Clips

News articles that Andrew Atwal has written

School Reunion

MMC Collecting Memories For Reunion

Mount Marty College is using scrapbooking to keep alive the memories of past school life, and is promoting the project ahead of its all-school reunion later this month. Pictured with MMC Events Coordinator Wyatt Yager are, from left, Mary Albrecht, Sister Ann Kessler, Sister Leonette Hoesing and MMC Chief Advancement Officer Barb Rezac. (Andrew Atwal/P&D)

By Andrew Atwal
andrew.atwal@yankton.net
Published: Saturday, June 9, 2012 1:09 AM CDT
As part of Mount Marty College’s 75th anniversary and its upcoming all-schools reunion, the institution has developed a project that helps preserve the memories and images of the past for all alumni, students and members of the public to enjoy.

The project involves collecting pictures and memorabilia from the past and putting them into scrapbooks.

So far, volunteers have about 200 scrapbooks in place, dating back from the time when the college operated as Mount Marty Academy, a high school. The books also contain artifacts from The Model School, which was an elementary school for the teacher education students at Mount Marty; the Sacred Heart School of Nursing; and Mount Marty  College.

Barb Rezac, chief advancement officer at Mount Marty, said she has been working on the project since she took the job in January.

The scrapbooks contain photos of students showing where they are today; pictures of students, coaches and faculty for each year of the scrapbook; programs from events during those years; The Moderator student newspapers; freshman directories; handbooks; and advertisements.

“It’s going really well, much smoother than we thought,” Rezac said. “We want to be able to allow people to take out the years they went to school here and remember certain things.”

She added that, once the college put out the word that they were looking for items for the scrapbooks, memorabilia starting coming in from all over.

Items have come from faculty members, alumni, and library archives.

Mary (Heirigs) Albrecht added that she would like to see photos of each graduating class for the scrapbooks.

Albrecht graduated from Mount Marty Academy in 1954 and then from Mount Marty College in 1958.

Albrecht and her husband used to own Paul’s Kwik Stop in Yankton. By looking at the photos in the scrapbooks, she was able to recall many of the dozens of students they employed during the years that they owned the     business.

Rezac said one of the more interesting items they have gotten for the books was a catalogue for the students at Mount Marty Academy from the 1931-32 school year. The catalogue contains everything from course requirements to items students needed to bring to school and what students needed to wear to class, social events and other times during the day.

“(In high school), we had to wear a dressy dress and we couldn’t wear anklets. We had to wear nylons,” Albrecht recalled.

One of her most fond memories was the bowling alley they had in a basement at Mount Marty Academy.

“We had to eat family style in the dining room when I went here (for college),” Albrecht added. “We would serve each other meals.”

Sister Ann Kessler, who graduated from Mount Marty in 1953 and went on to teach at the college for 40 years, said she is interested in seeing photos of people she has not seen in a while.

She is also fascinated by seeing her former students now as adults.

“It’s delightful to be able to go through the things,” she said.

Kessler added that there has become a true sense of tradition at Mount Marty, with many alumni sending their children and grandchildren to the school.

Sister Leonette Hoesing, who graduated from the high school in 1934 and is now 97 years old, recalled one of her most vivid memories from the times she had at the high school. She remembers walking over the Meridian Bridge from Nebraska to get to the high school. She would get dropped off right on the Nebraska-South Dakota border because there was a toll at the time of about one dollar for a car one-way. However it was only about 10 cents to walk over the bridge, so she would walk over the bridge to school each day.

The bridge became free to cross in 1953.

Sister Hoesing graduated from Mount Marty College in 1960.

Albrecht had a lot of memories of her times in the dorm rooms at Mount Marty.

She lived in the rainbow dorm room, and remembered there were curtains separating each dorm and bed area. The curtains were all different colors, which is how the dormitory got its name.

Students at that time, Albrecht recalls, would sleep on small beds, about the size of Army cots.

She also mentioned that when someone would get in trouble, their punishment would be to clean the bathrooms in the hall. However, these were cleaned during the day, so often times there would not be much cleaning to do if you got in trouble, she said.

Albrecht, along with her peers at the college, would be able to recognize what sister was walking down the hall based solely on the sound of how they walked.

Kessler remembered staying in a room with six or seven other people — the same room that now houses only two.

Private rooms were offered at that time at Mount Marty, which would house two people, but they were far more expensive than the other dorm rooms.

Rezac said that one of the goals of the scrapbooks is for alumni and current and prospective students to see “life in action” at Mount Marty from past years.

She said that she is fascinated by some of the early items in the scrapbooks just to see how this school was built.

Rezac wonders what scrapbooks will be like in the future because of the increased digital presence. She noted that the student newspaper is now online only, so it may not be possible for that to be included in future scrapbooking projects.

“It is important for parents to be able to show their kids what they did in college here,” Rezac said. “We tell people, rather than throwing things away from college, let us archive your stuff in our scrapbooks.”

She thinks that the scrapbooks will only get bigger after the reunion when alumni look at them and say, “I have this that I can add to the book.”

“We will continue to build the scrapbooks after the reunion is over,” Rezac added. “It will be a work in progress.”

“We need to study the past to know what built this place and where we need to go,” she said.

You can follow Andrew Atwal on Twitter at http://twitter.com/andrewatwal

Gas Prices

Falling Gas Prices May Boost Tourism

After gas prices soared through much of the spring and looked certain to hit $4 a gallon by Memorial Day, prices have dropped steadily in recent weeks. This has added even more of a boost to a local tourism industry looking to rebound after last summer’s flood-marred season. Visitor numbers at the Lewis and Clark Recreation Area are far ahead of last year’s pace. (Kelly Hertz/P&D)

Area Looks To Continue Fast Start To Season

By Andrew Atwal
andrew.atwal@yankton.net
Published: Thursday, June 14, 2012 1:09 AM CDT
After a spring filled with dire predictions about $5-a-gallon gas, the price of gasoline in South Dakota is down dramatically from where it was at this time last year.

Those low prices may be fueling a boom in local tourism numbers.

Jeff Van Meeteren, the regional park supervisor for the South Dakota Department of Game, Fish and Parks said, that the numbers at Lewis and Clark Recreation Area are up drastically this year compared to last.

“We have had an excellent year so far and we anticipated that,” Van Meeteren said. “We are looking forward to continuing the good year.”

The lower gas prices should also help keep up that momentum from the start of the season.

The average price for a gallon of regular self-serve gasoline in Yankton was $3.421 on June 12. This is down 0.2 cents from last week and 14.5 cents from a month ago. On June 12 of last year, the average price for a gallon of gas in Yankton was $3.666.

Gas prices are also down in Vermillion. The average price in Vermillion is $3.466, which is down 10.4 cents from last month. The average price of gas in Vermillion at this point last year was $3.684.

The South Dakota state average for regular self-serve gasoline is $3.53 per gallon, which is slightly below the national average of $3.56.

Both the nationwide and state averages are down significantly from where they were last year. On June 12, 2011, the statewide average was $3.75 and the national average was $3.71 for a gallon of regular self-serve gasoline.

The price of gasoline peaked in early April 2011, when the average price for a gallon of regular self-serve gasoline was $3.94. The national retail price of gasoline has gone down in 55 of the last 57 days.

Marilyn Buskohl, spokeswoman for AAA South Dakota, believes the lower gasoline prices have big implications for tourism throughout the state.

“In quarter one of this year, gas prices were high so people became prepared for the prices to increase,” Buskohl said. “However, that has not been the case.”

She added that the lower prices give consumers more income to spend, which is positive for businesses and the communities as a whole.

“(The lower gas prices) should be very good for tourism,” she said.

However, Jacquie Fuks, executive director of the Southeast South Dakota Tourism Association, does not think that the lower gas prices have had a major impact on tourism in the area.

“I don’t think the lower prices will make all that much of a difference,” she said. “People work hard and deserve a               vacation.”

Fuks added that the increased tourism numbers are huge in a community like Yankton because people that come to town visiting spend money while they are here, which helps businesses keep their doors open.

She also noted that tourism numbers were up throughout the entire region, and said that the combination of lower gas prices, nice weather and no flooding this year have all contributed to it.

Overall, visitor members are up significantly in Yankton.

At the end of May, the numbers at Lewis and Clark Recreation Area were up 29 percent from where they were at this point last year.

However, Van Meeteren anticipates those numbers flattening out.

“We are hoping the numbers end up being up about 12 percent from last year when the season is over,” he said. “These could be as high as 15 percent.”

Last year was the first time in more than a decade hat tourism numbers were down in Yankton, which was attributed to the severe flooding that occurred. The numbers declined by about two percent last year, despite Lewis and Clark Recreation Area adding 41 new campsites— about a 10 percent increase from the number of sites they previously had.

“The higher the gas prices are, the more locally people travel,” he said. “They can make multiple trips to local parks, compared to just one trip to a national park.”

In addition to the lower gas prices, Van Meeteren said that weather is the biggest factor on the tourism numbers at Lewis and Clark Lake. He said that this years camping season began about three weeks earlier than previous years because of the nice weather.

“There has been a pent-up demand to go camping because of last years flooding,” Van Meeteren said.

Bike Trip

Duluth bicyclists to circle all five Great Lakes

APR 30 2012  NO COMMENTS
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Two adventuresome bicyclists launch their plan to circle the Great Lakes on Tuesday.

Kris McNeil, 26, and Zach Chase, 25, who both graduated from the University of Minnesota Duluth in 2010, will begin the 5,300 mile journey in Duluth, Minn., returning home Aug. 5.  They will travel through two countries, eight states and about 20 major cities.

Zach Chase, left, and Kris McNeil. Photo: Bigwaterbike.com

“We will be traveling north from Duluth heading around the Canadian shores first,” Chase said. “When we get to Quebec City, we will cross the bridge and begin the southern United States shores.”

The first few days of the trip will be documented by friends from Vika Films.  Then they will shoot the rest of it themselves.

McNeil and Chase did a west coast bike trip in 2008 which took them a month to travel 1,702 miles through Washington, Oregon and California. The first 14 days it rained. The pair wrote journal entries on that trip which can be found on their Facebook page.

McNeil said that he did most of the planning of that trip.  Chase decided to join him at the last minute.

“We really didn’t know what we were doing,” McNeil said. “We had a plan but did not have any campsites set up.”

Although the west coast trip was good practice, the Great Lakes venture is much longer.

“It’s also more bold and adventurous,” McNeil said.

They have gotten over 7,000 webpage views and 460 likes on their Facebook page for the Great Lakes trip.

The inspiration for the Great Lakes trip came during their west coast bike tour.

“We were sitting in the mountains as our trip was coming to an end and we asked ourselves, ‘How can we do this back home?’” McNeil said.

Sweet logo. Photo: Bigwaterbike.com

Instead of just deciding to bike around Lake Superior, the two decided to do it big and bike around all of the Great Lakes.

Chase got the ball rolling in November 2010 and the two have been planning for the past year and a half.

They mapped out a website and their route. They decided to get business cards to make their trip more official among potential sponsors and other interested parties.

To gain credibility and help with expenses they decided to get sponsorships. During their first six to eight months of planning they only had four local sponsors. Since then, they have been able to secure several national sponsors. They have received an endorsement from Duluth Mayor Don Ness and sponsorship by the Sierra Club of Chippewa Valley, Wisc.

Endorsements are people that are helping to support the trip with their social status and clout. Sponsors are people and groups that have donated product or financial support.

They estimate the cost of the trip between $3,000 and $5,000, including camera gear. Film production costs may make that higher. Sponsors contributed about $2,000.

McNeil said that first and foremost, they are doing the trip for “us.” Both are very active outdoor people. Chase is an avid mountain climber.

“There is a sense of adventure we are seeking,” McNeil said.

The sense of the unknown and leaving home makes Chase a little nervous.

“Leaving all of your friends and family behind can make you a little homesick at times, but that eventually goes away and we also have a great relationship with each other so that helps as well,” Chase said

They hope that their documentary will help the public have a greater knowledge of the entire Great Lakes region, McNeil said. A person living on Lake Erie might not have knowledge about Lake Superior.

Another goal of the trip is to promote bike touring as a means of exploration and travel.

To prepare, they go to the gym several times each week. They bike as much as 80 miles a day while pulling trailers weighing 35 pounds when full with their gear.  On their trip they will average about 60 miles a day.

Photo: Bigwaterbike.com

The two plan on picking up food along the way at mini marts.

There are still unknowns, despite all of their planning.

They are bringing maps and a GPS, but they have never been to these areas before so they really don’t know where they are going. They are carefully planning their route through major and sometimes dangerous cities like Chicago and Detroit.

“We have learned how much people are easily willing to support you, to bike with you, to give you a place to stay, to give you food,” McNeil said.  

The two also hope to figure out their lives on the trip and get a sense of self-discovery.  McNeil is the event director for Fitger’s Brewhouse in Duluth. Chase is with the Conservation Corps of Minnesota in Duluth. After the trip is over, Chase wants to get his graduate degree in outdoor education.

A friend, Matt Brown, said the two love being outside.

If they were to jump out of an airplane and disappear for three months, chances are they would survive in the wilderness, Brown said. They are far more prepared for this trip then for their 2008 west coast trip, which was more about proving  that they could do a long bike trip, he said.

“Nothing will stop these guys.”

To find out more about the trip head over to bigwaterbike.com.

 

http://greatlakesecho.org/2012/04/30/duluth-bicyclists-to-circle-all-five-great-lakes/

Environmental Traits

Researchers discover what makes the best environmental citizens

JAN 31 2012
By: Andew Atwal
5 COMMENTS

Researchers have found what they believe to be the traits that make the very best environmental citizens.

A confident person patiently remains persistent as he or she picks up trash.

Patient, confident, and persistent people make some of the best environmental citizens, according to Kyle Whyte and Matt Ferkany, researchers at Michigan State University. Friendliness, wit, self-confidence, humility, fairness, patience and dependability are other traits they discovered associated with environmental interest.

Ferkany is an assistant professor of teacher education; Whyte is a visiting professor of philosophy.

“(When one) has a lot of confidence and not inclusive they think they are always right,” Ferkany noted. “When someone is humble they can consider others’ opinions.”

The researchers used case studies and existing research on how people solve complex, tough issues, such as that of environmental problems. Their findings could be used by environmental studies teachers to expose, or teach, their students these traits, the researchers said. That could help them become better problem solvers and environmental citizens.

The researchers are pursuing  a grant to do field research  to test the accuracy of their research.

In the meantime – let’s do a little informal research here. What traits do YOU think make the very best environmental citizens? Do you agree with Ferkany and Whyte?

Remedial Education (FINAL Published Edition)

Remedial Education

September 06, 2011 by Andrew AtwalObstacle or Second Chance?

 

Some call it the Bermuda Triangle of higher education. Some see it as a needless expense – double payment for students to attain skills they should have learned in high school. Others praise the programs for opening postsecondary education to students who have been underserved by their local schools.

Though the number of students taking remedial courses – in math, English or reading – has risen sharply in recent years, the percentage of entering freshmen who take remedial courses has grown only slightly, from 34.7 percent in the 2003-04 school year to 36.2 percent in the 2007-08 school year, the last year for which statistics are available.

Over the same period, the number of first-time freshmen increased from 2.6 million in 2003-04 to 2.8 million in 2007-08, pushing the number of students needing remedial courses from 900,000 to more than a million. And the numbers continue to grow.

Two years ago, the latest year for which statistics are available, the number of incoming freshmen grew to 3.2 million, largely because of a steep climb in for-profit college enrollment and thousands of older students going back to school because of the recession.

Most of those were attending community colleges, where educators have been shunting remedial students for years. Now some community colleges are trying to shift the unprepared students into adult education classes, though they generally aren’t available to students who already have a high school diploma.

“Students (who need remedial education) are struggling to get back to zero,” said former West Virginia Gov. Bob Wise (D) who is now president of the Alliance for Excellent Education. “They’re taking class time for remedial courses while not getting ahead with college-level coursework.”

As the dilemma of remedial students and how to assist them has grown, several national foundations, including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Lumina Foundation, have pumped millions into new ways to address the problem.  So far, their efforts have not shown much improvement in student skills.

Meantime, there are horror stories about high school valedictorians having to take remedial courses in college and complaints about the millions of dollars that states must spend to get their incoming freshmen to college-level courses.

According to the Alliance for Excellent Education, states spent about $1.4 billion total on remediation between 2003 and 2008. In addition, the group estimates that if the country graduated all of its high school students college ready, it would save the economy well over $5.5 billion per year.

But a recent study by the testing group ACT found that only 4 percent of African-American and 11 percent of Latino high school graduates meet readiness standards in English, reading, mathematics and science, compared to 31 percent of white high school graduates.

Regardless of race, whether a student needs to take remedial courses in college is the prime indicator of who is likely to complete his or her college program.

An American heritage

Remedial education’s U.S. roots can be traced to Harvard College in the 1600s, when Greek and Latin tutors were employed for unprepared students. Land-grant universities, established in the 1700s and drawing from a larger pool or prospective students, instituted preparatory courses for students weak in reading, writing and arithmetic skills.

In the early 20th century, more than half of the students enrolling at Princeton, Yale, Harvard and Columbia universities did not meet entrance requirements and were placed in remedial courses.

More recently, most public school systems have adopted a college preparation model, offering intense college-oriented curricula for students and advanced courses for top students.

Of course, historically, only the top high school students went to college. The others didn’t really need to because there were plenty of good American jobs that required no more than a high school diploma.

Now, Anthony Carnevale, head of Georgetown University’s Center on Education and the Workforce, predicts that 63 percent of American jobs will require at least some college by 2018, and 23 percent of jobs will require at least a bachelor’s degree. In contrast, in 1973 only 28 percent of American jobs required at least some college and just 9 percent required a bachelor’s degree.
The mismatch

There are many theories about what causes the mismatch between what high school graduates have learned and what they need to know to do college work.  Some blame less-than-rigorous high school academics; a tendency to let high school seniors slide through their final year; some students’ delay in entering college and older students who return in their twenties or thirties for a college certificate.

In a June 2010 report released by the Southern Regional Education Board (SREB) and the National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education, educators and policymakers focused on the mismatch and found that graduating from high school is no longer the same as being ready for college. The study found that part of the fault for the increased need for remediation is a lack of communication and partnership between those in control of K-12 education, and those in control of post secondary education.

The report also addressed the problem of college completion and blamed the low percentage of college freshmen who complete their degrees on the poor preparation they received prior to entering college.

Jane Neuburger, president of the National Association for Developmental Education, noted that there is a significant need to improve developmental education in the United States.

There is also a need to focus on remedial course pathways that accelerate and contextualize course skills, Neuburger said. This would allow students to take more than one developmental course (in a sequence) within a semester. Overall, Neuburger noted, there needs to be a national agenda that is focusing on college completion while also trying to maintain a focus on access.

Alexander Astin, former director of the Higher Education Research Institute at UCLA, has long asserted that the number of students needing remediation is vastly underreported – that colleges undercount to protect their ratings in national surveys, which are based partly on “student quality.”

Astin also has argued that there is no common standard skill or knowledge set for determining which students need remediation.  Each school makes such decisions independently, producing a relative and arbitrary system.

What to do?

Despite all the recent hand-wringing over remedial education, only lately have education experts turned their attention to why students need remediation and how best to help them.

To help take some of the stress of remedial education off of colleges, high schools are taking their own steps to help solve the problem of remediation for students entering college.

The brief from the SRLB states, “It is not well known that many high school students who fulfill all the college preparatory requirements likewise arrive at state colleges and universities unprepared. That is, a college prep curriculum is necessary but not sufficient to ensure college readiness.”

The brief also calls for state colleges to be more accountable to their states for what they are or are not producing in terms of graduation rates.

In the meantime, educators are trying to spread the word that placement tests are a part of entering college, and are having students take similar tests while they are still in high school as a way to determine what skills they may be lacking.

“The bottom line is that better information and opportunities for students to prepare for placement exams, whether it is while they are still in high school, or right after they enroll in college, can significantly reduce remediation rates,” said Bruce Vandal, director of the Postsecondary Education and Workforce Development Institute for the Education Commission of the States.

At most colleges, when students enroll at the particular institution, they are asked to complete a placement test like COMPASS, offered by the ACT (formerly known as American College Testing) or Accuplacer, run by the College Board. Both help educators quickly evaluate incoming students’ skill levels. The results are used to place students in the appropriate courses.

Depending on how students perform on their placement test, they may be able to enroll in college-level math or English courses – or they might be required to take some level of remedial courses.

“Students assume that if they took college prep curriculum coursework in high school that will be good enough,” said Vandal. “Unfortunately, many students who take a college prep curriculum in high school still get placed in remedial courses because they do poorly on the placement test.”

Seeking a solution

To close the gap between a high school diploma and college readiness, the Obama administration has championed the Common Core State Standards Initiative, a state-led effort being coordinated by the National Governors Association Center for Best Practices (NGA Center) and the Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO). The standards, adopted by 44 states and the District of Columbia, were developed in collaboration with school administrators, teachers and experts to provide a clear and consistent framework to prepare children for college and joining the workforce.

According to proponents, the standards are aligned with college and workforce expectations; are clear, consistent and understandable; include rigorous content and application of knowledge through high-order skills; build upon some of the strengths and shortcomings of current state standards; are based on existing evidence; and are informed by other top performing countries, so that all students are better prepared for a global economy and society after graduation.

Building on the core standards, which they have adopted, Florida and California have begun new measures to alleviate the gap between diplomas and college readiness by allowing students to take the college placement test as early as 11th grade. Students who are assessed as not college ready can take additional high school courses to address their academic needs. “Students can then retake the placement test after they have completed the courses to determine if their results have improved – California has found out that this approach has significantly reduced the percent of high school students that need remediation,” Vandal said.

Florida has aligned its state standards with college entrance standards for community colleges and many of their four-year institutions.

The state also has developed the Postsecondary Education Readiness Test (PERT) that is given to all students in the 11th grade. It is the same test used to assess students for developmental education when they enter a college in Florida. As a result, the tests are able to assess whether students are “college ready” while they are still in high school. Students who score below college ready on the PERT test must take courses in high school to address their academic needs.

Some colleges are determined to improve their own assessment processes. “Refresher courses” are provided to students at some colleges, often free of charge, to help students prepare for the placement exam. Other campuses have computer labs where students can take a pre-test, which then selects any needed review materials a student may need based on the test results.
Remediation vs. completion

Still, a very low percentage of students who must take remedial courses ever complete college level courses in math or English, much less earn a college credential. One of the main reasons remedial education students do not succeed is that the remedial education process of assessing, placing and delivering instruction takes too much time and students simply drop out of the system, according to Vandal.

On the other hand, Neuburger of the National Association for Developmental Education contends that the prospect of remedial courses should not scare students away from postsecondary pursuits.  “If you can’t get what you need in high school in terms of being “college-ready,” take those courses at college.  This is your second chance,” Neuburger said.

“The best bet for anyone considering college right out of high school is to take difficult courses right through senior year.”

One program that aims to help students in college remedial education make it to college completion is Achieving the Dream, a national initiative of the Lumina Foundation for Education and other organizations and philanthropies. The initiative helps community colleges learn how to collect and analyze student performance data in order to build a sort of “culture of evidence” – in other words, a culture in which colleges routinely use evidence to develop institution-wide reform strategies that are aimed at helping students succeed academically.

Currently, there are about 130 community college participating.

A five-year study of the first 26 colleges to join Achieving the Dream – covering 2004 through the spring of 2009 — unfortunately, found that the initiative has had a limited impact.

Gates Foundation

So far, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has contributed more than $100 million to  improve the effectiveness of remedial programs and ameliorate the need for them, including contributing more than $16 million to the Achieving the Dream initiative.

The Gates foundation has also invested about $1.75 million to expand Washington’s I-BEST program, which combines basic academic courses and career skills classes to put learning in a useful context and ensure that the least-prepared students not only complete college, but are competitive in the workforce when they graduate. Evaluations of the program suggest that students who participate are nearly four times as likely to earn a college credential or degree as students not enrolled in the program.

The foundation has also contributed about $2.7 million to the Academy for College Excellence (ACE) at Cabrillo Community College, a program that is designed to bridge the gap in education for young adults who are not typically encouraged to aim for college. Since being founded in 2002, the program has helped more than 675 at-risk students transition into Cabrillo College’s regular college-level courses.

A 2009 study of the program at California’s Cabrillo Community College showed significant positive effects for participation in both the accelerated and non-accelerated versions of the Academy. In addition, participation in the program is correlated with better outcomes on most measures for students. ACE students are, however, very likely to be more at-risk than are other Cabrillo students with similar levels of academic preparation.

Students in the program had more credits earned than those not in the program, and also had a higher persistence rate than other students. Students in the ACE group are also more likely to pass a transfer-level English course than other students are.

The Gates Foundation has also invested in the City University of New York (CUNY). CUNY’s new program will include intensive pre-college support to prepare students for the college experience; the merge of remedial and credit coursework to help students maintain momentum throughout their course of study; and more focused course options that guide students toward graduation and subsequent employment.

60 by 2025

The Lumina Foundation is spearheading a national effort to increase the proportion of Americans with high-quality degrees and credentials to 60 percent by 2025. Improving remedial education is a key to that.

Many of the most recent innovations in remedial education have concentrated on reducing the time students spend in remedial classes. In addition, Vandal, of the Education Commission of the States, said, most students should be able to complete their remediation in less than one academic year, and ideally in one semester.

To decrease the time students spend in remediation, colleges are:

  • Implementing more precise diagnostic assessments that pinpoint student deficiencies. This allows the college to customize delivery of remedial education to address only the skills that students need help with. As a result, students may avoid semester-long classes if they need only three or four weeks to address only their unique remediation need.
  • Customizing computerized instruction so students can focus more narrowly on their academic deficiencies. Students can move as quickly or deliberately as they need through their unique course of study. When a student has mastered one module, he or she can move immediately to the next module.
  • Allowing students to move through multiple modules in a semester – often completing in one semester what used to take two or more semesters to finish. This system also works for students who need more time. If students complete only half of the content of the course during a semester, they do not have to go back to square one the next semester. They start with the module where they left off.  Vandal said that the result of this system is that all students can reduce the overall amount of time they spend in remediation.
  • Enrolling students just below the college-ready level directly enroll in college level courses, but giving them additional academic support by enrolling them in the remedial course at the same time. The student is given support for the college level course as part of the remedial course they are taking.

Helping the lowest performers

Despite the sizeable need to reduce remedial education in the United States, budget cuts that are being implemented by many states and institutions loom as possible roadblocks.

Remedial education, according to Vandal of the Education Commission of the States, is by and large low-cost when compared with the expenses of offering other college-level courses.  When schools see a need to offer remedial courses, they typically use lower-paid junior, or adjunct, faculty. But this doesn’t always result in the best remedial instruction.

Until recently, there has not been a significant amount of data collected and studies completed on effective models of remedial instruction.

Now, there is a growing field for developing and improving instruction – including new PhD programs on teaching remedial education at two Texas universities, Sam Houston and Texas State.  Grambling State University also has a EdD program in remedial teaching.

At the same time, the place for remediation is changing: many states are offering remedial courses only at community colleges, where the cost of instruction is even cheaper.  The colleges, in turn, are adapting the ways they treat remedial students.

Many community colleges – most of which have open admission policies – are considering limiting access to remedial education to students who have some minimum academic skills.

Colleges refer to setting a “floor” for access to remedial education– meaning that students who take the placement exam must achieve a minimum score to be able to take remedial courses.  The argument is that data indicate that students who test at the lowest academic levels – typically at a sixth grade reading level or lower – have a much lower chance of ever earning a degree than students who test at a higher level.  The colleges believe it is not a wise financial decision, for both the students and the colleges, to deliver remedial education to students at the lowest level.

Instead, institutions are trying to encourage students to enroll in Adult Basic Education, or other basic skills programs, to get to the level at which they qualify for college level remedial courses. But since post-secondary education institutions rarely align their efforts with basic skills providers, there is no guarantee that students who are referred to these options will actually complete coursework there and go on to college.

Despite this method showing great promise, the approach is also controversial.

“There are no proven models on how to best serve students who perform at the lowest levels on college placement exams,” Vandal said.

An initiative called Accelerating Opportunity, launched last month in 11 states, is working to align adult basic education classes with college readiness expectations. The project is being managed by Boston-based Jobs for the Future and is supported by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the Joyce Foundation, the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, the Kresge Foundation and the Open Society Foundations. The initiative is designed to develop models that will move students from adult basic education directly into college-level courses.

Domas Profile

A Professor and a Commissioner… And even more?

By Andrew Atwal

Oct. 25, 2010

Not only does she run half-marathons, but she also manages to teach two courses at Michigan State while being a member of the Meridian Township planning commission as well.

Adrienne Domas was born and raised in San Antonio, Texas where she was the oldest of her siblings. She went on to receive her Bachelor’s degree in geography from the University of Texas Austin, graduating in 2000. Domas continued her study of geography at the University of California Santa Barbara where she received her Master’s degree in 2002.

Currently a professor in the department of geography at Michigan State, she teaches Geography 221, a course which introduces geographic information. Domas also teaches Integrative Studies in Social Sciences (ISS for short) 310 which involves contemporary issues related to the interaction of social and ecological systems (msu.edu).

She also helped to developed Geography 221V, which is the online version of geography 221. The course was awarded honorable mention for the 2010 MSU-AT&T Instructional Technology Awards.

Domas loves being a professor because she really enjoys interacting with students and being around young people, though she is only 32 years old herself. She also likes introducing students to new topics and seeing their interest sparked as a result.

If she was not a professor right now, Domas said she would be doing some sort of urban planning right now, identical to the work she did Santa Barbara and in Austin. She enjoyed being a planner in Austin, in particular, because she “could take the city that she loves and make it better.” Her projects in Austin were more long-term (10-20 years), while her projects in Santa Barbara were for the more immediate future.

Domas described one of her experiences as a planner in Santa Barbara where she had to deal with celebrity Rob Lowe. You may know Lowe from his roles in shows including Parks and Recreation and The West Wing. Domas sat through mediation meetings essentially across the table from Lowe stemming from neighbors taking issue with Lowe wanting an addition onto his beach house. Neighbors argued that the addition would “block their view of the sunset.”

In addition to being a professor at Michigan State, Domas serves on the Meridian Township planning commission. She enjoys being on the planning commission to get a first look at developments as it makes her feel “ahead of the game” in that regard. Domas also enjoys serving on the planning commission because she seeks to make Meridian Township a better place by making the best decisions for the community.

In her spare time, Domas enjoys running; she has ran eight half-marathons and one marathon. She also enjoys cooking and playing guitar. It also seems that Domas enjoys sports as her office in the geography building had posters of the Michigan State football and basketball teams. She also described herself as a hard-worker as she has won an award of some sort at every job she has ever held.

Although Domas is a professor at Michigan State, something that is a lot of work as is, she also serves Meridian Township on the planning commission to help better the community around her.

As if that was not enough, Domas has run several half-marathons.

This begs the question: Does she have any time for relaxing?

Okemos School Board

Okemos School Board facing potentially devastating budget cuts

By: Andrew Atwal

Oct. 18, 2010

OKEMOS, Mich. — The Okemos School Board met on Monday, Oct. 11 to discuss, among other things, the potentially very large  budget cuts that could wreak havoc on the schools’ operation in the years to come.

Catherine Ash, interim superintendent of the Okemos Schools, and Robert Clark, director of accounting services, talked about the budget cuts the schools could be facing within the next several years.

On a more positive note regarding the budget, the federally funded Education Jobs Bill, or EduJobs, is awaiting Governor Jennifer Granholm’s signature. If passed, Okemos would receive $23 per pupil, for a total of $92,000 for the district. The bill’s purpose is to give funds for salaries and benefits of building level staffing. Clark said Okemos would be “happy to receive the funding.”

In addition to the $92,000 from EduJobs, there is also a onetime additional federal funding allotment for Okemos as well. This would add $710,000 (allocated amount of money for the school district on a per pupil basis) for the 2010-11 school year  but is only a onetime allocation. “This helps us this year, but has no provision for future years,” Clark said.

However, there are many negatives for the future school budgets as well.

First off, the Michigan Public School Employees retirement rate is set to go up from 19.41 to 20.66 percent on November 1, 2010. This rate is up from 16.94 percent in 2009. The increase in retirement rate has a negative impact the Okemos budget of $285,000. Because the rate is state imposed, local school districts cannot opt out and are forced to abide by the state mandated retirement rate increase.

The retirement rate increase also comes with increased payment for retired workers’ health care costs. With the health care costs, and other related expenses factored in, the impact to Okemos ends up being about $4.25 million in 2021, which is double the 2009-10 employer retirement costs.

The Okemos school board budget sees another reduction in funds of about $1.4 million due to Michigan funding trends; for 2011-12, Okemos will not see any American Recovery and Reinvestment Act funds and no EduJobs funds.

However, Dr. Ash and Robert Clark are working on a financial contingency plan.

The plan came to be because of the potential for additional financial challenges in 2010-2011. The first step of the plan is the preliminary work of the Board and Leadership council which seeks the voice of community members on the issue. The second step is to update the Okemos Board of Education, community members and employees (which is the stage they are currently in and will be until June), and the final step of the process is to utilize the opinions and the plan in 2011-12 budget decisions.

Some of the possibilities the board is considering to increase revenue to the school district are by selling and renting property, applying for grants, and developing “magnet” programs such as instructional and program planning.

Additional possibilities include expenditure reductions. The board is considering transportation cuts, cutting some extracurricular and athletic programs, reducing personnel, cutting employee salaries, instructional cuts such as eliminating standardized tests and the programming of the fifth and sixth grades, and by consolidating school districts, a drastic measure which would have to be approved by both potential districts.

“These are devastating concepts to look at,” Ash said. “The cons are going to far out weight the pros.”

“There are unknowns facing us (Okemos).” Unknowns that the school board hopes to take on ahead of time through their financial contingency plan and by considering all possible budget and economic options.

 

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Mt Hope Crossings

Proposed development draws much criticism

By Andrew Atwal – Sept. 30, 2010

 

OKEMOS, Mich. – A proposed $6 million development project on Hagadorn and Mt. Hope Rds in Okemos drew its share of criticism at a Meridian Township Planning Commission meeting on Monday night, but also had a few residents in support of the development.

The proposed site would feature a 9,000 square foot office building along with a 41-unit apartment complex. The development would be located on about 4.5 acres of land with access drives on both Mt Hope and Hagadorn Roads. The complex would also feature a gathering area with picnic tables in between the office and apartment buildings.

Allan Russell, who represented DTN, the real estate company that proposed the project, said, “We have been as asset to the community and are looking for a core concept with DTN-owned Berrytree, Glenwood and The Hamptons apartments in the immediate area.” He also said that their goal was to heavily landscape the area, meaning having a lot of green space, should the Planning Commission approve the project.

One resident who showed up at the meeting was originally against the project, but has grown to support it. “As long as development ends up like The Hamptons, I would support it,” Chateau Condominium resident Laura Cottrell said. “I have lived here for 14 years and it has been quiet and clean and I do not want that to change.”

However, there were many more residents who are against the proposal.

Dawn and Dave McCune, who are also Chateau Condominium residents, voiced their concern over the potential development. “The proposed plan will only complicate and burden the traffic situation and will overload an already overused drainage system,” Dawn McCune said.

One resident, who lives just feet away from the site on Briarcliff Drive, shared his opinion on the project. “I am opposed to the 10 foot setback (to Briarcliff Dr), but I could support the proposal if there is increased setback,” Mike Peters said. “If the setback is not increased, I would feel as if cars are pulling into my driveway when they pull into the potential office building.”

Members of the planning commission also had concerns over the project, primarily ranging from lack of “green space” and the drainage issue that is currently a problem on the property and at the Chateau complex.

Many commissioners thought that if some of the parking spaces were cut out it would allow for more green space. The commissioners also said that if the setbacks onto Briarcliff and Chateau were increased, they would be more in favor of the project. Some of the commissioners were also underwhelmed with the number of amenities proposed.

Although residents are in agreement that this proposal is better than the previous, many are still against the development. The planning commission will meet again to discuss the project at its next meeting on October 11 at the Meridian Township offices on Marsh Road in Okemos.

Map of Proposed Area: http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&t=h&msa=0&msid=103006236496373527067.0004915b2f09a981623a2&ll=42.712186,-84.46055&spn=0.002759,0.00456&z=17&source=embed

 

Pictures of the site: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i7MJ7gW-E9I&feature=player_embedded

 

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