Showing posts with label Middle School. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Middle School. Show all posts

Monday, September 24, 2018

BEST! Kickoff, Cache

Harder to do than it looks!
Toilet paper races?

Mentoring and Leadership Event A Huge Success

After months of planning and organizing, 20 amazing youth were matched with a specially-chosen mentor.

Over 12 months ago, the planning began for the development and execution of a community-based mentoring and leadership program for the youth of Cache. The hard work and commitment to our youth was rewarded on Tuesday evening, August 21st at the BEST! (Building Extraordinary Success Today) Mentor Match Event. Twenty  5th-8th grade youth who were selected to participate in BEST! met with their chosen mentors for the first time.


Donors, their mentees and their families, mentors, school administrators, and other supporters of the program came together and enjoyed a great dinner. In addition, mentors and mentees participated in several fun leadership, team building, and get acquainted activities. Participants in this program will meet regularly with their mentors and participate as a group in leadership and enrichment activities.


Rhonda Clemmer, program coordinator, shared that one in three youth grow up without a mentor and BEST! is designed to do its part to change that statistic for the better. She also stated that she likes to call the mentors "nurturers of possibilities" because she believes the mentors can plan an instrumental role in their success as they navigate the next 5-10 years.




In personal conversation, Clemmer added that the games included an egg toss, toilet paper games and signs. The signs had activities and mentors and mentees had to sign if they had ever performed one of the acts, e.g., toilet papering a house or tree, making a prank phone call, etc. Mentees learned they had much in common. 

Thanks to Rhonda Clemmer for the photos and press release.

Applause for Cache's BEST!





Wednesday, June 1, 2016

Career Exploration Site, Breitlinks







Mr. Breitsprecher's "Career Exploration," has a vast compilation of easy-to-use resources. Some of his material may have expired links or be under revision, but exploring his topical site is worthwhile. Although Mr. Breitsprecher himself is a prolific educational and informational author, he has collected links from expert sources and institutions.


The host website is extensive, although we began with "Career Activities." On the right is the menu for http://breitlinks.com/careers/career_activities.htm,
the exploration section, but on the website are math tips, business education, entrepreneurism, business etiquette, and much more.


"Business Simulations," one of the interactive pages, provides links to a wide variety of career games to be played online.  http://www.mybusinessed.com/ 

























One more example of the scope of information is the assessment document.


http://www.breitlinks.com/careers/career_pdfs/Assessment_07.pdf 





Breitsprecher also has slides on Slideshare.net.



Host website for everything
http://www.breitlinks.com/

Ret. 5-31-16

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Identifying & Stopping Bullying

Excerpt from a Reader's Digest article

"One Teacher’s Brilliant Strategy to Stop Bullying"

Here's how one schoolteacher takes time each week to look out for the lonely.

Every Friday afternoon, she asks her students to take out a piece of paper and write down the names of four children with whom they’d like to sit the following week. The children know that these requests may or may not be honored. She also asks the students to nominate one student who they believe has been an 
exceptional classroom citizen that week. All ballots are privately submitted to her.
And every single Friday afternoon, after the students go home, she takes out those slips of paper, places them in front of her, and studies them. 
She looks for patterns.
Who is not getting requested by anyone else?
Who can’t think of anyone to 
request?
Who never gets noticed enough 
to be nominated?
Who had a million friends last week and none this week?
You see, Chase’s teacher is not looking for a new seating chart or “exceptional citizens.” Chase’s teacher is looking for lonely children. She’s looking for children who are struggling to connect with other children. She’s identifying the little ones who are falling through the cracks of the class’s social life. She is discovering whose gifts are going unnoticed 
by their peers. And she’s pinning down—right away—who’s being bullied and who is doing the bullying.
As a teacher, parent, and lover of all children, I think this is the most brilliant Love Ninja strategy I have ever 
encountered. It’s like taking an X-ray of a classroom to see 
beneath the surface 
of things and into the hearts of students. 
It is like mining for gold—the gold being those children who need a little help, who need adults to step in and teach them how to make friends, how to ask others to play, how to 
join a group, or how to share their gifts. And it’s a bully deterrent 
because every teacher knows that bullying usually happens outside her eyeshot and that often kids being bullied are too intimidated to share. But, as she said, the truth comes out on those safe, private, little sheets 
of paper.
As Chase’s teacher explained 
this simple, ingenious idea, I stared at her with my mouth hanging open. “How long have you been using this system?” I said.
Ever since Columbine, she said. Every single Friday afternoon since Columbine. Good Lord.
This brilliant woman watched 
Columbine knowing that all violence begins with disconnection. All outward violence begins as inner loneliness. She watched that tragedy knowing that children who aren’t being noticed may eventually resort to being noticed by any means necessary.
And so she decided to start fighting violence early and often in the world within her reach. What Chase’s teacher 
is doing when she sits in her empty classroom studying those lists written with shaky 11-year-old hands is saving lives. I am convinced of it.
And what this mathematician 
has learned while using this system is something she really already knew: that everything—even love, even 
belonging—has a pattern to it. She finds the patterns, and through those lists she breaks the codes of disconnection. Then she gets lonely kids the help they need. It’s math to her. It’s math.
All is love—even math. Amazing.
Chase’s teacher retires this year. What a way to spend a life: looking for patterns of love and loneliness. Stepping in, every single day, and 
altering the trajectory of our world.
http://www.rd.com/advice/parenting/stop-bullying-strategy/  
Ret. 5-18-16

Monday, July 27, 2015

From Teens: Study Resources

Booker T. Washington Magnet School, Tulsa
Extreme applause for the Teen Advisory Board (TAB) at Booker T. Washington High School in Tulsa, Oklahoma, for not only finding these study resources but also for sharing them. TAB even allow online requests through which BTW students can request a peer tutor in a particular subject. How is that for feeling included?

In addition, the BTW TAB in 2014-15 created Big Sib, a peer mentoring program matching upperclassmen with freshmen, who meet during advisory period, similar to homeroom, during the school day.

Back to the resources...


Studying Tips and Online Help
Study Blue 
Flashcards, review sheets, quizzes, study guides and more...

Open Study
Why Study Alone? Make the world your study group.

Jiskha
Homework Help

Quizlet
Simple tools that let you study anything for free.

Khan Academy
Learn anything!

Thinkerbinder
Start your own study group.

http://www.thinkbinder.com/  

Guides and Reference Materials

The Purdue Online Writing Lab (OWL)

The Purdue MLA Online Writing Lab

EASYBIB
Generate citations.

Citation Machine
Generate citations.

Ottobib
Make a bibliography or works cited with just an ISBN.                                             http://www.ottobib.com 

A Research Guide for Students

Info Please
Study Skills (includes various subjects)

Study Skills Online, Brunel University

IPL  
(no longer updated but usable for the past—newspapers, collections, resources by subject, etc.)

Shakespeare Online

Math and Sciences

Exploratorium

West Texas A&M Virtual Math Lab

Ask Dr. Math
The Math Forum at Drexel

Purple Math  

The Science Page 
for those hooked on science and science education

The Image
Gemstones, geology, digital photography

Interactive  Periodic Table

Aplus Math                                                                                                                 Interactive math resources for teachers, parents, and students featuring free math worksheets, math games, math flashcards, and more.                                                                     http://www.aplusmath.com

History Resources
West Point, Dept of History

Worldology   
Interactive Maps

A Timeline of History

PBS 

Interesting Things
TED

2014 by BOOKER T. HIGH SCHOOL TEEN ADVISORY BOARD


Ret. 7-24-15

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Mentor Mini-Training Docs

Useful resources for mentors of older mentees, many of these should be customized for different towns or cities.  Note that more will be added each month on the Friends for Youth website. 'Clever!

Friends for Youth, located in Centennial, Colorado, specializes in working with youth involved in the corrections, the juvenile justice, and child welfare systems. http://friendsforyouth.nationbuilder.com/   Ret. 5-22-15


http://friendsforyouth.nationbuilder.com/training

Resources and TrainingsSteph___KacyEDIT.jpg  

Friends for Youth has many different resources available to you to help best equip you on your mentoring journey....

Our Mini-Training series - 
Each month we are 
developing a mini-training 
for mentors on the go!  
Mini-Trainings:

Saturday, March 28, 2015

Soft Skills - Assistant

Many students choose work-study programs to help pay for their education or work full-time during the day and attend post-secondary education in the evenings. 

Mentors can encourage mentees to seek a higher employee skill base during the mentoring relationship. 



8 Soft Skills That Make for a Great Assistant

Posted: Updated: 


WOMAN IN OFFICE















If you've ever seen The Devil Wears Prada, you may believe that being an administrative assistant is a stepping stone to something greater. Though it can be a proving ground that opens doors to other positions, being a personal assistant to an executive or middle manager can also be a fulfilling career that is currently totally in vogue. Candidates may not need previous work experience as a receptionist or assistant, there are several crucial soft skills that make a candidate the best person for an administrative or executive assistant position.

Soft skills are those character traits and interpersonal skills. Character traits tend to be ingrained unlike occupational or hard skills, which are learned and honed over time. They're less what we know and more the core of who we are. While experience in similar positions may get you the interview, your ability to showcase these soft skills should get you the job.
Not everyone can be an administrative assistant. It takes a very specific set of skills to assist an executive or manager. The following soft skills make for a great assistant: time management, project management, strong communication, and active listening skills, as well as common sense, a flexible personality, attention to detail, natural curiosity and research ability.

1. Curiosity and Research Ability
An assistant with a natural curiosity and research ability benefits the executive or manager in many ways. The perfect candidate is someone who reads a lot, gathers information and builds bridges between ideas. Executives and managers dream of the kind of assistant who reads trade news, keeps him or her up-to-date, points out networking connections that should be made, and research the boss's new ideas with vigor.

2. Attention to Detail with a Great Sense of Urgency
The great executive assistant must be meticulous in all things. However tiny, details are expected never to go without notice. Assistants must pride themselves on noticing things others do not. All those arguments about work-life balance? A great assistant is the key to helping an executive or manager achieve it. When a great assistant respects his or her boss's need to balance work with their family or private life, he or she approaches the details of the boss's day with urgency and accuracy. Arrive well before the boss does, stay after the boss is gone to prepare for the next day, and work their calendar with proper planning and recommendations.

3. Common Sense
Despite what the name implies, common sense is rare. The great assistant is capable of filling in the gaps and demonstrating initiative. When given incomplete ideas, the assistant uses knowledge of his or her company and boss to round them out, all while keeping the executive informed and in approval along the way.

4. Active Listening Skills with Vision for the Future
Listening leads to learning. While most people are "hard of listening" rather than "hard of hearing," the great assistant processes information quickly and boldly asks questions to fill in his or her understanding. When an assistant understands the direction his or her boss is heading in and the strategy behind every move the executive or manager makes, the assistant will be able to have a greater impact on this growing partnership. Ultimately, the assistant will accurately anticipate what goes next.

5. Flexible Personality
A great assistant must have the ability to interact with all people. Whether you meet in person or over the phone, the assistant must build rapport. With as many unique personalities as an assistant must deal with, he or she must be able to build rapport in a number of ways. An assistant must remain flexible and patient with all people.

6. Strong Communications Skills
Communication is key. Understanding and conveying information between people is absolutely invaluable. There's perhaps nothing in the world more valuable to customers, clients and business partners than understanding and being understood. Strong communications skills could be the difference between your legacy as "The Greatest Assistant Ever" and "What was their name again?"

7. Time Management Skills
A great assistant needs to know how to prioritize and keep things on schedule because the job of assisting an executive or manager includes scheduling his or her meetings, events and other means of spending time. An executive assistant works with his or her boss to understand priorities and help manage daily scheduling so that the executive can spend more of his or her valuable time on long-term goal planning and setting.

8. Project Management Skills
As much as an assistant's ability to manage his or her time and the boss's daily operations so that the boss has time for big-picture thinking, it's incredibly important for an assistant to help bring the boss's big picture thinking to life. That means being able to help manage the projects the executive or manager is working on. Big pictures are made from many little ones. With each project, there are many moving parts and you'll be invaluable to your boss if you can help manage these moving parts. That may mean managing the deliverables assigned to all project team members or just making sure that the boss is working on the right project at the right time. It also means being able to pick up the threads of projects that have been tabled earlier but are now the boss's focus. A great assistant is one who can make his or her boss's job easier by tackling things like comparing expenses on financial statements, analyzing client trends or even simply highlighting a budget. These things make a huge difference in growing the partnership between an executive and an administrative assistant.

While the job title and description of an assistant may seem straight-forward, it can be less so in practice. An assistant's job requires the delicate use of dozens of desirable skills that people mostly notice when there's a distinct absence of them. If you've got at least some of these skills, you've got a shot at being a great assistant.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/sharon-tsao/8-soft-skills-that-make-f_b_6192974.html 

Ret. 3-17-15

Thursday, March 26, 2015

Model: OK Student Inventors Exposition

All Oklahoma school-age inventors should compete to attend this statewide exposition.

Many school districts, however, are located in sparsely populated areas and/or do not have finances to transports students far. We salute the founders of this 25+-year-old model, which can be adapted regionally, by counties or districts--large, small or cooperatively. 

Every school--public or private--can create its own version of this event. Recruit judges from business, college, military, Career Tech, or others. Eventually, create a pathway to get local winners to the Oklahoma Student Inventors Exposition.                                                                        

The Oklahoma Student Inventors Exposition allows students, 1st through 12th grades, to show their inventions. Winners and their teachers receive money awards, trophies and medals. For example, in 2013, winning students and their teachers were given $150 each. 

The 2015 event, the 26th, was on Tuesday, March 24, 2015 from 9:00 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. at Rose State College's Hudiburg Chevrolet Center, Midwest City. 

Patent attorneys, parents, the public, and others attend. Proud parents bring folding chairs and sit near the jam-packed display tables where their children show off their inventions. In 2013, 162 students earned the honor of competing. In 2015, over 400 youths from 85 schools displayed their inventions. Each year the expo grows. Some schools represented in 2015 were Bethany, Del City, Guthrie, Moore, Oklahoma City, Poteau, Seminole, and Shawnee. 

The public is encouraged to attend this event, as the young inventors enjoy showing and explaining their creations to visitors. Positive comments from guests also help encourage the students’ creativity and propel them forward to more problem-solving challenges. If someone strolling through does not inquire, the inventors often will engage the onlooker first. "Let me tell you about..."

Each year the enthusiasm, creativity, confidence, and professionalism of even the youngest inventors increases. As we walked, these first graders articulately and professionally with a generous addition of passion discussed their inventions. 'Only first graders? 


Regardless of grade-level, each had a problem to solve. One young inventor's dad drives much, and she was concerned he would fall asleep at the wheel. Her invention was an electronic device that would send a voice warning if the driver's hand was off the steering wheel for three seconds.

Another young man invented a garage attic ladder slide because his mother had difficulty carrying large plastic bins down the attic stairs. 

One young man's friend had a heat stroke so the inventor found a way to insert in a hat, cap or helmet a hot or cold gel mask. In the above photo, the young inventor on the right, a soccer player, used a variation of a hot and cold gel pack, secured inside a cloth cover, to attach with Velcro to his soccer shirts. 'Suitable for all kinds of weather! 

The list is endless as is the creativity, and the sophistication and practicality of the inventions varied. Undoubtedly, some of these students will soon be on ABC's Shark Tank.




Trifold display boards crowded the tables. Young inventors chiefly stationed themselves by their creations. Family members can be seen in the photos as well as some fatigue-clad judges, provided by Tinker Air Force Base. 




















Each inventor provided business cards printed with his or her name, invention, school, school address, grade, and teacher. Even the "business" cards varied widely in design.

Judges Cori Fowler, OKAN Americorps volunteer, and Cedric Currin-Moore, STEM coordinator for the Oklahoma Afterschool Network, flank Jesse Chavez, inventor. Jesse envisioned the perfect spy device for everywhere--underwater, in the woods, outside a house, in a planter by an office building, in the snow, etc. His Spy Rock, equipped with a camera and with retractable, mechanical legs like a spider's, could be activated by remote control yet camouflaged for any location. How original is that!

Fowler, Chavez, Currin-Moore
Below are Suzi and Shannon Stephens. Suzi wanted to demonstrate how kids can be creative rather than watch television, play online games, or roam the internet. She wrote a script for a video entitled The Mystic Island, built the set, shot over 200 still photos, moving the action figures in each photo, timed the play sequence so the action appeared like a movie, and posted the finished product on YouTube as an example for others. (Suzi's proud grandmother Summer was also at the expo.)

Suzie & Shannon Stephens
Mystic Island still photos




Betty J.C. Wright is a co-founder and chairperson for the Oklahoma Student Inventors Expo. A truly extraordinary teacher, Betty is a 2014 inductee of the Oklahoma Educators Hall of Fame among a myriad of honors and achievements. A genuine and loving dynamo, who never seeks glory for herself, Betty continues to create or make a way for students.












 The event brochure





























From a 2014 KFOR video and article:


Betty J.C. Wright and Julian Taylor, Co-Founders
Oklahoma Young Student Inventors 

MIDWEST CITY, OKLAHOMA — Too dark to find something in the bottom of your purse?

Reanna Glenn put a light bulb with a cell phone charger.

“Yeah,” she says after illuminating the inside of a large handbag. “There’s a secret pocket inside.”

Got a messy sandwich on your hands and not in your mouth?

How about Abigail Tardibono’s Food Buddy invention?

She says, “It keeps all of your food from spilling everywhere and making a big mess.”


Abigail Tardibono
For answers to these and hundreds of other everyday problems all you have to do is ask imaginative kids like Jared Stewart and Tyler Whitlock who came up with a perfect way to slice pizza.

Their invention is two scissors welded to a triangular sheet of aluminum.

“You put it under the pizza and it makes a perfect slice every time,” says Jared.

“It’s safe for kids,” adds Tyler.

25 years ago there were just a handful of kids who presented ideas for the first Oklahoma Inventors Exposition.

Teacher Betty Wright and inventor Julian Taylor helped organize it.

Betty, now retired, says, “We see even more creativity now.”

Don’t like the taste of dental x-ray slides?

Olivia Atkinson has a spray for that.

“I’ve got a tasty x-ray spray,” she says.

Want to learn to skateboard but don’t want to get hurt?

Gavin Beverly has training wheels for that.

“Have you tried it out,” asks an exposition visitor?

“Yeah,” says Gavin. “Does it work,” is the follow-up question. “Yeah,” says Gavin again.

Caleb Burns has a hearing impaired uncle.

The younger Burns came up with a pillow that doubles as an alarm clock.

“He had a hard time hearing it,” he explains.

Baby brother lost his soothie?

No problem if it’s attached to Tyler David’s Pacifier Positioning System.

“You can find it with the push of a button,” she explains.

So what are kids thinking about?

Moore students Jaden Wattle and Kylie Thompson came up with a safety vest for kids to wear if they’re at school and a tornado hits.

Highlighting one of its many features, Kylie says, “There’s a flashlight that you can shine on one of the reflector strips.”

Kaden Fox from Poteau was thinking about recent school shootings when he came up with his Safe Haven School Desk.

A full scale model would be made of steel and allow single students to lock themselves inside.

He says, “I thought, ‘what can I do to prevent something like that.”

A wealth of ideas and treasure for the best.

Winners in several categories received $150.00 in cash.

Their teachers got the same.

If you’re worried about the future, the solution is probably walking around in here.





Ret. 3-25-15



Updated 3-31-15