Category Archives: Education

Just added: ABEC’s Amazing Resource Wheel

ABEC Resource Wheel – This resource/networking wheel is an amazing one-stop information and learning resource. It describes and links various resources, groups, and topics supporting students, parents, business, and non-profits interested in improving education. To use it, just click the image, sit back, poke away!

Resource Wheel

 The Albuquerque Business Education Compact (ABEC) is a partnership of business, education and local government in the greater Albuquerque, New Mexico community.

 

David Foster Wallace Classic Commencement Address

David Foster Wallace Commencement Speech

In 2005, writer David Foster Wallace stood before the graduates of Kenyon College and delivered a memorable and impactful commencement address.

The speech, later turned into a book titled This Is Water, has become a classic to many, up there with Steve Jobs’ 2005 Stanford address. Videogram company The Glossary has revived Wallace’s words with a video visualizing the concepts described by the writer, who died in 2008.

The Glossary describes the speech as “the most simple and elegant explanation of the real value of education.”

No Rich Child Left Behind

This is a summary of a lengthy article in the New York Times Online, discussing why and how wealth and early child preparedness has affected, is effecting, schools and society.

Society … that’s you and me, by the way.       Click here to read the article.

  • Children of the rich perform better than middle-class or poor children (all grades, test scores, extracurricular activities, leadership, graduation, higher education).
  • While this has always been so, the test scores gap is 40% larger than in the 1970s.
  • NAEP scores (National Assessment of Educational Progress) have been rising for all populations since the 1970s.
  • The gap isn’t much affected either positively or negatively by K-12 school experiences.
  • It boils down to this: Rich students are increasingly entering kindergarten much better prepared to succeed in school than middle-class students. This difference persists through to high school.
  • The rich have more money and can (and do) focus more of it on early childhood education/experience.
  • It would be supportive to somehow improve the quality of parenting and early child environments.
  • Expand Nurse-Family Partnerships for single parents.
  • Provide greater support for maternity leave and day care.

One commenter named Howard, summed it up nicely, ” … to use another metaphor, the odds are against the seeds that fall on stony ground, no matter how good their genetic makeup.”

Click here to read the article.

Hector Slim Seade TELMEX CEO on education

“Education is the mainstay of modern society.”

So says Hector Slim Seade, COE of Telefonos de Mexico (TELMEX) in Time Magazine’s special advertising section.

“Nowadays, digital education represents one of the best means of overcoming poverty. We are convinced Mexico needs to be transformed into a technological society, one in which human capital will be key to growth.”

And this is also true(er even) for Mexico’s northern neighbor, New Mexico.

 

30 Years Later Nation Remains At Educational Risk

President Ronald Reagan’s Education Department issued the report “A Nation at Risk”  30 years ago.

This article describes what has, and hasn’t, happened since 1983, and provides interesting historical contexts for conversations about education today.

I’m linking to it rather than copying it to honor Philip Elliott’s AP copyright.

Hope you enjoy it.