An Imaginative Competition for Children

I recently received this announcement about a toy-design competition for children. I thought some of you might have a child who would like to participate or know a child who would love to do something like this.

Even if you don’t enter the competition, it’s a great idea for a project for inspire a child’s imagination. Perhaps yours!

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SALLY RIDE SCIENCE INVITES IMAGINATIVE KIDS TO ENTER SIXTH ANNUAL
TOYchallenge ENGINEERING DESIGN COMPETITION

SAN DIEGO – Toys are a great way too learn about science, engineering and the
design process. Sally Ride Science™ is giving students in grades five
through eight the chance to step out of their classrooms and develop their
engineering and design skills by creating their dream toy for the sixth
annual TOYchallenge™.

The mission off this fun-fueled toy- and game-design competition is to
motivate kids, especially girls, to get involved in engineering design and
recognize that there’s engineering in everything!

TOYchallenge 2008 will launch in the fall of 2007. Imaginative kids can
easily join in the fun. To get started, teams must: find an adult coach (18
years of age, or older) and sign up this fall; then choose from themed-toy
categories like Games for the Family or Get out and Play and start
brainstorming!

TOYchallenge information is available at www.TOYchallenge.com. Both boys and
girls in grades five through eight may participate, but at least half of the
members of each team must be girls. All submissions will be judged on
originality, creativity, engineering elegance, feasibility, design process
description, team participation and clarity of communication.

Sally Ride Science
Sally Ride Science™, founded by astronaut Sally Ride, is an innovative
content company dedicated to fueling young people’s interests in science,
math, and technology. Our publications and programs provide opportunities
for girls and boys to explore the captivating world of science – from
astrobiology to zoology. Our programs include Sally Ride Science Festivals,
TOYchallenge™, Sally Ride Science Camps, and Sally Ride Science
–After-School Programs. Our publications include award-winning science
books, science career books, a science newsletter, and Classroom Sets to
supplement science instruction. Sally Ride Science brings science to life
and shows young people that science is creative, collaborative, fascinating,
and fun. To learn more, visit www.SallyRideScience.com or call 800.561.5161.

Powerful Speech about Education

In the most recent edition of Education Revolution published a powerful speech to the Texas legislature delivered by Representative Cheri Isett. In response, she received an overwhelming ovation by the legislators, and her speech was published in the Quorum Report, an inside capitol rag.

As she left the room, the Sergeant at Arms who guards the door was in tears. He said nothing had ever been said in that room that was more important. He told her, "I was one of those kids."

If you’d like to know more about the publication in which I found this, you can go to Education Revolution and have access to numerous books and information about alternatives in education.

Here is the content of Cheri Isett’s inspiring speech.

I recognize that I am the most junior members of the House and for me to speak in this manner, I know, is highly unusual.  However, this may be the only opportunity I have to address this body on a matter that I feel is of utmost importance and lies deep within my heart.  In fact, what I am about to say to you, I believe, is so important that I am going to read it rather than speak freely as I am accustomed to doing.

HB1 is a good bill.  I am wholeheartedly behind reducing and restraining the growth on the egregious burden of property taxes in Texas.  I was glad to vote for it.  Carl stayed up way past his bedtime to watch the passage of HB1 and be a part of this historic legislation which you all have worked so hard on.

But there is something in this bill which grieves my heart.  Something I believe we will pay dearly for in generations to come. That is the education reform measures which, although well meaning, will be to the detriment of Texas children.  I am eager to see Texas children grow and increase in knowledge and education.  My goodness, I have seven of them.  I earnestly desire for the generation being raised up now to have greater opportunities than there were for the generation before them.  But I believe we are on a misguided path with increases in standardized testing and mandated course work.

I know, we all know, the utter frustration from parents and teachers and students over increased regiments and standardized testing.  I believe we would all agree that studying to a test and regurgitating is not a true education.  We would all agree that the minds of Albert Einstein, Ben Franklin, Thomas Edison, Samuel Morse, Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Michael Dell would never have tolerated such infliction upon them.  They would never have allowed their creativity and their courage to step into unknown territories to be held back by the boxes that we force our school children to conform into.

These children were created by God to be unique individuals with unique gifts and talents.  They are aching to break free from the tyranny of standardized tests and curriculum scope and sequence and express those gifts and talents.  But we have legislated them out.  We have told the artist that he has to pull back and cut back on blossoming in his chosen art because he doesn’t have time.  He has to take another math and science class.  We have told the very, very bright entrepreneur that his pursuits are worthless because he is not a good test taker and pulls our school ratings down.  We have told our teachers that they are not good teachers and don’t deserve merits for their efforts because the artists and entrepreneurs in their classes don’t deliver the goods in test results.

There is a whole world of knowledge and all of history to study.  We could never impart all of it to every child.  There’s just too much of it.  So who has the right to determine what body of knowledge has merit.  Who was it anyway that said every seventh grader needs to know all the parts of the cell and their function.  Why is that more important than, say, the intricacies of weather systems.  And why are either of those more important than any other body of knowledge which delights the heart of a child.  Who gives merit to one body of knowledge over another.  And yet, through our essential skills and standardized tests, we praise one type of learner and condemn another.  We tell our classroom teachers that it doesn’t matter that you want to reach the heart of a child . We want you to mold his mind to conform to what we believe is a productive, college-prepped student.

I challenge you, Members, in sessions to come as you discuss these crucially important matters, to break out of the box.  We can no longer afford to measure education success in terms of test results and rigorous curriculum.  In that arena, countries like China clearly have us beat.  They are disciplined, they are structured, they can produce multiples of what we can produce cheaper, not better, but more of it and cheaper.

The one thing other cultures lack which we possess and which we must fight to hold on to is creativity, imagination, and courage.  These are the things which we must foster in education if our children and our nation are to survive.  We need minds that are nurtured in discovery, not rote memorization.  We need individuals who are able to muster the courage to go where others have never gone.  We need to quit trying to cookie cutter every child in Texas schools and let the God given, God led creativity and excellence flow out.  We need to trust teachers to do what they have been called to do and quit micro-managing them. When it comes to accountability measures in exchange for state funding, we need to hold school administrators responsible for their stewardship of those monies, not place the onerous burden of performance on the shoulders of those who at this point are victims in this debate, the students and their teachers.  We need to quit telling parents that their child is a failure because he’s not raising our school’s ratings with his test results.

What I’m challenging you with will in itself require creativity and courage to do.  In the sessions to come, I’m challenging you to trust that children are naturally curious and creative.  Trust that if we as adults get out of their way, they will discover and grow in their world every bit as much between the ages of 6 and 18 as they did from birth to age 5.  We need to give the teachers in their classrooms the support and discretionary funding to explore and discover with their students. Not funding for more bureaucracy, but funding to buy state of the art equipment to learn on, funding to backpack over Guadalupe Peak,  funding to build a boat from scratch and sail it across a big lake.  We need to appreciate the value of apprenticeships and accordingly, to loosen child labor laws enough to provide for them. We need to stop burdening children with standardized testing which we would all have to honestly agree is not the measure of a true education.

Members, this is a big challenge.  I’ve seen more intellectual firepower in this room in the last three weeks than I’ve ever seen in one place before.  For the sake of our children, for the sake of our nation let’s use that firepower to find a better, more creative, more productive way to approach education reform than the road we’ve been on.

Thank you for allowing me to speak from my heart.

Watch this Inspiring Movie

I watched an inspiring movie yesterday based on a true story
Freedom Writers.
Erin Gruwell as a first-year
teacher chose to work in recently-integrated Long Beach School District in Southern California. She taught just after the riots surrounding the
Rodney King verdict. The first day she walked into her classroom, eager and
innocent, wearing her fashionable suit and pearls.

In walk her students—African-Americans, Hispanics,
Asian-Americans, and a few white students—all wanting to be somewhere else,
having
no interest in her or whatever her do-gooder-ness had to say. They were simply
putting in their time and, at best, tolerating her.

With each passing day, the interaction in the classroom and
her passion for her work, spiraled downward.
Just as she was about to give up
ever reaching them, ever getting past their protective bravado, she discovered
a teach-able moment that connected with them. The transformation and the love
affair began.

The movie authentically reflects the realities of life for
the youth.
The day-to-day struggle just to stay alive. Gangs as family and the
loyalty of being true to your own. Their hardness with their pain buried deep
beneath the surface.

The movie powerfully demonstrates what connects with young people, irregardless of their age, ethnicity, or cultural background. This is what works.

You have to show up as the person you truly are, with all of your strengths and limitations. This makes it possible for your child to connect with you. Children become distant and detached and manipulative when you try to be a good parent or teacher.

It’s all about relationship-the emotional connection between the two of you.

Every child wants to succeed in life and to lowingly relate with you. Sometimes they and you become distracted from this powerful desire and then the power struggles, impatience, and misunderstandings begin.

Old-Time Parenting Advice

As Doug and I prepare for our trip to Moscow and Kyrgyzstan, we have been
reading a book about Peter the Great and life in tsarist Russia.
In this
book, there was a quote from the Domostroi, a collection of rules written in
the mid-1500’s for everyday life for merchants and nobles.

“Punish your son when he is young, and he will give you rest
in your old age and will bring contentment to your soul.
Do not weaken in
beating the lad; for if you beat him with a stick he will not die, but will
rather be healthier, since by beating his body you save his soul from death.”

Whew! This is intense. It is interesting to me to see
diverse philosophies about how to raise children.
Today, most people believe
this approach from the mid-1500’s is appalling and would never consider
treating children in this manner.

However, there are still people who believe hitting a child
will teach her right from wrong and to respect her authority figures.
They see
nothing inconsistent about hitting a child as a means to teach him not to hit.
Then they are intolerant of this child for being mean and hurtful toward others
even though that is how they treat their child. The other possibility is their
child will withdraw, have physical health concerns or develop emotional problems,
such as difficulty focusing or shyness.

Here are some modern-days quotes from people who believe hitting a child is a good idea. A man in Tennessee says, "Punish little children when they misbehave, not to the point of abuse, but warm their little bottoms up. That should be the only place you hit."

This from a woman in Ohio, "A little swat on the leg sometimes corrects dangerous behaviors. The law should understand the difference between abuse and discipline."

Lastly, from a man in Ohio, "I had a few slaps on the wrist growing up, which probably kep me out of trouble and on the path to becoming a physician."

Parents, educators and society need to question what causes
“inappropriate” or troublesome behavior in children.
These do not happen
because of a personality flaw in the child. What we do affects our children
greatly. For the emotional wellness of children and of our society, we must
remember this. We must take actions that empower our children, rather than beat
them down or limit them.

Where do you stand on this issue?

Atstinence Class Effectiveness

Results were just released ordered by Congress  regarding the effectiveness of sexual-abstinence education programs for our youth. The major finding is that students who take part in abstinence classes are just as likely to have sex as those who do not. In addition, the youth in the study report having similar numbers of sexual partners, with or without the abstinence classes.

These findings indicate an important principle in child development. Children are children and will make choices based on who they are as people in alignment with their natural development. When we try to get them to stop being children based on what we tell them, we are seldom successful. Have you noticed?

Children pay attention to their own inner feelings and perceptions about reality. You can talk until you are blue in the face, and you will seldom see any results. In order to change their behavior, children’s inner feelings and perceptions of reality need to change. This is an inner change, not affected much by your good ideas.

What changes children’s behavior is their experience and what they see around them. This is where you can affect change. All the atstinence classes in the world and reminders about morality will not stop children from having sex.