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>The Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce invites you to

>

The Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce invites you to browse our shops, enjoy one of our many fine restaurants, visit our local professional members and do business in Ridgewood.

FREE Gift Wrapping at Bookends

232 East Ridgewood Ave.

Ridgewood’s gift to you is…
Free Parking on all four Saturdays before Christmas
Free Old Fashion Trolley Ridge for your shopping convenience
Free* gift wrapping with purchases made in Ridgewood
And the finest
Shopping and Dining in Bergen County during the Holidays
For more information call 201-445-2600

Santa House Hours

Saturday, December 8, 15, 22 , 2007 10:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m.
Monday, December 24, 2007 10:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m.

Trolley Hours

East side to West side
Saturday, December1, 2007 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
(Trolley will be parked in front of Van Neste Park from 4:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.)
Saturday, December 8, 15, 22, 2007 10:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.

GIFT WRAPPING AT BOOKENDS
232 E. RIDGEWOOD AVENUE

(* – with Ridgewood Merchant receipt!!!)
Courtesy Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce)

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>U.S. Students Lag In Science, Math On International Test

>courant.com/news/education/hc-science1205.artdec05,0,7504648.story

Courant.com
U.S. Students Lag In Science, Math On International Test
Washington Post

December 5, 2007

WASHINGTON —

American teenagers have less mastery of science and mathematics than peers in many industrialized nations, according to scores on a major international exam released Tuesday.

Education experts say results of the 2006 Program for International Student Assessment highlight the need for changes in classrooms and in the federal No Child Left Behind law. The average science score of U.S. 15-year-olds lagged that of students in 16 of 30 countries in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, a Paris-based group that represents the world’s richest countries. U.S. students were further behind in math, trailing counterparts in 23 countries.

“How are our children going to be able to compete with the children of the world? The answer is not well,” said former Colorado Gov. Roy Romer, who is chairman of Strong American Schools, a nonpartisan group seeking to make education prominent in the 2008 presidential election.

The PISA test, given every three years, measures the ability of 15-year-olds to answer math and science problems. About 400,000 students, including 5,600 in the United States, took the 2006 exam.

There is also a reading portion, but the results for U.S. students were thrown out because the tests were printed incorrectly.

Students in Finland earned top scores in science and math. Mexico was at the bottom of the pack.

The PISA results underscore concern in some quarters that too few U.S. students are prepared to become engineers, scientists and physicians and that the nation may lose ground to economic competitors.

An expert panel appointed last year by President Bush is preparing to recommend ways to improve public school math instruction, with a focus on algebra.

PISA, first administered in 2000, covers reading, math and science, but each time the test is given it focuses in depth on one subject.

Last year’s exam spotlighted science.

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>NOTICE: Impaired Driving Enforcement Campaign – December 7, 2007 through January 2, 2008

>Rum+Truck

Ridgewood’s Police Department will participate in the Statewide “Over the Limit, Under Arrest” impaired driving enforcement campaign between December 7, 2007, and January 2, 2008. The program is designed to raise awareness about the dangers of drinking and driving through high-visibility enforcement and to arrest motorists who choose to drive while impaired by either drugs or alcohol.

Law enforcement agencies recommend:

1) Be responsible and don’t risk it…you will be caught
2) If you plan to drink, choose a designated driver before going out
3) Realize before going out that every drink you have makes it more difficult to know when you’ve had too much to drive
4) Take a taxicab or ask a sober friend to drive you home
5) Spend the night where the activity is held
6) Report impaired drivers to law enforcement
7) Always buckle up – it’s your best defense against an impaired driver.

Ridgewood Police Chief William M. Corcoran and his officers wish everyone a safe and happy holiday season.

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>Readers Want to Know ….

>I would be interested to know precisely what Interim Superintendent Brennan means by the term “the people who are the consumers of this product”. For example, does he presume to dilute the well-documented, well-articulated, and by now urgent needs of parents and taxpayers by blending those needs together with what he and the district would like to think are the “needs” of students that like to learn math by playing games, writing sentences and themes, and displaying their artistic skills? If it is not his intent to take the time between now and September 2008 to talk district parents and taxpayers out of their distaste for reform math, or to do an end run around the problem, then he may have bought himself some good will with his full statement to the board.

As I heard his statement, it had a bit of an edge to it. He indicates that, based on his review of the historical record, the long drift or transition toward the implementation of reform math curricula and materials that started a decade or so ago appears to have taken place in the absence of any specific actions, deliberative processes, or official decisions undertaken by the Board. This buttresses the negligence argument that many on this blog have been raising.

The kicker, though, comes in the last ten seconds of this video. Ms. Brogan’s feeble, almost fearful, response to Mr. Brennan’s statement is embarassing, and reveals her emotions-based, fact-allergic style of non-analysis. At this point, I’d just as soon she politely remove herself from the debate, and start planning what she’s going to do with the extra free time she will soon have on weekday evenings.

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>Traditional Math Means Never Having to Say You’re Sorry (Barry Garelick)

>Last year at a meeting of the National Mathematics Advisory Panel (a Presidential appointed panel charged with drafting recommendations on how best to prepare students for algebra), a woman named Sherry Fraser read a statement into the public record which began as follows:

“How many of you remember your high school algebra? Close your eyes and imagine your algebra class. Do you see students sitting in rows, listening to a teacher at the front of the room, writing on the chalkboard and demonstrating how to solve problems? Do you remember how boring and mindless it was? Research has shown this type of instruction to be largely ineffective.” (Fraser, 2006).

Such statement falls in the category of “Traditional math doesn’t work” or “The old way of teaching math was a mass failure,” heard early and often at school board meetings or other forums. I am always puzzled by these statements but Sherry’s was particularly vexing given that 1) I was not bored in my algebra classes, and 2) Sherry, like me, ended up majoring in math. So I contacted Sherry and asked what the research was that showed such methods to be “largely ineffective”. Sherry is co-director of a high school math text/curricula called IMP, developed in the early 90’s through grants from the NSF, totaling $11.6 million, to San Francisco State University. She replied to me in an email that she is a “firm believer in people doing their own research” and added that I wouldn’t have any trouble finding sources to confirm her statements. I have assumed she is just trying to be helpful by having me discover the answer myself, rather than just tell me the answer to my question. I have been a good student; here’s what my research shows:

From the 1940’s to the mid 1960’s, at a time when math and other subjects were taught in the traditional manner, scores in all subjects on the Iowa Tests of Basic Skills increased steadily. From 1965 to the mid-70’s there was a dramatic decline, and then scores increased again until 1990 when they reached an all-time high. Scores stayed relatively stable in the 90’s.

Conclusion No. 1: During the 40’s through the mid 60’s, something was working. And whatever was working, certainly wasn’t failing.

Those who decry traditional math generally advocate its reform, and promote the concept of discovery learning. Students supposedly discover what they need to know by being given “real life” problems, frequently without being given the procedures or the mastery of skills necessary to solve them. The reform approach is at the heart of a series of math texts funded through grants from the Education and Human Resources Division of National Science Foundation and based on standards developed by the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM).

Long before NCTM’s release of its standards in 1989, math reformers of the 1920’s through the 1950’s had their say in how math should be taught. William A. Brownell, spoken well of by NCTM and various luminaries in today’s reform movement, was one of the key reformers of the early twentieth century and promoted what he called meaningful learning; i.e., teaching mathematics as a process, rather than a series of end products of isolated facts and procedures to be committed to memory.

If the above sounds like what the reformers are talking about today, it is because – like the complaints about education in general through the years – the complaints levied against how mathematics is taught have been perennial. What is often not mentioned when these complaints are replayed is 1) that there have also been perennial solutions and 2) some of these solutions have actually been effective.

The traditional math from the 40’s to mid-60’s was certainly not perfect. Also, it cannot be denied that in spite of the effort made in the texts to provide meaning to the student, some teachers did not follow the texts and insisted on a Thorndike-like approach that relied on rote memorization and math problems isolated from word problems. But neither the reformers nor the mathematicians of those times asked the teachers to teach math that way. Bad teaching was incidental to and independent of the textbooks used and the philosophy put forth by that era’s reformers.

Conclusion Number 2: Yesterday’s reformers sought the same goals as today’s reformers, except their textbooks actually contained explanations.

During the era of test score decline, many social issues emerged which may account for the downslide, such as increased drug use in the mid-60’s, permissiveness, increase in divorces and single family homes, and changes in the demographics of schools. Also, starting in the mid-60’s, many of the teachers of the older generation retired, making way for the newer cadre of reinvented John Deweys from the education schools.

The difference between traditional and present-day teaching is striking.

The emphasis is now on big concepts. These come at the expense of learning and mastering the basics.
Getting the right answer no longer matters.
In theory, it is student-centered inquiry-based learning. In practice it has become teacher-centered omission of instruction.
With the educational zeitgeist having been planted and taken root, the development of the NCTM standards in 1989 were an extension of a long progression. To top it all off, the reform approach to teaching math is being taught in education schools, thus providing future teachers with “work-arounds” to those few math textbooks that actually have merit.
Conclusion No. 3: While bad teaching was incidental to the traditional method in earlier days, it has now become an inherent part of how most math is taught today.

I hope my efforts provide something that Sherry Fraser can cite.

The above is taken from a 3-part article entitled “It Works for Me: An Exploration of Traditional Math,” published here at EdNews.org.

Barry Garelick is an analyst for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in Washington, D.C. He is a national advisor to NYC HOLD (www.nychold.com), an education advocacy organization that addresses mathematics education in schools throughout the United States.

https://www.edspresso.com/2007/11/traditional_math_means_never_h.htm

Comments
There’s an excellent point here:

Conclusion Number 2: Yesterday’s reformers sought the same goals as today’s reformers, except their textbooks actually contained explanations.

By and large, the goal of educators throughout history has probably been the same. We all want our students to achieve at their fullest potential. We must be careful not to “throw the baby out with the bath water” as we implement new “research” based strategies.

I haven’t conducted formal research, but I’ve noticed a trend in my student population over the past few years. The students who struggle with Algebra almost all struggle with basic mathematical concepts. Many of these early teens cannot multiply one-digit numbers without a calculator. I think that these students have developed too much reliance on calculators to solve math problems. When they reach Algebra, the calculator can no longer replace mathematical reasoning.

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>2007 LEAF COLLECTION – EXTENDED

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THE VILLAGE OF RIDGEWOOD WILL CONTINUE TO COLLECT LEAVES, WEATHER PERMITTING, UNTIL ALL THE LEAVES ARE PICKED UP. The following dates remain in the original schedule for leaf collection. AREA “A” Dec. 3 – AREA”B” Dec. 6 – AREA “C” Dec. 10 – AREA “D” Dec. 13 Click Here to view a map showing your pick up area.

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>the Fur is gonna Fly

>catinrain
It seems no one is safe from the voracious appetite for tax revenue not even our four legged friends. The Village Council is looking to raise fees off the backs of local cats, an unidentified spokesmen states,”hey cats have nine lives it is only fitting that we raise the licensing fees, to be fair to the rest of us who only have one life.” It was erroneously been reported on that other party flog that cats will be sprayed? if we are mistaken the Ridgewood blog suggest the Village manager spray the cats maroon and white in fitting with the Village colors. Or perhaps something more seasonal like Red and Green for December and so on. If Ordinance 3088 is passed licenses for first unspayed/un-neutered cat will be $14.00 Licenses for additional unspayed/un-neutered cats will be $10.00. Licenses for first spayed/neutered cat will be $11.00 Additional spayed/neutered cats licensed within the same calendar year, will be $ 7.00 per cat. Delinquent fee, if not licensed during the month of rabies vaccination, will be $ 10.00 per cat.

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>Events Around the Village

>LeRoy Neiman Thursday, December 13th – 5:00pm
Welcome back world famous Artist / Author, LeRoy Neiman who will be signing his latest Book: Femlin. Femlin is the legendary character Mr. Neiman has sketched for Playboy for many decades! Don’t miss this legend! BOOKENDS232 E. Ridgewood Ave.Ridgewood, NJ 07450Tel: 201/445-0726Fax: 201/445-8301

12/17 Last Day to Change Party Affiliation For Feb 5 Presidential Primary The last day to change party affiliation for the February 5, 2008 Presidential Primary Election is December 17, 2007 and the voter registration deadline is January 15, 2008. As usual, the Clerk will be in her office during the workday and in the Library Lobby from 4:30pm to 9:00pm.

Hotwire

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>EID

>During the month of Ramadan, Muslims observe a strict fast and participate in pious activities such as charitable giving and peace-making. It is a time of intense spiritual renewal for those who observe it. At the end of Ramadan, Muslims throughout the world observe a joyous three-day celebration called Eid al-Fitr (the Festival of Fast-Breaking).

A. Eid al-Fitr falls on the first day of Shawwal, the month which follows Ramadan in the Islamic calendar. It is a time to give in charity to those in need, and celebrate with family and friends the completion of a month of blessings and joy.
Before the day of Eid, during the last few days of Ramadan, each Muslim family gives a determined amount as a donation to the poor. This donation is of actual food — rice, barley, dates, rice, etc. — to ensure that the needy can have a holiday meal and participate in the celebration. This donation is known as sadaqah al-fitr (charity of fast-breaking).

On the day of Eid, Muslims gather early in the morning in outdoor locations or mosques to perform the Eid prayer. This consists of a sermon followed by a short congregational prayer.

After the Eid prayer, Muslims usually scatter to visit various family and friends, give gifts (especially to children), and make phone calls to distant relatives to give well-wishes for the holiday.

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>The History of Hanukkah

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Hanukkah is the annual Jewish festival celebrated on eight successive days beginning on the 25th day of Kislev, the third month of the Jewish calendar, corresponding, approximately, to December in the Gregorian calendar. It is also known as the Festival of Lights, Feast of Dedication, and Feast of the Maccabees, Hanukkah commemorates the rededication of the Temple of Jerusalem by Judas Maccabee in 165 BC after the Temple had been profaned by Antiochus IV Epiphanes, king of Syria and overlord of Palestine

The History of Hanukkah
Hanukkah is celebrated for eight days and nights, starting on the 25th of Kislev on the Hebrew calendar (which is November-December on the Gregorian calendar). In Hebrew, the word “Hanukkah” means “dedication.”

The holiday commemorates the rededication of the holy Temple in Jerusalem after the Jews’ 165 B.C.E. victory over the Hellenist Syrians. Antiochus, the Greek King of Syria, outlawed Jewish rituals and ordered the Jews to worship Greek gods.

In 168 B.C.E. the Jews’ holy Temple was seized and dedicated to the worship of Zeus.

Some Jews were afraid of the Greek soldiers and obeyed them, but most were angry and decided to fight back.

The fighting began in Modiin, a village not far from Jerusalem. A Greek officer and soldiers assembled the villagers, asking them to bow to an idol and eat the flesh of a pig, activities forbidden to Jews. The officer asked Mattathias, a Jewish High Priest, to take part in the ceremony. He refused, and another villager stepped forward and offered to do it instead. Mattathias became outraged, took out his sword and killed the man, then killed the officer. His five sons and the other villagers then attacked and killed the soldiers. Mattathias’ family went into hiding in the nearby mountains, where many other Jews who wanted to fight the Greeks joined them. They attacked the Greek soldiers whenever possible.

Judah Maccabee and his soldiers went to the holy Temple, and were saddened that many things were missing or broken, including the golden menorah. They cleaned and repaired the Temple, and when they were finished, they decided to have a big dedication ceremony. For the celebration, the Maccabees wanted to light the menorah. They looked everywhere for oil, and found a small flask that contained only enough oil to light the menorah for one day. Miraculously, the oil lasted for eight days. This gave them enough time to obtain new oil to keep the menorah lit. Today Jews celebrate Hanukkah for eight days by lighting candles in a menorah every night, thus commemorating the eight-day miracle.

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>Santa’s Helper wants to remind everyone ,It’s called a Christmas Tree

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Merry Christmas Everyone!

I was at the Ridgewood tree lighting on Saturday and had a wonderful time with family and friends.

However, it is a disgrace that Santa wished everyone a “Happy Holiday” when he lit the Ridgewood Christmas Tree (or is it the official Ridgewood “Holiday Shrub” or some other such nonsense).

It is a bit much when even SANTA can’t wish everyone a Merry Christmas!

Santa’s Helper
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>Hazardous weather condition(s):

>This Afternoon: Periods of snow and sleet. High near 30. East wind between 3 and 5 mph. Chance of precipitation is 100%. Total daytime snow and sleet accumulation of 1 to 2 inches possible.

Tonight: Periods of freezing rain and sleet before 10pm, then periods of rain and sleet. Temperature rising to around 36 by 1am. Calm wind becoming south around 6 mph. Chance of precipitation is 100%. New ice accumulation of around a 0.1 of an inch possible. New sleet accumulation of less than a half inch possible.

Monday: A chance of rain, mainly before noon. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 40. Breezy, with a west wind 8 to 11 mph increasing to between 19 and 22 mph. Winds could gust as high as 46 mph. Chance of precipitation is 40%.