Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts

Women's Health Week and Preventative Care

Every year there are around 92,000 deaths from heart disease, and 34% of these cases are preventable.

As you may know, May 8 kicks off Women's Health Week. As this week serves to raise awareness among women about taking control of their own health at any age, this infographic created by the Adventist University Nursing Program would serve as great content for your website highlights the top five causes of death in America, number one being Heart Disease, as well as the benefits of investing in preventative care vs. a cure.




ADU Online RN to BSN Program

What makes you happy? Minions? Freebies? Well, how about Minion Freebies?



Minion Freebie - Educents 3

These free math activities on Educents offers 22 printable pages of math activities for Minion fans. It covers addition, subtraction, measurement, money, and more!

Minion Math Centers Freebie

  • Minion Addition (to 12)
  • Minion Subtraction (to 12)
  • Minions Making Ten
  • Minion Measurement
  • Minion Money Match
  • Missing Minion Numbers
  • Minion Number Cards
Minion Freebie - Educents 2 If you're looking for more ways to make math learning fun, check this out:

Early Math Musical DVDs

4dde_c6ab3b8_Early_Math_Collection copy

This DVD set from Rock 'N' Learn is a fun way to boost math skills for the early grades. Like the Minions, these DVDs have fun characters your little ones will love to get to know! Math facts are easy to learn with fun music and exciting animation. Learn all about counting coins and bills and practice making change. Kids will learn to tell time to the hour, half hour, and minute using traditional analog clocks. Includes Addition & Subtraction Rap DVD, Money & Making Change DVD, and the Telling Time DVD. I hope this math freebie made by Amy of Teaching in Blue Jeans makes you happy. Download the Free Minion Math Centers, then go ahead and do a little dance! :) 

Violin Starter Set for Kids - On Sale Now!


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Perfect for beginners, this Violin Starter Set contains everything your child needs to play the violin.

Screen Shot 2015-07-23 at 5.24.40 PM
What’s more, it includes a great teacher, the award-winning eMedia My Violin interactive Win/Mac CD-ROM. Available in three sizes so kids as young as 5 can learn to play! Screen Shot 2015-07-23 at 5.24.25 PM

Here's what Kole, age 11, has to say about the Violin Starter Set for Kids.

Kole has a point - what is the difference between a fiddle and a violin? Do you know?? Leave your answer in the comments!! Here's more ideas on how you can incorporate music to your lessons:
Check out the Violin Starter Set for Kids - now only $99! Or, if you're looking for more musical education resources, browse through hundreds of offers on Educents.
Big thanks to Kole for his wonderful review of the Violin Starter Set!!

*contains an affiliate link

Join NHTSA on Twitter on July 31 for a Heatstroke Tweetup

Did you know that heatstroke is the leading cause of non-crash-related deaths for children under 14? Already 10 children this year have lost their lives to heatstroke after being left in vehicles. In fact, each year, an average of 37 children die from vehicle heatstroke.
While it seems like an impossible mistake to make, every parent or caregiver can potentially become distracted, and distractions often fuel this devastating situation. No one is immune. This tragedy is 100% preventable. We each have a role to play to help keep kids safe. Help  share live-saving tips and resources with as many people as you can about this important safety topic. Join National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's (NHTSA) Tweetup. Your support can help us prevent tragedies.
nHTSA will be tweeting all day on Friday, July 31, 2015, from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. ET with the hashtags #heatstrokekills and#checkforbaby. They’ll be sharing information, safety tips, badges, infographics, and other resources to help spread the word about the dangers of vehicle heatstroke.
Use these sample messages to get your followers involved in the Tweetup:
Twitter:
  • Do you know that #heatstrokekills? Join @NHTSAgov’s #Heatstroke Tweetup Friday, July 31, to help spread awareness.
  • On average, #heatstrokekills 37 children each year. Follow @NHTSAgov’s #Heatstroke Tweetup Friday, July 31, to help change this stat.
  • Summer days are hot! Don’t let them end in tragedy. Follow @NHTSAgov’s #Heatstroke Tweetup Friday, July 31. #heatstrokekills
  • Interior car temps rise quickly! Learn more about the dangers of #heatstroke during @NHTSAgov’s Heatstroke Tweetup, July 31. #heatstrokekills
  • Act fast, save a life. Bystanders can help. #checkforbaby #Heatstroke Tweetup Friday, July 31.
Facebook:
  • Vehicle #heatstroke deaths are 100% preventable. Join @NHTSAgov for a heatstroke Tweetup onFriday, July 31, from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. ET. Safercar.gov/heatstroke. #heatstrokekills #checkforbaby
  • On average, 37 children die each year from vehicle heatstroke. Help NHTSA change this number to zero. Join us for a heatstroke Tweetup with @NHTSAgov on Friday, July 31, from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. ET. #heatstrokekills #checkforbaby
  • We’re joining @NHTSAgov on Friday, July 31, 2015, from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. ET to help put an end to help end vehicle #heatstroke. Join with the hashtags #heatstrokekills and #checkforbaby.
Encourage your family and friends to be proactive about responding to potential heatstroke situations or victims. Join NHTSA for the Heatstroke Tweetup on Friday, July 31, from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. ET, and I invite everyone to participate in the Tweetup, too.

Free Minecraft--Themed Math Worksheets Your Kids Will Love

Do your Minecraft kids need some encouragement to practice math? How about a quick addition refresher before going back to school?

Minecraft Math Worksheet Freebie - Educents 

Download Multi Taskin' Mom's FREE Minecraft Themed Addition Worksheets.

These fun math worksheets include single digit to double digit addition, making this freebie useful for Minecraft kids ages 5 to 12. Here's more ways to use your child's interest in Minecraft for learning:
Looking for more ways to turn gaming time into learning time? Check out all the Minecraft-themed 
educational products offered on Educents at a discount.  

*contains affiliate link

How to Make Geography Lessons Stick

How to make geography lessons stick - Educents blog

How do you teach geography? Do you spend hours creating a map, labeling, cutting and pasting? It's so fun imagining all the ways this Mona MELisa reusable US Map can be used in the classroom or at home. All the states, capitols, and geographic information is ready for you to stick on to the map!



Here are a few geography activities to try:
  1. Playing "Name That State" with family and friends during the holidays. What better way to get the whole family together than a game for kids of all ages. Work in teams or alone to identify states and challenge seasoned family members in lightening fast rounds.
  2. Need a little direction? Use the compass to have children in the class describe where states are in relation to each other. Let your kiddos take turns directing each other around the country by using the directions on the compass. They'll have an awesome time walking their fingers from east from west in search of the correct state-- but be sure to watch out for the oceans!
Click here to read more.
*Contains Affiliate link.

Love Cars? Visit the Volo Auto Museum

Volo Auto Museum is not just for car lovers or men, its fun for the whole family!  Volo Auto Museum consists of 36 acres, mostly all indoors and includes fifty thousand square feet of antiques and gifts, a life like military combat zone, Betty's Diner featuring decor which includes Elvis Presley's autographed guitar, PeeWee Herman's Bicycle and more.  Plus over 300 restored collector automobiles from the early teens through today. 

There you and your family can see the largest collection of famous Hollywood TV and movie cars like the Batmobile, Ecto 1 from Ghostbusters and numerous others.  New for 2013 is the Cars in Wonderland Exhibit; it has all your favorite childhood cars from the Scooby Doo Mystery Machine to Lightning McQueen and Tow Mater from CARS all surrounded by movie-like setting from your favorite Disney and Looney Tunes Cartoons, such as Beauty and the Beast, Litter Mermaid, Coyote and Road Runner and others. 

Volo Auto Museum is more than a car museum, it's memories and education for all ages!
Here is a savings up to $12 off Admission at Volo Auto Museum with this coupon.

$10 Courses

I love a great bargain especially when it comes to learning.  I also believe that money shouldn't be an obstacle to learning.  I tutor and So, when I received this email from Udemy, I was excited that I had to share it with as many people as possible.

 Udemy is offering courses for $10, which is up to 90% off on selected courses (seems like many courses though). The deal expires in about four days.  If you  can use it, use it.  If not pass to others you think will benefit.  Here is the code: SUMMER13 code. 
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Guest Post: So She Can Be Somebody Tomorrow

By Jenny Hobbs

When a girl starts school in Liberia, she arrives full of enthusiasm and hope. Squeezing onto a bench with children her age—under a corrugated roof, in a make-shift building—she looks to her teacher ready to learn. But, without books to read from, a desk to lean on or a pencil to hold, progress is slow. Her teacher is an untrained, unqualified, unpaid volunteer. He struggles to control the overcrowded class and yearns for a curriculum to follow, textbooks to use or a decent blackboard to write on.
Children form orderly line ahead of entering school for morning class.Ph
oto: Ester Havens, Concern Worldwide

Concern Liberia is working to address these issues in 30 remote schools in Grand Bassa County. Constructing classrooms, separate toilets for boys and girls and providing furniture is just the start. Textbooks and other essential learning items like blackboards, pencils and copybooks are also being distributed.

To address the shortage of trained teachers available, Concern has posted Teacher Trainers in several rural communities across Grand Bassa to provide on-the-job training and support for primary school teachers. Bolstered by textbooks, tutoring and courses in teaching methodology, literacy and numeracy, such education programs can effectively bridge the gaps in their own education.

Ida Hughes volunteered to become a teaching assistant when she heard about the education program. Her eight children (5 boys and 3 girls) attend a primary school in the rural community of Fortsville. Ida never had the opportunity to complete her own education and knows plenty about the consequences. She puts her children through school with meager earnings from rice production and charcoal, which she makes from chopped wood.

Ida explains how she was forced to abandon her education: “At grade seven my foster parents stopped sponsoring me in school. They told me that they were not in a position to support another person’s child to complete high school.”
Not long ago, Ida joined the program as a teaching assistant. Today she supports teachers in the classroom, and attends basic courses to improve her own academic skills. She has high hopes to passthe Liberian national examinations and is determined to realize her dream to enroll in a teacher training college.

Liberia is still recovering from a brutal 14-year civil war that destroyed lives, schools and homes. Providing education opportunities for young girls and boys is essential to securing the country’s economic recovery and to affording Liberia the opportunity to lift itself out of poverty. Children need safe learning environments, free from corporal punishment and sexual exploitation and abuse—especially girls. In 2008, the failed system had an abysmally low net enrolment rate of just 33 percent for primary school: that’s 67 percent of primary school aged children out of school.

When I visited Tepenneh last week, I was reminded about  the vital importance providing safe learning spaces for girls. The old school building, a makeshift one-room structure made out of mud and stone is on the verge of collapse. Accompanied by a crowd of giggling children, I visited the site where we are building a new school with six classrooms, equipped with separate toilets for boys and girls. The importance of doing this can’t be overestimated. Girls are placed in danger of sexual assault when they have no safe toilets and have to share toilets with boys and men, or when they have to leave the school grounds to use the bush. Rape and sexual violence is a serious problem in post-conflict Liberia and we must make primary schools as safe as possible so children can learn free from danger of assault.  The Tepenneh community will rejoice when the new school building becomes officially theirs come April!

Girls’ education is hampered by the common belief in Liberia that girls are less intelligent than boys—a falsehood most devastatingly apparent in the lack of support demonstrated by parents. Unfortunately in Liberia, a girl’s education pays few tangible dividends and she ultimately becomes the ‘property’ of the family into which she marries. In addition, gender-`based violence and sexual exploitation by male teachers and fellow classmates severely limit enrolment and retention. When I reflect on the privileged way I grew up and got an education, I am saddened at the plight of girls’ here. I am grateful to make a difference, however modest, each day that I’m on the ground here.

My colleagues and I are working hard to encourage parents to send their children to school, especially girls. More importantly, communities must be educated about their children’s rights and become aware of the importance of gender equality. Parents and children are learning about the newly-introduced Liberian Code of Conduct for Teachers. Community members have translated the code into Liberian English so that parents and children can understand it better. One rule simply said “Teachers must not make love to students or impregnate students.” Now parents can report abuses in confidence to ensure their children are protected while at school.

Together with the Ministry of Education, Concern is working in rural schools to ensure that every girl has a brighter future, so she can “be someone tomorrow”.


Jenny Hobbs joined Concern in Liberia as Education Program Coordinator in 2009. She previously worked as a primary school teacher in Ireland before training teachers in The Gambia and Ethiopia. Jenny is based in Buchannan City, close to Concern’s rural school communities.

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Teachers: Keep Students Safe Online & Win!

The Internet can be a pretty crazy place. With so much in the news about cyberbullying, it’s important your students know how to stay safe and secure when they are online. As a teacher, you and your students can help keep the Internet a safer place for everyone, especially children. If you do, you could with $10,000 for your school

How? As a class project, help your students create and share a quick video (30 seconds to 2 minutes) about staying safe and secure online. Submit it to the “What’s Your Story?” Internet safety video competition on whatsyourstory.trendmicro.com.

The competition is open to everyone 13 and older living in the US, UK and Canada (excluding Quebec), so feel free to let other teachers and parents know.

The deadline for submissions is April 5, 2011, so make sure to get started soon. Head to whatsyourstory.trendmicro.com to find out more and submit your Internet safety video.
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List of 66 Teacher Discounts

Teacher discounts don't often receive the same attention as those specifically for students, but educators need not frown -- there are plenty to be had.

Along with classroom supplies and other learned goodies like books, numerous teacher discounts are offered nationwide, ranging from laptops and Photoshop to museum entry and cell phone plans. Gift Card Granny has compiled a list of 66 top-notch discounts spanning nine categories, both online and off. A sampling:
  • The Container Store: The organizational aficionados provide a 15 percent discount on all items through the Organized Teacher Program. Register online for a free discount card to use for in-store and online purchases. If you visit a store, be sure to have your school ID.
  • Borders: Register for the Classroom Discount Card, a brand-spanking-new program that entitles librarians and teachers 25-percent off most purchases. The discount is for those who teach preschool to high school and available in-store only.
  • The Limited: Show a school ID or valid pay stub when you shop at any The Limited location and snag 15-percent off your entire order. The offer is good for all items on the racks, walls or tables. In other words, everything.
  • Bose: The Bose offer is prime, particularly for those in need of sonic stimulation. Variable discounts are available on all music systems and accessories. Call the Customer Focused Development Team at 1-800-353-4027 for pricing and to place an order.
  • Cell Phone Companies (Verizon, AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile): This discount is a tad tricky to redeem but can save loads on a personal cell phone bill, sometimes up to 20 percent a month. Visit your providers business or discount portal and input your .edu e-mail address to check if your institution is registered. Example: Search "Verizon business discount" in an engine and click on the first result to check your discount or register.
  • National Park Service: Show a valid school ID at a slew of National Park Service visitor centers across the nation and receive 15-percent off any purchase. The discount doesn't apply to park entry or camping fees.
  • John & Mable Ringling Museum of Art: Present a valid school ID at the box office to snag a discounted day pass at the estate-turned-gallery in Sarasota, Fla. The museum, named for John Ringling of Ringling Brothers circus fame, is located at 5401 Bay Shore Road.
The Gift Card Granny list provides information where a deal can be redeemed, how to register for certain reward programs and, of course, the extent of a discount. Rules and conditions change from store to store, yet nearly all of the 66 deals are available year-round for teachers of every brand, including elementary school, high school, university and home school. Download "The Complete List of 66 Teacher Discounts" to sooth these oft-neglected educators with something more rewarding than the routine "apple for teacher."
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View this Global Photography Exhibition in Oakland on Nov. 30

From Joanna Lipper’s series for
Picturing Power & Potential,
Growth & Stagnation
The International Museum of Women, Mills College, and the San Francisco Arts Commission Gallery invite you to a reception and viewing of Picturing Power & Potential at Mills College in Oakland. Picturing Power & Potential is a juried photography exhibition of over 50 extraordinary works by 20 artists from around the world celebrating women as economic participants and agents of change.
Event details: Tuesday, Nov. 30 from 6:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. at the Lorry I. Lokey Graduate School of Business at Mills College, 5000 MacArthur Blvd., Oakland, CA 94613. RSVP Required! To RSVP, email bgibson@mills.edu no later than Tuesday, Nov. 23.
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Try Kaplan Tutoring For One Month Exclusive Discount Code!

From picking out the first day outfit to seeing friends after the summer break, the start of a new school year brings much excitement and anticipation. Now with the routines setting in and homework assignments in full swing, we often look for ways to help our kids stay   motivated with their lessons to get ahead or build more self-confidence with their learning to help them do their best. To augment classroom learning, Kaplan, a trusted educational company, offers a highly innovative online learning tool Online Learning Program for students in kindergarten through 8th grade.

The Kaplan Tutoring Online Learning Program starts with an assessment to determine your child's math and reading levels, then smoothly customizes a learning plan based on these assessment results. As your child progresses through the program, the material continues to adapt, becoming harder on topics your child masters, and easing back to accommodate struggles so that lessons are always challenging and engaging. Fun, interactive characters and the Reward Zone, where kids can redeem points for prizes, help kids stay motivated to continuously come back and push themselves to learn more. As a parent, you'll also have access to online progress reports so you know it's working.

Become a fan of Kaplan Tutoring on Facebook for access to special offers & discounts.  You can also follow them on Twitter to connect with the brand and other parents about helping your kids reach their academic potential.

Special Offer
You have the chance to try Kaplan's online tutoring program for one month at just $9 using this special discount code: FB1MO9.  Click here for more information on how to take advantage of this special offer.  Take advantage of this opportunity and feel free to share it with friends and family!


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From Summer Into School: Four Ways to Ease The Transition

GinnyKubitzMoyer (for web use).jpgBy Ginny Kubitz Moyer

It’s that time of year again.  Teachers are decorating their classrooms, brand-new lunchboxes wait to be filled, and kids who have savored the delights of vacation are looking downright glum.  If you’re a hardcore summer fan, you too may find it tough to get excited about the return of school.  It’s not easy to exchange the relative leisure of vacation for the tyranny of the alarm clock, the inflexibility of pickup times, and the challenge of shepherding your family through another academic year while (hopefully) keeping your own life in balance.

Luckily, the start of school does not have to mean the end of sanity.  Here are a few ways to ease the transition, making Back-to-School a positive, fun, and even spiritually enriching time for you and your family.

1.  Make a New School Year’s Resolution.  When I was a kid, I adored buying school supplies.  The folders were clean, the pencils smelled like cedar, and the crayons hadn’t yet been blunted by use.  If you’ll bear with my English teacher riff here, those supplies are symbolic of the beginning of the school year, when everything is fresh and new.   If your kids are old enough, talk about what they hope to accomplish during the year.  Do they want to participate more in class?  Limit the number of after-school activities to create more time for the one they really love?   You can even pen some personal goals for yourself, like reducing school-year stress by exercising three times a week (this one always works for me).  Don’t attach guilt to the resolutions, but do check in and reevaluate them as the year goes on.  It’s a great way to get kids reflecting on their own priorities.

2. Focus not on what you’re losing, but on what you’re gaining.  Yes, it’s tough to bid goodbye to swimming pools and charcoal barbecues.  But every season has its own charms.  On my short list of autumn fun: taking the boys to the pumpkin patch, letting myself eat candy corn again, smelling wood smoke in the air.  Even if school itself doesn’t generate any smiles, get your kids talking about fun experiences they had last fall.  Pull out some photos if you need to refresh their memories (or your own). 

3.  Pack a letter along with the juice box and string cheese.  At times throughout my childhood (and early adolescence), my mom would tuck a handwritten note into my lunchbox.  “I love you!  Enjoy the Cheese Puffs!  Love, Mom.”  When I was very young, these little letters helped me deal with the homesickness I often felt at school.  When I was older, they were a subtle, non-intrusive reminder that my mom wanted to stay connected to me.  Though I couldn’t have articulated this at the time, I loved the fact that I was holding something handwritten, something that Mom herself also touched.  That’s instinctively comforting for kids, who sometimes need a little shot of motherly encouragement in the middle of a long school day.

4.  Get mindful and remember that nothing stays forever.    “This too shall pass,” my grandmother always used to say.  While that is a comforting mantra when you’re so stressed out you can’t see straight, it also captures the bittersweet reality of parenting. Someday you will miss the four-year-old who, though exhausting, dances with excitement upon showing you the letters he traced at preschool, or the exasperating teen who makes an unguarded comment revealing how much she still values your approval.  I always try to remember that wishing away the negatives of a certain phase of parenthood inevitably means wishing away its joys, too.  So if the school year is ratcheting up your stress level, try this little assignment: pause, breathe deeply, and think, This won’t last forever.  Savor what’s good about the present moment.  In the classroom of life, it’s one of the most important lessons we’ll ever learn.
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Ginny Moyer - Ginny Kubitz Moyer is an author, English teacher, weekend gardener, sporadic exerciser, and proud mother of two young boys. Visit her blog at www.blog.maryandme.org for thoughts on faith, parenting, and the occasional ode to Jane Austen.

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