ReportWire

Tag: intervention

  • Celebrating Educator Excellence with our First-Ever Discovery Education Award Recipients

    Celebrating Educator Excellence with our First-Ever Discovery Education Award Recipients

    McKenna Akane, Alberton School District, Montana

    McKenna Akane designs lessons that are interactive, relevant, and meaningful by connecting classroom concepts to real-world applications and experiences. Whether through field trips, guest speakers, or project-based learning activities, she helps students see the practical implications of what they are learning, sparking their curiosity and engagement.

    Mrs. Akane has developed a proposal for a Virtual Reality (VR) project and curriculum that will truly revolutionize the way students across the country learn and interact with Montana’s Indigenous community. Working together with the University of Montana, Blackfoot Communications, and several other local partnerships, she has developed a K-12 project to provide meaningful Indian Education for All experiences. Utilizing high-powered computers and 360-degree cameras, students will reach out to Montana First Nations to record language, cultural traditions, ceremonies, and document tribal history from different Nations. In partnership with a VR education company, her students will then create VR lessons and tours and upload them to the company’s course offerings where other students across the world will be able to connect and interact with Montana’s Indigenous People virtually.

    Frank Bogden, Loudoun County Public Schools, Virginia 

    Mr. Bodgen uses a variety of materials, technology, and resources to promote the development of critical thinking, problem solving, and performance skills in all students. Mr. Bogden has gone from creating Genius Hours in his classroom to creating a Makerspace complete with LEGO bricks, Ozobots, Makey Makeys, and two 3-D Printers! He is particularly proud of how he discussed and used green screens for a myriad of uses for students. His lessons have inspired students to apply various greens screens to create stories, provide summaries, and create reports on a variety of academic topics. 

    Mr. Bogden is also credited with bringing computer science and Discovery Education resources into every classroom in the school! There were many teachers who didn’t know about Discovery Education and didn’t know their students could complete many computer science projects and concepts. The innovative initiatives Mr. Bodgen has spearheaded provide real-world connections, foster curiosity, and recognize the uniqueness of each student.

    Rodney Crouse, Guilford County Schools, North Carolina

    Rodney Crouse captures moments to hook and leave students on the edge of their seats when he’s teaching. He finds creative and invigorating ways to take students on an amazing learning journey. He infuses content across all core subjects to make learning time meaningful for all levels of learners.

    Mr. Crouse recently organized a virtual field trip touring a local museum, the Greensboro History Museum. He knew that students may not be able to see or feel the artifacts and that it was important to get them as close as possible. 

    The nomination for Mr. Crouse explained, “He looks for new challenges and ways to evolve as an educator. It’s like he’s on a real-time mission and looking for the schools/students who need him, and he works with district curriculum staff to create units for teacher use. When you watch him teach, he engages and connects with every learner in the process. That’s how he writes units and plans lessonswith students at the center of the learning.”

    Debbie Martin, Frederick County Public Schools, Virginia 

    Debbie Martin inspires other teachers to utilize resources, including Discovery Education tools, to allow students to independently discover, work collaboratively, and access curriculum in a way that helps them make sense of the world. Ms. Martin takes a vested interest in all she works with, both adults and students, to ensure they have access to the highest quality instructional support and resources.

    Ms. Martin led the district to increase the use of Discovery Education as a meaningful and intentional resource that drives student learning, specifically in social studies and science. Ms. Martin used her knowledge of Discovery Education tools, along with her excitement, to help teachers find valuable tools to provide direct instruction, independent discovery for students, collaborative activities, and even leveled reading. 

    As Ms. Martin wraps up her career as an educator, her growth is immeasurable. Her ability to coach teachers so that they are driving their own learning and discovery of resources is impeccable. Ms. Martin knows that everyone has different needs and continues to grow her strategies and resources to help others do the same!

    Rita Mortenson, Verona Area School District, Wisconsin

    Rita Mortenson is a technology coach who helps educators develop their capacity to use technology in equitable, creative, and meaningful ways. She loves finding creative ways to nurture student curiosity and allow them to showcase their knowledge authentically. 

    In the Verona Area School District, Ms. Mortenson has used Discovery Virtual Field Trips to pair high school students with various grades for collaborative learning events. After watching the virtual field trip, high school students and students from different grades engage in activities that deepen understanding and create connections. For example, after students watched the Discovery Education/LEGO Virtual Field Trip ‘Play to Learn,’ students from a neighboring elementary school came to the high school to work with a robotics class. They had an opportunity to build and play with LEGO bricks and robots.

    When she first joined the Discovery Educator Network, Ms. Mortenson was an enthusiastic participant, and over time, she has evolved as a leader. She recently presented at the DENSI Summer 2023 Institute, the 2023 Fall Virtcon, the 2024 “24+ Ways to Use DE in 2024,” and has a proposal accepted at ISTE that will focus on DE Virtual Field Trips. Ms. Mortenson’s involvement with DE reflects her commitment to her own learning and her contributions to educational technology advancement in her community.

    Rachel Anzalone

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  • Remediation, Intervention, and Acceleration

    Remediation, Intervention, and Acceleration

    Many intervention models include Response to intervention (RTI) or Multi-tiered systems of support (MTSS) frameworks. MTSS is a coherent continuum of evidence-based, systemwide practices and procedures to support a rapid response to academic and behavioral needs. RTI is a multi-tiered approach to helping struggling learners that nestles within MTSS. It focuses on academics and individual students. Within RTI, students’ progress is closely monitored at each intervention stage to determine the need for further research-based instruction or intervention in general education, special education or both.

    Because intervention is individualized, it requires educators to invest much more time into identifying each student’s needs, differentiating lessons, and tracking progress. In a traditional intervention model, highly-trained instructors work 1:1 with students to provide the exact type of support they need. Many administrators turn to adaptive technology as a helpful tool to provide personalized intervention support at scale.

    Which students need intervention and which students just need a little help from time to time?

    Students fit into three intervention tiers; students within Tier I generally get the support they need from regular classroom instruction.

    • Tier III: Intensive level (1-5% of students)
      Learners are more than one grade level behind and require individualized, intensive skill-specific intervention with one-to-one or small-group instruction outside the classroom.
    • Tier II: Targeted level (5-15% of students)
      Learners are behind by one grade level and should receive individualized support. Educators often deliver instruction in small groups and target supplemental instruction and remediation of specific skills or concepts.
    • Tier I: Universal level (80-90% of students)
      Learners may need basic support, but they can get necessary intervention with high-quality, research-based instruction within the traditional classroom.

    DE Staff

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  • Should Marijuana Be Part of a Major Conversation

    Should Marijuana Be Part of a Major Conversation

    Whenever family gathers there is a visit to past good times and grievances, and if there has been some times…a realization or need to share life announcements.  Whether it is a marriage, baby, divorce, move, coming out or an intervention, it is tricky and lots of moving parts.

    RELATED: How To Talk About Cannabis With The Elderly

    The topic might be heavy, the mood might be heavy, but finding the right words is imperative. It is important to be clear, to have a message and to be ready to questions, feedback and maybe even pushback.  All this means being on your A game.  No expert would suggest having significant alcohol before a sharing something about a life change.

     

    Photo by Hero Images/Getty Images

    Utilizing cannabis before a talk might be beneficial, but it can also be detrimental. It depends on many factors, not the least is the topic at hand.  There are subjects we think long and hard about before bringing them up, however, they might be enhanced by either microdosing THC or imbibing in an amount you know you’re confident and have the ablity to share and the guide the information.. Changes in relationships can be some of the more difficult conversations, but elevating the discourse with a little cannabis can help you be more present, empathetic and delve deeper into what it is that you’re conveying and why.

    Talking health issues is another place where cannabis may not only enhance the conversation, but may be a key part of what’s discussed. Everyone has at least one cannabis-resistant relative, but if said loved one is suffering, having a talk with them about introducing marijuana into their treatment may alleviate their suffering if you can get through. The key here is not to be stoned, but lifted, and to have talking points laid out before entering the room.

    RELATED: A Guide For Talking To Your Teens About Marijuana

    When it comes to having a talk with a close friend to whom you’re breaking news or bringing up concerning actions or habits that have cropped up, introducing cannabis to the discussion can take the edge off for both of you. Stand firm in your convictions, but listen and try to see things through their eyes, no matter who you’re talking with.

    If you’re not a daily or even weekly pot smoker or user, microdosing is definitely the recommended route pre-talk. Sometimes staying sober is the easiest route. If you want to remain clear-headed but need a little something, microdose with sativa. Then get a good, heady indica for after. You’ll probably have a lot to think about afterwards as well and that’s when cannabis will really be relieving to end a long day. Just don’t overthink what can’t be unsaid and breathe it out with every fragrant exhale.

    Sarah Johns

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  • Gang Member: “The Way to Happiness Turned Me From a Life of Crime”

    Gang Member: “The Way to Happiness Turned Me From a Life of Crime”

    London’s Metropolitan Police Service announced last month there were more than 9,000 knife crime incidents in London in the year ending April 2016. An open house at the Church of Scientology London provided the community with an effective tool to tackle this crime wave.

    Press Release


    Jun 29, 2016

    A former gang member was the featured speaker at a crime prevention seminar at the Church of Scientology London. He spoke of surviving a stabbing and about his life—in and out of prison. And he told those attending the seminar how The Way to Happiness helped him turn his life around. His frank presentation made a visible impact on those attending the program at the Church’s Queen Victoria Street headquarters.

    Another young man spoke of being stabbed twice. He described how he cut all lines to his former friends, came to London to create a new life, and happened to walked into the Church of Scientology where he learned of The Way to Happiness. He enrolled on a course that helped him grasp and apply its principles and spoke of how positive he felt when he finished it. He could see purpose in his life. If he had been shown the book when he was young, he felt sure he would not have led a life of crime. 

    One can feel that things are such now that it is much too late to do anything, that one’s past road is so messed up that there is no chance of drawing a future one that will be any different: there is always a point on the road when one can map a new one. And try to follow it. There is no person alive who cannot make a new beginning.

    L. Ron Hubbard, author, humanitarian and founder of the Scientology religion

    Written by author and humanitarian L. Ron Hubbard, The Way to Happiness is a unique moral code—the first work of its kind based wholly on common sense. It appeals to its readers to apply its precepts in their daily lives.

    And it has a very special message for inmates and ex-offenders. In the book’s epilogue, Mr. Hubbard wrote:

    “One can feel that things are such now that it is much too late to do anything, that one’s past road is so messed up that there is no chance of drawing a future one that will be any different: there is always a point on the road when one can map a new one. And try to follow it. There is no person alive who cannot make a new beginning.”

    The Church of Scientology makes copies of The Way to Happiness available free of charge to community groups, educators and law enforcement​ along with an Educators Guide, posters and other materials. 

    Several attendees originated wanting to use these materials to help address crime in their communities, including one who wants to deliver The Way to Happiness program in Wormwood Scrubs prison.

     The Church of Scientology London is an Ideal Scientology Organization, configured to provide the full services of the Scientology religion to its parishioners, while also serving the community with social betterment and outreach programs.

    Source: ScientologyNews.org

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