Wednesday, September 20, 2006

Powerful Forces Draw Academe Into the Fray
Economic fears and the high-school-reform movement have colleges under pressure to help improve the education of children


The Chronicle of Higher Education

By PETER SCHMIDT

After two decades, the revolution in the nation's elementary and secondary schools has finally reached academe's ivory towers. If college administrators listen beyond their institutions' walls, they can hear crowds of students and parents voicing frustration over colleges' high remediation rates and low graduation rates, visionaries urging the creation of entirely new education systems that would closely link schools and colleges, and political leaders issuing an ultimatum: Tend to the education of the masses, or the next thing you will hear will be battering rams.

For years most higher-education leaders thought they could stay above the fray, neither joining nor opposing the forces marching under the banner of education reform. With one public-opinion survey after another showing that people thought favorably of colleges — even as they were calling for the heads of schoolteachers, principals, and superintendents — it had seemed that colleges were safe from the forces of change unleashed by the 1983 publication of "A Nation at Risk," a highly critical federal report on the need for school reform

Monday, September 18, 2006

Large Numbers of Highly Qualified, Low-Income Students Are Not Applying to Harvard and Other Highly Selective Schools

The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education

An impressive new study finds that there is no shortage of academically strong students from low-income families. As a result, colleges and universities setting plans to enroll more low-income applicants need not relax admissions policies, which may result in lower mean SAT scores and other qualifications of entering students.

Fears are unwarranted that efforts to increase the number of low-income students will produce a lowering of their U.S. News & World Report rankings. Rather than lowering their academic standards, the nation's selective colleges and universities need to do a better job at identifying high-achieving, low-income students and convincing them to apply.


A solid and carefully researched new study conducted by the National Bureau of Economic Research establishes that there are a sizable number of low-income students in the United States with high academic qualifications who are not applying to the nation's highest-ranked colleges and universities. The researchers, including Harvard University economist Caroline Hoxby, examined data from The College Board for all students who had grade point averages and standardized test scores that were high enough for Harvard's academic standards. In this pool of potential Harvard students, they found thousands of low-income students who did not consider applying to Harvard.

Tuesday, September 12, 2006


Harvard to Drop Early Admissions Program
University Says It Disadvantages Minority and Poor Students
By JUSTIN POPE, AP

BOSTON (Sept. 12) - Harvard University will eliminate its early admissions program because it puts poor and minority students at a disadvantage, school officials planned to announce Tuesday. Under the surprise move, the Ivy League school will discontinue its "early action" round of admissions, in which high school seniors can apply by Nov. 1 and receive a decision - accept, reject or defer - by Dec. 15.

The change will take effect for students applying to enter Harvard in the fall of 2008. All applications for that class will be due Jan. 1.

Wisdom's Jewel


"If you always put limit on everything you do, physical or anything else. It will spread into your work and into your life. There are no limits. There are only plateaus, and you must not stay there, you must go beyond them".

-Bruce Lee

Wisdom's Jewel

"I do not know if it is clear to each one of us that we live in a state of contradiction. We talk about peace, and prepare for war. We talk about nonviolence, and are fundamentally violent. We talk about being good, and we are not. We talk about love, and we are full of ambition, competitiveness, ruthless efficiency. So there is contradiction. The action that springs from that contradiction only brings about frustration and further contradiction.…

- J. Krishnamurti

"There Is No Freedom of Thought" - The Book of Life

Thursday, September 07, 2006


Daily Insight


On the Role of Relevance and Education

A recent study by the National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education found that U.S students between the ages of 25-34 year olds are lagging behind the rest of the world in college enrollment and completion rates. This is troubling as the next generation of decision makers within the country will come from this group. What is the cause behind this lack of academic involvement? There are a myriad of possibilities but one stands out to me, and that it is a waning level of personal commitment to education on the part of aspiring students. Exceptional achievement in any endeavor is dependent upon what a person finds to be valuable. Typically we find valuable that which directly impacts our lives.

In my view education should seek to enlighten students, by directly connecting learning to the dynamic world in which they live. This action would offer the student greater clarity and understanding of life. Education, if viewed as a tool in which students can gain an understanding and mastery of themselves and their world around them, can truly be a powerful thing. Education when divorced from the real world is merely a mental exercise and lends no perceived value to lives of students. It is in this environment that we find ourselves, in a situation of declining student enrollment and completion rates. Many students find no practical value in the learning they are asked to endure, so many choose to forgo the experience. Learning must be made real and relevant to students seeking education. It is in an environment of relevance, that a commitment to learning be established.
Report Finds U.S. Students Lagging in Finishing College
New York Times
By TAMAR LEWIN

The United States, long the world leader in higher education, has fallen behind other nations in its college enrollment and completion rates, as the affordability of American colleges and universities has declined, according to a new report.

The study, from the National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education, found that although the United States still leads the world in the proportion of 35- to 64-year-olds with college degrees, it ranks seventh among developed nations for 25- to 34-year-olds. On rates of college completion, the United States is in the lower half of developed nations.

“Completion is the Achilles’ heel of American higher education,’’ said Patrick M. Callan, president of the center, a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization based in San Jose, Calif., and Washington.

One particular area of concern, Mr. Callan said, is that younger Americans — the most diverse generation in the nation’s history — are lagging educationally, compared with the baby boom generation.

“The strength of America is in the population that’s closest to retirement, while the strength of many countries against whom we compare ourselves is in their younger population,’’ he said. “Perhaps for the first time in our history, the next generation will be less educated.’’

Wednesday, September 06, 2006

Making Learning Relevant
Excerpt from: Adisa on Education

The ability to understand the most basic elements of culture is invaluable to an educator. The goal of any curriculum is to elevate the knowledge and understanding of the learners. This goal is the sole determinant for instructional efficiency and success. To understand the natures and proclivities of one’s students is a necessary requirement when designing learning curriculum. Dunn and Marinetti (2004) look at the proposition this way “For learning to be effective, learning activities should be relevant to the learners' interests and background and should occur in settings that mimic authentic ones.

Ignoring cultural factors leads inevitably to frustrating and ultimately ineffective learning experiences”. This process is not much different from that of a coach training a new team. The coach understands that each team is different, possessing varying skill levels and dispositions than previous the coaches previous teams. The coach as a result must adjust his/ her strategy to best fit the character and needs of the team. It is an unrealistic expectation that the same educational strategy will work in all situations. That expectation does not exist in the world of sport, nor should it exist on the educational landscape.


Reference:

Dunn, P; Marinetti, A. (2004). Cultural Adaptation: A necessity for e-learning.
Retrieved January 8, 2006 from http://www.linezine.com/




Tuesday, September 05, 2006



Wisdom's Jewel

"The intellect can reason, discuss, analyze, come to a conclusion from inferences, and so on, but intellect is limited, for intellect is the result of our conditioning. But sensitivity is not. Sensitivity has no conditioning; it takes you right out of the field of fears and anxieties…".

J. Krishnamurti, "Intellect Will Not Solve Our Problems" - Book of Life (September 5th)
Insight into Facilitation

I was watching a college football game the other day and a historically bad team had just played a phenomenal game. The announcer asked the coach what was to reason for this turn around. The coach humbly replied that the team had started to believe in what they were trying to accomplish and began taking ownership and control of the program. Training activities and weight lifting sessions that were such a choir for the coaches to get the players to engage in with 100% effort were willfully pursued by the players. The players themselves began monitoring compliance of team rules and quality training habits. The coach said that once this change occurred he noticed that performance on the field had improved by leaps and bounds.

Could this principle of ownership and self-monitoring work the same in educational environments? In the realm of adult education allowing learners the freedom to determine the course of the learning experience is a powerful thing to do.

full article

Monday, September 04, 2006

Wiki-style textbooks to aid poorer nations

September 2006
NewScientist.com news service
Tom Simonite


Students in developing countries are to get free textbooks written using "wiki" technology that lets anyone add to or edit an online document.

"The usual business model for textbooks just doesn't work for these countries," says Rick Watson, an expert on the development of opensource software at the University of Georgia, US. "Why not get groups of academics and their students to write them?"

Saturday, September 02, 2006

At 2-Year Colleges, Students Eager but Unready

Saturday, September 2, 2006
New York Times


Though higher education is now a near-universal aspiration, researchers suggest that close to half the students who enter college need remedial courses.

The shortfalls persist despite high-profile efforts by public universities to crack down on ill-prepared students.
Why I Do What I Do...
A Personal Statement

Throughout my life and professional career my dedication to the belief that education can be a force of social and economic growth has remained undeterred. My professional experiences have been focused on the development of people, helping them discover the farthest reaches of their potential. I have undertaken this work in both the non-profit and commercial sectors. Assuming the seemingly diverse roles of corporate fitness coordinator, training manger, doctoral counselor to corporate development specialist; I have had the opportunity to learn and grow. I have utilized educational principles and pedagogy in a wide array of circumstance. I have personally witnessed the transformative power that knowledge can have in the lives of people, regardless of their national origins, cultural roots or demographic demarcations. As a result I have been transformed by the very same principles in which I try to encourage in the learners with whom I have worked. This constant search for growth and development of human agency I believe is the key to strong communities and economies.

As a youth growing up in a military family, I have lived in many places both at home and abroad. I grew up with a large spectrum of what this world is and can be. This experience directly impacted my outlook on knowledge and learning. I seek to learn from the cultural perspectives of others and refine my approach to teaching and facilitation accordingly. It is my belief that through a larger conceptualization of education, the instruction of individuals and communities can be accomplished in a more effective manner. Horace Mann said it best when he stated that “education then, beyond all other devices of human origin, is the great equalizer of the conditions of men, the balance-wheel of the social machinery”. I couldn't agree more.

Friday, September 01, 2006

A Moment of E-lightenment
See and Make it Be
Impossibility to transcend perceptions of me, only as large as the concept I see. I shall surely be the expectation so transcend limitation and embrace the elation of knowledge and education. The transformation of my circumstance begins in my philosophical stance and the concept of “I”. The well is not dry in relation to my potential. It's essential to plunge deep into the reservoir of talent and dreams to make seen the pristine nature of my soul, for the whole world to behold.

Why Distance Learning?

Much has been said of distance education and online learning. My personal experience has been very positive. Online learning through University of Phoenix has allowed me to continual my professional career and further my skills at the same time. That being said one of the major advantages of pursuing an online degree is the caliber of the colleagues you will be working with. Many of your classmates will have a wealth of professional experience and will in many cases be actually engaged in the field in which you are studying. I have had classes with high level professionals from all over the world, from Jamaica to Japan. This exposure to actual practitioners is a plus if you plan to establish a career in the field in which you are studying. Theory is great and has its place, but learning how to execute that theory is what makes the difference between success and “another trip to the drawing board”.

The selection of online universities has perhaps never been greater; many universities are now offering online programs. Penn State University and The University of Wisconsin have become two “traditional” higher education powers who are now seeking to establish a major presence in the “online” arena as well. The University of Phoenix and Capella University are two distance education “heavyweights” that focus on providing higher education to the working professional.

My advice to those seeking higher education is to investigate the university before enrolling. Talk to practitioners in the field in which you intend to study, find out what their impressions are of the university and its graduates, also speak with graduates of the school which you are considering attending. What are the pervading sentiments among the institution’s students?

The final and most important point I will make is to make sure that the university is accredited through a recognized body. Look to see what other schools are accredited by the accrediting body. For instance the University of Phoenix is accredited by the same organization that accredits The Ohio State University, Ohio University, The University of Michigan (Go Blue) and Michigan State University… not bad company.

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