Thứ Sáu, 31 tháng 8, 2018

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This morning was the Partners in Education Breakfast this is an annual event where we

bring all of our partners in education the school representatives, principals and other

community leaders together to really celebrate what partners in education is about which

is inviting the community into our schools so that together we can make a bigger impact

in students' lives.

Just as our community continues to grow our student population continues to grow our partners

in education program continues to grow this year we have 214 partners in education and

that grows weekly as we have more folks come on board with us whether it's financial or

if it's in-kind or it's volunteer hours all of that supports and enhances what our teachers

are already doing in the classroom.

I think it's so important to partner with the schools and I mean it's not just the financial

side of it it's also giving back to those students in general and how can we help to

improve their futures and we've gone in and kind of talked about how they're going to

use math in the real world and some of the different things they're doing how that applies.

I'm am so honored to have won this award this is one that I wanted for a long time I've

been a PIE Rep for over 10 years and my goal has been to win this award.

Sarah Ditmore Cooper was one of my teachers in high school as well as Kay Martin so it's

really exciting to win an award named after her from one teacher that was also influential

in my life.

There's not a one size fits all approach for our partners in education some of our partners

may not be able to financially offer a lot and some of our partners may not have a lot

of time but they have financial resources so all of our partnerships look different

but at the end of the day it's about meeting goals so the goal of the school what they

can do to enhance public education and also the goal of the partner whether that is to

promote something a cause that they're very passionate about like financial literacy or

environmental stewardship so together they're meeting the goals that are important to them.

F&M Bank is great about being a community partner in any way we can help our community

we're giving back we're not just about taking care of people within the bank we're about

getting back out into the community and the bank encourages us to do that.

The process of becoming a partner in education is very simple the partner can reach out to

us at the district level you can reach out to us in the Communications Department or

you can reach out to a school or schools that you specifically want to partner with and

a PIE Representative will speak with you more about what opportunities there are to partner.

For more infomation >> Partners in Education Appreciation Breakfast - Duration: 2:44.

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Dept. Of Education Proposes Dramatic Changes To Handling Of Campus Sexual Assault | NBC Nightly News - Duration: 1:54.

For more infomation >> Dept. Of Education Proposes Dramatic Changes To Handling Of Campus Sexual Assault | NBC Nightly News - Duration: 1:54.

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Scientix | Future of STEM | #20 Evarist Bartolo, Minister of Education and Employment, Malta - Duration: 4:23.

For more infomation >> Scientix | Future of STEM | #20 Evarist Bartolo, Minister of Education and Employment, Malta - Duration: 4:23.

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Author Rights: Copyright in Open Education #2 - Duration: 3:38.

Hello, everyone!

As I mentioned in my first video on this topic, copyright is an incredibly important issue

in Open Education.

So in this video, we're going to take a look at Author Rights.

But first, a disclaimer: I am not a lawyer and this is not legal advice.

If you do need official legal advice, talk to a lawyer or your copyright office on campus.

Copyright law is meant to protect an author's intellectual property rights:

their rights over how their creations are used.

Specifically, copyright law gives you control over how your work is

displayed, reproduced, distributed, adapted, or performed.

However, for many authors of educational content, especially those who have previously

published content, getting these rights for their users is not easy.

This is because, under most traditional publication contracts, all of an author's copyright

control is transferred to their publisher.

So, what can you do about that?

We'll start with what you can do before you publish.

Your first option for keeping copyright control over your work is to publish your work openly

from the beginning.

Whether you publish with a large-scale Open Access publisher like Open Book Publishers,

your university press, or independently through a tool like OER Commons' Open Author,

making your work open from the start is the easiest way to make sure that

you keep the rights and that your work is as open as you want it to be.

But be sure to read your contract carefully, no matter who you're publishing with!

Some Open Access publishers require you to assign a specific license to your work which

may be more or less restrictive that you want it to be.

Look into their policies before choosing the first open publisher you see, and check out

a video on open licensing for some more information.

Your second option for keeping your copyright is to negotiate with your publisher

for the rights you want to keep, often through the use of

an addendum to your contract before you sign.

Adding an addendum can be scary at first, but you don't have to do it all yourself.

SPARC and other groups have created excellent stock addenda you can use

in your publishing contracts to outline the rights you'd like to keep.

Look at your options and customize the text to fit your needs,

but be sure to run the text by a copyright official to be sure that

any alterations you made to the addendum fit in.

And keep a copy of your contract on file!

Publishers sometimes update their policies

and then attempt to make authors abide by their new terms.

If you've altered your contract in any way, having a copy available will make conversations

with your publisher easier in the future.

Speaking of which…

After you've published your work, you do still have some options for getting your copyright back.

One way is through the use of a rights reversion clause or termination clause in your contract.

Rights reversion clauses allow authors to get their copyright returned after a certain number of years,

if their book goes out of print, or if their publisher never actually publishes their work (it happens!).

An example of a rights reversion clause is shown on this page.

If you don't see any clauses like this one in your contract (and remember, the wording

may not be exactly the same), you may still be able to terminate your contract and retrieve your copyright.

If you can't find anything explicit in your publishing contract, you do have one final

option: talk to your publisher.

Publishers have a vested interest in keeping authors happy,

so depending on who you're working with, they may be willing to negotiate with you.

If your textbook or other published resource is now out of print, you will have better

leverage for getting your rights back.

Some publishers might require you to change the name of the open version of your work

to avoid any confusion between the two, but it can work out.

Talk to your publisher before you give up completely, and remember,

there's always an option out there for you to consider.

Thanks for watching!

Remember, I'm a librarian, not a lawyer.

If there's something I missed, please feel free to comment and let me know, and join

in the conversation if you'd like to see more content like this in the future!

For more infomation >> Author Rights: Copyright in Open Education #2 - Duration: 3:38.

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Teacher unions file lawsuit against Texas Education Agency - Duration: 1:49.

For more infomation >> Teacher unions file lawsuit against Texas Education Agency - Duration: 1:49.

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Melanie Ramsey- Director, Progressive Education Program - Duration: 1:10.

Hello, my name is Melanie Ramsey.

I am the director of The Progressive Education Program.

PEP, as we are called, serves students who have moderate to severe disabilities.

Our goal is to provide an opportunity in a positive atmosphere for our students to succeed

academically, vocationally, and socially.

We have a wonderful, specialized staff dedicated to our students' well being and success.

At PEP, we believe the possibilities are endless.

Thank you for taking the time to learn more about the Progressive Education Program.

I encourage you to explore our website or call us if you are interested in learning

more about what we have to offer.

For more infomation >> Melanie Ramsey- Director, Progressive Education Program - Duration: 1:10.

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Angry Kids and Stressed Out Parents: Can Early Education Help? | Doc Zone - Duration: 44:19.

[theme]

When kids act out, their families suffer.

When, kids grow up misbehaving, we all pay.

When my son did the killing, why did my son do that?

What is truly amazing, though, is the power of early intervention.

A child who, before when they got upset, might throw something.

Now, substitutes language and says, "I'm mad."

Now they don't have to act out all their feelings.

Spending a little now gets huge payouts down the road.

We had less mental health problems, less addictions, less criminal involvement.

We know enough to act right now.

I'm Ann-Marie MacDonald.

Doc Zone looks at 'Angry Kids and Stressed Out Parents.'

[screams]

Karen: I, who would never thought I would shake a baby,

there were times when I was holding her I was going,

"What is the matter?" [Jilliane cries]

Narrator: For the first time in North American history,

children now suffer more from mental health conditions,

than physical ones.

Parents are coping with staggering levels

of anger and aggression.

Experts say kids who don't master self-control

are at risk of growing up overwhelmed by mental illness,

substance abuse and criminality.

Society pays the price in pain and dollars.

But it doesn't have to be this way.

Jim: They never thought about self-control

as something you could teach.

Narrator: This early childhood education program

in Winnipeg helps do just that.

It targets kids most at risk.

Kelson: Went to jail, did a lot of time in jail.

had a lot of friends killed.

Y'know, I don't want that for my kids.

Narrator: Other programs help all families.

Are you going to stop or do you want to go to your room?

Jilliane: Stop. Do you want to stop?

Dad: Good girl. Thank you.

Narrator: Deceptively simple programs that could save us

billions and help a nation of...

Narrator: Angry kids and stressed out parents.

♪ ♪

♪ ♪

[gun shots]

Narrator: The grainy images are imprinted on our national consciousness.

Frantic first responders,

blood-stained sheets on stretchers,

faces of students frozen in shock and horror.

École Polytechnique on December sixth, 1989,

the day Marc Lépine killed 14 young women

before turning the gun on himself.

Every December Canada stops to remember

the murdered young women.

But only one woman stops to reflect on the murderer.

And it's only when my son did the killing

of these 14 women

that's when I start doing a retrospective,

why did my son do that?

Narrator: In the quarter century since Lépine's

murderous rampage...

Well hi there, baby girl!

Narrator: There's been a revolution in our understanding

of early childhood development.

Science has proven the more nurture and stimulation

a child has before the age of six, the greater chance

she'll succeed in life.

Marc Lépine, known as Gamil Gharbi as a young child,

had a trauma-filled childhood because his father

was a violent man. Monique: In his mind,

he had to beat his wife at least once a day.

He was violent with my son.

And when he hit him in his face, it last for a week, you know,

these marks.

I hated him you know, oh yes, desperately.

Narrator: When Marc was six and his younger sister

Nadia four, Monique left her husband.

The children had no further contact with their father.

So therefore I was the only support.

And I had to work.

Narrator: With working full time and going to school,

Monique thought it best the children board

with other families and visit with her on weekends.

When Marc hit adolescence, he and Nadia returned

to live with their mother.

Needing a strong male role model for Marc, Monique signed him up

with Big Brothers.

Monique: My son really liked him, really liked.

I think he was going better then.

But all of a sudden the police came to my place to tell me

that the guy was in jail

because he had done sexual assault on little boys.

Bob: What had the potential to being perhaps a literally

life saving type of intervention for this young boy

turns out to be exactly the opposite.

It's just one more betrayal

in trust that he's put in another adult in his life.

Monique: And then he started changing.

Narrator: A lifetime of instability and trauma

took its toll.

Bob: A series of events that are so negative each of which

is traumatic in and of itself but which cumulatively

must have just been catastrophic.

If it had been possible to intervene with this child

and his family earlier on, then maybe the outcome

would have been very different.

♪ ♪

It's today that I see the consequences

of these behaviour, you know. Only today.

I would like to start all over again

and be different. Be a loving mother.

♪ ♪

Narrator: No one can put a price on the pain and suffering

caused by Marc Lépine's murderous rampage.

But it's possible to stop potentially destructive

behaviours before they spiral out of control.

Announcer: They are participating in a pre-school

experiment designed to assess the impact...

Narrator: Back in the early 1960s, faced with record numbers

of poor black children failing at school,

Michigan researchers created an intense early learning program

called the Perry Pre-School.

That first group of Perry-preschoolers

has been followed for 40 years.

Kids who attended the program were 46 percent less likely

to serve prison time,

they had 33 per cent fewer arrests for violent crime,

50 percent fewer teen pregnancies

and almost a 50 percent higher graduation rate.

Researchers aren't surprised by those findings

because brain scans show us the stress of grinding poverty

can be just as damaging to the child's developing brain,

as abuse and neglect.

A big problem, because a growing percentage of kids today

is being raised in poverty.

Children from lower socio-economic status

communities have different functional characteristics

of the forebrain the pre-frontal cortex

that lies here at the front of the brain.

Narrator: This is the brain scan of the pre-frontal cortex

of a child from a high-income family.

The deep green shows intensity of response to stimulation.

And this is the scan of a child from a poor home.

Much less response.

There are systemic differences in how those

children use the prefrontal cortex to do things

like control their attention, control their impulsivity,

think about decision making and so on.

[cries]

Narrator: And it's not just poor kids having trouble

controlling their impulsivity. Parents across all incomes

are struggling with increased behaviour problems.

Parents are busy in their own stressful and chaotic lives,

and there's very little time that children have where people

are present with them just to be with them,

just to play, just to read a book.

And those circumstances, those quiet times

in which they get lots of language input

really help them to learn how to regulate their behaviour.

Narrator: Displaying aggression and acting out

are normal behaviours for most three year olds.

What's not normal, is the number of children

who aren't 'growing out of it', by learning self-control.

The teachers will say that children have much poorer

attention spans and poorer self-regulation abilities

than they did ten or 20 years ago.

Now, I actually believe that this is true.

This is not just a phenomenon that people complain about.

Smita: On the count of go.

One, two, three, go!

Narrator: To test a child's ability to maintain

self-control, or self-regulation as experts call it,

researchers perform a battery of tests.

Smita: You didn't wait for 'go'.

Narrator: To see whether they can follow instructions.

You tap one.

Great.

Narrator: Stay on task, and wait for rewards.

Smita: I have to go wrap your gift right now,

but no peeking, okay? All right.

Narrator: Forty years of this kind of research

proves the more children can control themselves...

[paper crinkles] Smita: No peeking.

I'm not.

Narrator: The less they explode in anger

and frustration, the more successful they are in life.

Smita: Thank you, Adree, for your hard work.

Great job. High five!

Narrator: Too many kids are not able to do what Adree did,

simply control themselves.

So what we're seeing is that over time

with younger children is higher rates of inattention

and hyperactivity and conduct problems.

Narrator: That's one of the reasons parents all over Canada

are signing up for evidenced- based programs like Triple P.

That's the Positive Parenting Program developed in Australia

30 years ago, shown in dozens of peer-reviewed studies

to work on the most disruptive behaviour problems.

Karen: Sometimes she just snaps.

Like she can't do something and she just snaps.

[screams]

Narrator: Three-year-old Jilliane's temper tantrums

sometimes go on for hours.

Some days it's from the beginning to the end

and that's how the day goes.

Then some days it's like she's a different child

and I have an angel on my hands and nobody would ever believe me

that she ever had a temper tantrum.

Hi!

Narrator: Karen de Montigney's maternity leave for baby Joaquin

is just about up.

Karen: Come here. Want to say hi to your baby?

Jillian: Yeah. Karen: Yeah.

Karen: She's always been very, very good with him.

Dad: Hey, buddy. Very gentle.

When I came back from the hospital

we had a really rough patch for about six weeks.

She didn't talk to me for two weeks when we came back.

But she always was very good with him.

She always loved him and was very gentle.

Narrator: Karen wants to put a stop to Jilliane's tantrums

before she returns to work.

Karen: She's like a little ball of fire.

She's got a little temper and she's persistent.

I like to use that word versus stubborn.

[screams]

Narrator: Three-year-old Jackson flat out refuses

to do what his mother asks.

The more she persists, the more violent he gets.

Pam: He physically abuses me and it aggravates you even more.

Then you want to get more... [laughs]

Narrator: Pam's part time job means she's home more than

her husband so the job of teaching Jackson self-control,

falls largely on her shoulders.

Pam: Put your toys away. Jackson: No.

Pam: I know that I've got to tell him we're gonna have a bath

oh, it's gonna be a fight. Now we're gonna brush our teeth,

it's going to be a fight. Wipe your face.

Jackson: Uh-uh.

I can't blame him

and make him feel bad for person he that he is,

We just to hopefully change the few bad behaviours

and then he will be the greatest little kid ever.

Luke: No! Kiona: Here you go.

No!

Narrator: And five-year-old

Luke's misbehaving has pushed single mom Kiona Hartl

to her limit.

You know an easy baby until about three years old.

Here, look at your movie. Luke: No.

Okay, then go to your room. No!

Then he was this little person

that could actually talk to me.

Go outside? No.

Kiona: And my reaction to him not doing exactly as I said

um, was...

explosion.

[Luke whines] Aw, come on, Luke.

Come on!

Then I noticed it wasn't actually doing

anything constructive.

When you're applying any of these strategies...

Narrator: All three moms have signed up for the Triple P

Program offered in different Vancouver area communities.

Triple P teaches parents how to train their kids

in self-control.

The whole focus is on positive interactions,

developing a positive relationship with our children.

Narrator: Triple P teaches strategies, that if used

consistently, will stop bad behaviour.

Beginning by doing what seems to me the most challenging

to parents, slowing down enough to pay attention.

Kiona: Yeah, yeah.

I will often times give him half of my attention.

Out, out! Uh-uh.

Kiona: And from the first session at Triple P,

stop what you are doing and give your child

100 percent attention. Sorry but I have to go.

I'll call you back. Bye.

What are you doing sitting there?

Kim: Children often only need two, five,

ten seconds of your attention. Their needs are met.

They're done.

The kiss monster is here. [Luke laughs]

That has been a huge aha moment for me

which has practically, single-handedly

changed our relationship.

I hate this. Kiona: What?

I'm kidding. Kiona: Oh my gosh.

Narrator: Then Triple P teaches a series of techniques

designed to diminish negative interactions.

Kim: Praise is always our first line of defence.

That's our reward that we do first and foremost

and over and over and over again.

It's free, it's easy and kids get more out of that

than anything else we can do for our children.

That was awesome for taking the elevator.

Good sharing, thank you.

Hey, stop and wait for Mom.

Good job.

That's how we listen.

And the other thing that was really important

that I learnt from last week is count to eight.

Where does it go after? [Jilliane mumbles]

And the number of times I've told her to do something

and I've counted to eight and around seven or eight

she does it.

Good job, thank you. [Jilliane laughs]

I'm thinking all this time I would have repeated it

two or three times by then and already be frustrated

she's not doing it, when really, she was doing it

she just was processing what I said.

I do feel a little bit guilty about that.

[cat meows]

Kiona: Okay. All right, Luke.

What did I say about throwing balls in the house?

What's the rule? [Luke laughs]

Luke: No throwing balls in the house.

Kiona: Okay, you have to go sit on your chair.

Narrator: And then when misbehaviour happens,

Triple P teaches parents how to discipline

without escalating aggression.

Kim: Quiet time is a strategy that Triple P uses

to help with child who has just exhibited a minor misbehaviour.

Quiet time allows the child to stay in the area

in which the misbehaviour occurred but takes them away

from that specific spot.

And they're are allowed to have some time sitting,

calming themselves, finding a way to regulate their behaviour

and control their behaviour.

Kiona: We used something called the naughty chair before

and it made him actually feel bad.

And I didn't know how to manage it myself.

But when I do planned ignoring on the quiet time chair

it seems to work effectively.

You were quiet for three minutes, Luke,

you did really well. It's ready.

Narrator: Key to success, is delivering logical consequences

for misbehaviour and sticking to them.

Karen: Okay, Jilliane, there won't be time

for a book tonight. [Jilliane screams]

Karen: I think for me what's been essential

is for me to stay calm.

For me to keep it together and then focus on helping her

to stay calm, whereas I couldn't do that before

and she would get upset because I was upset.

[Jilliane cries] Jilliane, you are screaming

and it is hurting my ears. [screams]

If you don't stop screaming you are going to need

to go to your room to scream because I don't want

to hear you scream. [cries]

Do you want to stop or do you want to go to your room?

Jilliane: Stop. Do you want to stop?

Dad: Good girl. Thank you.

Thank you for listening, and thank you for calming your body.

Kim: These parents are doing a great job.

They are in the thick of it right now but they're still

using praise, they're still trying to get their child

to manage even though she's in the middle of a tantrum.

It's really hard when our children are at that point

especially when, in the past,

we're used to escalating with them.

Narrator: But Jilliane loses her temper again,

so she goes to bed without her bedtime story.

[screams] Bob: It's really remarkable

is that if you can hang in there long enough with those

temper tantrums at some point the light bulb goes on

with these kids, you can almost literally see

the dawning of awareness and they suddenly realize

oh, this is not working any more.

And from that point on what you see is a really rapid decrease

in that temper tantrum. It doesn't go away completely

because they're always going to try just to see

if it's gonna work, and that's why consistency

is so important on the part of the parent.

Pam: Let's go. [slap]

Narrator: Pam's convinced that consistency

is how she'll help Jackson master self-control.

Pam: Feet to yourself. Quiet time.

Narrator: But Jackson won't stop kicking and hitting.

Sit! Time out.

Narrator: With quiet time not working,

Pam's moves to time out.

All the preconditions are all set up the same

but they're in a different area. It's still a very short

period of time only used as a last resort

when everything else has failed.

[Jackson screams]

Pam: I used to yell and I used to scream

and get in his face and it just would make him

even more aggressive than what he already is.

Time out. Yeah, you got to go to time out.

Okay, time out.

[timer beeps]

You ready? [Jackson whines]

Narrator: By teaching parents to deliver discipline

without escalating their own anger or aggression

Triple P helps prevent the development of the worst

behaviour problem: conduct disorder.

Conduct disordered kids use violence and aggression

to get what they want. They hurt others,

show cruelty to animals, set fires and lie and steal.

A sub-group of kids who develop conduct disorder

before the age of ten go on to commit 50 percent

of all violent offences.

It's important to note that not all children

who get a diagnosis of conduct disorder

go on as teenagers or as adults to engage in criminal behaviour

but compared to other people in the population

there's an increased risk for that.

Narrator: But what about when an entire population

suffers a high risk borne of generations of disadvantage?

Kelson: Went to jail, did a lot of time in jail.

Had a lot of friends killed.

Y'know, I don't want that for my kids.

Narrator: When we return, an innovative preschool

promises Kelson's kids the best chance of escaping

their father's fate.

And as the kids amp up the bad behaviour,

will parents be able to stick with Triple P?

Pam: I can't give in, because I haven't given in

the in the last, I would say, week and a half or so

that I don't want to go back to that so I'll fight it.

♪ ♪

[theme]

Narrator: Manitoba is on the cusp of a crisis.

Right now a record number of children

are growing up disadvantaged.

Leanne: The number of First Nations children

under the age of ten is growing rapidly,

and in Winnipeg it'll be, it is, I guess, pretty much now

at 25 percent and growing.

Narrator: Unless things change dramatically,

those kids face a bleak future.

Seventy percent of those living on reserves

are high school dropouts.

♪ ♪

Eighty-seven percent of youth in custody in Manitoba

are First Nations.

♪ ♪

And Aboriginal youth are up to six times more likely

to commit suicide. All those troubling statistics

translate into huge social costs.

And Daddy likes running, eh?

The failure to act, the cost of the status quo,

is hugely enormous.

It's over 50 billion dollars for Manitoba

given that one in four of all Manitoba children

is vulnerable in kindergarten.

Narrator: So Manitoba has taken extraordinary measures,

spending millions on early interventions,

proven to dramatically improve the outcome

for the most vulnerable kids.

If we don't start early in providing those kinds

of resources so that can happen, we will not have a society

in which any of us are happy, safe and productive.

Narrator: Lord Selkirk Park, a mostly First Nations

neighbourhood plagued by high crime and unemployment.

Jennifer and Kelson are parents to six children.

Three of them, under the age of two,

are enrolled in the Abecedarian Childcare Centre,

the only one of its kind in Canada.

Abecedarian was invented for children who are not likely

to be very successful in school.

Say, hey Colby. Call your brother.

Joe: This is the only program literally in the world

that begins at birth.

Narrator: The idea behind Abecedarian,

is the earlier learning begins, the better.

This is the only pre-school to take babies.

[speaks native language] My name is Thunderbird woman.

And I drink this water and bless.

Narrator: The day begins with a blessing

from a respected Elder. A room full of toddlers

and babies is completely silent,

remarkable for a child care centre.

Elder: It doesn't matter what nationality you are,

you all are my grandchildren.

And you smudge your ears so you hear the good things in life.

And you smudge your mouth so the good things

come out of your mouth.

Boy: I'm done. Are you?

You could clean up then. Okay.

Narrator: With one caregiver for every three toddlers,

the program mirrors intense parent-like interactions.

Residential schools robbed many First Nations families

of this parenting knowledge because children

were ripped from their families at an early age

and grew up never knowing what good parents did.

I don't want to be like those people,

like the way my parents raised me.

I don't want to be like that and have my kids raised like that.

I think you should say. I want to change myself.

Exactly, there you go, you want to change yourself

because you went down the wrong path.

Yes, I went down the wrong path.

And I realize it now because now I see my little ones.

I don't want my little ones doing what I did, you know,

go where I went because I went the wrong way,

I went completely wrong.

He went the gang life way and now he learned.

Yeah, I went the gang life way and went to jail,

did a lot of time in jail, had a lot of friends killed.

Y'know, I don't want that for my kids.

It fell down, let's try again.

Narrator: If follow-up data from the original Abecedarian

Early Childhood Project is any indication,

Kelson's kids will do much better.

Kids who attended the program in the 1970s

at the Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute

in North Carolina, at age 30, were four times more likely

to be university graduates.

Feel that one. How does it feel?

Narrator: Fifty percent more likely to be

full-timed employed,

and 84 percent less likely to receive social assistance.

Eight, nine, ten.

Ten, you're right. There are ten cookies.

Narrator: Key to all that success:

a focus on early language development.

Good! Good.

We knew that language was often the thing

that kids were furthest behind in.

Narrator: In fact, children raised in welfare-supported

homes hear only 600 words an hour.

Working class kids hear 1,200 words an hour.

But children raised in professional homes

hear 2,100 words an hour.

Look at all your fingers, all the paint on your fingers.

Narrator: So the Abecedarian model imbeds learning language

into everything.

Carly: Can you count them?

Devon: One, two, three.

Carly: Yeah, there's three. I think there's five fingers,

What's the next thing we do, after we rinse?

When I was getting the child to wash his hands after painting,

I was incorporating the one component, was enriched

care giving which was talking to him about washing his hands,

getting the soap off his hands. The second component

was language priority which was extending his vocabulary,

his language, getting him to talk to me.

Asking him, "What do we do next?"

And where does the paper towel go?

What's this called? Devon: The garbage!

Carly: The garbage. Perfect.

So he's getting his vocabulary out.

and he's telling me what he is doing.

Generally in child care centres you'll see staff

just stand there and just supervise.

Where is the puppy?

Is the puppy under the blanket?

Narrator: In the Abecedarian model,

kids aren't simply read to.

It's the whole inter-exchange between

the caregiver and the child.

Show me the fish. Where is the fish?

Carolyn: So she's asking the child,

"Do you see this?" and she's going on the child's cue

of what the child is looking at. So that is sort of

conversational reading and that's done throughout the day

many times in a day.

Meow, meow!

Joe: I would challenge you to go to 100 child care centres

and see how many times you see a book read to one child.

Mortimer be... Quiet!

Mortimer shook his head, "Yes, yes."

Narrator: It's this intensive use of language

that helps the Abecedarian kids master self-control.

A child who before when they got upset might throw something.

Now substitutes language and says, "I'm mad,"

instead of throwing something. This is a big change

in development because now they don't have to act out

all their feelings.

Narrator: The program works best when parents make language

a priority at home too.

That's why Debbie Urbanski, the program's home visitor,

brings the same learning games to parents

that kids are playing at school.

Debbie: I've got some toys, some blocks this time

for Let's Build Together.

Now the lending books, how are those working out?

We've read them all actually. Kelson: Yeah.

Yeah, that saying they say, they're like little sponges,

that is so true. Where's the kitty cat?

Kitty cat. Kelson: Kitty cat, very good.

All they need to do is watch, then one day they'll get up

and they'll try it themselves.

Jennifer: They need an extra push though, too.

If a parent doesn't help them and explain things to them

or talk to them, they're not going to learn.

Are you ready for home yet?

Joe: The world doesn't have to be classist.

Just because groups have not done well in the past

doesn't mean they can't do well in the future.

Daycare worker: You zipped up your jacket all by yourself.

Emily: I zipped my jacket! I zipped my jacket!

Ha ha!

Kelson: Say, "Bye, daycare, be back tomorrow."

Bye! Be back tomorrow.

Narrator: While the Abecedarian program targets

the most at-risk kids in Manitoba,

the Pax Good Behaviour Game, another Manitoba

evidence-based approach, promises a better future

for all kids who play it.

The game begins now. [timer beeps]

Narrator: The game's origin goes back to 1967,

when a young American teacher confronted with the classroom

from hell, had a flash of brilliance.

I wonder what would happen

if we made being good into a game.

Narrator: Each class is divided into teams.

The teams compete to see which can behave the best

for the longest period of time.

When a child acts out it's called a spleem.

Dennis: We call them that silly name

because we want people to kind of smile when they say it

and not get all worked up like they're gonna have a hissy fit.

The winning teams get to walk around and hoot like a monkey.

And the 'prizes' are the things that kids love to do anyway,

like a giggle-fest, a roll on the floor.

♪ ♪

[harmonica blows]

Teacher: There's the timer. Okay, we need to calm down.

Leanne: So the self-regulation around starting and stopping,

stopping and starting, is key to the brain rewiring

into we can work, we can have fun,

we can socialize, but we know how to start something

and stop it and that really is the basis of self-regulation

and the basis of learning.

Teacher: Okay, the Pax game is almost done

and I have no spleems yet. Give yourself a pat on the back.

Yes? Are you gonna like do

the running game after our Pax?

Boy: He's not allowed, he yelled.

Teacher: Do you think we should give you a second chance?

Raise you hand if you think we should give him a second chance.

Narrator: Pax is also effective at reducing bullying.

Dennis: It helps the children learn to support one another

and not to exclude or diss or shame the other kid,

because if they did that, that would be a spleem

for their team as well.

Narrator: Playing the Good Behaviour Game not only

reduces bullying but results in fewer behaviour disorders.

And the kicker, the kids who were most at risk

are the ones who benefit the most.

Those findings are staggering, you have this

very simple intervention, that almost seemed

too good to be true.

You know you had less special education,

you had them more likely to graduate high school,

you had less mental health problems,

less addictions,

less criminal involvement based on incarceration records

and probably most powerfully it was one of the only approaches

that had shown any impact in reducing the odds of kids

thinking about or attempting to kill themselves,

suicide prevention.

Narrator: Great results, but how to cash-strapped governments

pay for programs like this?

And later, some successes.

Karen: Can you take a deep breath, please.

[deep inhale]

And some setbacks.

No!

♪ ♪

[theme]

Karen: Jilliane, two minutes. Okay?

Two minutes then we are going to turn off Sesame Street.

Narrator: Three months ago, these three moms

signed up for the Triple P parenting program

to learn how to help manage problem behaviours.

Pam: Two minute time out. Narrator: They diligently

stuck with the program. And the results are impressive.

Pam: Come here.

♪ ♪

Okay, time to clean up your toys, go put it in your toy box.

Good job, babe. Let's go.

Narrator: Jackson is a changed boy.

Pam: Yeah, this is so good.

Get your soccer ball.

Things on a daily basis have changed.

He will do a lot more that I ask of him.

Are you gonna put Curious George away?

Good job!

Getting him dressed yesterday was a great day.

I'll show you how. It was great.

We got to get out of the house in less than an hour.

And he'll be all excited because he got dressed all by himself

and it's fun.

♪ ♪

Narrator: Kiona's son Luke has stopped

his attention-seeking behaviour.

Kiona: What's the rule around burping?

What do we say? Luke: Excuse me.

Okay, good job. I always felt like

I was with Luke a lot, and still didn't feel

like I gave him my all.

But with Triple P, I was actually 100 percent with him.

There's been that shift for us

in that we are actually playing together a lot.

I like him. What about this one?

Karen: Bye, school bus.

Narrator: Karen has returned to work

with Jilliane's temper tantrums greatly diminished.

And a discovery.

Jilliane has a speech problem called apraxia,

a condition where her brain isn't sending signals

to the small muscles in her mouth.

Which explains so much.

So it's very frustrating for her because she can't

get across her needs, her wants, her thoughts.

When we go to speech therapy she really tries.

So when I positive reinforce her, I think it makes

a huge difference for her because she feels good

about herself versus always feeling bad about herself.

Good job, you knew what to do!

Don't forget these pieces.

Karen: I want to raise a girl who's going to be able

to control herself well and as she grows up

and is able to manage herself and manage her emotions,

then I think she'll have something to be proud of.

Narrator: The investment these parents have made

in their children should pay off in reduced social spending

down the road.

But it's the 'down the road' part that's problematic

for governments balancing budgets today

and heading for election tomorrow.

It's estimated that every dollar invested now

will return up to 17 dollars in reduced costs.

But where do cash-strapped government departments

find the dollars for that initial investment?

Children don't live in little silos.

Departments are silos, right? So this department does this

and that department does that

and children live in a horizontal world.

So we have multiple people serving this one child

within this one family within this one, you know.

So if we structured it differently, could we result,

could we provide better outcomes and could we also potentially

not be spending money on doing things two or three times over

by different departments? Could we get them connected?

Narrator: In Manitoba, with poverty and crime escalating,

there was an urgent need to act.

The province created the Healthy Child Committee of Cabinet,

charged with putting the needs of kids first.

[mingled voices]

Leanne: At the fundamental level that causes

a culture shift. It causes the Minister

of Justice to be equally comfortable talking about

early childhood as the Early Childhood Minister talking about

why do we have so many people ending up in jail.

Narrator: Three government departments pulled together

to pay for the Abecedarian playschool.

But not all intervention programs have to be paid for

by the public. The private sector

is investing in early childhood too.

♪ ♪

In Utah, in this high crime Salt Lake City neighbourhood,

they're taking the idea of early intervention to the bank

with a pilot program to fund early childhood education

through something called a social impact bond.

♪ Aa, aa, aa ♪

♪ B for bounce ♪

Narrator: Investment giants Goldman Sachs and JB Pritzker

fronted seven million dollars to pay for at-risk kids

to attend this special pre-school program.

♪ D for dig Dig, dig, dig ♪

Narrator: These are the kids most likely to cost the state

millions in additional special education services.

If those children who are statistically very likely

to end up in special education without any kind of intervention

end up staying out of special education,

the investor will receive a percent of those savings.

♪ Going on a word hunt ♪

Narrator: And the investment is already paying off,

kids who graduate from this pre-school program

use fewer special education services in later grades.

We are cutting it twentyish down to five percent.

That's a pretty nice cut,

savings to our state, savings to our district.

[mingled voices]

Narrator: The loan will be paid off in six years.

So far, the savings in special-ed costs

add up to more than 1.8 million dollars.

Teacher: That will work, yeah.

However conservative you are,

however business oriented you might be,

if you compare the rate of return to investment

in early childhood to something like investing in the equities

market, what you're finding that the rate of return

is as high. And that's the part about

the early childhood program that gets missed

in the political discussion.

The other thing is that it drives quality.

And really, only high quality programs get these kinds

of outcomes for kids.

Great, good job, Katelyn.

Funds will flow to the programs that have

the highest impact and we can be more efficient

with tax payer dollars. And at the same time

improve outcomes for low income children,

and for society as a whole.

Narrator: Jim Heckman warns of a bleak future

if we don't, literally, invest in the kids.

[mingled voices]

I mean I think we're gonna see continuing problems,

and the problems would take the form of higher crime,

worse health.

Narrator: When we return, intervening early

doesn't just change behaviour,

it changes our biology too.

And if Marc Lépine's mother had it to do over.

Monique: If I would've been able to go

outside of my own problem by then,

I would've seen a lot of fear in his eyes.

♪ ♪

[theme]

♪ [group sings]

Narrator: Intervening early doesn't just change

a child's future, there's evidence that

it actually affects the DNA.

Dr Michael Meaney made this startling discovery

studying mother rats and their young.

So literally pups, rat pups that are licked more frequently

are calmer and have a more modest response to stress.

Rat pups that are licked less are more reactive to stressors.

And what occurs is that the mother's licking

changes the activity in brain cells,

and that's registered through these epigenetic marks,

including epigenetic marks that regulate the genes

that control the way we respond to stress.

Narrator: An epigenetic mark is an actual mark

placed on top of DNA by various life events,

good and bad.

The mark acts like a kind of dimmer switch,

enhancing the effectiveness of some genes,

diminishing others.

Next Meaney studied human brains stored at the Montreal

Brain Bank, matching biographical information

with those visible marks on top of DNA.

Michael: In much the same region of the genome

that we'd studied in the rat, we could associate

the epigenetic mark to the history of childhood abuse.

Narrator: Which lead researchers to wonder...

Michael: If we talk about an individual who's gone

through abuse, to what extent is that reversible?

Narrator: Can the damage be undone?

New epigenetic research suggests yes.

In this freezer at a UBC research lab,

tantalizing evidence from Meaney's team.

These are DNA samples from adult children

of young high-risk mothers.

Some had the benefit of parenting programs.

Others did not.

The epigenetic marks on the genes of the children

whose moms received the intervention are different.

The children of the mothers who had the intervention,

also went on to more successful lives.

♪ ♪

If epigenetic damage can be undone,

then interventions like this Abecedarian playschool

may actually protect these children

from the kinds of social problems that have plagued

so many First Nations generations

and protect their physical health as well.

If you look at that history, if you combine it with

the epigenetics research which shows these intergenerational

effects of trauma, of toxic stress,

which has been the signature experience for too many

of the First Nations peoples in the history of the country.

You've got toxic stressors transforming the brain

for the worse, preparing it for a predatory,

dangerous, unpredictable world,

you get problems like addictions, mental health,

because that's the kind of world that those conditions

have prepared the developing brain for.

Kelson: Which way are you gonna go?

Which way? The stairs?

Rob: We have to think forward in time to what we are going to

tell every one of those children if we don't act today.

We know enough to act right now.

[laughs]

♪ ♪

Narrator: Today, the mother of the man who committed

the Montreal Massacre, Monique Lépine is convinced

a history of childhood abuse turned her son into a killer,

beginning right from birth when he was deprived

of his mother's touch.

Monique Lépine's husband would not allow it.

Monique: He didn't even want me to take them in my arm,

you know, when they were crying.

He just forbid me, you know.

Because he was saying that they would be spoiled,

can you imagine?

And what do the child needs?

Love.

He needs his mother.

I'd like the parents who will listen to me to understand that.

Because we cannot focus on the behaviour,

we have to focus on the pain

that is in the heart of the child.

♪ ♪

You can always see our documentaries at cbc.ca/doczone.

I'm Ann-Marie MacDonald. Thanks for watching.

♪ [theme]

For more infomation >> Angry Kids and Stressed Out Parents: Can Early Education Help? | Doc Zone - Duration: 44:19.

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Local group rallies support for Holocaust education bill - Duration: 1:32.

For more infomation >> Local group rallies support for Holocaust education bill - Duration: 1:32.

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Scientix | Future of STEM | #18 Svein Sjøberg, Professor in Science Education, Norway - Duration: 4:12.

For more infomation >> Scientix | Future of STEM | #18 Svein Sjøberg, Professor in Science Education, Norway - Duration: 4:12.

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

Education Insights for India - Power BI Data Story - Duration: 4:54.

Education Insights report provides a high level view of the education quality in India

This report uses interactive Power BI visualizations to represent data effectively

This report uses survey data published by NAS and U-DISE

The table on the right shows the literacy rate of states

Overall literacy rate of India is 73.9% with population of 1.11 billion

Kerala has the highest literacy rate

Bihar and Rajasthan have lowest literacy rates

Let's sort the table by population

States with higher population have either average or low literacy rate

Let's check the Performance report

The Performance report shows the average scores (NAS) across states and districts

On hovering on a district, we can view additional data points such as total students, total teachers and average score.

Average score of students from Rajasthan is better than that of students from other states

This table provides a comparative analysis between average score and total students

Let's check the student score for the state of Bihar which has the lowest literacy rate

We can see the district that has low student score and high pupil-teacher ratio

This page shows consolidated data for a state collected from NAS and DISE survey

NAS performance is calculated by using the performance score of a subset of students

We can see the ratio of participants in the NAS survey across different classes

The visual shows the average score (in %) obtained by the students across classes and subjects

On hovering over the visual, we can see the detailed distribution of the scores obtained by the students for that class and subject

We can observe that the average score decreases as the class increases

We can see the distribution of average score by different classes and categories

We can see the distribution of NAS participants by category in the chart to the right

Now, let's evaluate why Darbhanga district has poor average performance

We can see the sample size used by NAS survey from the district

We can see that most of the students score below 75% in the district

We can evaluate the performance of students across different classes and subjects which led to poor performance  

We can check the performance of the students for a class across different categories We can infer that in case of class 3 students, students from rural areas and students from government schools need additional attention.

We can check areas in which students are performing well and where do they need additional attention to improve their overall scores

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