Posted on Leave a comment

>Village Council Proposes New “No Stopping & Standing Zone” Near Somerville School

>Somerville
Despite spending $50K in late 2004 to construct a traffic safety speed table and cutout on South Pleasant Avenue near the Somerville School, Village Council members are still very unhappy with motor vehicle traffic flow and parking in the area.

On March 12, Ordinance 3108 was introduced by Council members. This ordinance, if approved, will ban all stopping and standing along the west side of South Pleasant Avenue between the hours of 7:00 AM and 9:00 AM and 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM.

So, regardless of the new traffic safety speed table and cutout, which were constructed to facilitate drop offs and pick ups on the west side of South Pleasant Avenue, Council members plan to ban this practice.

The Fly thinks this will create even more of a traffic mess in the area. What do you think?

show?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=139586

Posted on Leave a comment

Valley expansion plan under fire

Valley_Hospital_theridgewoodblog

>012508valley
Valley expansion plan under fire

Saturday, March 22, 2008
Last Updated Saturday March 22, 2008, EDT 9:48 AMBY BOB GROVESThe cost of Valley Hospital’s proposed expansion would threaten Ridgewood’s taxpayers and the future of the facility, critics charged.

Valley’s $750 million plan to replace two of its older buildings with three new ones over the next decade could balloon, with interest, to $1 billion — and that would require the hospital to earn an additional $40 million a year for 25 years to pay it off, said Paul Gould. He is a member and spokesman of Concerned Residents of Ridgewood, a neighborhood group that has opposed Valley’s expansion plans for months.

“Where will it come from?” Gould said. “Will we end up with another Pascack Valley?” The Westwood hospital went bankrupt and closed last year after building a $50 million addition.

On the contrary, Valley’s plan “is vital to its success,” said Maureen Curran Kleinman, a hospital spokeswoman.

“If Valley is not allowed to renew over time, we will not be the hospital that the community will choose for its medical care in the future,” Kleinman said in a statement. “It will impede our ability to attract the best physicians and staff, and the hospital would be at risk of facing the same unfortunate fate as Pascack Valley and many other New Jersey hospitals that have been forced to close their doors.”

The Ridgewood Planning Board is deciding whether to approve separate requests, by Valley and by Concerned Residents, for changes in the village’s hospital zone ordinances and master plan. Those changes would either allow the hospital to expand or preserve the surrounding neighborhood.

Beyond financial concerns about the hospital’s plan, Gould and other members of his group worry how much Valley’s expansion would cost the village.

“Taxpayers would absorb the additional infrastructure costs of roads, fire and police, which are paid for by the residents of Ridgewood,” he said.

If, for example, Valley increased its occupancy rate from its current 87 percent to 100 percent, to help pay for the expansion, that could add 80,000 car trips on village streets to the hospital per year, on top of 600,000 vehicle visits already made there annually, Gould said.

While other area hospitals have expanded or renovated in recent years, Valley’s $750 million plan is one of the most ambitious.

Gould’s group is worried that Valley will suffer the same fate as Pascack Valley, which succumbed to a $100 million annual debt after it opened an addition. The hospital closed in November.

“We do not want another bankrupt hospital,” Gould told the Planning Board during a public hearing this week.

But Valley officials say the hospital is not in financial danger.

Valley would finance the first phase of its expansion, estimated at $420 million, through tax-exempt bonds, fund-raising and existing cash, “as is typical financing for not-for-profit hospital projects,” Kleinman said.

Even after the project is complete, Valley’s debt will be “manageable and moderate in comparison to other hospitals,” Kleinman said.

Gould conceded that Valley “is very profitable today,” he said. At a time when many of the state’s hospitals are struggling financially, Valley hospital has $225 million in cash and investments and a $46 million debt, according to tax filings. Revenue increases by 8 percent each year, Gould said.

But to pay for the hospital to pay for the expansion, Gould said, net patient revenue would have to increase by an additional 8 percent a year. How will the hospital do that when it’s only adding three more beds to its current 451? he asked.

Valley officials have repeatedly said their building plan is being done to bring the hospital up to modern medical standards, not to bring in more patients. Will the hospital have to increase what it charges patients? the neighborhood group asked.

“Valley’s charges are among the absolute lowest of any hospital in the state,” Kleinman said. “Even after the project is in place we will still have charges well below other hospitals in New Jersey.”

The neighborhood group also claims that the Planning Board, through its attorney and other professional advisers, has already been negotiating with Valley officials about some terms of the expansion before it has been approved.

David Nicholson, chairman of the Planning Board, said its professionals had met with Valley officials, but denied that they had “negotiated” any of the proposal.

“The implication that this matter is already decided is simply not true,” Nicholson said.

Kleinman said the hospital met with village professionals to discuss the hospital ordinance and make a recommendation to the Planning Board, but not to negotiate terms of the proposed expansion.

E-mail: [email protected]

Posted on Leave a comment

>Village Hall – The Money Pit

>Bids Requested For Additional Flood Prevention Measures At Village Hall

VILLAGE OF RIDGEWOOD – NOTICE TO BIDDERS

Sealed bid proposals will be received by the Village of Ridgewood, in the 3RD Floor Conference Room, Village Hall, 131 North Maple Avenue , Ridgewood, New Jersey 07451, on Wednesday, April 16, 2008 at 10:00 am, prevailing time, and then publicly opened and read aloud for the following project: Village Hall Flood Protection Project

The work of the Contract shall be to construct and furnish the following flood protection measures for Village Hall:

“Approximately 80 linear feet of 3-foot tall stucco finished reinforced concrete wall.

“Approximately 70 linear feet of 3-foot tall stucco finished face, formed reinforced concrete wall.

“Two 3-foot tall stucco finished reinforced concrete end pillars with seating benches for mounting Doordam panels.

“Approximately 100 linear feet of Doordam Panels with mounting pillars, mullions, brackets, and all necessary appurtenances for a complete installation for flood protection.

“Site landscaping and sidewalk restoration, as needed.

The Body Shop - Free Body Butter

Posted on Leave a comment

>April showers bring May flowers ?

>spring+time


So what to do when you dog has to go? If your down town be aware that many merchants in town maintain the flower beds around the trees in town and it makes there job of beautifying the town more difficult if you allow your dogs to relieve themselves in those beds, yes its not illegal but its just plain rude, so lets work together and keep the Village of Ridgewood a beautiful place.……

1-800-FLOWERS.COMshow?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=100462

Posted on Leave a comment

>How did this all come to pass? A History Lesson

>Hi PJ,

My name is Richard . I grew up in Ridgewood, moved away, went to Georgetwon and Columbia B-School, found myself a wife and moved her back to Ridgewood with me in 2005.

Between your blog and other sources I have learned what a mess the BOE and the math curriculum are and I have just one question that I hope you can help me with: How did this all come to pass? I came back to Ridgewood late in the game and things had already been moving.

Where is the acting superintendent?
Why did the new guy who was hired disappear?
How did the elementary schools end up with 3 different math curricula?
Why did the BOE feel the need to change the old (traditional?) math system?

I guess, just like at my company, when people barge in my office with a problem I find it easier to make our way back to the light when I know how we got into the mess to start with.

If you don’t know all these answers maybe you can point me to someone else who may.
I trust your judgement based on all I have read on your blog and I appreciate that you keep the thing up at all!

Here’s my own contact info as well

Best regards PJ,

Richard

Posted on Leave a comment

>The Gang That Couldn’t Shoot Straight… but They Can Do Damage Anyway

>The Gang That Couldn’t Shoot Straight… but They Can Do Damage Anyway

By Steve Lonegan

It is clear that the big-government radicals that are running Trenton will stop at nothing to advance their vision of an even bigger nanny state. So much so that they will pass drastically flawed and dangerous bills that will destroy New Jersey’s competitive business climate in favor of emotion based, job destroying politics. This time, however, they got caught.

New Jersey taxpayers will be expected to fork over another $130 million in new taxes to seed the launch of the radical Paid Family Leave bill and small businesses already struggling in the nation’s worst business environment will be sacrificed on the alter of entitlement.

The destructive Paid Family Leave bill will go back to the Senate for another round of hearings and voting. The bill, which allows every single worker in the state six weeks Paid Leave for virtually any reason at all with pay of up to $550, is so deficient it would result in crippling lawsuits for New Jersey’s beleaguered small businesses.

After prompting from conservative legislators, AFP Citizen Activists and Members of the NJBIA, Attorney General Ann Milgram issued an opinion stating the bill is too vague and opens the small business community to costly litigation. The bill’s proponents are so committed to advancing their socialist agenda and expanding the entitlement state they will stop at nothing to advance what they consider the “Common Good,” no matter what the cost.

Left to their own devices, the backers of this bill would have sought a way to by-pass Senate rules and shove this bill through this past Monday. Thanks to Senator Tom Kean, Republican Minority Leader, it became obvious the required thirty votes would not be there for an emergency vote.

The real lesson here is the willingness of those we elect to represent us to railroad destructive legislation past the voters in order to gain favor from state worker union leaders. It is impossible to believe the Senators who voted to pass the dangerous PFL legislation did not realize the potential for trouble. Set aside the basic fact this is bad policy—the fact that they were willing to ignore clear issues of litigation and costly business destroying lawsuits for the bill’s benefit reveals a far more insidious motive. Even legal laymen were questioning the bill’s disastrous side effects, but the Trenton gang did not care. They just wanted to gain favor from those labor union bosses looking down from the gallery.

They were caught this time. The Senate will have to vote again. Now that we have revealed their lack of consideration for the business community and taxpayers, we must convince more of our taxpayers to pick up the phone and call Senators who voted yes and get them to change their votes.

Here they are. Call them now!

JOHN H. ADLER – Democrat (856)-489-3442
BILL BARONI – Republican (609)-631-9988
BARBARA BUONO – Democrat (732)-205-1372
RICHARD J. CODEY – Democrat (973)-731-6770
SANDRA B. CUNNINGHAM – Democrat (201)-451-5100
NIA H. GILL, ESQ. – Democrat (973)-509-0388
JOHN A. GIRGENTI – Democrat (973)-427-1229
ROBERT M. GORDON – Democrat (201)-703-9779
RAYMOND J. LESNIAK – Democrat (908)-624-0880
FRED H. MADDEN, JR. – Democrat (856)-232-6700
DANA REDD – Democrat (856)-384-5862
RONALD L. RICE – Democrat (973)-371-5665
M. TERESA RUIZ – Democrat (973)-484-1000
NICHOLAS J. SACCO – Democrat (201)-295-0200
PAUL A. SARLO – Democrat (201)-804-8118
NICHOLAS P. SCUTARI – Democrat (908)-587-0404
BOB SMITH – Democrat (732)-752-0770
BRIAN P. STACK – Democrat (201)-330-3233
STEPHEN M. SWEENEY – Democrat (856)-251-9801
SHIRLEY K. TURNER – Democrat (609)-530-3277
LORETTA WEINBERG – Democrat (201)-928-0100
JOSEPH F. VITALE – Democrat (732)-855-7441
JIM WHELAN – Democrat (609)-383-1388
show?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=56753

Posted on Leave a comment

>Were we not told repeatedly the new assessment would lower property taxes ?

>”As far as the budget goes, you should give Bombace credit for suggesting that they not take the full 4% increase in the budget.

Doesn’t the BOE realize that higher school budget=higher property taxes. New assessments, lower home equity, lower stock accounts, lower interest rates on savings = we don’t want to pay another dime for tutors because you can’t teach our kids math.

Are we all so wealthy in this town that we can take a recession and pay higher school taxes and pay for tutors for afterschooling? “

Match.com

Posted on Leave a comment

>Happy St. Patrick’s Day

>SP 00034 C~St Patrick s Day Green Beer Posters
ABOUT SAINT PATRICK

Saint Patrick is believed to have been born in the late fourth century, and is often confused with Palladius, a bishop who was sent by Pope Celestine in 431 to be the first bishop to the Irish believers in Christ.

Saint Patrick was the patron saint and national apostle of Ireland who is credited with bringing christianity to Ireland. Most of what is known about him comes from his two works, the Confessio, a spiritual autobiography, and his Epistola, a denunciation of British mistreatment of Irish christians. Saint Patrick described himself as a “most humble-minded man, pouring forth a continuous paean of thanks to his Maker for having chosen him as the instrument whereby multitudes who had worshipped idols and unclean things had become the people of God.”

Saint Patrick is most known for driving the snakes from Ireland. It is true there are no snakes in Ireland, but there probably never have been – the island was separated from the rest of the continent at the end of the Ice Age. As in many old pagan religions, serpent symbols were common and often worshipped. Driving the snakes from Ireland was probably symbolic of putting an end to that pagan practice. While not the first to bring christianity to Ireland, it is Patrick who is said to have encountered the Druids at Tara and abolished their pagan rites. The story holds that he converted the warrior chiefs and princes, baptizing them and thousands of their subjects in the “Holy Wells” that still bear this name.

There are several accounts of Saint Patrick’s death. One says that Patrick died at Saul, Downpatrick, Ireland, on March 17, 460 A.D. His jawbone was preserved in a silver shrine and was often requested in times of childbirth, epileptic fits, and as a preservative against the “evil eye.” Another account says that St. Patrick ended his days at Glastonbury, England and was buried there. The Chapel of St. Patrick still exists as part of Glastonbury Abbey. Today, many Catholic places of worship all around the world are named after St. Patrick, including cathedrals in New York and Dublin city

Why Saint Patrick’s Day?
Saint Patrick’s Day has come to be associated with everything Irish: anything green and gold, shamrocks and luck. Most importantly, to those who celebrate its intended meaning, St. Patrick’s Day is a traditional day for spiritual renewal and offering prayers for missionaries worldwide.

So, why is it celebrated on March 17th? One theory is that that is the day that St. Patrick died. Since the holiday began in Ireland, it is believed that as the Irish spread out around the world, they took with them their history and celebrations. The biggest observance of all is, of course, in Ireland. With the exception of restaurants and pubs, almost all businesses close on March 17th. Being a religious holiday as well, many Irish attend mass, where March 17th is the traditional day for offering prayers for missionaries worldwide before the serious celebrating begins.

In American cities with a large Irish population, St. Patrick’s Day is a very big deal. Big cities and small towns alike celebrate with parades, “wearing of the green,” music and songs, Irish food and drink, and activities for kids such as crafts, coloring and games. Some communities even go so far as to dye rivers or streams green!

Posted on Leave a comment

>Campaign News

>Lois & Maskin Respond to Questions – Answers online

Both candidates answered a set of 13 questions forwarded by a group of concerned citizens. The responses of Ms. Maskin can be found here. Greg’s answers are here. The popular “Ridgewood Blog” has sent questions to Sarah-Kate and Greg – their responses will be published on the Ridgewood Blog.

Have a question for the candidates? Please come to the League of Women Voter’s forum scheduled for April 1st at the Ed Center (49 Cottage Place, 7PM). Questions from the floor will be answered. Or feel free to email the candidates: click here to email your questions.

This week’s “Sneak Peak” Press Release

Sheila Brogan has served on the Board’s ‘Legislative Committee’ since 2005. According to Board Candidate Greg Lois “Ms. Brogan has failed to bring the needs of Ridgewood to the attention of the Legislature and failed to obtain a fair return for our schools.”

According to Lois, “Ridgewood has an average per capita yearly income of $51,638 (pop. of 24,936) and the State is taxing that income (at a graduated rate) averaging 6.37% per earner – That is 6.37% on $1.3 Billion dollars or at least $82,054,765 in tax revenue that goes to the State of New Jersey.”

According to Lois, “The State returns approximately $3,146,911 (in 2007) in State aid to our school district – we are not getting our fair share” of State funds. Lois stated that it was Brogan’s responsibility to bring this shortage of State funding to the attention of our lawmakers and community. Lois said that Brogan had “failed to bring the funding disparity to the attention of our Assembly and Senate lawmakers and by that failing had cheated Ridgewood out of necessary funding. . . Brogan presented long ‘legislative recaps’ to the Board of Education but did nothing during her current tenure to advocate for the Village Schools or bring this matter to the forefront.”

Greg Lois is an attorney and candidate for the Board of Education. According to Lois, the Board member who serves as the Head of the Legislative committee should be expected to “do more than just report to the people of Ridgewood – he should be expected to advocate for the people of Ridgewood and bring more of our own tax dollars back to this District.”

Other Campaign News

Sarah-Kate and Greg met with Dr. Monica Brown, principal of Somerville Elementary School on Tuesday, March 11th. One of the issues discussed was the increase in the number of students at Somerville.

Sarah-Kate met with the Orchard Home School Association on March 12th, answering questions brought by attendees. Podcast available here: link.

Greg and Sarah-Kate met with Principal Margy Leninger of Travell School and Principal Anthony Orsini of Benjamin Franklin Middle School on Friday, March 14th.

Sarah-Kate and Greg will be meeting with Ridgewood High School Principal John Lorenz and Ridge Elementary Principal Jean S. Schoenlank on March 17th.

Next Actions
Lawn signs are available – please click here to request delivery (be sure to provide your address). Please contact us if you can volunteer – volunteers are needed for April 12th & 13th (Saturday & Sunday)(phone bank volunteers needed).

Thanks again for your support.

* * * *
This email sent by Maskin & Lois for School Board, P.O. Box 30, Ridgewood, NJ 07450. Paid for by Maskin & Lois for School Board, P.O. Box 30, Ridgewood, NJ 07450. To be removed from this email list, please click here.

1-800-FLOWERS.COMshow?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=100462

Posted on Leave a comment

Valley Hospital ‘at a pivotal point’

Valley Hospital theridgewoodblog.net 131

>Valley Hospital ‘at a pivotal point’

Tuesday, March 11, 2008
Last Updated Tuesday March 11, 2008, EDT 9:01 AMBY BOB GROVESThe Valley Hospital needs more space to handle advances in medical technology and provide better patient care, officials said Monday.

“The hospital is at a pivotal point in its history,” Audrey Meyers, Valley’s president and chief executive officer, told the Ridgewood Planning Board. “Valley must be allowed to evolve over time.”

About 200 people, including supporters and opponents of Valley’s expansion plans, attended the public hearing. Valley’s $750 million plan includes adding a parking deck and replacing two buildings with three new ones, increasing the hospital’s size by 67 percent.

Although modern surgery involves less-invasive techniques, it requires bigger equipment than can be accommodated by Valley’s existing operating rooms, Meyers said. Under the plan, Valley would add just three beds to its existing 451 beds, but the hospital wants to make all its room private in keeping with current standards of care, Meyers said.

The population of Valley’s service area is relatively stable and expected to grow by only 4 percent in the next 10 years, she said. “The demand for change at Valley will be driven by changes in technology and patient care delivery,” she said.

Opponents say the proposed 80-foot-tall hospital buildings don’t belong in the residential neighborhood because they would overshadow homes as well as Benjamin Franklin Middle School.

Answering concerns by nearby residents that the expansion would increase traffic, Meyers said that the hospital’s nine off-site facilities have already eliminated more than 673,000 car trips per year to the hospital’s main campus.

Tuesday night’s special Planning Board meeting at George Washington Middle School was its fourth public hearing on Valley’s proposal.

The next meeting will take place next Tuesday, when Concerned Residents of Ridgewood, a group that opposes the hospital’s plan, will make their arguments before the Planning Board.

In January, the residents group applied to amend the village Master Plan and its hospital zone ordinance to “limit its impact on the community and preserve the village’s residential character.” The group also asked the Village Council and the Planning Board to amend the ordinance to change the minimum distance — from the current 40 feet, to a proposed 80 feet — that hospital buildings must be set back from North Van Dien and Linwood Avenues.

“We want further clarification about whether the hospital has changed any of its positions from 12 months ago — particularly the magnitude and scale of the proposed development — following the public outcry,” Paul Gould, a member of the group, said before the meeting.

David Nicholson, chairman of the Planning Board, said the board would consider the request by the hospital and concerned residents “as legitimate and equal” and will consider them simultaneously. “The board will then make its decision whether it will consider any changes — one or the other or one of our own devising — to the ordinances,” he said. “My hope is we will make a decision by the end of April.”

E-mail: [email protected]

Posted on Leave a comment

>Panel Proposes Streamlining Math

>March 13, 2008
Panel Proposes Streamlining Math
By TAMAR LEWIN

American students’ math achievement is “at a mediocre level” compared with that of their peers worldwide, according to a new report by a federal panel. The panel said that math curriculums from preschool to eighth grade should be streamlined to focus on key skills — the handling of whole numbers and fractions, and certain aspects of geometry and measurement — to prepare students to learn algebra.

“The sharp falloff in mathematics achievement in the U.S. begins as students reach late middle school, where, for more and more students, algebra course work begins,” said the report of the National Mathematics Advisory Panel, appointed two years ago by President Bush. “Students who complete Algebra II are more than twice as likely to graduate from college, compared to students with less mathematical preparation.”

The report, to be released Thursday, spells out specific goals for students. For example, it says that by the end of the third grade, students should be proficient in adding and subtracting whole numbers; two years later, they should be proficient in multiplying and dividing them. By the end of sixth grade, it says, students should have mastered the multiplication and division of fractions and decimals.

The report tries to put to rest the long and heated debate over math teaching methods. Parents and teachers in school districts across the country have fought passionately over the relative merits of traditional, or teacher-directed, instruction, in which students are told how to solve problems and then are drilled on them, as opposed to reform or child-centered instruction, which emphasizes student exploration and conceptual understanding. The panel said both methods have a role.

“There is no basis in research for favoring teacher-based or student-centered instruction,” said Dr. Larry R. Faulkner, the chairman of the panel, at a briefing for reporters on Wednesday. “People may retain their strongly held philosophical inclinations, but the research does not show that either is better than the other.”

Districts that have made ‘’all-encompassing decisions to go one way or the other,” he said, should rethink those decisions, and intertwine different methods of instruction to help students develop a broad understanding of math.

“To prepare students for algebra, the curriculum must simultaneously develop conceptual understanding, computational fluency and problem-solving skills,” the report said. “Debates regarding the relative importance of these aspects of mathematical knowledge are misguided. These capabilities are mutually supportive, .”

The president convened the panel to advise on how to improve math education for the nation’s children. Its members include math and psychology professors from leading universities, a middle-school math teacher and the president of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics.

Closely tracking an influential 2006 report by the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, the panel said that the math curriculum should include fewer topics, and then spend enough time on each of them to make it is learned in depth and need not be revisited in later grades. This is how top-performing nations approach the curriculum.

After a similar advisory panel on reading made its recommendations in 2000, the federal government used the report as a guide for awarding $5 billion in federal grants to promote reading proficiency.

The new report does not call for a national math curriculum, or for new federal investment in math instruction. It does call for more research on successful math teaching, and recommends that the Secretary of Education convene an annual forum of leaders of the national associations concerned with math to develop an agenda for improving math instruction.

The report cites a number of troubling international comparisons, including a 2007 assessment finding that 15-year-olds in the United States ranked 25th among their peers in 30 developed nations in math literacy and problem solving.

The report says that Americans fell short, especially, in handling fractions. It pointed to the National Assessment of Educational Progress, standardized-test results that are known as the nation’s report card, which found that almost half the eighth graders tested could not solve a word problem that required dividing fractions.

After hearing testimony and comments from hundreds of organizations and individuals, and sifting through 16,000 research publications, the panelists shaped their report around recent research on how children learn.

For example, the panel found that it is important for students to master their basic math facts by heart.

“For all content areas, practice allows students to achieve automaticity of basic skills — the fast, accurate, and effortless processing of content information — which frees up working memory for more complex aspects of problem solving,” the report said.

Dr. Faulkner, a former president of the University of Texas at Austin, said the panel “buys the notion from cognitive science that kids have to know the facts.”

“In the language of cognitive science, working memory needs to be predominately dedicated to new material in order to have a learning progression, and previously addressed material needs to be in long-term memory,” he said.

The report also cites recent findings that students who depend on their native intelligence learn less than those who believe that success depends on how hard they work. Dr. Faulkner said the current “talent-driven approach to math, that either you can do it or you can’t, like playing the violin” needed to be changed.

“Experimental studies have demonstrated that changing children’s beliefs from a focus on ability to a focus on effort increases their engagement in mathematics learning, which in turn improves mathematics outcomes,” the report says “When children believe that their efforts to learn make them ‘smarter,’ they show greater persistence in mathematics learning.”

The report makes a plea for shorter and more accurate math textbooks. Given the shortage of elementary teachers with a solid grounding in math, the report recommends further research on the use of math specialists to teach several different elementary grades, as is done in many top-performing nations.

The report also recommends a revamping of the math content on the national assessment test, to focus on the same skills that the report emphasizes.

Here are the panel’s recommended benchmarks for elementary school math education:

Benchmarks in Math Education Fluency With Whole Numbers

1 By the end of Grade 3, students should be proficient with the addition and subtraction of whole numbers.

2 By the end of Grade 5, students should be proficient with multiplication and division of whole numbers.

Fluency With Fractions

1 By the end of Grade 4, students should be able to identify and represent fractions anddecimals, and compare them on a number line or with other common representations offractions and decimals.

2 By the end of Grade 5, students should be proficient with comparing fractions and decimalsand common percents, and with the addition and subtraction of fractions and decimals.

3 By the end of Grade 6, students should be proficient with multiplication and division offractions and decimals.

4 By the end of Grade 6, students should be proficient with all operations involving positiveand negative integers.

5 By the end of Grade 7, students should be proficient with all operations involving positiveand negative fractions.

6 By the end of Grade 7, students should be able to solve problems involving percent, ratio,and rate and extend this work to proportionality.

Geometry and Measurement

1 By the end of Grade 5, students should be able to solve problems involving perimeter andarea of triangles and all quadrilaterals having at least one pair of parallel sides (i.e.,trapezoids).

2 By the end of Grade 6, students should be able to analyze the properties of two-dimensional shapes and solve problems involving perimeter and area, and analyze the properties of three dimensional shapes and solve problems involving surface area and volume.

3 By the end of Grade 7, students should be familiar with the relationship between similar triangles and the concept of the slope of a line.

Source: National Mathematics Advisory Panel, 2008.

Posted on Leave a comment

>A solution to how to teach math: Subtract

>A solution to how to teach math: Subtract

By Greg Toppo, USA TODAY
WASHINGTON — Wondering why your child isn’t learning enough math in school? Her textbook may be too thick.

In an unprecedented effort, a blue-ribbon panel commissioned by President Bush has been working since 2006 to find out why the math skills of U.S. students pale next to those in so many other industrialized nations. The 20 respected scholars scoured more than 16,000 research studies, heard testimony in eight cities and argued among themselves — sometimes heatedly — for nearly two years.

CHART: What kids need to know — and when
In the end, they found a math instruction system that’s “broken and must be fixed” if the USA is to compete with established economic powers or emerging ones such as China.

In its long-awaited report, out today, the National Math Panel zeroes in on several factors:

•Children badly need both automatic recall of math facts and understanding of big concepts, in effect declawing both sides in the decades-long “math wars.”

•Based on brain research, Americans should look at prowess in math less as a talent than as the result of sheer hard work.

•Schools must streamline their math courses, focusing on “a well-defined set of the most critical topics” from early elementary school through middle school. “Any approach that continually revisits topics year after year without closure is to be avoided,” the report says.

If widely adopted by states, the new approach could force U.S. textbook publishers to slim down their wares, forcing massive textbooks — some run 700 or even 1,000 pages — into extinction.

In their place would be books as slim as 150 pages to help children solidly learn just a few key skills each year.

“There is a problem of kids not feeling like they’re getting anywhere, that third-grade math is the same as fourth-grade math,” says panel chairman Larry Faulkner, president emeritus of the University of Texas at Austin.

Math books are much smaller in many countries with higher mathematics achievement, the panel says.

“In the U.S., we’re trying to teach first-graders 20-some topics,” says Michigan State University professor William Schmidt.

Schmidt, who is not a member of the panel, agrees with the finding that math curriculums often lacks coherence. “You’re trying to do everything everywhere,” he says.

The panel lays out a plan for a “focused, coherent progression” of skills. The progression includes fluency in adding and subtracting whole numbers by the end of third grade, and multiplying and dividing whole numbers by the end of fifth grade. Students should be able to solve problems involving percent, ratio and rate by the end of seventh grade.

The panel issues a call for an “authentic algebra course” for many students by eighth grade and a greater emphasis on fractions for young students.

Teachers told the panel students’ biggest deficiency was a poor command of fractions, Faulkner says.

The panel suggests updating the National Assessment of Educational Progress, a federally administered test, to emphasize mastery of fractions and other pre-algebra skills.

The report, to be delivered today to Education Secretary Margaret Spellings, could spark an effort to create a federally funded math program, much as the 2000 National Reading Panel led to the $1-billion-a-year Reading First program for early elementary grades.

“There was a recognition that we had to do for math what had been done for reading, which is to settle some of these long-standing skirmishes and get a better understanding about the core things that we know,” Spellings says. “Educators are hungry for it, looking for it. This will be well-received.”

On the “talent” question, Faulkner says the research is clear: “Effort counts. Students who believe that working hard will make them smarter in math actually do achieve better.”

The belief that people who are good in math are simply born good at it is “not a cultural belief that’s shared in China,” he says.

What kids need to know — and when

After two years of work, the National Math Panel issues its recommendations today. They include calls for greater emphasis on fractions, algebra and key “benchmark” skills in early grades. Here’s a sample:

Fluency with whole numbers Fluency with fractions Geometry and measurement

Grade 3 •Add and subtract

Grade 4 •Identify and use fractions and decimals, and compare them on a number line

Grade 5 •Multiply and divide •Compare fractions and decimals and common percents; add and subtract them •Solve problems involving perimeter and area of triangles and all quadrilaterals having at least one pair of parallel sides (i.e. trapezoids)

Grade 6 •Multiply, divide fractions and decimals •Add, subtract, multiply, divide positive and negative integers •Analyze the properties of two- and three-dimensional shapes and solve problems involving perimeter and area, surface area and volume

Grade 7 •Add, subtract, multiply, divide positive, negative fractions •Solve problems involving percent, ratio, and rate and extend this work to proportionality •Be familiar with the relationship between similar triangles and the concept of the slope of a line

Posted on Leave a comment

>Cameras and guards alter the environment at the high school

>In a post 9-11 world, I understand that there are necessary security concerns that must be addressed. Over the past few years, the Board of Ed has been installing security cameras in all of the Ridgewood Public schools, with GW as the first pilot school. These cameras have two purposes. One is to help administrators catch students that commit vandalism or the like; the other is to provide a peace of mind for everyone in the building. Safety should be a pertinent issue in schools, and using technology to make the school environment a better place is a good thing.
To parents, the presence of security guards at the High School seems like a good thing. I see them as that too. They help direct traffic in the morning, patrol the parking lot for cars that do not have parking permits, and register visitors. I do not mean to belittle what they do; though I feel that they are not necessary – at least not the number that currently exist at the high school.

There are now security guards stationed at the main entrances at the high school, where teachers used to sit and sign people in. I appreciate that they help “maintain order” by walking around the school and doing other things, though I do not think an additional security guard is needed at the high school, as proposed by the Bd.
of Ed. In the 2008-2009 budget.

Cameras and guards alter the environment at the high school. The cameras, at least, help with locker room theft. But, I feel Ridgewood High School is a community high school, not a “public” high school that needs to become a secure fortress. Security measures are needed, but not to this extent. The school system should at least not expand the current security program. What’s next; metal detectors? It might seem far off, but I once thought security guards and cameras in the Ridgewood Schools were only a figment of the imagination.

I do not think RHS should add an additional security guard, as proposed by next year’s budget. What do you think?

-A Ridgewood Student

Hotwire

Posted on Leave a comment

>Reader says ,"Yes! Dropping a patient who signs the petition makes perfect sense. Think about it…"

>Yes! Dropping a patient who signs the petition makes perfect sense. Think about it…

What some of you, who are not physicians, fail to realize is that if Valley does not move ahead with their plans, one of the consequences will be that the hospital won’t be able to offer some of state-of-the-art equipment that would sustain Valley’s capabilities for decades to come. These are the unique resources that attract the best doctors and keep them at a hospital like Valley, instead of alternatives like Columbia Presbyterian.

Now follow me on this one…if you don’t support Valley’s plans by, say, not signing the petition, Valley won’t be able to purchase, install and support the most “cutting edge” technology. That in turn will make Valley a less desirable hospital for the “top” physicians, who can choose to practice anywhere they want, but, choose the relaxed setting of Ridgewood because Valley’s superior facilities make it unnecessary to work in NYC. Eventually, the doctor, who you think is so great will move on to a hospital in another city that is willing to invest to support his or her practice and making the cutting edge of medical technology available to his or her practice. After enough physicians come to the same conclusion, Valley will not be able to attract the next great young doctors and will eventually become a second tier hospital. You and I will both have to find a new doctor and settle for second rate care or go somewhere else.

So, before you get up on your soap box and brag about not signing the petition, pause to consider the very real and severe consequences of the collective actions of all the anti-Valley people like you over time. Keep in mind you are affecting the quality of your doctor’s practice and, ultimately, contributing to the decay of medical care in Ridgewood for all of us. You may poo-poo that idea and say that “your actions won’t really have that kind of impact.” But, you would be wrong. Why would the best doctors want to set up their practices in Ridgewood? The answer is that they won’t. And who will be responsible? YOU! Although, tou won’t ever accept that responsibility. You’ll blame it on the declining school system or some other issue. But, the fact will remain that the residents of Ridgewood chose not to allow Valley to invest in the future of YOUR medical care.

If I was your doctor, I would absolutely drop you as a patient, because you obviously don’t care about me or my livelihood and would be hurting my practice. So, if you come into my office and see a petition, you don’t have to sign it. But, just don’t let anyone else see that you didn’t sign it. Because, if I find out that you were voting against my opportunity to have the best medical resources possible for my practice, I am sure that I won’t have an opening the next time you call for that emergency appointment.

1-800-FLOWERS.COMshow?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=100462

Posted on Leave a comment

>If only Ridgewood Public School administrators and existing Board of Education members were so innovative and progressive …

>At L.A. school, Singapore math has added value By Mitchell Landsberg Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

March 9, 2008

Here’s a little math problem:

In 2005, just 45% of the fifth-graders at Ramona Elementary School in Hollywood scored at grade level on a standardized state test. In 2006, that figure rose to 76%. What was the difference?

If you answered 31 percentage points, you are correct. You could also express it as a 69% increase.

But there is another, more intriguing answer: The difference between the two years may have been Singapore math.

At the start of the 2005-06 school year, Ramona began using textbooks developed for use in Singapore, a Southeast Asian city-state whose pupils consistently rank No. 1 in international math comparisons. Ramona’s math scores soared.

“It’s wonderful,” said Principal Susan Arcaris. “Seven out of 10 of the students in our school are proficient or better in math, and that’s pretty startling when you consider that this is an inner-city, Title 1 school.”

Ramona easily qualifies for federal Title 1 funds, which are intended to alleviate the effects of poverty. Nine of every 10 students at the school are eligible for free or reduced-price lunches. For the most part, these are the children of immigrants, the majority from Central America, some from Armenia.
Nearly six in 10 students speak English as a second language.

Yet here they are, outpacing their counterparts in more affluent schools and succeeding in a math curriculum designed for students who are the very stereotype of Asian dominance in math and science.

How did that happen?

It’s a question with potentially big implications, because California recently became the first state to include the Singapore series on its list of state-approved elementary math texts. Public schools aren’t required to use the books — there are a number of other, more conventional texts on the state list — but the state will subsidize the purchase if they do. And being on the list puts an important imprimatur on the books, because California is by far the largest, most influential textbook buyer in the country.

The decision to approve the books could place California ahead of the national curve. The National Mathematics Advisory Panel, appointed by President Bush, will issue a report Thursday that is expected to endorse K-8 math reforms that, in many ways, mirror the Singapore curriculum.

The report could also signal a cease-fire in the state’s math wars, which raged between traditionalists and reformers throughout the 1990s and shook up math teachers nationwide. Fundamentalists called for a return to basics; reformers demanded a curriculum that would emphasize conceptual understanding.

Mathematicians on both sides of the divide say the Singapore curriculum teaches both. By hammering on the basics, it instills a deep understanding of key concepts, they say.

Kids — at least the kids at Ramona — seem to love it.

Ramona, which received a grant to introduce the Singapore curriculum, is one of a sprinkling of schools around the country to do so.

Not all teachers like it, and not all use it. The Singapore books aren’t easy for teachers to use without training, and some veterans are more comfortable with the curriculum they have always followed. But you can tell when you walk into a classroom using Singapore math.

“On your mark . . . get set . . . THINK!”

First-grade teacher Arpie Liparian stands in front of her class with a stopwatch. The only sound is of pencils scratching paper as the students race through the daily “sprint,” a 60-second drill that is a key part of the Singapore system. The problems at this age are simple: 2+3, 3+4, 8+2. The idea, once commonplace in math classrooms, is to practice them until they become second nature.

Critics call this “drill and kill,” but Ramona’s math coach, Robin Ramos, calls it “drill and thrill.” The children act as though it’s a game. Not everyone finishes all 30 problems in 60 seconds, and only one girl gets all the answers right, but the students are bubbling with excitement. And Liparian praises every effort.

“Give yourselves a hand, boys and girls,” she says when all the drills have been corrected. “You did a wonderful job.”

Reinforcing patterns

What isn’t obvious to a casual observer is that this drill is carefully thought out to reinforce patterns of mathematical thinking that carry through the curriculum. “These are ‘procedures with connections,What isn’t obvious to a casual observer is that this drill is carefully thought out to reinforce patterns of mathematical thinking that carry through the curriculum.

After 10 years of studying the Singapore curriculum, Yoram Sagher, a math professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago, said he still has “very pleasant surprises and realizations” while reading the books. Sagher, who helped train Ramos and the other teachers at Ramona, said he is constantly amazed by “the gentle, clever ways that the mathematics is brought to the intuition of the students.”

The books, with the no-nonsense title “Primary Mathematics,” are published for the U.S. market by a small company in Oregon, Marshall Cavendish I nternational. They are slim volumes, weighing a fraction of a conventional American text. They have a spare, stripped-down look, and a given page contains no material that isn’t directly related to the lesson at hand.

Standing in an empty classroom one recent morning, Ramos flipped through two sets of texts: the Singapore books and those of a conventional math series published by Harcourt. She began with the first lesson in the first chapter of first grade.

In Harcourt Math, there was a picture of eight trees. There were two circles in the sky. The instructions told the students: “There are 2 birds in all.”
There were no birds on the page.

The instructions directed the students to draw little yellow disks in the circles to represent the birds.

Ramos gave a look of exasperation. Without a visual representation of birds, she said, the math is confusing and overly abstract for a 5- or 6-year-old.
“The math doesn’t jump out of the page here,” she said.

The Singapore first-grade text, by contrast, could hardly have been clearer.
It began with a blank rectangle and the number and word for “zero.” Below that was a rectangle with a single robot in it, and the number and word for “one.” Then a rectangle with two dolls, and the number and word for “two,” and so on.

“This page is very pictorial, but it refers to something very concrete,”
Ramos said. “Something they can understand.”

Next to the pictures were dots. Beginning with the number six (represented by six pineapples), the dots were arranged in two rows, so that six was presented as one row of five dots and a second row with one dot.

Day one, first grade: the beginnings of set theory.

“This concept, right at the beginning, is the foundation for very important mathematics,” Ramos said. As it progresses, the Singapore math builds on this, often in ways that are invisible to the children.

Word problems in the early grades are always solved the same way: Draw a picture representing the problem and its solution. Then express it with numbers, and finally write it in words. “The whole concept,” Ramos says, “is concrete to pictorial to abstract.”

Another hallmark of the Singapore books is that there is little repetition.
Students are expected to attain mastery of a concept and move on. Each concept builds upon the next. As a result, the books cover far fewer topics in a given year than standard American texts.

Skilled at math

Singapore is a prosperous, multicultural, multilingual nation of 4.5 million people whose fourth- and eighth-grade students have never scored lower than No. 1 in a widely accepted comparison of global math skills, the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study. U.S. students score in the middle of the pack.

When the U.S. Department of Education commissioned a study in 2005 to find out why, it concluded, in part: “Singapore’s textbooks build deep understanding of mathematical concepts through multi-step problems and concrete illustrations that demonstrate how abstract mathematical concepts are used to solve problems from different perspectives.”

By contrast, the study said, “traditional U.S. textbooks rarely get beyond definitions and formulas, developing only students’ mechanical ability to apply mathematical concepts.”

Many eminent mathematicians agree. In fact, it is difficult to find a mathematician who likes the standard American texts or dislikes Singapore’s.

“The Singapore texts don’t make a huge deal about the concepts, but they present them in the correct and economical form,” said Roger Howe, a professor of mathematics at Yale University. “It provides the basis for a very orderly and systematic conceptual understanding of arithmetic and mathematics.”

The Singapore curriculum is not strikingly different from that used in many countries known for their math prowess, especially in Asia and Eastern Europe, math educators say. According to James Milgram, a math professor at Stanford who is one of the authors of California’s math standards, the Singapore system has its roots in math curricula developed in the former Soviet Union, whose success in math and science sent shivers through American policymakers during the Cold War.

The Soviets, Milgram said, brought together mathematicians and developmental psychologists to devise the best way to teach math to children. They did “exactly what I would have done had I been given free rein to design the math standards in California. They cut the thing down to its core.”

The Soviet curriculum was adopted by China in the mid-1950s, he said, and later made its way to Singapore, where it was rewritten and refined. The Singapore texts could easily be adapted for use in the United States because children there are taught in English.

“American textbooks are handicapped by many things,” said Hung-Hsi Wu, who has taught math at UC Berkeley for 42 years, “the most important of which is to regard mathematics as a collection of factoids to be memorized.”

One might think that school districts would be lining up to get their hands on the Singapore texts, but no one expects many to take the plunge this fall.

“Maybe in seven or eight years, but not yet,” said Wu. For now, he said he’d be surprised if the Singapore books claim 10% of the market.

In part, that may reflect the inherent conservatism of the education establishment, especially in large districts such as Los Angeles Unified, whose math curriculum specialists said in December, a month after the Singapore texts were adopted by the state, that they hadn’t even heard of them — or of the successful experiment taking place in one of their own schools.

But there is also an understandable reluctance to rush into a new curriculum before teachers are trained to use it. Complicating that, experts said, is that most American elementary school teachers — reflecting a generally math-phobic society — lack a strong foundation in the subject to begin with.

The Singapore curriculum “requires a considerable amount of math background on the part of the teachers who are teaching it,” said Milgram, “and in the elementary grades, most of our teachers aren’t capable of teaching it. . . .
It isn’t that they can’t learn it; it’s just that they’ve never seen it.”

Training is key

Adding to the difficulty is that the Singapore texts are not as teacher-friendly as most American texts. “They don’t come with teachers editions, or two-page fold-outs with comments, or step-by-step instructions about how to give the lessons,” said Yale’s Howe. “Most U.S. elementary teachers don’t currently have that kind of understanding, so successful use of the Singapore books would require substantial professional development.”

Although some U.S. schools have had spectacular results using Singapore texts, others have fared less well. A study found that success in Montgomery County, Md., schools using the Singapore books was directly related to teacher training. At schools where teachers weren’t trained as well, student achievement declined.

Sagher, the Illinois professor, said that he would love to see Ramona Elementary become a training ground for L.A. Unified teachers and that Singapore math could radiate out from its Hollywood beachhead. Districtwide, only 43% of fifth-graders last year scored at grade level or above in math, 33 points below Ramona students. “If LAUSD is smart enough to do it, it will be a revolution,” he said.

[email protected]