Came across a very interesting article from freedom from hunger. 

Since quite some time I have been thinking to work on a similar service delivery model integrating all the four basic development components – Finance, Education, Health & Environment…together . Most of the development efforts concentrate and specilize on either of these or a couple of these at max. and there is hardly any conscious integeration of all the four components,  which, I believe really drags down the potential impact/outcome.. While a conscious integration of all these four components may bring about a compunded and meaningful impact of development efforts worldwide.. I wish come up with something concrete on this which will reque quite a bit of time and effort from my side but I sure intend to come up with something on this in future ..

The integration of non-financial services, such as education, with microfinance can be accomplished in a variety of ways. Three types of integration include:

Linked
Services can be provided by two independent organizations, if good-quality financial and non-financial service providers are operating in the same service area (actually or potentially) and are willing and able to serve the same clients. In this linked services model, the financial service provider does not directly provide non-financial services; it partners with a non-financial service provider.

In the provision of health services, for example, a financial services organization may form a strategic alliance with a local health clinic and allow health care professionals to participate in the regular group meetings to attend to the health needs of group members and their families.

This linked services model is particularly appropriate when the expertise or infrastructure required to deliver the non-financial service is quite different from that needed for financial services. A potential disadvantage of linkage is that the microfinance institution (MFI) does not have control over the quality of the partner’s services. Tension also may arise as each organization competes for the time and attention of the clients.

Parallel
A more integrated approach is the delivery of parallel services by two programs of the same organization. An organization committed to providing multiple services could create two distinct programs with separate, specialized personnel who share the same organizational name and, perhaps, the same physical and administrative infrastructure. Using the example of health services again, an organization might elect to run parallel programs employing specialized health educators and care providers to offer health services to their clients while employing separate banking staff for financial services.

This parallel services model has a clear division of staff functions, yet quality control is in the hands of the single overarching organization. This model places a larger financial and management burden on the organization than either the linked services model or the Credit with Education service model. There is also some risk of duplicating services that may already be present in the area.

Credit with Education
The third option is to fully integrate financial and non-financial service delivery. The same staff of the same organization provides multiple services to the same clientele. In the case of health, credit officers would also provide health education services to their village bank clients.

This Credit with Education model reduces costs of delivering two or more different services, since it only requires one set of staff members to provide two different services. Also, most or all of the costs can be covered by revenues from credit operations, since the staff are already in the field to provide support for village banks (in effect, credit operations are cross-subsidizing the additional service(s). However, in fully integrated programs, field staff must learn to wear multiple hats and perform services that, at times, require different sets of skills. Also, the scope of the services is mostly limited to education and facilitation activities that can occur during a weekly village bank meeting. In the health services example, it is possible for loan officers to deliver a health education curriculum, but they probably would not be able to provide health care.

Credit with Education is the best-known example of the credit with education model of integration. It combines microfinance services and health, nutrition, and business education into a single service for women in poor, rural areas of the developing world. This type of integration of group-based poverty lending and nonformal adult education has been reaching marginalized families and communities around the world for more than a decade.

Little Johnny again ..I just can’t keep him out ..he’s one of ma favourite characters …

One day at the end of class Little Johnny’s teacher asks the
students to go home and think of a story, to be concluded with the
moral of that story.
The following day the teacher asks for the first volunteer to tell
their story.

Little Suzy raises her hand. “My dad owns a farm and every Sunday
we load the chicken eggs on the truck and drive into town to sell
them at the market.

Well, one Sunday we hit a big bump and all the eggs flew out of
the basket and onto the road.”

When the teacher asked for the moral of the story, Suzy replied,
“Don’t keep all your eggs in one basket.”

Little Lucy went next. “My dad owns a farm too. Every weekend we
take the chicken eggs and put them in the incubator. Last weekend
only 8 of the 12 eggs hatched.”

Again, the teacher asked for the moral of the story. Lucy replied,
“Don’t count your chickens before they hatch.”

Next up was little Johnny. “My uncle Ted fought in the Vietnam
war, and his plane was shot down over enemy territory. He jumped
out before it crashed, but could only take a case of beer, a
machine gun, and a machete. On the way down he drank the case of
beer. Then he landed right in the middle of 100 Vietnamese
soldiers. He shot 70 with his machine gun, but then he ran out of
bullets! So he pulled out his machete and killed 20 more. Then the
blade on his machete broke, so he killed the last ten with his
bare hands.”

The teacher looked a little shocked. After clearing her throat,
she asked what possible moral there could be to this story.

“Well,” Johnny replied, “Don’t screw with uncle Ted when he’s been
drinking.” 

It would be a crime to not mention Tagore on an education blog. A friend from West Bengal was instrumental in helping me realize it :) So, Sooner the Better.  

I recently found a very nice exploration of Tagore’s contribution by Kathleen M. O’Connell  titled ‘Rabindranath Tagore on education’ cited in the encyclopaedia of informal education . Thought of Sharing that..

Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941), Asia’s first Nobel Laureate, was born into a prominent Calcutta family known for itsRabrindranath Tagore in Kolkata circa 1915 (public domain) socio-religious and cultural innovations during the 19th Bengal Renaissance. The profound social and cultural involvement of his family would later play a strong role in the formulation of Rabindranath’s educational priorities.  His grandfather Dwarkanath was involved in supporting medical facilities, educational institutions and the arts, and he fought for religious and social reform and the establishment of a free press.  His father was also a leader in social and religious reform, who encouraged a multi-cultural exchange in the family mansion Jorasanko. Within the joint family, Rabindranath’s thirteen brothers and sisters were mathematicians, journalists, novelists, musicians, artists.  His cousins, who shared the family mansion, were leaders in theatre, science and a new art movement. 

The tremendous excitement and cultural richness of his extended family  permitted young Rabindranath to absorb and learn subconsciously at his own pace, giving him a dynamic open model of education, which he later tried to recreate in his school at Santiniketan.  Not surprisingly, he found his outside formal schooling to be inferior and boring and, after a brief exposure to several schools, he refused to attend school. The only degrees he ever received were honorary ones bestowed late in life.

His experiences at Jorasanko provided him with a lifelong conviction concerning the importance of freedom in education.  He also realized in a profound manner  the importance of the arts for developing empathy and sensitivity, and the necessity for an intimate relationship with one’s cultural and natural environment. In participating in the cosmopolitan activities of the family, he came to reject narrowness in general, and in particular, any form of narrowness that separated human being from human being. He saw education as a vehicle for appreciating the richest aspects of other cultures, while maintaining one’s own cultural specificity. As he wrote:

I was brought up in an atmosphere of aspiration, aspiration for the expansion of the human spirit.  We in our home sought freedom of power in our language, freedom of imagination in our literature, freedom of soul in our religious creeds and that of mind in our social environment.  Such an opportunity has given me confidence in the power of education which is one with life and only which can give us real freedom, the highest that is claimed for man, his freedom of moral communion in the human world…. I try to assert in my words and works that education has its only meaning and object in freedom–freedom from ignorance about the laws of the universe, and freedom from passion and prejudice in our communication with the human world.  In my institution I have attempted to create an atmosphere of naturalness in our relationship with strangers, and the spirit of hospitality which is the first virtue in men that made civilization possible.

I invited thinkers and scholars from foreign lands to let our boys know how easy it is to realise our common fellowship, when we deal with those who are great, and that it is the puny who with their petty vanities set up barriers between man and man. (Rabindranath Tagore 1929: 73-74)

As well as growing up in a household that was the meeting place for leading artists and intellectuals from India and the West, Rabindranath had a further experience which was unusual for someone of his upbringing.  In the 1890s, he was put in charge of the family’s rural properties in East Bengal. His first experiments in adult education were carried out there as he gradually became aware of the acute material and cultural poverty that permeated the villages, as well as the great divide between the uneducated rural areas and the city elites.  His experiences made him determined to do something about rural uplift, and later at Santiniketan, students and teachers were involved with literacy training and social work and the promotion of cooperative schemes. As an alternative to the existing forms of education, he started a small school at Santiniketan in 1901 that developed into a university and rural reconstruction centre, where he tried to develop an alternative model of education that stemmed from his own learning experiences. 

Rabindranath composed his first poem at age eight, and by the end of his life, had written over twenty-five volumes of poetry, fifteen plays, ninety short stories, eleven novels, thirteen volumes of essays, initiated and edited various journals, prepared Bengali textbooks, kept up a correspondence involving thousands of letters, composed over two thousand songs; andafter the age of seventycreated more than two thousand pictures and sketches.  He dedicated forty years of his life to his educational institution at Santiniketan, West Bengal.  Rabindranath’s school contained a children’s school as well as a university known as Visva-Bharati and a rural education Centre known as Sriniketan.

Key ideas

Rabindranath did not write a central educational treatise, and his ideas must be gleaned through his various writings and educational experiments at Santiniketan In general, he envisioned an education that was deeply rooted in one’s immediate surroundings but connected to the cultures of the wider world, predicated upon pleasurable learning and  individualized to the personality of the child. He felt that a curriculum should  revolve organically around nature with classes  held in the open air under the trees to provide for a spontaneous appreciation of the fluidity of the plant and animal kingdoms, and seasonal changes.   Children sat on hand-woven mats beneath the trees, which they were allowed to climb and run beneath between classes. Nature walks and excursions were a part of the curriculum and students were encouraged to follow the life cycles of insects, birds and plants. Class schedules were made flexible to allow for shifts in the weather or special attention to natural phenomena, and seasonal festivals were created for the children by Tagore. In an essay entitled “A Poet’s School,” he emphasizes the importance of an empathetic sense of interconnectedness with the surrounding world:

We have come to this world to accept it, not merely to know it.  We may become powerful by knowledge, but we attain fullness by sympathy.  The highest education is that which does not merely give us information but makes our life in harmony with all existence.  But we find that this education of sympathy is not only systematically ignored in schools, but it is severely repressed.  From our very childhood habits are formed and knowledge is imparted in such a manner that our life is weaned away from nature and our mind and the world are set in opposition from the beginning of our days. Thus the greatest of educations for which we came prepared is neglected, and we are made to lose our world to find a bagful of information instead.  We rob the child of his earth to teach him geography, of language to teach him grammar.  His hunger is for the Epic, but he is supplied with chronicles of facts and dates…Child-nature protests against such calamity with all its power of suffering, subdued at last into silence by punishment. (Rabindranath Tagore, Personality,1917: 116-17)

In Tagore’s philosophy of education, the aesthetic development of the senses was as important as the intellectual–if not more so–and music, literature, art, dance and drama were given great prominence in the daily life of the school. This was particularly so after the first decade of the school. Drawing on his home life at Jorasanko, Rabindranath tried to create an atmosphere in which the arts would become instinctive.  One of the first areas to be emphasized was music. Rabindranath writes that in his adolescence, a ‘cascade of musical emotion’ gushed forth day after day at Jorasanko. ‘We felt we would try to test everything,’ he writes, ‘and no achievement seemed impossible…We wrote, we sang, we acted, we poured ourselves out on every side.’  (Rabindranath Tagore, My Reminiscences 1917: 141)

In keeping with his theory of subconscious learning, Rabindranath never talked or wrote down to the students, but rather involved them with whatever he was writing or composing. The students were allowed access to the room where he read his new writings to teachers and critics, and they were encouraged to read out their own writings in special literary evenings. In teaching also he believed in presenting difficult levels of literature, which the students might not fully grasp, but which would stimulate them. The writing and publishing of periodicals had always been an important aspect of Jorasanko life, and students at Santiniketan were encouraged to create their own publications and put out several illustrated magazines.  The children were encouraged to follow their ideas in painting and drawing and to draw inspiration from the many visiting artists and writers. 

Most of Rabindranath’s dramas were written at Santiniketan and the students took part in both the performing and production sides. He writes how well the students were able to enter into the spirit of the dramas and perform their roles, which required subtle understanding and sympathy without special training.

As Rabindranath began conceiving of Visva-Bharati as a national centre for the arts, he encouraged artists such as Nandalal Bose to take up residence at Santiniketan and to devote themselves full-time to promoting a national form of art. Without music and the fine arts, he wrote, a nation lacks its highest means of national self-expression and the people remain inarticulate. Tagore was one of the first to support and bring together different forms of Indian dance.  He helped revive folk dances and introduced dance forms from other parts of India, such as Manipuri, Kathak and Kathakali.  He also supported modern dance and was one of the first to recognize the talents of Uday Sankar, who was invited to perform at Santiniketan.

The meeting-ground of cultures, as Rabindranath envisioned it at Visva-Bharati, should be a learning centre where conflicting interests are minimized , where individuals  work together in a common pursuit of truth and realise that artists in all parts of the world have created forms of beauty, scientists discovered secrets of the universe, philosophers solved the problems of existence, saints made the truth of the spiritual world organic in their own lives, not merely for some particular race to which they belonged, but for all mankind.’ (Tagore 1922:171-2)

To encourage mutuality, Rabindranath invited artists and scholars from other parts of India and the world to live together at Santiniketan on a daily basis to share their cultures with Visva-Bharati. The Constitution designated Visva-Bharati as an Indian, Eastern and Global cultural centre whose goals were:

  1. To study the mind of Man in its realisation of different aspects of truth from diverse points of view.

  2. To bring into more intimate relation with one another through patient study and research, the different cultures of the East on the basis of their underlying unity.

  3. To approach the West from the standpoint of such a unity of the life and thought of Asia.

  4. To seek to realise in a common fellowship of study the meeting of East and West and thus ultimately to strengthen the fundamental conditions of world peace through the free communication of ideas between the two hemispheres.

  5. And with such Ideals in view to provide at Santiniketan a centre of culture where research into the study of the religion, literature, history, science and art of Hindu, Buddhist, Jain, Zoroastrian, Islamic, Sikh, Christian and other civilizations may be pursued along with the culture of the West, with that simplicity of externals which is necessary for true spiritual realisation, in amity, good-fellowship and co-operation between the thinkers and scholars of both Eastern and Western countries, free from all antagonisms of race, nationality, creed or caste and in the name of the One Supreme Being who is Shantam, Shivam, Advaitam.

In terms of curriculum, he advocated a different emphasis in teaching.  Rather than studying national cultures for the wars won and cultural dominance imposed, he advocated a teaching system that analysed history and culture for the progress that had been made in breaking down social and religious barriers. Such an approach emphasized the innovations that had been made in integrating individuals of diverse backgrounds into a larger framework, and in devising the economic policies which emphasized social justice and narrowed the gap between rich and poor.  Art would be studied for its role in furthering the aesthetic imagination and expressing universal themes.

It should be noted that Rabindranath in his own person was a living icon of the type of mutuality and creative exchange that he advocated.   His vision of culture was not a static one, but one that advocated new cultural fusions, and he fought for a world where multiple voices were encouraged to interact with one another and to reconcile differences within an overriding commitment to peace and mutual interconnectedness. His generous personality and his striving to break down barriers of all sorts gives us a model for the way multiculturalism can exist within a single human personality, and the type of individual which the educational process should be aspiring towards.

Tagore’s educational efforts were ground-breaking in many areas.  He was one of the first in India to argue for a humane educational system that was in touch with the environment and aimed at overall development of the personality.  Santiniketan became a model for vernacular instruction and the development of Bengali textbooks; as well, it offered one of the earliest coeducational programs in South Asia.  The establishment of Visva-Bharati and Sriniketan led to pioneering efforts in many directions, including models for distinctively Indian higher education and mass education, as well as pan-Asian and global cultural exchange.

One characteristic that sets Rabindranath’s educational theory apart is his approach to education as a poet.  At Santiniketan, he stated, his goal was to create a poem ‘in a medium other than words.’   It was this poetic vision that enabled him to fashion a scheme of education which was all inclusive, and to devise a unique program for education in nature and creative self-expression in a learning climate congenial to global cultural exchange.

Conclusion

Rabindranath Tagore, by his efforts and achievements, is part of a global network of pioneering educators, such as Rousseau, Pestalozzi, Froebel, Montessori and Dewey–and in the contemporary context, Malcolm Knowles–who have striven to create non-authoritarian learning systems appropriate to their respective surroundings. In a  poem that expresses Tagore’s goals for international education, he writes:

Where the mind is without fear

   and the head is held high,

   Where knowledge is free;

Where the world has not been broken 

up into fragments by narrow domestic

         walls;

 Where words come out from the

         depth of truth;

 Where tireless striving

       stretches its arms towards

          perfection;  

 Where the clear stream of reason

      has not lost its way into the

 dreary desert sand of dead habit;

    Where the mind is led forward

 by thee into ever-widening

      thought and action–

 into that heaven of freedom,

     my Father,

        Let my country awake.

And, what can be a better example to that than India. I am sure Mr. Bok would have had
India in mind while quoting this …We have been trying that a lot since generations and it seems that now we are just starting to realize it – at least to some extent. And that is why I believe we can see a small but powerful wave of new generation education reformists rising in our country trying to play their part.. Will briefly introduce some of them later.
 

Also, at this point, please allow me, to make it clear that though the usage of terms in the quote seem to imply only about financial repercussions and I am not exactly sure about what Mr. Bok. meant when he quoted it ..But I’d like to see it on a bit broader and deeper level. Let me elaborate a little bit on this.. Education is Expensive – It is for sure expensive in financial terms but it is also expensive in terms of the amount of dedication and perseverance and thus time it expects us to put in, the passion and love  (a dangerous word though but have to use it) it requires from us from whatever little we have. That is how it becomes expensive.  To take an example, Siddharth left his family, kids, palaces, his whole kingdom and all the luxuries in the world just to understand ..What the hell is goin on ? that was the cost he was ready to pay and paid it ..and we all know what happened than…including that he was kicked out of
India ..
 

So, now after putting in so much of our resources, what can we expect from it: See I generally don’t like talking about things in a businesslike way ..but I have come to realize that this is best way (and probably the only way) most of us understand most of the things … 

I learnt my first lesson on this from my dad. I used to read some weird books …during my graduation ..I still do ..which have nothing to do with my education or job or success in normal terms …and used to spend quite a considerable time on it ..and whenever my dad finds me reading all that stuff(instead of reading the books on my curriculum or business books on strategies and how to be a good manager and all…) he got very curious about the whole thing …and used to ask  me a very pertinent question ..why do you read all these things?  My response would be that I read it because I like it . I love reading these books …to this he used to get more surprised and will ask another question ..but what exactly do you think you would get out of it ? well, well, well, I said there you are … I was caught …I normally say (I still say it) I am not sure ..if I would  really get anything out of it …then he says ..if that is the case, my son ..than what is the point in reading all this and wasting your time …And the way he says all this makes me  realize that we both are from different planets. So, I use my last weapon to convince him. dad we don’t do everything because we would get something in return … We do something’s because we just love doing it … and then comes the time ..when, he wonders about me ..(Probably, he thinks that I hope the babies were not exchanged in the hospital. and he’s really my son..) and I wonder .. If I am right or he is right…On the contrary, Had I said that reading all that stuff will make me a Guru within the next five years and then I will be rolling out on a Rolls Royce giving speeches to millions of idiots around the world ..he would have been happier..Krishna Baba ki Jay ..u know …But can’t say that.. 

Coming back to the point, The least we can expect is Financial returns – (skills and abilities) which is nonetheless important but it is just one of the important things and never the most important thing… what are the other things then….I believe that we as a society shall atleast ensure that every child comes out of the system with an understanding of or at least a real & deep urge or search for finding/understanding these things. (pls. don’t ask me how..rather, tell me how) 
·   Who we are ? The most baffling puzzle of all times, Who am I?

·   Purpose of our life in general and his/her in specific

·   Understanding the nature of one’s relationship with the world. 

Well I believe this is too much to ask for what we have so far been able to achieve on those fronts, but the least we can expect our education is to keep our genuine curiosity or say passion alive for searching all this… and to say in other words… Developing a love for learning and understanding…not with an aim of getting anything in return but just pure love… (Now, here, I must admit that I am talking about what I have not yet completely experienced  …but I understand this because I have experienced the pain of loving (at least pretending to) anything and anyone with the hope of getting something in return.. I mean to say that If one is educated for the sole purpose of earning and nothing else and even if his is highly successful at that, I am sure that sooner or later that person will realize (if one is lucky enough to have his conscience alive till that time) that it was a costly affair no matter how much money one has accumulated and even donated S/he will repent. That’s the fate of it. That’s the fate of a body without a soul/life in it. it stinks – sooner or later… 

I understand that some thoughts mentioned above are fragmented and not very well linked ..but this was just the stuff straight out of my mind at this point without much editing and filtering …Thanks for bearing with me .

 

This letter was written by Abraham Lincoln to the Headmaster of his Son’s school.. It is still relavant..probably more relevant for most of us not only the children…

 

He will have to learn, I know,
that all men are not just,
all men are not true.
But teach him also that
for every scoundrel there is a hero;
that for every selfish Politician,
there is a dedicated leader…
Teach him for every enemy there is a friend,

Steer him away from envy,
if you can,
teach him the secret of
quiet laughter.

Let him learn early that
the bullies are the easiest to lick…
Teach him, if you can,
the wonder of books…
But also give him quiet time
to ponder the eternal mystery of birds in the sky,
bees in the sun,
and the flowers on a green hillside.

In the school teach him
it is far honourable to fail
than to cheat…
Teach him to have faith
in his own ideas,
even if everyone tells him
they are wrong…
Teach him to be gentle
with gentle people,
and tough with the tough.

Try to give my son
the strength not to follow the crowd
when everyone is getting on the band wagon…
Teach him to listen to all men…
but teach him also to filter
all he hears on a screen of truth,
and take only the good
that comes through.

Teach him if you can,
how to laugh when he is sad…
Teach him there is no shame in tears,
Teach him to scoff at cynics
and to beware of too much sweetness…
Teach him to sell his brawn
and brain to the highest bidders
but never to put a price-tag
on his heart and soul.

Teach him to close his ears
to a howling mob
and to stand and fight
if he thinks he’s right.
Treat him gently,
but do not cuddle him,
because only the test
of fire makes fine steel.

Let him have the courage
to be impatient…
let him have the patience to be brave.
Teach him always
to have sublime faith in himself,
because then he will have
sublime faith in mankind.

This is a big order,
but see what you can do…
He is such a fine little fellow,
my son!

~ Abraham Lincoln

Education is what remains when we have forgotten all that we have been taught.

George Savile, Marquis of
Halifax (1633-1695) English statesman and author.

I warned you at my first post.. didn’t I ..that we won’t be only talking about teaching and studies and schools and cognitive learning and such stuff ..we will make this a very inclusive platform..

A colleague from IFMR just forwarded this thing -from forbes.com ..it talks bout 10 ppl. who chould change the world …change the way we see things ..change the way we perciver things ..can change the way we live …isn’t it then about education ? okay lets come to the point ..here are those 10 ppl. according to forbes..

ALT

Courtesy of Esther Duflo

Fighting Poverty Efficiently

Esther Duflo, 34
Economist, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

While politicians tend to espouse solutions like “more aid” or “more trade,” entrenched poverty is a great lingering economic mystery. Duflo designs studies to figure out which kind of aid projects work, and which don’t. She was among the first development economists to evaluate aid projects using randomized trials, long the gold standard in scientific testing..

 

ALT

Courtesy of Kevin Eggan

P.C. Stem Cells

Kevin Eggan, 32
Cellular Biologist, HarvardUniversity

Eggan is leading the way to a world where stem cells–which have tremendous medical promise because of their potential to replace any damaged cell in the body–could be made without destroying embryos. Eggan is also becoming one of science’s more outspoken voices, defending the necessity of pursuing embryonic cell research through all available means as a way of understanding scourges like diabetes and Lou Gehrig’s disease.  

ALT

© Caroline Webb

Tree Rights

Thomas Linzey, 38
Executive Director, Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund

Last year the borough of Tamaqua, Pa., passed an unprecedented law giving ecosystems legal rights of their own. Yes, you read that right. The trees, rivers, mountains and all the little critters that live in them have rights just like people. Linzey drafted the law, and is working on passing more ordinances around the country. His efforts fly in the face of thousands of years of Western legal precedent that treats nature strictly as property. 

ALT

© McGill University

Altering Human Memory

Karim Nader, 40

A scientist asks you to recall a memory, gives you a pill and alters your recollection. It sounds like a scene from the film Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, the sci-fi romance in which ex-lovers have their memories of one another erased. But it’s exactly what Nader is doing with folks who suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder (rape survivors, war veterans and the like). The method does not aim to actually erase bad memories, but it can significantly reduce the severe pain of traumatic memories. His work could revolutionize how doctors treat epilepsy, obsessive compulsive disorder and even drug addiction.Neuroscientist, McGillUniversityCourtesy of Max Tegmark

Measuring the Invisible Universe

Max Tegmark, 40
Cosmologist, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
If the laws of physics as we know them are correct, the vast majority of the universe–some 96% of it–consists of invisible, mysterious stuff known as “dark energy” and “dark matter.” Tegmark’s ambition is nothing less than to map and measure the entire universe, including these “dark” bits.  Courtesy of Josh Tenenbaum

The Human Computer

Josh Tenenbaum
Cognitive Scientist, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Science fiction is rife with intelligent, self-aware computers, from the benevolent “Mike” of Robert A. Heinlein’s The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress to the murderous HAL 9000 in Arthur C. Clarke’s 2001: A Space Odyssey. But before we can actually design and build super-smart machines like those in our books and movies, we need to better understand the nature of human intelligence. That’s where Tenenbaum comes in. He’s using a combination of mathematical modeling, computer simulation and behavioral experiments to explain how people learn new things. 

 Courtesy of Christopher Voigt

 

Reprogramming Life

Christopher Voigt, 30
Synthetic Biologist, University of California, San Francisco
“We program cells like robots,” says Voigt. He’s at the forefront of a group of young researchers working to deliver on the profound promise of genetic engineering: Rebuilding living organisms to fight disease, make bio-fuels and solve industrial problems. To do this, Voigt works hard to understand what “commands” are programmed on the DNA of simple organisms like the E. coli bacteria. Then he changes the commands so the organism does his bidding.

 

 

To be completed …

A FIRST GRADE TEACHER collected old, well known proverbs. She gave each child in her class the first half of a proverb, and had them come up with the rest.

As you shall make your bed so shall you……….mess it up.
Better be safe than………………….punch a 5th grader.
Strike while the …………………………bug is close.
It’s always darkest before…………daylight savings time.
You can lead a horse to water but…………………..how?
Don’t bite the hand that……………………looks dirty.
A miss is as good as a……………………………..Mr.
You can’t teach an old dog new…………………….math.
If you lie down with the dogs, you’ll..stink in the morning.
The pen is mightier than the………………………pigs.
An idle mind is…………………..the best way to relax.
Where there’s smoke, there’s………………….pollution.
Happy the bride who……………….gets all the presents.
A penny saved is……………………………..not much.
Two’s company, three’s…………………..the musketeers.
Laugh and the whole world laughs with you, cry and……………………..you have to blow your nose.
Children should be seen and not………spanked or grounded.
When the blind leadeth the blind………get out of the way.

An Interview with Anthony Dalmann-Jones: About “Shadow Children”

Michael F. Shaughnessy Senior Columnist EdNews.org
Eastern New Mexico University

Dr. Anthony Dalmann-Jones is the author of “Shadow Children: Understanding Education’s Number 1 Problem.

He is founder and director of The national At-Risk Education Network (NAREN ) and graduate professor in the School of Graduate Education at Marian College in Fond du Lac Wisconsin. At Marian College he co-founded the first accredited At-Risk Education Master’s Degree program in the U.S. His previous publications include the widely used Handbook of Effective Teaching and Assessment Strategies. 1) Your recent book, “Shadow Children” is subtitled “Understanding Education’s # 1 Problem.

First of all, do you differentiate between “at-risk “children and “shadow children” and why do you see this specific group as Education’s # 1 problem?

At-Risk and Shadow Children are one in the same. These are children usually not getting special funding for compensatory education they need, and are usually known as potential dropouts. Whether dropping out or no, they are not absorbing the tools and skills necessary to succeed in life, and THAT is why schools exist, to insure that youth succeed in life, now and in the future as adults. Shadow Children also put a shadow under education’s eye, known as a black eye. They prove that 30% of the time (at least) we are not doing our job well. 70% was a D- when I was in school. If getting a D- in your profession across the land isn’t a #1 concern, it should be, don’t you think? The money it is costs is monumental as well, which I find alarming…was surprised myself at the figure. BUT: Mostly what makes it #1 is the pain that has happened in these children’s lives and the pain to come as they grow up with a shallow toolbox in a tough world and the school, their last chance at being diagnosed and remediated, drops the ball with a giant thud…then largely denies it. The more you make me think about it, maybe both of education’s eyes are blackened.

2) In reading your book, I get the feeling that the problems are not with the schools, but with the juvenile justice system and the social workers who investigate child abuse and neglect. Am I wrong on this?

It is definitely a corollary problem. We need a collaborative effort on behalf of this section of our youth, and schools cannot do it all…social services, police, juvenile court system, should be working more with the schools.

3) Could you provide an operational definition of “Shadow Children”

Shadow Children are youth in danger of not succeeding in school or in society due to lack of tools and skills that a healthy (functional) family and school system should provide. (Tools & Skills: problem-solving, decision-making, prioritizing, handling emotions and getting needs met healthfully, money management, relationship skills, organizing, literacy – including computer literacy – skills, etc. There are more.

4) Many “shadow children” that I have seen, have come from broken homes where parents have divorced. It seems to me that divorce is simply way to easy to procure, and if we invested more time and money into salvaging marriages, there would be fewer “shadow children”? Your thoughts?

Single parent homes can be as functional or more so than both-parent homes. It is about abuse and, mostly, neglect to teach the tools and skills needed to succeed in life, and some single parents do a wonderful job. Odds are perhaps weighted against a single parent family only because one person may be doing it all, and/or perhaps relying on unhealthy caregivers to lend a hand. Single parent families are – odds are – also getting a reduced amount of income compared to two potential caregivers/breadwinners.

5) Over and over, it seems to me that schools try to educate the middle of the bell shaped curve very well, but tend to neglect the other two ends of the spectrum. Is this on target or am I off base? And how does this relate to your work?

Well, it is absolutely true and also absolutely relates to my work. If school could do its job, I wouldn’t have to write this from the perspective I have. See #1 question above.

6) In my own work on “at risk” kids I found that the average I.Q. of kids who were involved in either in-school or out of school suspension, that their I.Q. was roughly 85. Are these kids, in a sense, somewhat doomed to failure in a school system that leans toward educating children of average intelligence?

If what you say is true, yes they are doomed. However, I wonder if your statement would be true as a generalization? One year in Chicago, they discovered that the average IQ of those staying in school was lower than those who dropped out. Don’t ask me what year, I think it was about 15 years ago…and I have not followed up on this. I could if you were interested. What I am saying is that we may have more of a “brain drain” situation than most think. Another #1 reason to be alarmed.

7) In your mind, do you think teachers are getting a bit tired of kids with labels being tossed at them? Kids with ” alphabet labels ( E.D., B.D. L.D., ADD, PDD etc etc) and most recently ” At-risk kids ” and now ” shadow kids”?

God, yes. And so am I! But the reality is, if you cannot define your population that needs help and then have a “count” you will not get attention or money to compensate as needed. Unfortunate, but true.

8) What do you do as founder of NAREN (The National At-Risk Education Network)?

And where is this organization located?

I am the Director. I answer questions a lot, such as yours. Not being cute, it is true. I talk a LOT. I am not grandiose…wish there was no need for me, really. I am a cross between a Johnny Appleseed, a revivalist, and one of my own constituents I call angel-warriors. THIS is my place in this schema. I have never been paid a penny in salary…over 14 years now…but definitely have plans to someday be paid. Hahaha… Seriously, I write and speak a lot about the plight of these kids. No one is championing them (enough) and I suppose one could say that the advocacy they need is strangely silent. I think there is a conspiracy to protect neglectful parents and schools.

I am not a radical. I think there is a ton of evidence. I think one day, maybe 20 years from now we will look back on today and say, “What the heck were we thinking????” Better still, “Why WEREN’T we thinking???”

We are located at 107 State Street, Madison WI 53703

9) Are our Senators and Congressmen aware of the plight of these ” shadow children”?

In a way, and I used a lot of $$$$ numbers to substantiate Shadow Children as a problem. It is a language they understand. They are not moved by sob stories, though true. They hear them all the time. Tobacco farmers cry. The AMA cries. The Religious Right cries. They think educators just whine all the time. The $$$ figures are there as a constant reminder that this is a real problem and sooner or later you are going to be embarrassed that you did not take better action as you cost the taxpayers a LOT MORE by not doing what was needed.

10) Your book contains (E.A.A.R.B. forms and A.A.R.B.M.S.) What are these forms all about and who should be responsible for these forms? The guidance counselor? Social Worker? School Psychologist?

The forms are designed to place awareness of the individual child in trouble into the collective educational system’s mind so it will (must) take action. There should be an At-Risk Coordinator in charge of them…whether that be designated to the counselor, psychologist, or to a head teacher who cares.

11) Dysfunctionality in families- whose job is it to provide counseling to children of these “dysfunctional” families?

The school. The school gets paid to assess the child’s learning problems and then meet them at a door with suggested means of compensatory education to remediate the child, to bring them back to center, or TO center for the first time. If not the school, whom? The school stands between the Shadow Child and prison, failure and, perhaps, death. I consider out work life and death work. We have a lot to do…and a lot of Shadow Children who need it.

12) Teachers are already being asked to do a gargantuan amount of work, with a plethora of different kinds of kids with a horrendous amount of paperwork. How much more can we expect teachers to do in this society?

Again, we should not ask the school to do it all. Theyshould coordinate a collaborative effort that is all about each child. Of course, we need more funding and focus on this issue. Each school system might need an At-Risk Coordinator.

13) What question have I neglected to ask?

How should school get ready to handle this problem more effectively? Have a structure, such as the NAREN Nine Standards or others, that tells you WHAT you are going to do, then spend time deciding HOW to best use that scaffolding such that it becomes a consistent, clear and intelligent program that is effective and can be assessed as such. Then train your staff so they are all on the same page.

Thank you for this opportunity to clarify some of these ideas, issues, and concerns of great importance (especially to the Shadow Children)

On Education:

[A process] which makes one rogue cleverer than another.

Oscar Wilde (1856-1900) Irish poet and dramatist.

One of my favourites .. Wilde had an amazing sense of humour.. There have been tons and tons of books written on quotes by Oscar Wilde. His paradoxical, intellegant and ironical  and his — as one book is titled – Wicked Wits are just ming boggling ..pls. read below for some of his other amazing quotes.

 

  • A man can be happy with any woman, as long as he does not love her.

  • When the gods wish to punish us they answer our prayers. 

  • By giving us the opinions of the uneducated, journalism keeps us in touch with the ignorance of the community.

More on this genious, later.


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