Click image to enlarge.
Click here for 2nd page: Reader’s Digest2
11 Apr
Please note this opportunity to obtain resources for the children that you serve.
Back packs, school supplies, personal care items, and gently used books are available for schools, 21st CCLC Programs, Family Resource Centers & Community Agencies that serve families in need. Please refer to the documents below for further details.


2. Feed the Children Resource Announcement
11 Apr
Please join us in celebrating our Military children on Saturday, April 16, 2011. There will be food, fun, horse rides, a bounce house and it’s FREE! It’s our way of saying “Thank you!”
Click here for details: MOMC Celebration.
31 Mar

Mixing in Math is a FREE set of English and Spanish resources that combine math with:
You can download everything for free at http://mixinginmath.terc.edu. Please feel free to pass on this message to anyone whom you think might be interested.
Any questions or feedback? Contact us and sign up for our newsletter at mixinginmath@terc.edu.
What is Mixing in Math?
At Mixing in Math (MiM), we believe that life is full of opportunities to explore math. By building on the math around us, MiM helps children and facilitators* become more confident, comfortable and competent in math.
MiM offers over 200 English and Spanish resources that blend math with fitness, nature, cooking and other areas familiar to grades K-6 children and their facilitators. MiM resources include games, projects, movement activities, and museum-type displays. Some take five minutes to do; others an hour or more. Facilitators choose among and adapt MiM resources to use MiM in settings from story times to recreation programs to clubs to family dinner table conversations.
MiM starts with the routines, projects, and games that make up out-of-school time at centers, public programs, and homes.
MiM resources show how to mix math into all of these—and much more. Children learn that math can be part of the things they enjoy. And facilitators don’t need to set up a separate “math time.” (MiM can be a separate program—but it doesn’t have to be.)
MiM is designed to mesh with facilitators’ (and children’s) goals—which often include much more than math.
Facilitator have many competing demands on their time. MiM offers realistic ways to combine math learning with other important goals.
MiM meets the realities and constraints of today’s facilitators.
MiM was developed with input from hundreds of facilitators in realistic settings—from high staff turnover, to no paid prep time, to shrinking budgets.
MiM provides for learning in different social groups and alongside people with varying abilities.
MiM takes into account the variation in math, language, and motor skills that might be present in any group.
MiM resources are designed so that facilitators can customize them to fit the interests, culture(s) and language(s) of their audiences.
MiM resources show facilitators how to keep the core math but change the context to engage and challenge the audience, whoever they are and wherever they’re from.
*We use “facilitators” to include anyone who supports children’s development outside of school, including parents, librarians, after-school educators, museum educators, and grandparents.
29 Mar
Fantastic resource!… Here’s a list of sites that offer Translated Parenting Information.
29 Mar
Don’t miss these upcoming SchoolsMovingUp webinars on expanded learning time!
Whether your schools have additional learning time or are just starting to consider expanding learning time, it’s crucial to make sure every minute of the school day is used to maximize student learning and deepening student engagement. In this series, Ben Lummis, Vice President for the National Center on Time & Learning (NCTL) and Sarah Gallagher, Program Associate at NCTL, will present webinars on the following topics:
* Making Every Minute Count
* Three Effective Ways to Use Expanded Learning Time
* Collaborating with Stakeholders to Prioritize Extended Learning Time
* Engaging the Whole Child OR Teacher Collaboration Time (depending on a vote at the April 7th webinar)
We invite you to send any questions you have about these topics in advance to eventquestion@wested.org . While we won’t be able to answer every question, this will help inform the presentations.
________________________________
Making Every Minute Count: http://www.schoolsmovingup.net/cs/smu/view/e/4965?allSMU0321
Thursday, April 7, 2011
1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. Eastern Time
This webinar will introduce a framework for effectively expanding learning time and share strategies for making every minute count in your school and district.
To sign up for this webinar, please visit: http://www.schoolsmovingup.net/webinars/time http://www.schoolsmovingup.net/cs/smu/view/e/4965?allSMU0321
________________________________
Three Effective Ways to Use Expanded Learning Time: http://www.schoolsmovingup.net/cs/smu/view/e/4966?allSMU0321
Thursday, April 28, 2011
1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. Eastern Time
This webinar will focus on effective uses of additional learning time, both in and outside of the school day, to offer additional blocks of time for academic support, tiered interventions for struggling students, and additional supports before the school year, after school, and on Saturdays.
To sign up for this webinar, please visit: http://www.schoolsmovingup.net/webinars/time2http://www.schoolsmovingup.net/cs/smu/view/e/4966?allSMU0321
For subsequent webinars in this series, click here: http://www.schoolsmovingup.net/cs/smu/print/htdocs/smu/webinars/upcoming.htm and scroll down to our May webinars.
________________________________
Unable to attend?
You can view the archived webinar http://www.schoolsmovingup.net/cs/smu/print/htdocs/smu/webinars/past.htm at any time. Our archives enable you to watch and listen to the presentation; read the participant questions and discussion; and access the accompanying resource materials. Our archive technology allows you to navigate to specific parts of the presentation and pause the presentation. This is an excellent way to view the presentation with a group. [Archives are available one day after the live webinar. Even if you do not plan to participate in the live webinar, we recommend that you register to receive notification about and instructions for the archive.]
Contact
We look forward to your participation. For more information, email schoolsmovingup@wested.org or call 510.302.4248.
29 Mar
Please
see the flyer below for the upcoming “Promoting Healthy Relationships: Strategies to Respond to Domestic Violence and Reproductive Coercion and the Implications for Unplanned and Rapid Repeat Pregnancy” webinar.
The webinar is scheduled on Wednesday, March 30th at 2:00pm EST. To access the call, dial 1-888-324-8125, passcode: OAH. Join the webinar directly at https://www.mymeetings.com/nc/join.php?i=PW1880291&p=OAH&t=c.
Click here for more information: Healthy Relationships Flyer.
The OAH Team

15 Mar
At the Maine Afterschool Network’s meeting some wonderful free resources were highlighted. Check these out.
I. Spotlight on the “Let’s Go! 5-2-1-0” Program, which started in Portland, taking a multi-sector approach to sustainable environmental policy change to reduce childhood obesity, and is now a nationally-recognized model – available to afterschool programs through Emily Walters at WALTEE@mmc.org . Website to check out is http://letsgo.org for wonderful resources and all free!!!
II. “Cooking Matters – Maine” Program through the Good Shepherd Food Bank and Share Our Strength. Cooking Matters partners with host agencies such as local family and community centers and food pantries to offer four to six week classes to the agency’s clients. Classes are free to participants and host agencies. At each class, participants receive a bag of groceries and recipes to try at home. For more info contact Kristen Miale at (207)423-5166 or kmiale@gsfb.org. Laura Riggs-Mitchell, director of RSU 72′s 21st grants can give you more information., including how you might be able to get free gift certificates for food, etc. Sounded fantastic! 3 websites to check out:
1. http://raisingmaine.mainetoday.com/blogentry.html?id=49951
2. http://umaine.edu/food-health/blog/2010/11/04/cooking-matters-for-maine
3. http://gsfb.org/about_us/cooking-matters-to-maine.php
Joan Martay
Maine DOE 21stCCLC Program Consultant
49 Wellington Road, Portland, Me 04103
Phone: 207-773-1995
Cell: 207-838-5871
E-mail: maines21st@aol.com
Website: http://www.maineafterschool.net
15 Mar
Text messaging has a bad rep in most K-12 schools in the U.S. Many teachers ban texting, they say, because it interferes with learning in class. Some say it encourages bad spelling. A ten-year Coventry University study of a small sample of children has found, however, that those who text message fluently have better literacy skills than those who do not, including, despite their high use of “textisms” such as LOL, plz and l8ter, better spelling!
I wonder if one variable that makes the difference is that these students owned their own mobile phones, and thus could get _fluent_ with texting.
I also wonder why, since most adult learners may already have their own cell/mobile phones, texting isn’t a more frequent practice in adult education classes. I wonder if reading and writing fluency may be more important than the content of what read or written, or how it is spelled.
http://topnews.us/content/234147-kids-improve-their-literacy-skills-texting
http://www.coventry.ac.uk/latestnewsandevents/a/5695
David J. Rosen
djrosen123@gmail.com
15 Mar
Learn how to give middle school and high school youth or adults the knowledge and skills they need to make critical personal economic decisions throughout their lives.
Leave with new ideas on how best to teach Personal Finance and a variety of free resources.
Keynote Speaker: Scott Guild, Director of Economic Education, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
Workshops will include:
Click here for registration info: Personal Finance Conference.