Saturday, January 31, 2015

Sharing Resources

I have been researching the NIEER website (National Institute for Early Education Research to be found at http://nieer.org/. The amount of information is overwhelming in a good way. I enjoyed getting to know many of the sections and information that seem particularly relevant to my current professional development. The teacher section was of particular interest to me as it looks at teacher quality, teacher salaries and overall compensation, teacher training and professional development. This section had articles related to and enhancing everyday experiences in your classroom. I am also going to be interested in new ideas and my own growth as an educator working with children and families in the classroom. The idea of further teacher training is important to me as upon completion of my graduate degree, I hope to be able to teach future teachers. As an early childhood advocate, I see the need for early childhood educators to be respected in the field and should get higher compensation. Teachers with a higher level of education, higher wages will result in less turn around more qualified teachers in the classroom that will contribute to higher quality preschool.
I read a preschool policy brief on the website that helped me look at early childhood education outcomes in a different way. I understood that there are short term and long term benefits to an early childhood education. I did not consider the amount of health benefits. This brief talked about the many long term health benefits to adults that have had access to high quality education. Early childhood education improves adult health by improving child health. It improves adult health by increasing cognitive abilities, knowledge and adults tend to use that knowledge to make better health choices.
The above brief tells me that economists support early childhood education. High quality education has a benefit on the economy as a healthy society has positive economic returns in that it will reduce health care costs. There is a section called Economics and Finance. In this section there are numerous sources to find out about the economic benefits of preschool. I next went to current newsletter issue. The first three articles were from each of the three fields outside of early childhood that we have been discussing. It was in the very first section called “Hot Topics”. The first was a political view “Child Care Takes Spotlight in the State of the Union Address. A link was included to bring you right to the speech. The second article was “Growing Importance of Dual Language Learning” a look from the neuroscience field.  The third article was related to economists “Common Core Standards and Early Childhood”. These were the first three articles clearly showing that these are important issues and trends in the field and that these three fields have a vested interest in early childhood education.
A new insight that I gained this week is that there is a wealth of information out there at our fingertips. As early childhood educators it is so important for us to remain in touch and involved with current issues, trends and research. I also learned that having more knowledge on issues and trends will help us to be advocates for our field.



Saturday, January 24, 2015

Poverty

My first conversation partner is Michael Hibbeln. He is the early childhood and elementary school principal of the American School of Milan, Italy. I have had one Skype call with him already. We were not able to connect this week but it is my hope that we will be able to communicate for future conversations. This is what we talked about in our first conversation. He is originally from Michigan. He and his wife have lived abroad and were interested in living in another country again. He applied to different schools and was hired by the ASM. It is a school of nearly 900 students beginning at age 3 and going up through high school. Children graduating from ASM will receive an American style High School Diploma. We spoke for a few minutes about their early childhood program. He said that there are three classrooms with 17 students. There is one teacher and a teacher assistant. AMS is an accredited school. They are an English emersion school. There are 52 different nationalities. Most of the families have at least one family member that speaks some amount of English. They do have translators. I told him the issues and trends that we will be studying in this course and he said that he would be able to assist me with these topics. We had a call confirmed for this week regarding issues of poverty but he was unable to keep our appointment time. I look forward to future phone conversations and learning more about his school in Italy. I hope to gain more insight into issues and trends in early childhood in Italy.

My next conversation partner is Gem Munro. The principal of the school I visited this week gave me his information. She met Mr. Munro when he spoke at a Rotary Club meeting in December here in Orlando, Florida. He is the founder of an organization called the Amarok Society. This organization has a unique way of going into the poorest most poverty stricken areas of the world and providing education. They are building schools but these schools are not filled with children. The schools are filled with mothers. The idea is to teach mothers to teach their own children and at least five other children in their community. We have only been in contact through email as he is in Bangladesh for the next few months. He wrote back immediately to say that he would be glad to answer any questions but his access to email is sporadic. I am waiting for his reply. In the meantime, I went on the website. The Amarok society offers a wonderful program that seems to have great results. The Amarok Society works in the poorest of slum communities. They teach very poor mothers who do not have enough money to send their children to school. They teach the mothers to read and to write in their language, math and also English. The mothers learn basis life skills about health, nutrition, child care and child development. The results are that these mothers, fathers and communities are gaining a respect for education. They are teaching children that would not otherwise have an opportunity to learn anything.
The insight that I have gained is a whole new way to look at educating and empowering a community. These families are in such poverty, they are too poor to attend any kind of school at all. This program gives families the opportunity to gain some knowledge and learn basic skills to help their families thrive in these dire circumstances. This style of education is one that I never expected. You would expect to see organizations building schools and filling them with trained educators to teach children. Mr. Munro goes to these remote slums with his family, trains teachers and teaches the mothers. The mothers are required to attend school for two hours every day and then the mothers go home and hold school in their own homes teaching the children what they learned that day. I am so surprised that the founder of this organization emailed me directly after my initial email. He has written a book called South Asian Adventures with the Active Poor. I plan on reading the book. For more information, I am including the link to their website http://amaroksociety.org/wordpress/




Saturday, January 17, 2015

Sharing Web Resources


The organization I choose to research is The National Institute for Early Education Research (NIEER).  www.nieer.org. NIEER conducts and communicates research to support high-quality, effective early childhood education for all young children. NIEER looks at early childhood education to enhance children’s physical, cognitive, and social development, and subsequent success in school and later life. The Institute offers independent, research-based advice and technical assistance to policymakers, journalists, researchers, and educators. The Institute's research programs offer a vision of early education excellence in terms that are usable by policy makers and understandable to everyone. NIEER is interested in progress toward excellence in early childhood education. It looks to improve quality and increase access for all children to good preschool programs.

A current issue that caught my attention was a section on the website called STEM which stands for Science, Technology, Engineering and Math. It was under the heading of Nieer Current Projects. It caught my attention because it focuses on how to incorporate these subjects into the early childhood curriculum. It talks about how early science and math skills and knowledge enhance children’s school readiness and later success in school. This personally resonates with me because I really enjoy teaching science and math to my preschoolers.  I teach 3-4 year olds. I am interested in doing more research in this area.

It mentioned DLL in the STEM curriculum. Teachers can apply language development concepts and teaching strategies for DLLs to lessons. This fits right in with our topic of this week. There are many articles and a lot of information on enhancing language learning through STEM. I encourage you to go to the NIEER website.




Sharing Resources


The organization I choose to research is The National Institute for Early Education Research (NIEER).  www.nieer.org. NIEER conducts and communicates research to support high-quality, effective early childhood education for all young children. NIEER looks at early childhood education to enhance children’s physical, cognitive, and social development, and subsequent success in school and later life. The Institute offers independent, research-based advice and technical assistance to policymakers, journalists, researchers, and educators. The Institute's research programs offer a vision of early education excellence in terms that are usable by policy makers and understandable to everyone. NIEER is interested in progress toward excellence in early childhood education. It looks to improve quality and increase access for all children to good preschool programs.

A current issue that caught my attention was a section on the website called STEM which stands for Science, Technology, Engineering and Math. It was under the heading of Nieer Current Projects. It caught my attention because it focuses on how to incorporate these subjects into the early childhood curriculum. It talks about how early science and math skills and knowledge enhance children’s school readiness and later success in school. This personally resonates with me because I really enjoy teaching science and math to my preschoolers.  I teach 3-4 year olds. I am interested in doing more research in this area.

It mentioned DLL in the STEM curriculum. Teachers can apply language development concepts and teaching strategies for DLLs to lessons. This fits right in with our topic of this week. There are many articles and a lot of information on enhancing language learning through STEM. I encourage you to go to the NIEER website.



Saturday, January 10, 2015

Establishing Professional Contacts and Expanding Resources

For Part 1 of the assignment this week, I tried to use the websites provided but was unable to make contact as most the emails were all returned. I then went on the computer to Google Maps and typed in early childhood learning centers in Milan, Italy. It pinned a school called American School in Milan. I immediately went to the website. I found a contact person with an email address. I emailed Sara Griffith and told her the name of our school and the project we are beginning. She sent an email back telling me that she is the admissions director and would not be able to help. She passed along my email to the principal of the early childhood center. He emailed me right away saying that he would like to set up a Skype meeting. We have a Skype call set up for this coming week. I am excited to be able to discuss issues and trends in the early childhood field with him and compare and contrast the US and Italy. I am also working on reestablishing contact with my cousin in Israel. I traveled there last year with my mom and we met for the first time. She teaches English but her dad told me she has many contacts. Phone calls are hard because of the eight hour time difference. I found out that the best way to reach her is through an app called “What’s App”.This is an app used for text messaging overseas without worrying about additional charges. You just have to make sure the other person has the app as well. I look forward to a growing relationship with my cousin through this project. I hope that my colleagues will have a similar experience when establishing international contacts.

For Part 2 of the assignment this week, I chose two websites to research and study further one is Zero to Three: National Center for Infants, Toddlers, and Families and I have signed up for their newsletter. Upon initial browsing of the website, I found it to be very informative and easy to manipulate with information useful for families and professionals in the field. I also chose The National Institute for Early Education Research and signed up for their newsletter as well. Again, upon initial browsing of this website, I found it informative. I think I will gain valuable knowledge and insight into the current issues and trends in the field. I look forward to the continuing journey. I hope that other colleagues will choose these same websites and newsletters so that we may be able to share what we are learning and engage in meaningful conversation regarding our growing list of resources in the field of early childhood.