Rising Above I.Q.

In Nicholas Kristof’s article below reviewing John Nesbitt’s new book, Intelligence and How to Get It, both authors consider the role IQ and effort has when analyzing Asians, Jews and West Indian-born African Americans. As it turns out, each of the people in these three ethnic groups outperform other ethnic groups and typically white middle class students as well. The people in these ethnic groups aren’t necessarily “smarter” than their counterparts, but because of family support, priority around becoming educated and exposure to more vocabulary at a young age, they get the “most out of the firepower” that they have.

What all students should be taught in school is this basic lesson: Intelligence and academic success are very much a matter of personal choice and is, therefore, a decision that we can make. As my friend Joe Martin, who was raised in the projects and went on to get his Ph.D says: “Your I CAN is a lot more important than IQ.”

ARTICLE
New York Times
By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF

In the mosaic of America, three groups that have been unusually successful are Asian-Americans, Jews and West Indian blacks — and in that there may be some lessons for the rest of us.

To view the entire article visit
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/07/opinion/07kristof.html?emc=eta1

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Colleges Face Challenges in Helping Foreign Students Adjust to Life in U.S.

CAROL’S SUMMARY:

As more and more students add an international component to their education, it is critical to understand how to engage and support students during a time when they are susceptible to culture shock, isolation and academic stress. As the article below indicates, many colleges fall short of their goals in helping foreign students adapt to American culture. The coaching required to help international students with academic, financial and emotional issues can be extensive and challenging, as advisors discover that tactics that work for American college students often don’t work for their foreign counterparts.

Socially, international students often stick together because they can be uncomfortable trying to mesh with our culture. However, survey results taken from undergraduates at several private liberal arts colleges reveal that many international students would like to have more American friends. As perhaps the most important challenge for international students is forming relationships with individuals different from them, the support networks and mentoring programs mentioned in this article are crucial to student success.

Some internationals students arrive on campus with more complex and weighty issues than homesickness or culture shock. They may come from war-torn or politcally unstable countries, such as the Rwandan genocide of 1994, which traumatically affected students attending universities in this country who knew their family members were either in hiding or being killed. In those kinds of cases, colleges must ramp up their crisis intervention programs. This article’s primary charge is for colleges and universities to commit to training advisers, who often are the first person on campus that international students seek out when they need help.

This article also raises a critical issue in coaching: how do we help engage at-risk populations who often aren’t asking for help? This article provides several suggestions, from partnerships between foreign and domestic students to professional counseling to presemester courses on writing, culture, and acclimating to the United States. The importance of providing the right resources, practicing active listening skills and asking the right questions simply cannot be understated, especially when dealing with cultures different from our own.

ARTICLE:
Chronicle of Higher Education
By BETH MCMURTRIE

American colleges pride themselves on welcoming students from around the world. But how effectively are they helping foreign students adapt to and thrive in an American setting?

That is a subject of increasing debate among educators, some of whom question the support systems their institutions have in place.

To view the entire article visit
http://chronicle.com/temp/email2.php?id=vGkW9myprTw9WByRPDS2wrgSyxCCR9nc

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A Changing Student Body: Report Shows Record Enrollment, More-Diverse Population

CAROL’S SUMMARY:

As the Washington Post article below indicates, the demographics in America are changing:

· 44% of the nation’s students are minorities

· Performance among 17-year-olds has been stagnant since the seventies

· Achievement gaps between low income students and high income students continue to widen

· Our nation will see record enrollments between now and 2018, when there will be 53.9 million students

· In 2007, there were 1.5 million home-school students

· Private school attendance is down

· Numbers of students earning Bachelor’s degrees has increased 30%.

What will we have to do in K-12 to prepare students in the lowest economic status for success?

What can turn around success for our nation’s 17 year olds?

How can we look differently at K-12 learning to set a world-class standard for performance?

ARTICLE:
By Maria Glod

Public school enrollment across the country is hitting a record this year with just less than 50 million students, and classrooms are becoming more diverse, largely because of growth in the Latino population, according to a new federal report.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/05/31/AR2009053102229.html?sid=ST2009060100036

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46 States, D.C. Plan to Draft Common Education Standards

CAROL’S SUMMARY:

Our nation is on the verge of a transformational new movement to define educational standards for all grade levels through high school. As the article below states, 46 states are now in agreement that we need to adopt national curriculum standards to help make our country’s workforce more globally competitive. These states are no longer content to watch ill-prepared students get by in school by passing tests that fail to meet national educational expectations. The outcoming national standards hope to balance the discrepancy between what students score on state versus national tests, and to narrow the widening achievement gap between the United States and the world.

LifeBound offers programs that can help smooth the transition for students all the way from elementary school through high school. Even more importantly, LifeBound works to supplement the traditional educational system with critical life skills and strengths-based materials. Along with the new educational standards due to be released in July, LifeBound will help prepare the next generation of students with the persistence, self-awareness and confidence needed to succeed in our global economy.

ARTICLE
By Maria Glod
Washington Post

Forty-six states and the District of Columbia today will announce an effort to craft a single vision for what children should learn each year from kindergarten through high school graduation, an unprecedented step toward a uniform definition of success in American schools.

To view entire article visit

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/05/31/AR2009053102339.html?wprss=rss_education

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Introducing a Remedial Program That Actually Works

While our nation is at-risk for financial and real-estate debacles, we are also at-risk for our economy of the future in underprepared college graduates who are swelling our Higher Educational institutions in numbers two-thirds strong in community colleges and almost one-third strong in four year schools as the article below indicates.

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Texting May Be Taking a Toll

CAROL’S SUMMARY:

Yesterday and today, we worked with a school district, training teachers and administrators from elementary through high school.  When we asked them what characterizes some of their challenges working with today’s students, they cited texting and cell phone use as a huge problem.  The article below is right on with their concerns. 

Too much texting at school, out of school and in class has caused major problems in focusing and being attentive, teachers say.   If students  are continually distracted by responding to everyone who texts them ( American teenagers sent an average of over 2,000 text messages a month) then they aren’t able to set and maintain boundaries which can allow them to concentrate and follow-through when they need to do that.

Parents and teachers need to work with students on critically analyzing the pros and cons of technology—especially texting which is the most prevalent  means of communication among young people.  Many teens say they would rather text than make a phone call or have an in-person conversation.  Not only is too much texting an issue of attention, it can also be addicting for students, sucking them into texting all the time at the expense of their own mental and emotional health.   Texting has also fostered an unabashed language of sexual innuendos and trash talk which hamper personal and interpersonal self-respect.

If we really want to help young teens develop their emotional intelligence, as parents and educators, we need to model more attentive interaction ourselves, engage in honest discussions about pros and cons of technology and the basics of how to manage oneself with increasingly complex choices.  If we are honest about this problem, we can give students the tools to listen to themselves, be brave enough to turn off distractions when needed and say “no” at the right time.

ARTICLE:

They do it late at night when their parents are asleep. They do it in restaurants and while crossing busy streets. They do it in the classroom with their hands behind their back. They do it so much their thumbs hurt.

Spurred by the unlimited texting plans offered by carriers like AT&T Mobility and Verizon Wireless, American teenagers sent and received an average of 2,272 text messages per month in the fourth quarter of 2008, according to the Nielsen Company — almost 80 messages a day, more than double the average of a year earlier.  

To view entire article visit

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/26/health/26teen.html?emc=eta1

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New Push Seeks to End Need for Pre-College Remedial Classes

CAROL’S SUMMARY:
More than 60% of students at community colleges need remediation for math or English or both and 30% need remediation at 4 year colleges. Many are clamoring for colleges to hold high schools to much greater accountability so that they don’t need to do “clean-up” work at the college level.

High schools across the country should offer student success classes for freshmen in high school, setting the bar high for academic skills which can help them throughout high school and beyond. In addition to this academic preparation, students need emotional and social skills which will allow them to seek and appreciate challenges in college, career and life. LifeBound resources provide these opportunities.

ARTICLE
New York Times
By SAM DILLON

MARTINSBURG, W.Va. — After Bethany Martin graduated from high school here last June, she was surprised when the local community college told her that she had to retake classes like basic composition, for no college credit. Each remedial course costs her $350, more than a week’s pay from her job at a Chick-fil-A restaurant.

To view entire article visit
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/28/education/28remedial.html

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Teaching Online: 2 Perspectives

CAROL’S SUMMARY:

In the article below, Gina Greco, a professor of English at Hudson Valley Community College, explains why on-line learning has opened up her true passion for teaching and what you need to do as a faculty member to be
effective at teaching in this environment.  One big difference is how you communicate to students through writing with a pithy, positive style. Most of her students are older, returning and have lacked success in their other academic endeavors.  This is a fresh start to change habits and lives through education.  This medium has tremendous power to transform learning around the world.

Right now, I am in the cab riding to the airport. My cab driver, Tom, is enrolled in all on-line classes through the University of Phoenix.  As a returning adult student, he says that the fluid nature of his classes keeps his mind mentally sharp all day long as he considers class assignments and issues while driving his cab. Tom makes use of his downtime waiting for clients while he uses his Broadband Access card.   He is a marketing major and has creatively developed an internship, which accommodates his schedule, his classes and his family.  In addition to being hard-working and creative, he showed up to pick me up this morning fifteen minutes early. This type of industriousness is just what our graduates need to create every advantage for themselves in any economy.

 ARTICLE:
By GINA GRECO
A Reaffirmation of Why I Became an Educator

“Impersonal, disconnected, and unfulfilling.” That is how I would have answered if you asked me 10 years ago what I thought of online teaching. As a teacher, I feed off the energy of the crowd and thrive on exciting and entertaining my students to the point of drawing even the most resistant into attending class. When the economy and my growing family necessitated that I teach online as well as in the classroom, I couldn’t have been more surprised by the satisfaction and joy that could come from a distance-learning program.

To view entire article visit

http://chronicle.com/temp/email2.php?id=qCrbjqTGncnqhhXHJfFNTKshnHCz4rxk

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Internationally, the Business of Education is Booming

International education is here to stay and colleges are figuring out how to provide these opportunities to students as a way to stay competitive themselves. Indeed, as the article below indicates, students today will graduate into a global world so understanding how the world works will be key beyond studying in London or Australia. Going to places like China, The United Arab Emirates, India and Spanish speaking nations will serve students better for the long run.

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Test Preparation May Help High Scorers Most, Report Says

Test preparation and coaching, such as the services that Kaplan and Princeton Review provide, can raise student test scores by 30%. However, those families who need it most, as the article below indicates, are often excluded from this type of service since they can’t afford it.

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