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Joel Garcia

Association of California School Administrators - Diversity Tool Kit - 0 views

  • Diversity Tool Kit The Action plan was created in response to the Board’s ongoing concern that ACSA membership lacked diversity in its membership and leadership and charged the Equity, Achievement and Diversity for Success (EADS) Committee to address the issue. The Diversity Action Plan was approved by the Board in May 2006 and touched on six specific areas: Training – building cultural competency to help administrators understand the issues associated with diversity and the barriers to access that certain groups encounter. Mentoring – develop a mentoring support program for new administrators of color. Internal leadership – equip members of color to take leadership roles within the organization. Recruitment & Retention – implement strategies that specifically increase recruitment of minority administrators through ACSA’s statewide membe3rship campaign and increasing retention rates for ALL members (regardless of ethnicity) by providing engaging opportunities for involvement at both the local and state levels. Data – collect and analyze data to inform the organization of current membership gaps.   Results will help shape ACSA’s direction on membership development. Communication – increase awareness of issues regarding membership diversity and ACSA’s efforts to promote equity in standards-based system.
  • In this section Diversity Tool Kit
  • Network & Discover Shape Your Future Membership Categories National Associations Membership FAQs Membership Matters Member Services Team Join ACSA Blog Calendar Prof Learning - All Events Prof Learning - Site Administrators Prof Learning - Central Office Council / Committee Meetings Governance Key Legislative Dates Affiliate Events Career Center Online Job Search Career Development Job Ad Options & Pricing Employer Login Advertisers & Sponsors Advertising Opportunities Sponsorships & Corporate Partners Leadership Magazine Marketplace Community Shop Home About ACSA For Policymakers Contact Us Media FAQs Site Map Home About ACSA Committees & Groups EAD for Success Diversity Tool Kit Print Page Email Page   Diversity Tool Kit The Action plan was created in response to the Board’s ongoing concern that ACSA membership lacked diversity in its membership and leadership and charged the Equity, Achievement and Diversity for Success (EADS) Committee to address the issue. The Diversity Action Plan was approved by the Board in May 2006 and touched on six specific areas: Training – building cultural competency to help administrators understand the issues associated with diversity and the barriers to access that certain groups encounter. Mentoring – develop a mentoring support program for new administrators of color. Internal leadership – equip members of color to take leadership roles within the organization. Recruitment & Retention – implement strategies that specifically increase recruitment of minority administrators through ACSA’s statewide membe3rship campaign and increasing retention rates for ALL members (regardless of ethnicity) by providing engaging opportunities for involvement at both the local and state levels. Data – collect and analyze data to inform the organization of current membership gaps.  Results will help shape ACSA’s direction on membership development. Communication – increase awareness of issues regarding membership diversity and ACSA’s efforts to promote equity in standards-based system. Diversity Toolkit In this section Diversity Tool Kit http://www.acsa.org/Functi
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  • Resources
jeffery heil

Danah Boyd - Cracking Teenagers' Online Codes - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • There’s no shortage of grown-up distress over the dangers young people face online.
  • Endless back-and-forthing over how to respond effectively — shutting Web sites, regulating online access and otherwise tempering the world of social media for children — dominates the P.T.A. and the halls of policy makers.
  • “Children’s ability to roam has basically been destroyed,”
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  • “Letting your child out to bike around the neighborhood is seen as terrifying now, even though by all measures, life is safer for kids today.”
  • Children naturally congregate on social media sites for the relatively unsupervised conversations, flirtations, immature humor and social exchanges that are the normal stuff of teenage hanging-out, she said.
  • What scares me is that we don’t want to look at the things that make us uncomfortable. So rather than see what teenagers are showing us online about bullying and suicide and the problems they’re dealing with and using that information to help them, we’re making ourselves blind to it.”
  • She asks, for example, how teenagers can be encouraged to become politically active when so much of that activity takes place online.
  • she wonders whether gay children grappling with their sexuality might benefit enormously from chatting online with adults who have been through similar situations.
Beverly Prange

Media and Technology Resources for Educators | Common Sense Media - 0 views

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    Check it out! Great free resources for schools!
Beverly Prange

SurveyMonkey to SPSS A How to Guide - 0 views

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    this was helpful to me when I had to get my survey monkey data cleaned up for SPSS
Beverly Prange

Whose children have been left behind? Framing the 2012 ed debate - The Answer Sheet - T... - 1 views

  • Their ideas boil down to this strategy: NCLB failed because we didn’t use enough carrots and sticks. They say that schools should operate like businesses, because the free market is more efficient than government. So these reformers — I call them corporate reformers — advocate market-based reforms.
  • schoo
  • l testing began in 2002, and no gains for Hispanic students since 2005. According to the latest research, the black-white achievement gap is larger now in Chicago than when the reforms began.
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  • schools. All schools are given letter grades based on test scores. New York City spent $56 million on merit pay, then abandoned the program when it showed zero results.
  • ity kids consistently get lower test scores than white and privileged kids. So why would we make testing the most important measure of education? Why would we take the technology that is most discouraging to children in the bottom half and then insist that it matters more than anything else? Why would we give more credibility to standardized tests than to teachers’ and parents’ judgments about children’s potential?
  • o more money.” There is money to do what we want to do. There is money to fight wars in the Middle East. There is enough money to give big corporate cuts. There is enough money for 1% of this nation 7 to live lives of splendor. Why is there not eno
  • money to provide the basic public services that every child needs?
Joel Garcia

http://www.acsa.org/FunctionalMenuCategories/AboutACSA/CommitteesGroups/EAD-for-Success... - 0 views

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    cultural proficiency annotated bibliography
Beverly Prange

SpanglishBaby™ - 0 views

shared by Beverly Prange on 10 Nov 11 - Cached
Beverly Prange

How to Think Creatively - Tony Schwartz - Harvard Business Review - 0 views

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    Great advice for doctoral students!
Beverly Prange

Hacer una presentación sobre la seguridad en internet | Alerta en Línea - 0 views

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    Great resources in Spanish and English for teaching kids and parents about Internet safety
Beverly Prange

Lisa Guernsey: EdTech for the Younger Ones? Not Without Trained Teachers - 0 views

  • lthough some teachers are taking on the challenge of learning how to incorporate technology into the classroom on their own initiative," the report says, "they are in the minority and typically have access to a strong social network of support.
  • The council lays out five goals to help teachers be part of the picture: help teachers plan and collaborate; train teachers how to integrate digital and screen media into their teaching practices; tap into public media as a resource; ensure that a technology infrastructure is built to support standards development, curricula distribution, and teaching; and bolster research and development.
Beverly Prange

http://ogs.ucsd.edu/_files/academic-affairs/Dissertations_Theses_Formatting_Manual.pdf - 1 views

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    Here is the blue book on formatting rules for dissertations.
Beverly Prange

More on "The New Stupid" - Rick Hess Straight Up - Education Week - 0 views

  • schools have a "long tail" of support staff charged with ensuring that educators have the tools they need to be effective. Just as it makes more sense to judge the quality of army chefs on the quality of their kitchens and cuisines rather than on the outcome of combat operations, so it is more sensible to focus on how well district employees perform their prescribed tasks than on less direct measures of job performance. The tendency to casually focus on student achievement, especially given the testing system's heavy emphasis on reading and math, allows a large number of employees to either be excused from results-driven accountability or be held accountable for activities over which they have no control. This undermines a performance mindset and promises to eventually erode confidence in management.
Beverly Prange

Policy and Research Briefs | Center for Latino Policy Research - 0 views

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    Interesting research about CELDT
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