Friday, July 1, 2011

TLC Summer Youth Program Applications Available online

Click here  to download Application

Click here to download Application



Minneapolis, MN (TLC Education Foundation/July 1, 2011)...The TLC Education Foundation announced that it is now taking applications for it's summer youth programs, FLY CLUB and STEM Programs.

TLC Education Foundation has evolved over the last 10 years into an organization that helps “at-risk” students and families to develop academic confidence, to understanding the importance of education and to develop and implement paths to move college aspirations into reality.

Because You Are Worth It©(BYAWI) is a TLC Education Foundation is a free comprehensive tutoring program that has been a major success in working with “at risk” as well as many other students to maximize their academic performance in the classroom and on standardize tests. 
The organization specializes in helping build strong students, strong families and stronger communities.TLC offers the following service to the community:

  • Free Tutoring grades K-12
  • MCA Workshops
  • Math Workshops
  • Reading/Writing Workshops
  • Interactive Summer enrichment programs
  • College Scholarship
  • TLC Internships
  • Post Secondary Education Prep and much more!
Please click on the links above to download applications.
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Thursday, May 19, 2011

U of M accepts new group of teens to third annual Junior Entrepreneurs of Minnesota program

The University of Minnesota
The University of Minnesota is hosting its third annual summer program designed to introduce high school students to the basics of entrepreneurship and launching a business.
 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

PRLog (Press Release)May 19, 2011 – The University of Minnesota is hosting its third annual summer program designed to introduce high school students to the basics of entrepreneurship and launching a business. From June 13 through July 14 on the University campus, over 30 Minneapolis high school students will engage in active learning sessions covering business fundamentals and personal development topics alongside University faculty, recent graduates, and experienced local entrepreneurs.

jEM is a five-week camp intended to develop the students’ understanding of business fundamentals and entrepreneurship, with particular emphasis on problem-solving, teamwork, leadership, and communication skills. Other topics covered include ethics, social responsibility, and self-assessment. In addition to their hands-on learning experience, participants will also complete an ongoing service project: developing and maintaining a community garden at St. Olaf Community Campus, a senior living facility in North Minneapolis. This includes planning the layout of the garden, building compost bins and irrigation equipment, and planting and caring for all of the greenery.

The jEM program is jointly developed by the Office for Business & Community Economic Development and the Gary S. Holmes Center for Entrepreneurship at the Carlson School of Management, in conjunction with the City of Minneapolis’ STEP-UP program. Support also comes from Synico Staffing, Ajasa Technologies, Select Source International, the Minnesota Twins, Dairy Queen, Bachman’s Floral, Gardens of Eagan, Quality Bicycle Products, and Rani Engineering.

If you are a local entrepreneur interested in sharing the story of your business, sponsoring this program in any way, or donating needed items for the program, please contact the Office for Business & Community Economic Development B-Tech Center at 612-624-3404, or email the jEM program at jem@umn.edu. 
 
You can also find more about jEM online at bced.umn.edu/JEM.
 

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Calling it as I see it: Why the use of the term “achievement gap” makes a bad situation worse

By Professor Nekima Levy-Pounds, Guest Contributor – Originally posted in LearnmoreMN (A blog about school success in Minnesota). Re-Published with permission by TLC Education Foundation. 

Minneapolis, MN...For years, we have invariably used the term “achievement gap” to describe educational disparities between white and black youths in Minnesota. It occurs to me that this term fails to accurately articulate the truth of why children of color are falling through the cracks within our public education system. For one, the term “achievement gap” is deficit-based language that implies that blame for children’s failure to “achieve” falls upon their own shoulders and is a result of their unwillingness or lack of motivation to work hard in school. (It is the Horatio Alger “pull yourself up by your bootstraps” myth in disguise.) However, for many children who struggle in school, external circumstances like chronic poverty and marginalization often hinder them from obtaining equal opportunities to achieve success.

For example, a child who has attended school in a wealthy suburban area typically receives advantages to which a poor child would not ordinarily be privy. The child in the wealthier community will likely gain access to more highly qualified teachers, newer textbooks, access to the latest technology, smaller class sizes, privately-financed extra-curriculars and inside knowledge of the unwritten customs and rules of mainstream society.

Meanwhile, a poor child of color is forced to contend with less qualified teachers, used or even no textbooks, lower teacher expectations, over-crowded classrooms, and a lack of racial diversity and cultural competence amongst teachers. Further, the recent report entitled: “Double Jeopardy: How Third- Grade Reading Skills and Poverty Influence High School Graduation2″ (Annie E. Casey Foundation) establishes that “children whose families live in poverty often lack resources for decent housing, food, clothing, and books, and they often do not have access to high quality child care and early education… .”

Rather than labeling the cumulative effects of these conditions as an “achievement gap,” I prefer the analysis provided by Carter G. Woodson, who wrote a book describing these issues in 1933, aptly called, The Mis-Education of the Negro3.  Thus, I see the educational disparities as the result of “mis-education” or an “opportunity gap” experienced by poor children of color. In order to tackle these issues effectively, we have to provide equal access to educational opportunities, teachers qualified to teach poor children of color and language that accurately identifies the issues. In essence, the “achievement gap” rhetoric is a misnomer that sets us back, rather than pushes us forward in creating equal opportunities to succeed for all children.

References
1.    ^Nekima Levy-Pounds (learnmoremnblog.typepad.com)
2.    ^Double Jeopardy: How Third- Grade Reading Skills and Poverty Influence High School Graduation (www.fcd-us.org)
3.    ^The Mis-Education of the Negro (en.wikipedia.org)

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

TLC Education Foundation offers programs that work!

Because your worth it!
The TLC Education Foundation offers programs to support K-12 students enrolled in school. Here are some of the value-added programs developed by the TLC Education Foundation:

TLC Education Foundation has evolved over the last 10 years into an organization that helps “at-risk” students and families to develop academic confidence, to understanding the importance of education and to develop and implement paths to move college aspirations into reality.

Because You Are Worth It©(BYAWI) is a TLC Education Foundation is a free comprehensive tutoring program that has been a major success in working with “at risk” as well as many other students to maximize their academic performance in the classroom and on standardize tests.

The organization specializes in helping build strong students, strong families and stronger communities.TLC offers the following service to the community:

    •    Free Tutoring grades K-12
    •    MCA Workshops
    •    Math Workshops
    •    Reading/Writing Workshops
    •    Interactive Summer enrichment programs
    •    College Scholarship
    •    TLC Internships
    •    Post Secondary Education Prep and much more!

For more information on how to enroll your child in TLC Education Foundation's programs, please contact executive director Ms. Yolanda Friday at (612) 341-2795.

School-based therapy helps families, children in need

Saint Paul, MN (Source: Minnesota Public Radio)...Many children in Minnesota wait months for mental health services due to a severe shortage of providers. But some schools have managed to get their students to the front of the line by partnering directly with mental health agencies, a program that has served 8,400 children in the last two years.

School-based therapy is convenient for children and their families and schools, and helps students get back on track academically much sooner. But nearly $4.8 million in annual state funding for the three-year program could be in jeopardy as state legislators debate whether to continue the service.

Not continuing it would be a setback for parents who depend on such services. Among them is Clarence Scott, of Minneapolis, who has found parenting much harder since his wife died six years ago.

Scott, 56, he has no trouble making dinner for his two sons. But he's found it tough to juggle home and school as a single father.

His toughest challenge has come from his youngest son, 11-year-old Darrius, who went into a deep depression after his mother's death and struggled at school.

"No response. No laughing, no nothing," Scott said. "It's just like daydreaming. Just staring, you know, just shut down. You know something is wrong."

Read the full story here.

Science and Engineering and Conservation -- Oh My!

 Minnesota Department of Education.
Minneapolis, MN (Source: Minnesota Department of Education)...Focusing on Minnesota's academic standards about the water cycle, plants, and weather, Mr. Seidl's Greenvale Park Elementary third-graders eagerly jump into learning in creative ways every day.

This Northfield school class is developing a system to collect rain water from the school roof in rain barrels. Next, they transport and pump the water into the collection barrels used by the gardeners to water their plants. This project will save lots of time, money, and most importantly -- conserve water! Seidl's curriculum is on the cutting edge of the new engineering standards in science that will be put into practice next year.

Dr. Timothy Childs talks about going to Washington, DC to meet President Obama

The follow video was recorded on Tuesday, April 12, 2011 just before Dr. Childs and his wife headed to Washington, DC to meet with President Obama and his staff.