Archive for July, 2009

28 JulWe have a lot from a bunch of different

We have a lot from a bunch of different sources this week. These first couple actually come from eSchool News Online .

Students get access to classes statewide Mobile Register – Mobile, AL, USA

Students at Alma Bryant High School in Bayou La Batre will soon be able to take classes being taught at schools across the state via the Internet. Bryant was one of 46 Alabama schools to receive a technology grant known as ACCESS (Alabama Connecting Classrooms, Educators and Students Statewide). It’s part of a $3.4 million statewide pilot program. Officials hope ACCESS will one day allow students throughout the state to take unique electives and advanced courses offered elsewhere, according to the State Department of Education, which chooses the schools that get the money. [Directly to the Mobile Register ]

More S.D. students taking classes online ArgusLeader.com – Sioux Fall, SD, UGA

A rapidly growing number of college students are avoiding lectures and early morning commitments by taking classes online through South Dakota’s public universities. So many in fact, that the number of credit hours delivered electronically in 2004-05 is 36 percent higher than the previous year. More than four out of 10 of those students are even living on campus, but for one reason or another choose to take classes over their personal computers. [Directly to the ArgusLeader.com ]

Webcast: Virtual school helps at-risk students succeed

Online instruction has helped several at-risk Illinois students finish their high school education and earn their diploma, when it’s likely many of these students otherwise would have dropped out of the system, said Sarah Antrim-Cambium, the Illinois Virtual High School (IVHS) coordinator for participating schools in Cook County. Antrim-Cambium was speaking at a Dec. 14 webcast sponsored by the North American Council for Online Learning (NACOL). The purpose of the event was to highlight how virtual schooling can be used to reach students who are at risk of failing or of dropping out of the traditional school system.

This next one is from the Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development SmartBrief .

Pennsylvania to review cyberschool funding formula eSchool News – Bethesda, MD, USA

Pennsylvania lawmakers will hold hearings this year to revisit the state’s funding formula for its 12 charter cyberschools, which currently serve more than 10,000 students. District leaders contend the amounts they’ve had to give cyberschools exceed the online schools’ actual costs. [May require free registration]

These two are from Edutopia News – the electronic newsletter from The George Lucas Educational Foundation.

Web Courses Offer Students Second Chance The Herald – Rock Hill, SC, USA

Students in York, South Carolina, who are failing or nearly failing high school courses needed for graduation have a new online tool that aims to help them. Starting this month, the local school district will launch NovaNet.

Online Learning

Throughout the country, schools are turning to online courses to enhance and enrich their curriculum. Learn more about this nationwide trend in Edutopia’s multimedia special report on online learning.

This next one comes from EdTech Trends .

Online state program expands schools’ curricula The Des Moines Register – Des Moines, IA, USA

Cassidy Thompson was skeptical about taking a class taught by a teacher located 25 miles away from her Story County high school. But Cassidy said she’s learned more from Iowa Learning Online ’s physics class than she would have from a traditional high school class. “It’s been a challenge, but it’s been good,” said Cassidy, 17, a senior at Maxwell-Collins High School. “If we wouldn’t have been offered the class online, we wouldn’t have been able to take physics.”

And now back to our regularly scheduled programming. The Google News Alert for the terms cyber and school and the terms virtual and school.

Students in dark on cyber school crash Australian – Australia

Students at Australia’s best-known computer training college could lose thousands of dollars each if its owners fail to find a buyer. Computer Power’s 1254 students and 90 staff at the college, which operates 11 training facilities in Australia and New Zealand, arrived for classes this week to find doors locked and the company in the hands of administrators. One student told The Australian he had been unable to get any information on the future of the college, and all calls went unanswered. The college’s website had no information.

Bricks v. Clicks in Pa. funding fight eSchool News (subscription) – Bethesda, MD, USA

In the latest salvo in the battle over cyber school funding, Pennsylvania legislators say they want to reduce the amount of money that cyber schools receive under the state’s current formula. These schools don’t incur the same per-pupil costs of traditional bricks-and-mortar schools, state legislators argue–and funding them at the same per-pupil levels takes funding away from traditional-school students. Pennsylvania state lawmakers are looking to revise a funding formula that reportedly allows the state’s 12 cyber charter schools to pocket more money than their expenses–a formula that has been sore spot with school districts since it was implemented in 2000.

Gettysburg board split on cyber student decision Gettysburg Times – Gettysburg, PA, USA

Amid conflicting viewpoints among board members, the Gettysburg Area school board passed a motion Monday evening to allow a cyber charter school student to participate in extracurricular speech and debate activities at no cost. The motion passed 4-3, with board members Ron Weaner, Dale Biesecker, Doyle Waybright and Todd Orner voting in the affirmative and Marcia McClain, Terrence McClain and board president Pat Symmes voting no. The boardis policy committee will meet Thursday to begin formulating a policy for future requests, said superintendent Dr. David Mowery.

Virtual High School For Katrina Victims InternetNews.com – USA

Katrina took their high school down, and their chemistry teacher left town. But 28 students at Pass Christian High School will still get a shot at passing chemistry, thanks to an online course administered by Michigan Virtual High School (MIVH). MIVH spokeswoman Erin Stang wasn’t sure how the Mississippi high school administrators found her organization, a non-profit funded by Michigan.

Tags: virtual school , cyber school , high school , education

24 JulStarting with the Yahoo! News Alerts virtual school

Starting with the Yahoo! News Alerts virtual school.

Cool at School: Virtual High School KLAS Las Vegas Wed, 15 Nov 2006 5:18 AM PST

Technology has certainly changed the world we live in – at work, at home, and at school. In fact, some students here in the valley can now attend high school without ever leaving home. It’s called Virtual

Virtual School takes step toward reality Baldwin City Signal Wed, 15 Nov 2006 10:10 PM PST

Thanks to School Board member Scott Lauridsen, the Baldwin School District is one step closer to reaching a partnership with Insight Schools.

Virtual charter school denied by Board Henry Herald Thu, 16 Nov 2006 5:37 PM PST

Officials with a nationally certified charter may seek to become Henry County’s first-ever charter school, and one that exists only in the virtual world.

New school ethos of virtual learning Beverley Today Fri, 17 Nov 2006 2:32 AM PST

THE success of Driffield School’s specialist status bid will see a rapid transformation away from the days of chalk dust and leaky fountain pens to high-tech computer assisted learning. (17/11/2006 10:18:04)

Virtual classrooms offer jump-start Bluefield Daily Telegraph Fri, 17 Nov 2006 1:16 PM PST

PRINCETON — Some PikeView High School students are adding all their options and getting a jump start in their college careers through special correspondence courses.

Moving to the Yahoo! News Alerts cyber school.

Western Beaver, Midland school districts locked in lawsuit over tuition rates The Beaver County Times Sat, 18 Nov 2006 0:18 AM PST

BEAVER – The Western Beaver School District has sued the Midland School District, claiming Midland owes $263,661 in tuition for students who attended Western Beaver during the 2004-05 and 2005-06 school years.

Moving on to the Google News Alert for cyber school.

Down in flames, but on his own terms Philadelphia Inquirer – Philadelphia,PA,USA

… decision to spend most of his time in Virginia while a Pittsburgh-area school district picked up the bill for his children’s cyber-school education weakened … [ See all stories on this topic ]

The Cyber School Option WNEP-TV – Scranton,PA,USA

… Heather’s mother feels the virtual school, or cyber school as it’s also called, has also improved the parent-teacher relationship. …

Finally, from the Google News Alert for virtual school.

Study: Virtual-school enrollment explodes eSchool News – Bethesda,MD,USA

… student achievement, was the focus in Plano, Texas, as more than 500 educators from across the nation gathered for the annual Virtual School Symposium Nov. …

Education notes: History education council elects Swihart The Tennessean – Nashville,TN,USA

… The second publication, Cost Guidelines for State Virtual Schools, deals more concretely with the requirements associated with launching a virtual school. …

Virtual trade school proposed Kahnawake Eastern Door – Kahnawake,Quebec,Canada

… Nations of Quebec and Labrador in Quebec City, members of the Mohawk Council of Kahnawake proposed the establishment of a First Nations Virtual Training Centre …

Tags: virtual school , cyber school , high school , education

20 JulSchool Ethos and Alcohol Use

Prevention Action turn their attention to a piece of research we’ve noted before, which looks at the impact of school ethos on young people’s alcohol use. 
They say:
Simply going to a “bad” school did not turn children to drink; other individual factors were far more salient, but the significance of the differences between schools was very noticeable.
So, to take the case of

Original source : http://www.drugeducationforum.com/blog/?ArticleID=… Filed under: Uncategorized

Substance Abuse Prevention Dollars and Cents: A Cost-Benefit Analysis.

Via the Mentor website I see that the US government’s Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration have published a guide to cost effective substance abuse prevention programs, Substance Abuse Prevention Dollars and Cents: A Cost Benefits Analysis
In the executive summary they say:
If effective prevention programs were implemented nationwide, substance abuse initiation would

Original source : http://www.drugeducationforum.com/blog/?ArticleID=… Filed under: Uncategorized

Positive Activities.

“It’s not like if you don’t do sport you’re going to get pregnant, go on drugs and vandalise bus stops!”
So says one 18 year old quoted in new research for the DCSF, Positive Activities; Qualitative Research with Young People.  The young person was responding to the following messages which went with the picture reproduced below:

“Either get into

Original source : http://www.drugeducationforum.com/blog/?ArticleID=… Filed under: Uncategorized

‘Boredom’ leads teenagers to drink.

ITN news report (once you’re past the short advert) about young people’s drinking based on a Drinkaware survey.

more about " ‘Boredom’ leads teenagers to drink ", posted with vodpod Filed under: Uncategorized

05 JulTeenagers for Sale $$$

QUESTION: Do you think the world governments are putting forth enough effort to stop and prevent human trafficking? If you had the means and power what would be your proposed resolution?

The movie Taken was released January 30, 2009. The action, adventure, and drama filled thriller made over 145 million dollars in the United States box office. The film portrayed a family distraught, because their young teenage daughter had been kidnapped on an international vacation. Her father, known as a “preventer”, saved his daughter from being bought and sold into the sex trafficking business.

The idea of a mainstream film revealing the devastating details of this ever-growing industry says that people worldwide are being affected by this epidemic. Therefore, it is up to world citizens to ask their country’s governments, “What are you doing about this issue?” and “How can you protect my family?” From the shocking stories, primetime specials and film portrayals of this industry, one would conclude that there is danger around ever corner.

Although human trafficking is a worldwide epidemic, many Americans are under the impression that young women and children are only being abducted from foreign countries, but they are sadly mistaken. There have been several incidents reported where children and young women have been abducted from several places which most wouldn’t believe to be perilous. It appears as if there is nothing our governments can do to reduce the occurrence of forced prostitution worldwide. While it may be easier to track criminals who put children and young women on the streets, those whom continue to move to different locations makes finding the missing persons a challenge for police officers and government officials.

Knowing that there may potentially be predators lurking around every corner, riding down your street or even in line behind you at the grocery store; one might ask is any place safe? Is there really anything the police and lawmakers can do to combat this violent epidemic? Though there are non-government agencies that battle for the enslaved children and young women being trafficked, and there have been laws passed making human trafficking a federal crime, there are still over 100,000 women and children being bought and sold in America everyday. As citizens of the world we must demand that the deplorable people that commit these horrible acts be severely punished.

By Karenia S. Ferguson

Possibly related posts: (automatically generated)

- Thinking Things Through
- How can we monitor human trafficking?
- A dialogue