About Me: Dr Olga Magdalena Lazin is a prolific author,and motivational Carreer Coach. Personal

Saturday, September 10, 2016

STOP PAY DISCRIMINATION: We need Equal Pay: Daily Analysis of Mental Health News is out! Edition of 10 September 2016 - olazin@g.ucla.edu - Google Apps for UCLA Mail

The Olga Lazin Daily Analysis of Mental Health News is out! Edition of 10 September 2016 - olazin@g.ucla.edu - Google Apps for UCLA Mail:



Dear [Decision Maker], We, the undersigned, strongly support equal pay and urge you to reject any effort from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and others to stop the implementation of the EEO-1 Form to collect pay data information. Without this data, it will be even harder to identify and stop pay discrimination. The revised EEO-1 Form reflects careful analysis and consideration and provides a powerful tool to address pay discrimination while minimizing any burden on employers, who are only required to report data that they already collect. This new form will encourage companies to not only identify and correct pay disparities, but also prevent them in the first place by proactively evaluating their pay practices. By allowing the EEOC to see which employers have racial or gender pay gaps that differ significantly from the pay patterns of other employers in their industry and region, the EEOC will be able to more effectively and efficiently root out pay discrimination. And most importantly, by having all this data, the EEOC will be able identify which employers' pay practices merit further investigation.

The Olga Lazin Daily Analysis of Mental Health News

How To Boost Your Brain And Memory Daily

Advising graduate students who are interested in an M.A., not a Ph.D. (essay) | Inside Higher Ed

insidehighered.com - The debate over advising students interested in a humanities Ph.D. has now raged for years, if debates in the scholarly world can actually be said to rage. After William Pannapacker’s salvo, “Gradu...

Six teams seek to identify biological factors that influence neural regeneration

nih.gov - NIH to award $12.4 million over three years as part of audacious effort to reverse blindness. The National Institutes of Health will fund six projects to identify biological factors that affect neu...

The Marriage Counseling Hall of Fame - MastersInCounseling.org

mastersincounseling.org - One branch of counseling that you might consider is relationship counseling. This can take on many forms, from counseling families, couples, employers in a workplace to even professionals and clien...

Summit faculty published in national educational peer journal

summitcds.org - Summit Country Day School Curriculum and Instruction Director Kirstin McEachern Ph.D. and fifth grade science teacher Jessica Horton Ph.D. will be published in the October issue of The Educational ...

Raising Kids Who Love to Learn

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Big Word Club
parents.com - What I saw when I peeked in on them was a complete surprise: There they sat on the floor, two grass-stained, disheveled boys, their blond heads bent intently over . . . books. I tiptoed away and wh...


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Friday, August 19, 2016

The Real Alice in Wonderland: A Role Model for the Ages (9781449081317): C.M. Rubin, Gabriella Rubin: Books

Amazon.com: The Real Alice in Wonderland: A Role Model for the Ages (9781449081317): C.M. Rubin, Gabriella Rubin: Books:





"According to Center for Curriculum Redesign (CCR) founder Charles Fadel, education is “falling behind its mission to prepare students for the future: a world that’s increasingly volatile, uncertain, complex and ambiguous.” Curriculum was significantly redesigned in the late 1800’s when societal and human capital needs demanded it. But the 21st century bears little resemblance to the past. WHAT should we teach young people in an age where Dr. Google has an answer for everything? Humans are living longer; the traditional professions disappear while new ones are created; international mobility is drastically increasing population diversity; terrorism, environmental threats and inequality need our collective attention; and robots and gene editing are coming, requiring us to re-examine the very core of what it means to be human. WHAT does all that we know now, and all that we still can only imagine, mean for Curriculum?
If we agree that the technological trends futurists are predicting will mean constant and dramatic changes for all, why aren’t we more focused on rethinking the WHAT of education i.e. WHAT curriculum will make education more relevant in the future?
According to Andreas Schleicher, Director for Education and Skills at the OECD, Fadel’s book, Four-Dimensional Education: The Competencies Learners Need to Succeed, provides a “first of its kind organizing framework of competencies needed for this century which defines the spaces in which educators, curriculum planners, policy makers and learners can establish WHAT should be learned.”
The Global Search for Education begins a five part series to discuss WHAT should students learn for the 21st century? We welcome Charles Fadel for Part 1: What is Four-Dimensional Education?
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“Because of the vast amount of information that needs to be covered and the pressure of preparing for standardized tests, relatively few educators are able to consistently provide the time needed to effectively integrate new learning goals into the curriculum.” — Charles Fadel
Charles: It is an unpredictable world. What does it mean for Curriculum?
The unpredictable context requires a paradigm switch so that the goal of education is no longer to impart information but to teach students to navigate an ever-changing world. For this they will need versatility i.e.breadth as a hedge against rapidly changing conditions, an increasedcapability i.e. depth to engage with complex challenges, along with a diverse set of competencies such as adaptability, increased collaboration between cultures, etc. towards the goal of a sustainable humanity via fulfilled individuals.
What elements of curriculum do we need to change?
Traditional disciplines currently take up most of the available time and leave little space for newer subjects, branches and topics within traditional disciplines for example complex systems in mathematics, modern disciplines (e.g. entrepreneurship), interdisciplinary, cross-cutting themes, and competencies. Because of the vast amount of information that needs to be covered and the pressure of preparing for standardized tests, relatively few educators are able to consistently provide the time needed to effectively integrate new learning goals into the curriculum. We need to redesign curriculum to both broaden and deepen understanding; the current content will need to be re-examined with a fine-toothed comb. That process involves distilling each discipline into its core essential questions, and restructuring the information to highlight these concepts and meta-concepts as well as their processes, methods and tools. We need to examine the rationale behind each item; does it provide practical value for the future? Cognitive value for transfer and extension to other faculties? Emotional or aesthetic value due to its inherent beauty? These facets should be highlighted, and the items found to have no clear justification except inertia should be removed. This does not mean cutting out entire subjects by any means. The question is not whether students need to learn math, but which parts of math are no longer useful? For example, perhaps it is no longer useful to spend core curriculum time learning long division, or some algorithms of trigonometry.
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“We need to redesign curriculum to both broaden and deepen understanding; the current content will need to be re-examined with a fine-toothed comb.” — Charles Fadel
Are paradigm shifts difficult in large established systems where there may be a lot of inertia?
Correct. The inertia is propelled at two levels: the policy level, and the level of human expertise and authority.
At the policy level, most countries must work with an inherent level of instability, with elections and changes of leadership occurring every few years. The frequent changes of personnel at both the staff level and the ministerial level, and the political pressures to balance the competing interests of voters, parents, unions, businesses, and so on, often preclude the continuity necessary to reflect on large-scale trends, plan for long-term goals, take calculated risks, or embrace change and innovation.
At the level of human expertise and authority, decisions are often reserved for subject-matter experts. These experts’ opinions are partial and biased in certain predictable ways. First, experts feel responsible for upholding earlier standards, as they have sometimes been part of creating them and promoting their benefits. Being loyal to their field of study, they also find it difficult to discard parts of the whole cloth of their field’s knowledge, even after those parts have become outdated.
Second, it is also very difficult for experts to add new disciplines to traditional fields of knowledge. For example, algorithmics and game theory are topics that are relevant for current advancements in a variety of fields that use mathematics, but tradition-oriented mathematics experts do not include them in their efforts to reform mathematics curriculum. Additionally, expert academics often operate in relative isolation from the demands of the real world, sometimes unaware of the ways their discipline is currently being applied in professional settings outside academia.
Finally, these subject-matter experts place a large emphasis on the ways others in their field around the world are accomplishing similar curriculum reviews. In trying to adjust to emulate the others, they are subject to groupthink, and together they are rarely able to be highly innovative.
We’re seeing a growing consensus among employers and world leaders that curriculum does not adequately prepare graduates for today’s workforce and world. Thoughts?
In addition to learning content deeply, students will need to apply that knowledge using “21st Century Skills”: Creativity, Critical Thinking, Communication, and Collaboration. But skills are only one further dimension. In addition to skills, students will need to learn Character qualities: how students engage and behave in the world. Policymakers are beginning to see their importance as part of a formal education, although educators and employers have known this for a long time. Despite what is traditionally conceived of as progress, for example, economic growth, material productivity, etc, countries are now tracking other indicators of social progress and the level of their responses to local and global challenges, for example, poverty, violence, corruption and sustainability. This highlights the need for students to develop and build positive character qualities in addition to the knowledge and skills most needed for success.
In order to deepen and enhance the learning in these three dimensions — Knowledge, Skills, and Character qualities–there is an important additional fourth dimension needed for a fully comprehensive twenty-first century education: Meta-Learning (often called learning to learn–the internal processes by which we reflect on and adapt our learning). It is not enough to implicitly include this fourth dimension in all the other dimensions–its significance must be highlighted explicitly, so that we are constantly reminded to incorporate meta-learning strategies into the knowledge, skills, and character portions of our learning experiences, learning how to strive to improve no matter what goals we set for ourselves.
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We will need the courage to innovate, letting go of the comfort of an existing system and working under conditions of uncertainty toward a better one.” — BS ing us, Charles Fadel
 Deja vu! I say, DR OLGA LAZIN, @olga
Why do you believe your framework is the best approach?
Our framework is a result of the analysis and synthesis of research on learning sciences, views from futurists and economists, standards around the world, and needs of employers and societies — all organized to be maximally comprehensive, compact, appropriate, and globally relevant. By being able to consider all the necessary goals of a 21st Century curriculum at one time, policy makers, curriculum designers, teachers, and parents can more effectively make decisions about the future of education. The framework does not prescribe a particular path forward; rather it lays out the map clearly so that everyone can speak the same language about improvement, even as they create different instantiations of how to get there.
How can successful implementation be realized given the complexity of the issues?
At the policy level, we will need to strive toward a stable consensus among political factions, and clearly articulated vision of the kind of education students now need. At the level of disciplinary experts, there needs to be continuous involvement of real-world users of the disciplines, in addition to reform-minded academics.
We will need to leverage best practices from education systems around the world as well as industry where applicable. We must carefully re-examine the relevance of what we teach, curate the traditional disciplines, add relevant modern disciplines, and place emphasis on more holistic “whole student” learning–not just knowledge but also skills, character, and meta-learning. Finally, we will need the courage to innovate, letting go of the comfort of an existing system and working under conditions of uncertainty toward a better one.
Thank you Charles. In Part 2 of our series with Charles Fadel, we will focus on WHAT Knowledge.
(All Photos are courtesy of CMRubinWorld)
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C M Rubin and Charles Fadel
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Join me and globally renowned thought leaders including Sir Michael Barber (UK), Dr. Michael Block (U.S.), Dr. Leon Botstein (U.S.), Professor Clay Christensen (U.S.), Dr. Linda Darling-Hammond (U.S.), Dr. MadhavChavan (India), Professor Michael Fullan (Canada), Professor Howard Gardner (U.S.), Professor Andy Hargreaves (U.S.), Professor Yvonne Hellman (The Netherlands), Professor Kristin Helstad (Norway), Jean Hendrickson (U.S.), Professor Rose Hipkins (New Zealand), Professor Cornelia Hoogland (Canada), Honourable Jeff Johnson (Canada), Mme. Chantal Kaufmann (Belgium), Dr. EijaKauppinen (Finland), State Secretary TapioKosunen (Finland), Professor Dominique Lafontaine (Belgium), Professor Hugh Lauder (UK), Lord Ken Macdonald (UK), Professor Geoff Masters (Australia), Professor Barry McGaw (Australia), Shiv Nadar (India),


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Publisher's Tips: The Dr Olga Lazin Daily is out! Edition of 19 August 2016 - olazin@g.ucla.edu - Google Apps for UCLA Mail

The Dr Olga Lazin Daily is out! Edition of 19 August 2016 - olazin@g.ucla.edu - Google Apps for UCLA Mail:



Explore the new Paper Settings Dashboard

Over the years, we’ve developed into the full-fledged content curation and marketing tool we are today. For small businesses, sharing relevant, focused content on social media, maintaining a web presence, and creating curated topic-based newslettershave all proven to be effective tools in order to attract, delight and inform new potential customers and community members.
Our aim is to make collecting and sharing topic-based content as straightforward as possible.
Based on our study of how small businesses and marketers are using their found content, we’ve reorganized the Paper Settings Dashboard into functional groups or modules according to how content is being used or shared:
  • via social media
  • via a web newspaper
  • via email newsletters
You’ll see these sharing options reflected in the new Paper Settings Dashboard:
menu_changes

Besides the three new sharing modules, we’ve also completely revamped the content tab, resulting in a menu that’s much more intuitive and easy to use.
Explore the newly simplified Paper Settings Dashboard to become familiar with the changes.   All menu settings that existed in the previous Settings Dashboard are still there, but some have been folded into one of the three new sharing modules, based on whether the setting supports sharing via social media, your web newspaper or your email newsletter.

Social Media Agent – with a new sharing option

Under the Social Media Agent module, you’ll find all settings related to sharing your content on social media.  All settings previously found under Social Media Promotion can now be found here, under Social Media Agent.
What’s new?   We’ve added an additional benefit to Social Media Agent. You now have three automatic sharing options on Twitter, Linkedin, and Facebook:
  • your web newspaper
  • your web newspaper with its top article title and image
  • NEW! your top article (with no mention of the paper). This is a great new way to gain visibility on social media, sharing only your best content.

Reorganization change  Since your Paper thumbnail is seen when you share your paper on Facebook or Linkedin, the Paper thumbnail setting has been moved to this section.

Web Newspaper

Under the Web Newspaper module, you’ll find any setting related to your customizedweb presence (paper), the paper’s embeds and its stats.   
What’s new?   You can now choose whether you want your paper (both Pro or free) to be viewable publicly online or privately.  If you’re using your paper for personal content discovery only, you now have the option to deactivate your public web newspaper so that it’s only viewable by you (or any collaborators), when signed in.
All papers are public web newspapers, by default. If you have a “private paper” (using the old menu “language”), the toggle for your Public web newspaper has been switched off (which equates to “private mode”).

New for basic papers!
Public web newspaper

Reorganization changes  We’ve tidied up all options related to your Web newspaper by moving any Layout & appearance settings related to your paper and your paper’s stats to the Web Newspaper module.
Your custom domain setting is now found under this module.
As mentioned above, your paper’s “private” setting (renamed Public web newspaper) is now found under this menu.  If you previously had a private paper, the new “Public web newspaper” toggle has been switched off.

Newsletter service

The newsletter service menu includes any setting related to sending out your email newsletter. The menu remains generally the same, but we’ve added an option to upload your newsletter banner (paper banner) to the Newsletter layout submenu, which allows you to find all newsletter formatting settings in one, convenient place.
Reorganization change We’ve moved your subscriber stats to this section under Newsletter Service > Subscriber Management tools.

Content menu – more intuitive, easier to use

The content menu has been completely redesigned to make it easier and more intuitive for a user to find and manage their content.

What’s new?   As an alternative to the Publish it! bookmarklet, you can also add an article to your current edition easily and quickly, within your settings, by clicking on Manually add an article and entering a URL into the field.
You’ll also notice that we’ve transformed and improved the way content sources are added, making it much easier and more intuitive to add and find sources.

Add content sources

Reorganization changes   
The Publish it! bookmarklet has found a new home under the “Manually add an article” submenu of the Content menu.
You’ll also notice that rather than the long list of options presented in the old content menu, the new content menu has been broken down into more “bite-size” submenus (shown below).
Content


Looking ahead

Over the next few months, we’re putting into action steps to improve both the quality of your found content and the value proposition for each of the three sharing modules.  The Paper Setting Dashboard reorganization is just the first of many improvements to come.  Stay tuned!

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