challenge.

So we hunt around at the shows to see

what we can find that tastes good

or if we could find something

that we could enhance the taste.

-Yes, by adding some spice.

Kids like spice, that's something I learned.

-Yes, very spicy.

A lot of Asian foods are pretty spicy,

like the Szechuan chicken.

-And that's something that's asked for.

-Yes, at the secondary level mostly.

-All right. So what else do parents

need to know coming up this year, anything?

-Oh, goodness. I think we're just

really excited about the new platform.

Going digital and saving paper is a good thing,

so it's something that's pretty exciting.

-Well, we appreciate the update,

and continued success in the Food Service

department and thanks

for being here today. (both) Thank you.

A reminder that you can find your school's

lunch menu online either on the website

of your child's school or you can search

for your child's school to find

that month's menu calendar at

CCSD.Nutrislice.com/Menu.

For more infomation >> Inside Education S19 E1 Clip | What's New for Lunch? - Duration: 4:15.

-------------------------------------------

Inside Education S19 E1 Clip | A Closer Look at CCSD Budget Cuts - Duration: 4:23.

The new superintendent has a big job,

but some of the biggest challenges he'll face

may likely be the effects

of the recent budget cuts.

This summer District leaders approved

approximately $68 million in cuts

from its 2018-2019 general operating fund,

and $47 million of those cuts

came from individual school budgets.

The Kenny Guinn Center for Policy Priorities

recently put out an analysis of these cuts

authored by a CCSD student.

Joining me now is Nancy Brune,

executive director of the Guinn Center,

and Paulina Kerrigan, the author,

also a student from Las Vegas Academy.

Welcome to both of you.

This seems like a really big job, Paulina,

and you were able to put all the facts

and figures together.

It seems like this would take a really long time.

(Paulina Kerrigan) Yes, it took a very long time.

I believe I was working on it for about a week,

like eight hours a day, and towards the end,

another intern also helped me

with the school budget part

and it was very time consuming.

-Nancy, this is part of the mission

of the Guinn Center.

What are you trying to do by putting together

projects like this analysis?

(Nancy Brune) The Guinn Center is a statewide

bipartisan policy institute,

and our goal is to provide data-driven

analysis to decision-makers.

By providing this data, we hope that folks

in the community will have a better

understanding of what's going on.

We hope to drive conversations

and help people look for solutions

to some of the issues facing

the Clark County School District

and other folks in the education space.

-So Paulina, what did you learn,

or what should we take away from this analysis?

You went in to see how these cuts

affected all the schools,

so what did you find out?

-I found pretty much that the cuts

were equitable across levels of schools,

so elementary, middle and high schools

were cut equitably across themselves.

High schools were cut more because high schools

and 7th and 8th grade don't have any

restrictions on class sizes,

but elementary schools have very strict

restrictions so they need more teachers

automatically, and magnet schools

and Title 1 schools were cut less.

-So were you thinking possibly you'd find

some schools, some areas were hit less?

Was that kind of what you were thinking

was going to happen?

-I thought it might, especially when

I was looking at the budgets.

The budgets for some of the schools

didn't look right, 75 schools didn't

have budgets that looked quite right,

but when we looked at the data overall,

it looked fine and equitable overall.

-And Nancy, your thoughts on this?

Do you think this is something

the School District should use to promote

that they're being very fair?

-Yes. I think I had the same hypothesis

or my thinking was the same,

that we thought there would be discrepancies

or inequities across Trustee districts.

But clearly after we saw the data,

the District did a lot of hard work

and good thinking in making sure

that the pain was spread across

geographic districts, different types

of schools, and Title 1 schools.

So I think the community really can appreciate

the hard work and thinking that leadership did

within the District to make sure

that the pains were distributed evenly.

-So Paulina is an intern, we should let people know.

Why was it important for her

to do this project for the Guinn Center?

And you said you'd hire her if you could.

-Yes. Her analysis was impeccable

and the rigor with which she looked at the data.

Based on our work on workforce development,

we think it's really important

for our students in Clark County

to have internships and apprenticeships

so when they graduate, they're job

and skill ready to go into the workforce.

We were happy to have Paulina,

and we hope to have other interns

from other area schools next summer.

-Well, good work, Paulina, keep it up.

Thanks so much for your time today.

You can read the analysis for yourself

and you can also find other research

on tax cuts, Medicaid funding,

and federal revenue streams in Nevada

on the Kenny Guinn Center for Policy

Priorities website, GuinnCenter.org.

For more infomation >> Inside Education S19 E1 Clip | A Closer Look at CCSD Budget Cuts - Duration: 4:23.

-------------------------------------------

The Value of a St Thomas Education - Duration: 24:23.

For more infomation >> The Value of a St Thomas Education - Duration: 24:23.

-------------------------------------------

Inside Education S19 E1 Clip | Mitch Tours and Tastes at the SNA Conference - Duration: 3:59.

Have you ever thought about how something

actually gets on the menu

in the Clark County School District?

All public schools must provide foods

that meet some pretty strict dietary guidelines

required by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

It just so happens there is a conference

that helps districts offer healthy

and enticing meals, and this year

it was held here in Las Vegas.

Deep inside an exhibit hall

at Mandalay Bay is where thousands

of food service directors and staff

from school districts across the country

are on the hunt for something new.

The School Nutrition Association's

national conference is where you can find it.

Hundreds of food vendors, some with very

well known names, are offering breakfast

and lunch items that first,

meet school guidelines and, second,

are aimed at the sometimes picky clientele--

students.

"This is the highlight in school nutrition,

"an annual school nutrition conference.

"All the vendors come out,

"and luckily it's in Las Vegas this year."

Among the thousands attending the conference

is Christine Saheb,

a registered dietitian with CCSD.

We tagged along as she searched

for new menu items, new ideas and new recipes.

(Christine Saheb) I just love these concepts they have here.

Here's a pulled pork-type slider.

It looks like they've mixed it

with carrots, tomatoes and lettuce.

It's simple, but that's what the kids like.

They put on Carolina Gold barbecue sauce.

They also have a really interesting

cheeseburger meatloaf, and if you try it,

it's even better than just a regular burger.

Also catching her eye at the Tyson booth,

a sweet and sour chicken

and a chicken and waffle combination

where the batter tastes like a waffle.

Saheb is also looking for more ethnic

and spicier options because students,

especially high schoolers, ask for it.

So you wanted to come over here and sample this,

the Szechuan chicken?

-Yes, this is a spicy Szechuan chicken.

This was really appealing to me just because

the chow mein is 51% whole grain,

which it needs to be whole grain

to be on our menu, and the incorporation

of the vegetables is very appealing to kids.

They're going to want to eat the celery,

the onions, and the carrots

when they see it in here.

You want to take a try? -Yeah.

-Tell me what you think. -Try them together.

Oh, yeah, that's good.

Also in demand by a growing number

of students, vegetarian and vegan options.

How do you know if the students will like it,

a taste test?

-We'd do all the taste testing.

We'd purchase this and take it out.

We have almost 1,000 student workers,

and we test it with them.

It has to get at least a 7 or greater

from a 1 to 10 scale.

If they like it, if it gets a 7 or greater,

we try it on the menu.

In addition to entrees, Saheb alsos keeps

an eye out for things she's not seen before;

in this case, a type of healthy sorbet.

I thought this food was pretty cool

because what it's doing is it's a little treat

for the kids but it counts as a half cup of fruit.

Among all the new items and options available

at the convention, Diane Pratt-Havener

of the School Nutrition Association

says some trends are clear:

Students increasingly want menu variety

and the kind of options

they often find at a restaurant.

Achieving that, that's the tough part.

(Diane Pratt-Havener) School meals have to meet federal

nutrition standards, so every school lunch

has to offer fruits, vegetables, milk,

whole grains and lean proteins,

and the trick is to offer all those foods

on a limited budget in way that's appealing to kids.

For more infomation >> Inside Education S19 E1 Clip | Mitch Tours and Tastes at the SNA Conference - Duration: 3:59.

-------------------------------------------

Education Around the World: Randi Orshan - Duration: 1:06:13.

So, thank you for coming

Like Amian was saying, I had the opportunity to travel to Finland this year

Actually, my family came with me because my husband said "Well, you're going on a business trip

Then we're all joining you on this business trip."

So they also had the opportunity to come with us, which was really incredible.

But mommy was there to work and work I did and I learned a lot

As educators, we know that when we research and we learn things there's nothing like seeing it firsthand

When I went to Finland, you know everything I read about I expected to see and I saw everything.

And more so, what the books say is

really true so my first the title of this presentation is called "Why Finland? Eight reasons

Why Finland Is On Top Of Its Education Game" and

those of you

May know anything about Finland and may not but recently they has been number one in education for a long time

literacy, science, math...they've been on top of their game and

people in America are how did this country doing what we strive to do and

Sometimes some people are great at it and some schools are not, some places in the United States

you know do it better but why as a whole country are they doing things right and

Right here

I was saying do not ask me to pronounce it because I

Learned in one word while isn't feeling that it was ketose and that means thank you

but the rest of it I don't know but I chose to say this because one of the things that I

appreciated while I was there, especially, you know being a nervous American and always on the go and

They're very present. So when they are here and they are wherever they are, they're focusing on that and

After I can share with you after the presentation

I wrote some articles one of the articles that I talked about this the honking phenomenon because the entire time we were there

We heard nobody honk. And so I asked somebody

I said why aren't you honking and they said well?

Clearly whoever is in front of us is there because they need to be there and something is going on

So why should I honk and and I'll just you know, be patient?

so when I saw this it really resonated with me because the Fins are

present at all times and they're not always worrying about what else is going and so I thought that was important

Okay, here's Finland, right it's a country with a small population I just saw in 2018 they had

5.4 million

People across the country, so it's not you know humongous

But why are they making such a huge impact on the educational world?

And I have a short video clip that I would like to show you before

Okay, so presentation over cuz they told you everything you need to know right but a lot of my presentation

I want to say that in my cohort

Some of the people actually went to that school. I

Didn't but that's a real thing that you saw the kids come in every where they take their shoes off. They had outdoor clothes

They had an indoor clothes

It's a much more relaxing environment. How many of you let your kids take their shoes off in your classrooms?

Can I ask what made you decide to do that?

And then once they did it the first time they saw they liked it

As long as it doesn't interfere with learning for Chumash...why not? Exactly. And did you notice any change in the learning environment if they were more comfortable? No

So we're gonna see in this slide actually that

How they keep things stored in the kindergarten, right? So because of boots muddy, right? They don't want you bringing in the outdoor

junk into the classroom. The classroom is supposed to be a safe clean environment

so like you just said why I'm gonna bring that in part of the

Okay

Cooperation versus competition. Okay, so they talked a little bit about that in the video, but

Finland

education system knows that the proper way to

Have success in children is for everybody to cooperate together. There's no competition

Among the schools. They all have the same curriculum, right? That's Dean from the Ministry of Education

And like you saw they do not have politicians telling them and everything is funded through public money

So there's no reason to

I'm gonna do this. You're gonna do this. I'm gonna be better. I mean better

No, they know that the best way to do that is to collaborate

So this is a big word in there and I love this sentence here. There's no word for accountability and finish

But the education expert Posse Stoppard, he'll hear his name mentioned often

He talked a lot about that T word trust

That was one of the biggest things that I learned when I was there is that everybody trusts each other. I

Can't even imagine letting my students go on a cross-country skiing

exhibition by themselves

That would be crazy. I can't my kids go out of the house and go next door, right?

so after coming back from Finland

That was one of the things that I tried to work on for myself is how to just trust in other people

But 90% of what we're going to hear it's cultural and when we're living in America these things - just don't resonate with us

but here, they do

There are

Basically, no private schools in Finland

Everything is public but in the early childhood, they started having more private schools and when I found that was interesting

And I really didn't get a great answer as to why they're even having them

But like I said, they have to follow the same curriculum

so it's kind of a mystery as to why they're starting all these different private schools when the public schools are free and they're

All teaching the same things

So I haven't got a good answer for that yet

It's not because there is no preschools? No, there are preschools

I don't yet. They do. I don't know why they don't start primary school until age 7

But they had their early childhood is one of the most things that they're famous for

So I don't know why they said that I wonder if that child just didn't choose to go but everybody

Has an opportunity to go and it's free

Okay teaching is one of the most respected professions

Let's let that sit in for a second

Because I feel nowadays and I want this to be interactive

so feel free to you know, say something if you want, but I feel nowadays that

Unfortunately teaching has not been appreciated as much as it was previously

Does anyone feel that way?

It's okay to raise your hands if you do

Everyone feels valued as an educator

No, okay, right. So in Finland, it's still one of the most respected

Professions it is it is of the utmost respect

I know we're not talking about Hawaii, but I

Happen to teach in Hawaii and also there, you know in America or it was next to see it's also respected. So

They treat them like royalty and in Finland also teachers are very very very highly respected

Worse there are 50 but they still respect their teachers and they still value them as

Educators as professionals. I think that's the key word. Right and so in Finland, they are looked at as professionals

And again, we're going to go back to the trusting word. So you're a teacher you're respected because you've gotten your master's degree, right?

So everybody who's a teacher has to go through that same program and you have to have a high level degree

They go through what's the equivalency here of somebody going in a residency program in a medical school

So there's a lot to go through in order to become that. Yes

Again a lot of this cultural right so they want to become professionals because why not? Yes

So they're in education and in the secondary schools, they have two quick outs of

Concentration and I'm actually not sure what they do for them

So as you see here

The teachers they know what they're doing

right, so you're not going to find somebody that is not current on what's going on in the education world in the research and like

I said we were talking about cooperation right and collaboration

Everyone is on the same page because they're going through the same things together. So it's a very nice way to have an interaction

Oh you went to this school. I went to that school

We learned this we were and that so they have a variety things 31 different universities throughout the country

but they're all learning in the same way and that

Was interesting

So they work as a student teacher same as we would do in America, but

Elementary schools. They have affiliations with otologist

So again, it's that same

Collaboration so the colleges are working with the elementary school. It's kind of like here in America, but it's a little bit more extensive

So there's giving them what to work on and they're giving them what to work on. So it's a little bit more cohesive

Okay, Finland listens to the research

In Finland research comes with virtually no political baggage right. Now. How many of you work in private schools?

Anybody in public?

Okay

so when we talk about

Politics right? So when you're in a private school, it's not you know, you have government and you have politics like that

But you talk about politics and other ways you talk about your board politics. You can talk about your parent politics, right?

There's a lot of politics, right?

But in Finland, they they doesn't come with that

right

So they are doing studies themselves

Because they are listening to the teachers and they more importantly are listening to the students

You'll see a little bit later that they ask the students. What do you want, right?

What do you want on your playground? What do you want to eat?

What do you think is a good option and they listen to them and they make their curriculums around that and that's in all levels

right

So they know they're not even though they have the Ministry of Education and they have their curriculum to follow

teachers have the autonomy to really do what they need to do and

they are not having standardized testings like we are having also they have

That they have to take what's called the Pisa exams every four years, but other than that they are not

The teachers themselves and they create the assessments that they need based on their

All right, well

Anybody here who knows me knows that I appreciate a healthy

Lifestyle and healthy food. And before I went to Finland, one of the things that constantly kept coming up

It's my research are the healthy lunches that are provided for the students

so when you're in a primary school, which is great one through six you are giving one healthy meal every single day and that

Is for lunch. So if you look here in this bright picture that was when I was at the primary school

and it's hard to tell that they have this beautiful salad bar set up with tons of vegetables and

Salads and then their hot lunch. I forgot what they were having that day, and then I don't have a picture up

But then they have this beautiful set up of different threads and shelli using butter. It was just amazing

Actually, they weren't serving fish I did not remember what they were serving they were serving like what we would say it like schnitzel but

The students

The teachers do eat with the students and it's all a part of this teacher

Involvement here that I have at the bottom and social etiquette

So it's hard to see you again, but that is primary school the kids, you know

Like they have this in public school kids take their trees and they walk and they put it in the back behind

Right and then put it back. But normally you have somebody behind there that's washing the dishes right? Well not here

there's a rotation and the kids are taught how to wash how to put things away and when there's

yes, exactly and

It's all part of those people matters that are there

And if you look in the middle, this was when I was in the kindergarten classroom

and Here I am with my kosher bad lunch and everyone's sitting here eating what I

Was

That was very impressive to me

There was

The government

No, they're doing this

In Baltimore, we do everything to reverse there's no respect for the teachers

Within the community the children have no respect for the teachers. So what kind of learning can go on?

You know, there's no support for young children when they're first born whether it's a single family or whatever

Just to stack those brokers. So in a safe

Protected manner where the parents or parents are with that child

It's just absolutely the opposite. Yeah, I mean, I don't think that's just Baltimore, you know

I think not a man a lot of places their answers regrettably

absolutely, and I think that's why it's important that we

You know be here and learn about it and go and travel and see different things and whatever we can take from that right like

I said 90% disco, but we can take from that. Hopefully you can bring you know back here and and try to change things but

So I said a lot of got healthy casados really important scene, but the last picture here on the left

Was also when I was in the kindergarten

It's hard to see but there are long tables set up and yet again

The kids are in charge of setting up the tables cleaning up the table even as young as six years old

because there's no reason not to and

the way that they're EC EC is structured so

When you're you know

If a parent goes back to work right after a year

Child can enter that system and they can be there until they're six and they call it

You can earn it, but they pick and shoot like it's a really weird system

They have a certain amount of hours set up that you're allowed to be in the system and you can have up to

20 hours or something extra if you need it, so they're open right when they're younger for like 6 a.m

Until 6 a.m. 6 p.m. Excuse me, and then if they're there that long then they're offered that other three meals per day

Breakfast lunch and a healthy snack

Children and my kids we're snapping and snapping and snacking and these kids are like, okay like

So I asked somebody about that and they don't snacks

So in schools even in the upper school the upper school. They're allowed to have like a snack in the later time

but in the younger school, they had one snack that is provided whether it's a yogurt or to food or this or that and

That's it and something more important to that is

They have to try everything it is a rule in the country

I'm telling you it was not I'm telling you they said it in one school

I went to another school and I asked them about it and they're like, yep. They have to try

Two questions

I was disciplined handled and

If a child it's a little more challenged than others

How is that handled with that classroom until it's to the point where obviously they really need to be in a totally separate setting right?

So I I'm gonna answer the best my ability because I don't know 100%

But what I do know is let's say the younger school the ratio right is they have three teachers in the classroom?

And they have one specific teacher. I think they said a little bit about this in video older group also. Yes, uh-huh

Dedicated to any child that has any sort of problems. Whether that's a learning problem when it's a behavior problem

They have something dedicated to them

And what's also good to note is that that person also went through the equipment say of the same education level as a teacher?

When you are in the preschool, it's a little bit different. They call them nurses so their degree throws little bit different

But again, they're still going through the same type of education process

but

It's funny that you say that because in both of the schools that I went to so it's in the kindergarten environment for two days

And then I was in a primary school

The other time and it was a first grade and a fifth grade and the entire time I was there. I was like this I

Was waiting waiting for somebody to like shout out for someone to say something what

I was waiting for it and I was with

Another American and Singh from Texas and heard how he was looking at each other

We knew what we were thinking. So in the kindergarten classroom, we saw one boy

Very adorable sweet little kid for sure, you know

We would say here that he had some attention and focusing type of things. So he's laying on the couch

they have a couch set up in one of the play areas in the

Kindergarten and he's hanging over the couch and his hands are on the floor

It's beat her up here and he's looking around and all the rest of the kids are paying attention to the teacher

This is one of their teacher guided lessons

So they have that for one hour and you can be burdened in the rest of the day. It's basically play at lunch and

I was waiting to see like what was going to happen, right? And again, I told you that there are three teachers in the room

So one was sitting next to him one was teaching and one was with a bunch of other kids and well

They just let him be

And at one point the teacher went over to him

And she just put her hand like that

Good and that was the end of it

And so I spoke to the kindergarten teacher after and she was telling me that from the start of their

School and all right just like we prepare the kids for what we want them to do

So if we want them to ignore it certain behaviors

We're going to prepare them for that and the best way to do that

We know as educators is to model that right. So anytime a child would do something that was

You know, that was highly I guess not inappropriate meaning they had to deal with it

They ignored it and so once the teacher ignored it the children just got used to ignoring it

And so I was down April

So I'm sure that kid was doing this throughout the rest of the month

But they were so used to it that nobody paid attention to it

And he was just kind of left alone to do what he needed to do

And then once they broke from that he got right back in the groove and then they all true by two walked outside

Put there. Well, he's on and they were going out and playing their outdoor shoes on and it was like

Great, let's move on. So that was

My friend who was there

But this is also important to know that

That question was in a secondary school

So that's my high school girl was sitting there on her cell phone and she was ordering boots, right?

The teacher said nothing just kept on teaching when the girl was done ordering her boots

She put her cellphone down went straight back to what she was doing at the end of the class the teacher walked over to her

And said kind of boots did you order?

The girl said love a blonde. I remember the boots and the teacher said awesome. Can't wait to see you tomorrow

Conversation no, right. What does that mean? Right so you can interpret that in a few different ways. Does anyone want to

Try to interpret that

Okay, so they have one level expected that she would do what she knew she should do it for whatever

The opposite of that is perceivable so it's a teacher

Without accountability she

Would drive us crazy, but did she really miss? Of course?

Further by ordering those boots

Maybe that's all that was driving her crazy, and she wasn't able to focus

Until she ordered the goods and then she kind of focused back

We won't even know our cell phone in the classroom

There were a few words that were thrown around trust

Accountability and we're gonna get this towards the end

Confidence the teacher had confidence within herself and what she was teaching that she didn't need to

Remark at that point. You know what?

she said to the friend my friend and asked her about this like did you you knew she was already good someone good really and

Again, this is third hand but you know

My friend said if the teacher said she was like she needed to do what she needed to do at that time if I went

Over and made a big deal about it. It would have been a much bigger deal

But you saw sure the booty should put the phone down. So I'm right back to the lesson

This is a good student like the teacher just knew the kid. I knew like what you're saying at that moment

That's that you need to do that and it wasn't really affecting anybody also talk about the order your group

I think it also says something about their level of professionalism that they're familiar enough with child development to know like when the

you know at what age do you need to continue teaching those skills and i18 what age like she knows I

Just have to trust her

Know they're not perfect. It was just that. Okay, so I'm gonna get to this next slide

They know that play time isn't valuable so when they're not at play time they are focused on what they are doing

right

and this is something that we can easily bring back into our schools something really try to do at my school and

You know in the elementary schools, it's a little bit easier than it is in a middle school because you have different periods

But they have 15 minutes of play for every 45 minutes of instruction

Because all I started showing up

Every single grade from the elementary up until the primary and in the kindergarten they have like an hour of play is how 15

Chunks or 15 minutes or an hour?

Or 45 minutes 45 minutes exactly. It's by law. They have 45 minutes of instruction and then they have 15 minutes

So it's not a minute chunks before the line to 9:45 and then 905. I'm right with that recomment and to be like that

Yeah, exactly, and then they're done at their school day at 1 o'clock

but so, you know in the United States right when I do a lot of their research and you know

I don't know if you guys how many of you see those videos that are going around, you know

Facebook or Instagram all these different things now about recess, right and why recess is important. You don't know that inherently

We all know that kids need to play but we get bogged down

By we gotta finish this quick them that fish that we gotta do this. We gotta do that

So we take it away

But really we know like I'm using quotes that it saves us time in the school day to allow them to go outside

to have free time and to go play so

If you see here that they they they are required

This is what form of the classes that to go outside for those 15 minutes

And I said, well what if it's raining and she looked at me?

And said they haven't

And they have wrinkles and they have boots, right?

So again, they they're bringing in all these different elements so that we can enable them to be successful

and she said I think the woman in the

Primary school was telling me that she could remember one time that been and allowed the kids to go outside if there's an extenuating

Circumstance, obviously, they'll allow them to be in for one of the breaks

She said but they the schools are set up for them to be successful. So they have warnings and they have you know

Forests and they put their bikes and they bring their roller blades and they have all of these different

equipment for the kids to

It gets yet gets dark it's not 24 hours but it gets dark very early at certain times of the year and especially in

Suriname yeah, so putting in 20 nurse like it's not 24 hours yet, son

I think they were telling me like where I was I can help to get it like to fuck in the afternoon at one point

It would get dark

so

So play is really really important

and I put this picture on here on purpose because you see that there Allen snow playing and

Having a great time and you know things

we can talk about play for hours and that could be a whole another session but

You know play obviously teaches the kids so many different

qualities that you're not going to get from other things and you know

the whole thing like Abby was talking about like not going into this into the

Classroom with mud on the students at the whole big thing about the shoes

There's so much more to that. Right? So in the kindergarten they give them swimmin

That means you take them on a bus. They have to get changed

They have to write they put other babies if he responds with their clothes

They have to go to the book and I was in kindergarten. It's no big deal

I can't even take my own children to the prom without having a nervous breakdown

You're taking 24 kindergarteners to the swimming pool. She's like its life

You need to prepare them for life

And I think you know that's another sense of this whole thing is how do we preparing children?

To be life learn earth. They need to know how to take off their shoes put on slippers, right?

Because that's what they do here when they put on, you know different kinds of shoes and it's showed in the video

But where I was they put on like them the slipper type shoes

And they need to know how to put on their hats and how to put on their gloves and their scarves and their winter clothes

And all of these different things to be prepared for what's coming, so it just makes a lot of sense

Yeah, we Jews are responsible for teaching our children to swim

Seriously, is it?

Yeah, but but I'm wondering that the goal of education is to make a person successful in a society that wants to

perpetuate that kind of society

So the girl with the cell phone I would have thought it would be better if there was a mechanism for her to ask

Without destruction. Could I be excused for two minutes? Ya see what I mean? Because

In adult life in the middle of a meeting or something

You need permission to not disrupt

Yeah the situation right again, you know, I wasn't I'm not saying I agree or disagree of that situation

It was just like an interesting, you know something that came up and eternally respond. You got discipline. Yeah

Yes, so they eat lunch with them and they're on the playground, but they have a rotation just like we would hear

I'm sorry, I only broach that topic briefly

With one person so I don't know exactly how it's handled

I know that it's a problem just like it would be anywhere else and I think that

Miss Jen or something not just

Control over that so

You know, they said they deal with it like anything else. They have social-emotional programs. They have counselors on hands

It's not just like pushed to the side

but they have teachers that go outside at research recess on a rotation this and that but they did say that

It was just like anywhere else

Your friend who was in the more high school environment where they have sex education classes

I'm actually I'm sure they do but not that we

Okay kids have very little homework

So in Finland, they have very little nightly homework and they are only given what they need to and you know

It stems from this philosophy that again that there's a mutual level of trust between the teachers and the schools and the parents

So the parents aren't trusting that. Okay you go to school if you learn what you need to do

You don't have to come home and work on it again

And the teachers are trusting the students within the classroom that you're getting what you need during the day

And so they value the family time. Not that you know that we don't hear but their rationale for that

Is that like when you're home you're home you're with your family

You'll come back the next day and obviously suppose to be working for them

but

There are tons and tons of schools now in the United States that are saying that homework is not necessary

You know again, there's always research to dispute research students be research but you know, the evidence here is proven that it is

They have somewhere in Finland in the upper grades, right, that's what they say that

Okay this

Non emphasis on homework conflict with the idea

That education has to continue during this summer vacation

We're here at people in an affluent environment have different enrichments going on but kids who are not in that situation

Lose much of what they have learned

Whether in class or in class plus homework, right? So I'm just seeing this to me. There's a little bit of a

Yeah

Okay, so here we're talking about the EC EC which is the early childhood education and care

So we've been talking about this

You know a little bit but they have a high high enrollment because they are extremely extremely high quality preschool

They like again a caseta before they are teaching life skills. So they're coming out of these

Kindergarten ready for the primary school. Of course, you're gonna have a next option

Right, but the majority are coming out and they are ready to go. They're ready to read. They're ready to learn

They're ready to be students right there

They're anxious to go in and go and to do that, but you know, it's set up so that you can leave one school

No matter where you are in the country and go to the next primary school because like we said before they're collaborative, right?

They're all kind of on the same curriculum. So it's an easy

an easy fix

The time self-will go to okay college tuition is free

So they subsidize even higher education and so they have little to no bones. Okay

That's quoted said it takes a huge burden away from the other people's minds when they don't need to wonder whether they can afford to

pay for their studies and

it comes from the belief that

Higher education is a human right and also a great equalizer in our society

Before that in

The nordic countries they had international students also can go for free and then some of those countries took it away

But finland has not taken that away yet. They still have to qualify to get into college or is everyone up entitled to it

So that's also a very interesting question. So we've broach that topic

I don't know 100% what i've gathered from what who is saying?

Is that depending on I think what you want to go into?

Which I don't fully know that hundred percent on that, but that's kind of what you're saying

They didn't discuss it

Right, right

I mean, yeah, it's all developmental right so they don't believe that kids until a certain age are ready to read

So when should you read that should be in great point. I'm not sure it is. So that's our step here. You're seven

So they don't believe that you know the sixth grade. They're still not mature enough

So that's not going to be in the secondary school. So we're gonna go ahead of that. I

Could say with certainty that that comes from research

Yes

Though they graduate from high school, yes, they don't graduate high school at 19

Wouldn't be 19

Okay

No, I'm pretty sure they're not because we talked about that because they were saying that is 17 and 18 year old right even 16

it's maybe I'm but that's what

That they had a decline in kids wanting to go after secondary school, too

Even though it's very, you know, well

And that's what people do but they were saying that the boys

More than the girls were dropping out and didn't want to go further in their education

So the women in Finland hold higher esteem professions than the men

so they're trying to do everything they can to try to get that's

Okay

IPads and smart boards so they had smart boards, but the technology was very limited. I didn't see it anywhere

But then I was talking to one of the staff members about it

primary school that I was in and she said that so this coming up school year the

Younger kids are getting the iPads and the older kids are getting Chromebooks, but it's not a one-to-one. They're getting a certain amount for

their class but you know

I didn't really talk about this but it's very simple there, right?

A lot of the stuff that they do is simple here, you know

We're always trying to do this and do that. And what's better than what's best

And so they also think like that right and they're progressive but you know

They don't feel like they need all of these different types of equipments to educate the children

That was one thing that we we're talking about. Okay, so, how can we make this a reality in our schools?

okay, and I think that that's

You know what? Everyone might be thinking right now?

So I wanted to show you something really fast

And I know that there's some controversy of Michael Moore but he made a short little clip that I wanted to

to share with you about creating joy and positivity within our

Classrooms because we all know that that when we're happier, it breeds happiness, right?

And so one of the things that is really important to them obviously in all of us to be to create a positive atmosphere

So after that

I want to talk. I want you guys to talk amongst yourselves about some of the ways that you create positive atmospheres within their classroom

Moses and Michael Voris humor

Okay, so maybe we won't watch it that if we can't really hear and I'll just tell you because

Unless you guys want to watch it

Yeah, one of the changes that they must have done is that they got 30 teachers in a classroom because

They always even though these 60s and have three teachers that's there. I don't know actually how far back I don't

Remember what it said one is for special it doesn't matter three teachers even modeling good behavior

Changes the entire dynamic of what is going on in the classroom?

Only needs attention is those it makes changes it changes how much?

culture is brought into the classroom from the teacher rather than from the student side like if

It changes your entire

classroom you have to see I look at it as

Children's brain not ready to learn to read

And so what do we do

This three-step research result and I've never agree with it ever

And he's

Funny really learn in second grade. Well, we're making some changes in Orca - so we can talk about that one. Later

but we are on the same page as you not seventh grade, but first grade and

Way to go

so basically

You know

he was saying in this video that

there's a positive atmosphere which we've all seen and that at the end of the day right besides the trust besides this besides that they

have joy

They're like the same before they're happy and you see other kids faces and you know

Amy was saying don't come between you're gonna fall you're gonna fall right the kindergarten teacher was telling me that she gotta put a

swing set next to the gate cuz that American dude was like we would never put a

Swing set there the kid kid turns out the gate can fly open then we where there are swings and you know

She just look you guys are crazy

Like you have to trust that they're going to be able to do the right things and you know

They were saying in the video that they learn a lot from climbing trees. They learn about risk-taking

They you know, they learn about you know, problem-solving, you know and collaborating with someone else

Are you there to catch me right? So that was probably they were saying so

If you want to take, you know

30 seconds to talk to your neighbor about what are some of the ways that you create a positive atmosphere within your classroom

Okay, so I'll tell you a little bit about what they do

Okay, so this was my most be trick, right

This is my most favorite thing that I saw respect right because that word is universal

Right doesn't matter how it's spelled but it's a universal word, right?

we all have to have respect so some of the things that I

Mail just for myself that I found to create a positive atmosphere is mutual respect

Right mutual respect between each other mutual respect to the teachers and the students a mutual respect between the parents leadership everybody

natural light

okay, natural light every single classroom didn't matter what school we were in everybody had natural light and it really makes a

humongous difference and the last thing that I saw with

peaceful calm environment

Talk about how do you create that this and that but calm?

Peaceful atmosphere where you're mindful of yourselves and what's around you right creates a positive joyous atmosphere

Okay to be or not to be a zombie

Right. So how many shrimp kids sitting in the class and I'm like honestly or they're not paying attention

They're looking out the window, right? We've lost them they're done. Right? So you're talking about this after a lot of talking

An ounce of time right these children begin to act like that because they need a break

That's we're talking about those breaks before our so

important going outside rain or shine getting that fresh air and having that break is so

Important and all of the research shows that breaks into happen regularly to benefit the students

So I would like to hear from you. How do you offer breaks within your your class day?

So you're gonna get and talk about it amongst yourselves

All right, so we'll just go in some time but again here fresh air has been proven to help the brain

So I heard somebody say brain breaks

So a lot of us do like to go through it all type of stuff and that's a brain break within the classroom

If used regularly scheduled time for breaks

This is important

Allowing the students have choice time during their break. So often times. We'll say, okay

I have a break you guys can have a break and you can do this over here and this over here and this over here

But because I want to do that if it's their break

They want to have the choice to do what they want to do on their break

So keeping them choice time and if you can't do it on the break giving them choice time within their day is as equally important

Like I said, they fight it roller blades they hang out and talk. So this was at

The primary school that I was in they're all in sports here. They all have their bikes and then there are sheds

Okay, what's the purpose

Right kids want to know a lot. Why am I learning this? Why am I doing this, right?

We all want to know why not just kid

But they want to know what is the purpose?

So the goal of make it real is to promote a sense of purpose in the classroom

they want to see how does their schoolwork connect to the real world and

I have to say just personally in my school

we

Concentrated on this in good General Studies departments this year and each teacher had to come up with at least one

There was tons of other things about how to make the learning you do. So

Second but what does that look like for you?

how do you make your learning real has it come alive in your questions that the children have an

Understanding of what they're doing actually applies

My fourth graders make a show about

Able to be in the content then they make a shoot for the school or so all the kids learn how to buy it

It's amazing. I can attest that it feels like

Okay, you know you can't give them the money they taught that to uni group

It's beautiful and that's exactly how to make it real

There's no other better example one thing would be

to take some of the learning home and see if the parents are interested in talking about it and that would obviously

Stimulate that hey, I learned something in my parents are interested in this absolutely teaching it over right that's really important. So

here of a few things

So this was a room in the kindergarten that they had set up for

Project-based learning and they were learning about space that Rockets and that engineer come in all the kids design their own rockets

And how does that look like? How does it work?

They shot them and then they create this room to look like a spacer right make it ice-cream shop. Very simple

You know

Participate in programs like this town. Did anyone here ever hear of Midtown? Right? So when chocolate kids is here, right?

It was amazing, but they're learning about economics in their in their math

And what better way to go do that is to go to this town where you can run your own business

That's what it's a bunch of businesses that are set out and all the kids have to run them

But they have to know what does it mean to be a student. What does it mean to be a CFO?

What kind of qualities do I need to have right that's completely real-world application and Finland model

They're in this town. It's called my city off of the American business always

Using real objects, you know, like in my book I'll show you that I have

Sticky notes all over because I look at it quite often

But even just using real needles, I mean if you're learning something you have to use the real objective of what you're doing. Otherwise it

Okay, and this is the last one?

Okay, the triple steep and we talked a little bit about that's right cooperation collaboration and confident but

How does that how does that bring joy like what wouldn't have to do with anything one of those days bring joy

But when you're in a cooperative

Calm environment and you have great work-life balance

What should I?

Bring to my friends because but my real-life

Friends, right like work-life balance is very hard and all of us like we don't know what that means

But they're they know what it means to live and when they go home

They're not planning because they're confident in their work and their mission and they know okay

I'm gonna go do this next I don't just sit there for hours and hours, you know

They have collaboration as a mindset

they know I'm going to go in I'm gonna work with my colleagues and I'm gonna collaborate with people from here and I'm going to

Collaborate people from there and we talked about this in the first slide. There's no competition and everyone's in it together and that creates a

cooperative calm

mindful environment, which ultimately leads to joy in my opinion and

You know

This was

Teachers hanging out with the lights off

Candles lit and the other side of the room was a massage chair. This was their faculty room, right?

They are mandated to take a break. So when the kids are on a break if they're not at a

Outside duty with them the teachers are taking a break

Right, they call collaborate over coffee and come together and schmooze then other laptops out

They don't have their workout, but I'm sitting at their computer

They're finding the time for joy, and some of the other things is when you're on vacation

baking

Make time for yourself during the day, right? So when the kids are on the right, you're on the break do something you love

be confident within your profession and

collaborate with your colleagues

So those were the new things that I found to be joyous?

And that is the end of my slide show. I

Really fast I

Have surprises for you

Okay, how many meals a day are offered to the preschool kids if they're there from 6 o'clock in the morning until 6 coffee night?

Great

All right, all right Yoda

Okay, who is top east Albert

Okay, true or false teachers have autonomy over their work

through

Okay. There you go. You're welcome. Okay. Oh, I don't know if I said this but I think we could fill the blanket

Education is a basic

blank, right

What's the ratio of great to lesson times

Yes

There you go

All right, why is homework limited

Okay, what age do kids graduate out of the early childhood program

That's debatable, but who said six seven, right? Okay, here you go

You're welcome

What does it mean to make it real?

Dad one word, what's the number one key to being successful? It's that trust first

Okay, thank you all so much for coming

But we don't have time but I made you a successful checklist

So you can fill in here, you know positive classroom break time. Make it real and then

You know during your school day keep it with you and check it off

So, you know that you you know, you learn something you work through it and we're all here to you know

Take what we've learned and then to apply it so feel free to to take one if you'd like

Okay

For more infomation >> Education Around the World: Randi Orshan - Duration: 1:06:13.

-------------------------------------------

Help Educate Girls in Guinea! - Duration: 1:27.

Good evening dear parents and dear friends

My name is Fatoumata Sadjo Diallo

I am in 9th grade at Koumbia College [middle school]

I am one of the founders of AJDE

Youth Association for Kid's Rights

Our vision is to increase the rate of education

For young girls and also for all children

We are here to prevent early and forced marriage

and also female genital cutting, violence, and other social harms

We are asking you to help us

We would like to present to you our newest project

There are students who want to study, but their parents are poor.

We want to defend them with scholarships so that they can study

We will work with the school administration

to choose 50 students, at least 25 girls,

who are courageous students, but poor

they want to work

and they follow the values of AJDE

One of the conditions of our scholarship

is to help elementary school students with review sessions

AJDE with your collaboration hopes we will be able

to help young children who are poor with their education

Together, educate our children!

Today students, tomorrow leaders!

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét