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>Goodman Launches Mailbox Campaign

>0406081218a
An eagle-eyed citizen spotted a Laurie Goodman campaign flier tucked into the mailbox of a Village resident. This photo taken by cell phone captured the deed. The Fly wants to know why Mrs. Goodman doesn’t know that accessing a private mailbox without express permission from the owner is…well a federal impropriety? Mrs. Goodman, in addition to squashing dissent and removing our right to vote on school budgets, do you also wish to see our federal laws on this issue changed to suit your predilections?

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Kids being rushed past childhood.

>Ready, Set, Relax! is one town’s effort to stop hyper-parenting, in this exclusive excerpt.

Apr 05, 2008 04:30 AM
Carl Honoré

Ridgewood is the sort of place that comes to mind when people talk about the American dream. Nestled in the woodlands of northern New Jersey, this quiet, verdant town of 25,000 souls breathes affluence and well-being. The locals work hard at high-powered jobs in Manhattan, but they enjoy the fruits of their labour. Large, handsome houses sit on spacious lots dotted with swing sets and trampolines. Luxury sedans and shiny SUVs glide along wide streets lined with oak, dogwood and maple trees.

Move in a little closer, though, and this happy portrait starts to fray round the edges. At the school gates, around the tables in the local diner, and in the supermarket parking lot, you hear the people of Ridgewood voicing the same complaint: we may live inside a 21st-century Garden of Eden, but we are too damn busy to enjoy it.

Many families here are scheduled up to the eyeballs. Caught between work and home, parents struggle to find time for friends, romance, or even a decent night’s sleep. Their children are in the same boat, filling the hours not already occupied by school work with organized extracurricular activities. Some 10-year-olds in Ridgewood are so busy they carry Palm Pilots to keep track of their appointments. Eating dinner or doing homework in the car while travelling to swimming or the riding club is common here. One local mother emails an updated family schedule to her husband and two sons every evening. Another keeps her timetable pinned to the front door and the underside of the sun visor in her people carrier. With so many schedules to mesh, with so much going on, even getting toddlers together for a playdate can be a logistical nightmare. One of my favorite New Yorker cartoons was penned with places like Ridgewood in mind. It depicts two little girls waiting for the school bus, each holding a personal planner. One tells the other, “Okay, I’ll move ballet back an hour, reschedule gymnastics, and cancel piano. … You shift your violin lessons to Thursday and skip soccer practice. … That gives us from 3:15 p.m. to 3:45 p.m. on Wednesday the 16th to play.”

Unlike other towns, though, Ridgewood has taken a stand against overstuffed schedules. What started with a few moms grumbling over coffee at the kitchen table has blossomed into a mini-movement. In 2002, Ridgewood pioneered an annual event called Ready, Set, Relax! The idea is that one day a year this alpha town takes a breather: teachers assign no homework, extracurricular activities are cancelled, and parents make a point of coming home early from the office. The aim is to cast off the tyranny of the timetable, to let children rest, play, or just daydream, and to give families time together that is not built around driving to the next volleyball practice or band rehearsal.

Hundreds of households put down their planners to take part in Ready, Set, Relax! and the event has inspired towns across North America, not all of them as well-heeled as Ridgewood, to follow suit. To help out frazzled families, the school board in Sidney, N.Y., a blue-collar hamlet 210 kilometres northwest of here, no longer schedules any extracurricular activities or meetings after 4:30 p.m. on Wednesdays. In 2007, Amos, a small forest and mining town in northwestern Quebec, held its first activity-free day based on the Ridgewood model. Marcia Marra, a mother of three who helped set up Ready, Set, Relax! in tandem with a local mental health agency, hopes the tide is turning. “People are starting to see that when their lives and their children’s lives are scheduled to the hilt, everyone suffers,” she says. “Structured activities can be great for kids, but things are just out of control now.”

This is not a new panic. Warnings about children being overscheduled, racing from one enriching activity to the next, first surfaced in the early 20th century. Dorothy Canfield Fisher, a popular novelist-cum-parenting guru, warned in 1914 that American parents were stripping childhood of its “blessed spontaneity” by placing “a constricting pressure upon the children to use even the chinks and fragments of their time to acquire accomplishments which seem to us profitable.” In 1931, Ruth Frankel, a pioneering cancer specialist in Canada, described how “the modern child, with his days set into a patterned program, goes docilely from one prescribed class to another, takes up art and music and French and dancing … until there is hardly a minute left.” Her fear was that overscheduled children would grow so jaded that they would turn “desperately to the corner movie in an effort to escape ennui.”

That same worry has reached fever pitch over the last generation. Books with titles like The Hurried Child and The Overscheduled Child have carved out shelf space in the library of modern parenting. Even the kids’ section has tackled the topic. In The Berenstain Bears and Too Much Pressure, the famous ursine family goes into stress meltdown because Sister and Brother Bear are enrolled in too many after-school activities.

Why are so many children so busy today? One reason is the rise of the working mother. When moms stayed home, it was easier just to let the kids play around the house. But as women entered the workplace and the extended family dissolved, someone else had to pick up the slack on the child-care front. Extracurricular activities fit the bill perfectly, promising not only supervision but also enrichment. Yet putting children on a tight schedule is not always a response to the child-care gap. Many stay-at-home moms also sign their children up for endless activities. Part of this is self-defence: when every other kid in the neighbourhood is booked solid, who is going to indulge in free play with your unscheduled child? In our atomized, bowling-alone society, organized activities are also a good way – sometimes the only way – to meet other parents. Nor does it help that many extracurricular activities are designed like a slippery slope: you sign up your 4-year-old daughter for a weekly dance lesson, and then, before you know it, she has a class every other night and is travelling across the country to compete. Rather than rock the boat, though, we persuade ourselves that lots of scheduled activities are just what children need and want, even when they tell us otherwise. The other day I watched a mother drag her 3-year-old daughter from a nursery school near our house. The child was weeping. “I don’t want to go to ballet,” she howled. “I want to go home and play.”

No one is saying that extracurricular activities are bad. On the contrary, they are an integral part of a rich and happy childhood. Many kids, particularly in lower-income families, would actually benefit from more structured activities. Plenty of children, especially teenagers, thrive on a busy schedule. But just as other trappings of modern childhood, from homework to technology, are subject to the law of diminishing returns, there is a danger of overscheduling the young. When it comes to extracurricular activities, many children are getting too much of a good thing.

Wayne Yankus, a pediatrician in Ridgewood since the early 1980s, reckons that 65 per cent of his patients are now victims of overscheduling. He says the symptoms include headaches, sleep disorders, gastric problems caused by stress or by eating too late at night, and fatigue. “Fifteen years ago it was unusual to see a tired 10-year-old,” says Yankus. “Now it’s common.” Recently he hired a therapist to spend one day a week in his office to talk to families about the need to prune their planners.

The extracurricular merry-go-round can also ensnare the family in a vicious cycle. Parents resent children for taking up so much time and costing so much money – Britons spend £12 billion a year on their children’s hobbies, half of which are abandoned within five weeks – while children resent their parents’ resentment. Activities overload also squeezes out time for the unscheduled, simple stuff that brings families together – relaxed conversation, cuddling, shared meals or just hanging out together in companionable silence. Yankus sees this disconnect in many Ridgewood households. “When the snow comes and the activities get cancelled, everyone is horrified because they’re suddenly stuck at home and have to deal with each other,” he says. “They don’t know how to get along without a schedule.”

Ridgewood does not shut down completely on Ready, Set, Relax! day. Some residents regard the event as silly or patronizing. Sporting matches arranged with neighbouring districts are not cancelled, and the homework ban is not always as strictly enforced as it could be, especially in high school. Yet the town does feel different on the big day. With fewer soccer moms running red lights, the traffic is less frantic. People are more likely to stop and chat than exchange a brief nod before pointing to their watch and rushing off to the next appointment. To many families, Ready, Set, Relax! has been an epiphany. More than a third of those who took part in 2006 trimmed their schedules afterward. Consider the Givens. The three children used to be enrolled in so many after-school activities that there was barely time to eat, sleep or talk. Even though she felt overwhelmed and often found herself jogging round the supermarket to save a few seconds, Jenny, the mother, somehow felt that it was her duty to keep the family maxed out on extracurricular pursuits. “Every activity that comes up you want your kids to try, and you fear that you are failing them if they are not busy every second,” she says. “You want the best for them, but always at the back of your mind, even if you don’t admit it, you have the fantasy that they might turn out to be brilliant at something, that by signing them up for an activity you might uncover some latent genius.”

In the Given household, that translated into an eye-watering barrage of art classes, Spanish lessons, soccer, lacrosse, softball, volleyball, basketball, baseball, tennis, scouts and book club. Every weekend, the parents would split up to ferry the children to their various activities. At home, time and tempers were short. Ready, Set, Relax! came as a wake-up call. On the first night, the Givens made Mexican food and chocolate chip cookies together. Then they got down Cadoo, a board game that had been sitting unopened on the shelf since Christmas. The evening rolled along in a riot of laughter and cuddles. “It was an amazing revelation for all of us,” says Jenny. “It was just such a relief not to be rushing off to the next thing on the to-do list.”

After the Ready, Set, Relax! night, the Givens cut back, keeping only activities the children are passionate about. Today Kathryn, 16, does an art class, Spanish lessons, and a book club. Chris, 14, plays on basketball and baseball teams while Rosie, 12, concentrates on soccer, tennis and lacrosse. The whole family is more relaxed, and the children are all doing better at school since the cutback. The spirit of Ready, Set, Relax! has rippled out into other initiatives in Ridgewood. Every Wednesday, weather permitting, about 80 children aged 4 to 7 are now let loose in the playground of the local primary school. This is Free Play Day and parents are confined to the sidelines. Left to their own devices, the children skip, play hide-and-seek and tag, make up stories, throw balls around, sing and wrestle. The noise is exhilarating, the child equivalent of a Wall of Sound. To many parents it is a revelation. “It never occurred to me to do this, to just let them play like this,” says one mother. “You always feel like you have to be organizing something for them, but actually you don’t.”

There is, of course, something absurd – even a little tragic – about having to schedule unscheduled time, yet given the world we live in, that is probably the first step for many families. And clearly the Ready, Set, Relax! movement reflects a wider rethink.

Harvard urges incoming freshmen to check their overscheduling ways at the door. Posted on the university website, an open letter by Harry Lewis, a former dean of the undergraduate school, warns students that they will get more out of college, and indeed life, if they do less and concentrate on the things that really fire their passion. Lewis also takes aim at the notion that everything young people do must have a measurable payoff or contribute toward crafting the perfect resumé. “You may balance your life better if you participate in some activities purely for fun, rather than to achieve a leadership role that you hope might be a distinctive credential for postgraduate employment. The human relationships you form in unstructured time with your roommates and friends may have a stronger influence on your later life than the content of some of the courses you are taking.”

Most families that ease the load end up spending more time eating together. In a hurry-up, hyper-scheduled culture, where dining al desko, in front of the TV or computer, in the street or in the car is commonplace, the family meal often falls by the wayside. One study found that a fifth of British families never eat together. The irony is that many of the benefits extracurricular activities, including homework, purport to deliver may actually by achieved through the simple act of breaking bread en famille. Studies in many countries show that children who have regular family meals are more likely to do well at school, enjoy good mental health, and eat nutritious food; they are also less likely to engage in underage sex or use drugs and alcohol.

A Harvard study concluded that family meals promote language development even more than does family story reading. Another survey found that the only common denominator among National Merit Scholars in the United States, regardless of race or social class, was having a regular family dinner. Of course, we’re talking here about meals where both parents and children ask questions, discuss ideas at length and tell anecdotes rather than just watch TV and grunt “pass the salt.”

Why does a proper family meal pay such handsome dividends? When it comes to diet, the answer is obvious. A 9-year-old boy is more likely to finish his greens, or to eat any vegetables at all, in front of his mom and dad than when he is dining alone at the computer in his bedroom. Sitting around the dinner table, taking part in conversation, also teaches children that they are loved and cherished for who they are, rather than for what they do. They learn to talk, listen, reason, and compromise – all those essential ingredients of a high EQ. Of course, no one is saying that family meals are always a bed of roses. Sometimes they are sheer hell. Gathering tired toddlers, sullen teenagers and stressed parents around the table can be a recipe for open warfare. But then, dealing with conflict is part of life, too.

Excerpted from Under Pressure: Rescuing Childhood from the Culture of Hyper-Parenting. Copyright 2008 Carl Honoré. Published by Knopf Canada. Reproduced by arrangement with the publisher. All rights reserved.

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>RIP Bill Zisa of Westside Barbershop

>Guglielmo Zisa

ZISA Guglielmo “Bill”, 77, of Ridgewood died on March 26, 2008. Born in Italy, he moved to America in 1962. Bill was the current owner of The Westside Barber Shop in Ridgewood for forty-five years. Survivors include his loving wife Nunziata (nee Nicastro) Zisa of Ridgewood, his three beloved sons Dino of Long Valley, Phil of Hendersonville, NC and David Zisa of Ridgewood. He is the grandfather of five adoring grandchildren. Funeral Services, Saturday at 9:30 AM at CC Van Emburgh Funeral Home, Ridgewood. Interment to follow at Valleau Cemetery, Ridgewood. Visiting, Friday, 2-4 and 7-9 PM. For driving directions and online condolences, please visit: (www.vanemburgh.com)

Published in The Record and Herald News on 3/27/2008.

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>Alleged Drug Dealer Arrested In Ridgewood

>Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office
PRESS RELEASE

TO: ALL NEWS MEDIA
FROM: PROSECUTOR JOHN L. MOLINELLI
DATE: APRIL 3, 2008

Bergen County Prosecutor John L. Molinelli announced the arrest of ERIC JIMENEZ (DOB: 2/29/1988) of 792 Norgate Drive, Ridgewood, New Jersey on Tuesday, April 2, 2008 on drug distribution charges. The arrest came about as a result of an investigation conducted by members of the Bergen County Narcotic Task Force, under the direction of Chief Joseph Macellaro, the Ridgewood Police Department, under the direction of Chief William Corcoran and the Allendale Police Department, under the direction of Chief Robert Herndon.

On February 20, 2008, ERIC JIMENEZ sold approximately three and one-half (3.5) grams of Cocaine to an undercover detective of the Bergen County Narcotic Task Force in Ridgewood, New Jersey. On February 25, 2008, ERIC JIMENEZ sold approximately ten (10) grams of Cocaine to an undercover detective of the Bergen County Narcotic Task Force in Paramus, New Jersey. On March 3, 2008, ERIC JIMENEZ sold approximately ten (10) grams of Cocaine to an undercover detective of the Bergen County Narcotic Task Force in Ridgewood, New Jersey. On March 18, 2008, ERIC JIMENEZ sold approximately ten (10) grams of Cocaine to an undercover detective of the Bergen County Narcotic Task Force in Ridgewood, New Jersey. On April 2, 2008, ERIC JIMENEZ sold approximately one (1) ounce of Cocaine and one (1) pound of Marijuana to an undercover detective of the Bergen County Narcotic Task Force in Ridgewood, New Jersey. Subsequent to this narcotic transaction, JIMENEZ was placed under arrest without incident. A subsequent search of JIMENEZ’s vehicle revealed an additional two (2) pounds of Marijuana.

ERIC JIMENEZ was charged with the following: One (1) count (inclusive of five (5) separate dates) of Distribution of a Controlled Dangerous Substance, namely Cocaine, in violation of N.J.S.A. 2C:35-5a(1)/5b(2)-2nd degree crime; One (1) count (inclusive of three (3) separate dates) of Distribution of a Controlled Dangerous Substance, namely Cocaine, while within one-thousand (1000) feet of a School Zone in violation of N.J.S.A 2C:35-7-3rd degree crime; and one (1) count of Distribution of a Controlled Dangerous Substance, namely Marijuana over one (1) ounce, in violation of N.J.S.A 2C: 35-5a(1)/5b(11)-3rd degree crime. Additional charges for possession of cocaine and marijuana are to be levied against JIMENEZ when this case is presented to a Grand Jury for indictment consideration.

Bail was set at $75,000.00-no10% for ERIC JIMENEZ by Judge Louis Dinice, J.M.C., after which, he was remanded to the Bergen County Jail in lieu of bail.

Prosecutor Molinelli states that the defendant is presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt and would like to thank the Ridgewood and Allendale Police Departments for their assistance and cooperation in this investigation.

BERGEN COUNTY PROSECUTOR’S OFFICE
CHARGE INFORMATION FORM

DEFENDANT: ERIC JIMENEZ DOB: 02-29-1988
LAST KNOWN ADDRESS: 792 Norgate Drive, Ridgewood, New Jersey 07109

MARITAL STATUS: Single
PLACE OF EMPLOYMENT: Unemployed
LENGTH OF EMPLOYMENT: N/A
PRESENT POSITION: N/A/

ARREST INFORMATION

FUGITIVE: NON-FUGITIVE: XXXXX

DATE & TIME OF ARREST: 04/02/2008 @ 5:18 p.m.

PLACE OF ARREST/TOWN: Ridgewood, New Jersey

AGENCIES EFFECTING ARREST: Bergen County Narcotic Task Force, Ridgewood Police Department and Allendale Police Department

CHARGE AND STATUTE CITATIONS

Distribution of a Controlled Dangerous Substance, namely Cocaine, in violation of N.J.S.A. 2C:35-5a(1)/5b(2); Distribution of a Controlled Dangerous Substance, namely Cocaine, while within one-thousand (1000) feet of a School Zone in violation of N.J.S.A 2C:35-7; and Distribution of a Controlled Dangerous Substance, namely Marijuana, in violation of N.J.S.A 2C: 35-5a(1)/5b(11).

ARRAIGNMENT INFORMATION

ARRAIGNMENT DATE: 04/03/08 @ 9:00 a.m.
JUDGE: Hon. Louis Dinice, J.M.C
BAIL AMOUNT & CONDITIONS: $ 75,000 with no ten percent (10%) option
PRESENT STATUS: Bergen County Jail
https://www.bcpo.net/bcpo/blog/index.php

https://www.bcpo.net/bcpo/blog/index.php

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>The Ridgewood Blog wants to know, what are your feelings on the great debate?

>PJ – Can you please start a new thread on the League of Woman Voters debate, since this thread (about the RW Republican Club “Math Night”) has been hijacked.

Obviously there are many here who want to discuss last nights debate.

thanks!

a comment

You noticed that too?

Did you also see Charlie’s rude behavior?

This is what I saw…

Frances went up to ask a question and arrived slightly behind a questioner (I don’t recall his/her name). She then backed off, giving the questioner some space.

Then, after the questioner finished, Frances moved back up the center aisle to ask her question. At the same time, Hutton rises to ask a question and is making his way through his row of seats to the center aisle.

As this is happening, the moderator announces that this will be “the last question”.

Hutton arrives at the center aisle at the same time that Frances (in the center aisle) arrives at Bob’s row of seats.

There is the smallest microsecond of a pause (probably to avoid crashing into each other) and then Hutton muscles his way in front of Frances and heads to the microphone.

Then as bonus rude behavior, Hutton tries to ask TWO questions and is chastised by the moderator (with whom he trades words in an attempt to ask two questions).

Now clearly, Frances was “next” and should have been the last questioner. First of all, she was already queued up to be the next questioner and even if Hutton didn’t notice this, common courtesy dictates that a person exiting a row of seats, yields to the person in the aisle

Totally rude and totally wrong behavior, but Hutton must be heard! Unfortunately, this is what I have come to expect from Bob Hutton, so this boorish behavior was really not surprising to me.
BTW, Hutton also grandstanded the prior night at the Republican club Math night event where he turned a Q+A session into a soapbox attack diatribe.

But wait, there’s more theater from the self proclaimed guardians of all knowledge…

After Frances got muscled out by Bob Hutton and Bob finished fighting with the moderator and asked his ONE question, Frances went up to the microphone.

The moderator said that that (Hutton) was the last question.
Frances asked if there could be one more question, and before the moderator could even answer, Charlie (you just knew he couldn’t leave this alone) almost bolted out of his seat as he yelled (and I paraphrase, but you will see it when the tape is released) “NO! SHE SAID NO MORE QUESTIONS. THOSE ARE THE RULES”.

Frances might have said something to the moderator. Then someone in the audience yelled out “Let her ask her question”. There was a murmuring of agreement in the audience, but Charlie (looking like the veins were about to pop out of his head) again insisted “NO, THOSE ARE THE RULES”. Then someone yelled out “Well, let’s put it to the audience… lets take a vote” Finally the moderator took back control and allowed “One last question from someone who did not already ask a question.”

Frances was allowed to ask her question.

another comment …..

Goodman showed her true colors saying that she sided with the School Board Association in wanting to take the vote on the budget away from the public. Her comparison to state and federal budgets belies her ignorance of our representative system of government. Schools purposefully are left to “local” control with state and federal mandates to guarantee that an equitable service is provided. State and federal budgets are NOT designed to be local control because they provide for the function of state and federal governing bodies.

How can she not understand that because the budget has to go before the voters, it forces any board of ed to provide ample due diligence to the process, and to make it somewhat transparent. We can improve on this by moving the budget vote to the general election when far more voters go to the polls (a proposal the unions and school board assoc. fight tooth and nail). But if Goodman truly wanted public representation, she would have recommended such a move. Clearly, her sentiments lie towards a “dictatorship” model for a school board. Really scary stuff.

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>BOE Candidates Greg Lois and Sarah-Kate Maskin Address the Math Wars at the Ridgewood Republican Club

>

candidate+speaks

candidates+take+questions

candidates

Candidates Greg Lois and Sarah-Kate Maskin put on a good show at the Ridgewood Republican Club meeting explaining the math controversy. They were joined by Bob Hutton a BOE Board member who offered his take on the issue as well. About 30 people peppered the candidates with questions.
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>So much for group math.

>From the report of the National Math Panel: “The sociocultural perspective of Vygotsky has also been influential in education. It characterizes learning as a social induction process through which learners become increasingly independent through the tutelage of more knowledgeable peers and adults. However, its utility in mathematics classrooms and mathematics curricula remains to be scientifically tested.”

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>Over 100 New GeesePeace Volunteers Trained in Ridgewood

>IMG 0884
Over 100 New GeesePeace Volunteers Trained in Ridgewood

GeesePeace founder David Feld and Diana at Village Hall Comunity Center,
demonstrating how to addle eggs following the humane GeesePeace protocol.

Turnout was high at two GeesePeace training sessions held in Ridgewood on March 27. Over 100 volunteers from all over Bergen, Passaic, Hudson and Sussex counties in New Jersey, and Rockland County in New York, attended an afternoon session at Village Hall and an evening session at The Stable.

Ridgewood more than doubled its roster of volunteers, which grew from 16 last year to 35 this year. We certainly have enough people to continue the success we experienced in the Village last year, and expand out to cover our Bergen County parks and golf courses. Diana and Jim are working on assignments week of March 31. Time is of the essence, as we have already discovered and treated one active nest in town.

A big “Thank You” to Captain John LiPuma of the Ridgewood Police Department, who arranged for an officer to assist with parking, particularly at The Stable where the small lot overflowed its capacity quickly.

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>Two great opportunities…

>The Ridgewood Republican Club meeting…
Monday, March 31, 2008 at 7 PM in the East Room of the United Methodist Church, located at 100 Dayton Street across from Van Neste Park.

Tonight from 7:15 PM to 7:45 PM
Two speakers will explain and answer questions on the topic, “The Ridgewood Schools Math Controversy: Basis and Solutions”. The invited speakers are Greg Lois and Sarah-Kate Maskin, who are currently candidates for the Ridgewood Board of Education. (Election Day is April 15).

The League of Women Voters sponsors School Board Candidates debate…
Tuesday, April 1, 2008 at 7:30 PM in the 3rd floor of the Education Center, located at 49 Cottage Place.

All four candidates will be answering 3 questions posed by the LWV’s moderator and questions will be taken from the audience.

Take advantage of these opportunities to attend one or both of these open to the public events and hear what the candidates have to say.

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>Instructional practices come and go, and some should flee faster than others.

>The National Math Panel has scrutinized only the most rigorous studies to draw its conclusions. Not surprisingly, some of the panel’s findings cast doubt on techniques recently in use–even in the best school districts.

Below are some interesting points extracted directly from the panel’s final report. Administrators and teachers should take note of these, and consider them in light of current practices and future professional development. Schools of Education should also take a hard look.

The first list consists of direct quotes from the panel. The second list is a summary of this blogger’s views and opinions, mapped to the first list. The final list highlights a few points of interest.

National Math Panel statements about Instructional Practices
(these are direct quotes)
1.Claims based on Piaget’s highly influential theory, and related theories of “developmental appropriateness” that children of particular ages cannot learn certain content because they are “too young,” “not in the appropriate stage,” or “not ready” have consistently been shown to be wrong. Nor are claims justified that children cannot learn particular ideas because their brains are insufficiently developed, even if they possess the prerequisite knowledge for learning the ideas.

2.The sociocultural perspective of Vygotsky has also been influential in education. It characterizes learning as a social induction process through which learners become increasingly independent through the tutelage of more knowledgeable peers and adults. However, its utility in mathematics classrooms and mathematics curricula remains to be scientifically tested.

3.The Panel recommends the scaling-up and experimental evaluation of support-focused interventions that have been shown to improve the mathematics outcomes of African-American and Hispanic students. [However,] average gender differences are small or nonexistent, and our society’s focus on them has diverted attention from the essential task of raising the scores of both boys and girls.

4.All-encompassing recommendations that instruction should be entirely “student centered” or “teacher directed” are not supported by research. If such recommendations exist, they should be rescinded. If they are being considered, they should be avoided. High-quality research does not support the exclusive use of either approach.

5.The Panel’s review of the literature addressed the question of whether using “real-world” contexts to introduce and teach mathematical topics and procedures is preferable to using more typical instructional approaches. For certain populations (upper elementary and middle grade students, and remedial ninth-graders) and for specific domains of mathematics (fraction computation, basic equation solving, and function representation), instruction that features the use of “real-world” contexts has a positive impact on certain types of problem solving. However, these results are not sufficient as a basis for widespread policy recommendations. Additional research is needed to explore the use of “real-world” problems in other mathematical domains, at other grade levels, and with varied definitions of “real-world” problems.

6.The Panel’s survey of the nation’s algebra teachers indicated that the use of calculators in prior grades was one of their concerns (National Mathematics Advisory Panel, 2008). The Panel cautions that to the degree that calculators impede the development of automaticity, fluency in computation will be adversely affected. The Panel recommends that high-quality research on particular uses of calculators be pursued, including both their short- and long-term effects on computation, problem solving, and conceptual understanding.

7.Research has been conducted on a variety of cooperative learning approaches. One such approach, Team Assisted Individualization (TAI), has been shown to improve students’ computation skills. This highly structured instructional approach involves heterogeneous groups of students helping each other, individualized problems based on student performance on a diagnostic test, specific teacher guidance, and rewards based on both group and individual performance. Effects of TAI on conceptual understanding and problem solving were not significant. There is suggestive evidence that peer tutoring improves computation skills in the elementary grades. However, additional research is needed.

8.Use of formative assessments in mathematics can lead to increased precision in how instructional time is used in class and can assist teachers in identifying specific instructional needs. Formative measures provide guidance as to the specific topics needed for assistance. Results [of studies] suggest that use of formative assessments benefited students at all ability levels. More studies are needed. Formative assessment should be an integral component of instructional practice in mathematics.

Summary:

1.Piaget’s theories are not reliable for mathematics education. Interestingly, the constructivist approach to teaching is based on Piaget’s theories. This finding of the panel casts grave doubt on the validity of a constructivist model for the teaching of mathematics.

2.The use of peer groups for the purpose of students teaching other students has never been tested, and therefore should be used sparingly and with caution.

3.Teaching methods specifically intended to reach girls should be dropped.

4.”Discovery” has always been a useful teaching approach and continues to be. The “discovery” approach can once again take its rightful place as one of many teaching techniques, rather than the dominant or only one, as it has in constructivist schools and classrooms.

5.The broad policy of using real-world problems to introduce and teach mathematical concepts has not been sufficiently tested, and should be restricted to upper grades, and then only to certain domains of mathematics.

6.The use of calculators before ninth grade has not only not been tested, the panel cautions that their use before grade nine interferes with the development of automaticity and fluency. Therefore, their use should be dropped until studies can be done.

7.Cooperative learning helps develop computation skills but not necessarily conceptual understanding or problem solving. Until further testing is done, cooperative learning should be limited to use for developing computation skills.

8.The increasing use of “formative assessment,” also known as “authentic assessment” (assessment which is ongoing as opposed to traditional tests)is a good idea, and should continue.

A Few Points of Interest:

1.It is noteworthy that while the panel was quite negative about early use of calculators, they were much more positive about the use of computer-assisted instruction. So much for educators lauding use of all technology. They need to think a little more critically about which technology.

2.The practice of “formative assessment,” a method used increasingly in some schools and often referred to as “authentic assessment,” while understandably questioned by parents, has been tested and shows good results in the teaching of mathematics.

3.Teachers and administrators should pursue practices that have been well-tested, and must exercise restraint with regard to practices that are not sufficiently tested. Parents, taxpayers, administrators, and teachers need to place their trust in science and an eclectic approach, rather than any one “ism.”

4.With regard to the evidence that cooperative learning can help develop computation skills, so can computer assistance. Either way, the student is prompted to focus on drill, and the teacher is freed up to work with other students. However, gifted literature is rife with anecdotes of negative impact on the student who is leaned on too much. It is wise to exercise caution, therefore, until studies of gifted students can be scrutinized more closely to determine the extent of negative impact.

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>In the Village for April

>ridgewood+may+13+019

BOOKENDS
232 E. Ridgewood Ave.Ridgewood, NJ 07450201/445-0726(Fax) 201/[email protected]

Jose Canseco
Tuesday, April 1st – 3:30pm
Former Slugging Outfielder with the Oakland A’s and controversial Author, Jose Canseco will sign his latest Blockbuster: Vindicated!

Julie Andrews
Tuesday, April 1st – 7:00pm
Hollywood Icon known for her roles as Mary Poppins and the Sound of Music, Julie Andrews will sign: Home: A Memoir Of My Early Years… don’t miss this legend!!

Gene Wilder
Wednesday, April 2nd – 7:00pm
Star of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, Blazing Saddles, and Young Frankenstein, Gene Wilder will sign: The Woman Who Wouldn’t.

Linda Francis Lee
Thursday, April 3rd – 7:00pm
Former Texas Junior Leaguer, Debutante and author of the wickedly funny, THE DEVIL IN THE JUNIOR LEAGUE, Linda Francis Lee will discuss and sign her newest release, THE EX-DEBUTANTE. You really do not want to miss this one!

Mary Higgins Clark and Carol Higgins Clark
Wednesday, April 9th – 7:00pm
Mother and Daughter NY Times Best Selling dynamic duo of Mary Higgins Clark and Carol Higgins Clark will discuss and sign their latest thrillers: Where Are You Now? and Zapped: Regan Reilly Mystery Series #11!

Jesse “The Body” Ventura
Thursday, April 10th – 6:30pm
Former WWE Superstar and Former Governor of Minnesota, Jesse “The Body” Ventura will sign his new book: Don’t Start The Revolution Without Me. This is a “once in a lifetime opportunity” to meet this Legend!

Harlan Coben
Sunday, April 13th – 2:00pm
Ridgewood’s own New York Bestselling Author, Harlan Coben will discuss and sign his latest thriller: Hold Tight!

Match.com

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>Calculating a New Approach

>A report on math education fuels the debate about the Singapore model. What is it–and would it work here?
Peg Tyre
Newsweek Web Exclusive
Updated: 4:33 PM ET Mar 14, 2008

This week, after two years of deliberation, the National Mathematics Advisory Panel released their report aimed at improving math education in this country. And you could almost hear the sound of textbooks–that heavy one in your kid’s backpack, and a stack of high-stakes math tests, the kind your kid take every year–landing in the garbage can with a thud.

The advisory panel, made up of 24 educators and mathematicians, is all for textbooks and testing. In fact, the report specifically endorses regular math assessment. But after months of hearings, the panel was unequivocal that we need to change the way math is being taught–and the way we test it. Right now, it’s simply too broad, too unfocused, repetitious and, in the end, treated too superficially. Instead, the report recommends, “the mathematics curriculum in Grades PreK-8 should be streamlined and should emphasize a well-defined set of the most critical topics in the grades.” Teachers should focus on skills like computing with whole numbers, fractions, geometry and measurement. Most importantly, those skills should be taught in a coherent sequence so that by late middle school, more students have a proper foundation from which to unravel the elegant puzzles of algebra. “Students who complete Algebra II are twice as likely to graduate from college compared to students with less mathematical preparation,” the report says.

Which means that a lot of states are going to have to start scrambling. In most places, math standards, which are determined by the state and sometimes the district, are a hodgepodge of as many as a hundred different topics related to math: word problems, computation exercises, probability games. And teachers are required to cover them all in a single year. Textbooks, which are written to follow state standards, are also overlong and often incoherent. Take that math book out of your kid’s backpack and look at it. It’s likely to be a massive tome that includes chapter after chapter with photographs, puzzles, data charts, “Did You Know” factoids and even a few games. And the yearly assessments are often just as incoherent.

Instead, states need to figure out what’s crucial, when to teach it, and make sure teachers follow the formula. “The conversation needs to be, at every grade level, ‘What’s important here?’ ” says Francis Skip Fennell, president of the National Council of Teachers of Math, which came up with their own pared-down guidelines for math instruction in 2006, which strongly influenced the math panel’s recommendations.

The findings of the panel come when international assessments show U.S. students rapidly falling behind other developing countries. A 2007 assessment found that 15-year-olds in the U.S. ranked 25th out of 30 developed nations in computation, problem solving and math literacy. The panel was convened in 2006 by President Bush to address concerns about the lack of homegrown mathematicians, engineers and scientists.

The panel’s report tries to defuse factional tension between proponents of new math, fuzzy math, back-to-basics math and the like. The report says teacher-directed approaches (the skills-and-drills method) or student-centered approaches (based on individual or group exploration of math concepts) each have a place.

At the same time, the report will provide momentum to the small but increasingly influential group of math researchers and educators who see the curriculum used in Singapore, often called Singapore Math, as the gold standard. Singapore math is very lean, says Charles Patton, a software developer at SRI International and math-education researcher who is working with Singapore’s National Institute of Education. The Singapore curriculum flows coherently from one subject to another, culminating in algebra. “If you flip through the pages of an American math textbook and a Singapore math textbook, you begin to understand just how much thought and effort went into sequencing and wording. It is a very powerful and well-engineered tool,” he says.

Since 2006, when the NCTM published its guidelines, several states have begun looking at ways to simplify their math curriculum. But Patton cautions against schools simply grafting Singapore Math textbooks onto their already existing math program. Singapore’s teachers are trained by a single institution, which also provides the math curriculum, tests and textbooks. Teachers get about 100 hours of professional development to work on their instructional skills. “If you simply drop a Singapore math textbook into your math program,” says Patton, “it is bound to fail.”
URL: https://www.newsweek.com/id/123326

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>These are Negotiations!

>A recently discovered document by the Concerned Residents of Ridgewood created by Valley’s Architect’s TRO Jung Brannen . It is part of a larger record that the architects are using to track the negotiations between Valley and the Village Professionals. Notice they use words like Compromise, Proposed and Agreed. All words that are normally associated with negotiating. They also name the Village Planner as holding-out for a ratio of 4.2 car spaces after Valley at first offered 3.9 and then later offered 4.0. This shows that Valley is constantly changing the “margins” of their proposal to make it conform to feedback from the Village Professionals.

Irrespective of what the Planning Board might say, Valley’s professionals believe they are negotiating with the Professionals from the Planning Board! For Valley this has the effect of being a backdoor deal, avoiding the more transparent public process. It is expected that Planning Board professionals will give their “option” on the Valley proposal on April 1st. Then it is up to the Planning Board and Village Council.

https://www.stopvalley.com/TheseareNegotiations.pdf

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>From the horses math I mean mouth…

>Your community passion must be commended. Yes, it is fuzzy math…to adults. When taught in its entirety, students get it. So is this about us as adults and what we know or about student achievement?

Visit What Work Clearinghouse, www.w-w-c.org and justforkids.org. See what successful schools are doing to improve student achievement. EM is being used in quite a few places.

The big problem with EM is the sprial. It makes all of us uncomfortable because it is outside of what we know. We are uncomfortable because WE have to change our way of thinking that has served us well for decades. It goes to the very heart of what we know about school. So does using the Internet, IPODs, PDAs, or the fact that children are extremely disruptive at school and even at home. It is a difficult shift for teachers, parents, and the community.

But are they not worth making a change? Mathematics is not just arithmetic, even at the kindergarten level. In kindergarten, students visit concepts in all mathematical strands: numbers and operations, geometry, algebra, data analysis and statistics, and probability. That’s real mathematics that they learn.

No, they don’t know the facts like we would like them to know them. If you look at the standardized assessments, it doesn’t seem to be a priority either. But they have strategies for performing operations mentally and/or using tools that are amazing.

Before you condemn a program, learn about it. We were ready to give up on it, too. What we realized is that this program, this type of program is not going anywhere. NCLB has ensured us that not only will spiraling programs stay, there will be more. So we decided to accept and embrace it fully, then we would decide for ourselves. The results: we made 14% growth in mathematics scores!

The more we learned, using program and the Teacher Reference Book, the more we realized we did not understand at a deeper level. We memorized information when we were in school! We have a cohort of teachers from this school earning endorsements in Middle School Mathematics. Even the Pre-K teacher is going! The classes are not about EM but about mathematical concepts and the teaching and learning of mathematics. Our grade level meeting discussions are deeper and our conversations are always peppered with questions and things we have learned.

With parent workshops, our parents are starting to learn about mathematics, not just the program. We are honest about our struggles. It sometimes difficult to understand the point of some lessons. We use the EM website, email EM for clarity and talk about it. Most of the time, it is a topic we learned by memorizing years ago and now we need to understand it conceptually.

Ask a second grader with a teacher who is fully implementing EM what it means to multiply. The depth of their explanation and the ways they can prove it are amazing.

With FULL, UNSUPPLEMENTED, and SUPPORTED implementation you will get the results you are looking for from this program. Teachers will not do well with this program without intense professional development in their first two years of use.

Take the time and really find out what this type of program does for learning. Understand it has it draw backs, but so does NCLB. For all of the problems with it, the good outways the bad in working towards a quality education for all students.

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