Category Archives: > Conferences, Trainings, Degree Programs

+ Scholarships to IDA Conference: Deadline Sept 15

other topics: use search box

The International Dyslexia Association (IDA) annual conference will be held November 9-12, 2011 in Chicago, Illinois. 

IDA reminds us that if finances for attendance are a problem for you, there may be a scholarship opportunities.

Thanks to the generosity of several IDA partners in the learning disability arena, IDA is able to offer these three scholarships:

  1. The Robert G and Eleanor T Hall Memorial Scholarship
  2. IDA Annual Conference Scholarship for Teachers
  3. Parent Scholarship

Deadline is September 15, 2011.

For more information regarding eligibility and what each scholarship offers, visit the IDA Website: http://www.interdys.org .

The annual IDA Conference is attended by more than 2000 teachers, educators, administrators, reading specialists, researchers, university faculty, psychologists, physicians and tutors.  It is considered the premier professional development conference dedicated to dyslexia.

NOTE: Wednesday Symposia

The November conference starts on Wednesday, November 9 with four exceptional full day symposia led by Elsa Cardenas-Hagan, Michele Berg, R. Malatesha Joshi, and Jonathan Green. 

Attendees may choose one of these in-depth symposia.  They will address issues around

  • English Language Learners (ELL)
  • Working memory
  • Spelling
  • Information for Administrators in the independent LD school system

tutoring in Columbus OH:  Adrienne Edwards  614-579-6021  or email aedwardstutor@columbus.rr.com.

 

+ Teachers: Primary Resources at the Library of Congress

other topics: use search box

Teachers can subscribe to a free quarterly newsletter, “Teaching with Primary Resources (TPS) Quarterly,”  offered by the Library of Congress.  Visit http://www.loc.gov/teachers/tps/quarterly/

In the most recent online issue, Danna Bell-Russel writes “Beyond Typescript and Photographs: Using Primary Resources in Different Formats.”

Bell-Russel is a reference librarian and archivist working in the Educational Outreach Division of the Library of Congress.  She answers questions from teachers who want to help their students engage in real inquiry, construct knowledge  and develop critical thinking skills.

She hopes to encourage teachers to use a wider range of formats than the standard photographs and photocopied documents so widely available.

Among the Library of Congress’s digitized collections are materials that students can use to explore multiple points of view and the varying documentary methods people have implemented throughout history.

Handwritten Manuscripts 

Before email and tweeting existed — people relied on pen and paper to document their experiences. 

Handwritten manuscripts offer unique and intimate perspective on historical events.  While some of the Library’s manuscripts have been transcribed, there is excitement and insight available when viewing a person’s original writing.

Bell-Russel suggests that students might value letters from Civil War participants and their families.  One of the collections is called “A Civil War Soldier in the Wild Cat Regiment.”  This collection includes letters to and from Tilton C. Reynolds, who was a member of the 105th Regiment of Pennsylvania Volunteers.  His correspondence documents the difficulties faced by the soldiers, and even covers his prisoner-of-war experiences among his Confederate captors.

Also available  is Orlando Gray’s letter describing the Battle of Williamsburg.  

“A Teacher’s Guide to Analyzing Manuscripts” is also available.  And students can complete the “Primary Source Analysis Tool,” in order to document and organize their thinking.   Bell-Russel suggests that the question, “How did Confederates view the Battle of Williamsburg,” could lead to analyzing manuscripts written by soldiers on the opposing side.

Posters, Prints and Drawings

Search the Library’s “Prints and Photographs Online Catalog.” This collection includes architectural drawings, baseball cards and cartoon drawings.

The WPA Poster Collection collects the posters commissioned to tell communities about upcoming events, healthcare messages and other information during the Depression.    Of course, teachers can use the Teacher’s Guide to Analyzing Photographs and Prints.  Students might create their own posters to highlight current issues.

History and the Movies

Before YouTube and Hulu, films were black and white, and some were silent.  Films provide a visual moving reminder of the ways people lived and thought at that time.

Check out The Spanish-American War in Motion Pictures, or Raising Old Glory Over Morro Castle.  Of course, there is a Teacher’s Guide.

Oral Histories

The Library of Congress has a number of oral history collections such as American Life Histories, Born in Slavery, and Voices From the Days of Slavery which provide stories of life during the Civil War, Reconstruction and the early 20th century.

The Veteran’s History Project collects stories of American war veterans — from World War I to current conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.  Students can read transcripts when available as they listen to interviews.

Historic Sheet Music and Sound Recordings

Check out the selections from the Historic Sheet Music Collection, 1800-1922.  Collections also include musical and spoken word sound recordings.  The Library also has several “folklife” collections that feature sound recordings of people’s songs, stories and history.  One example is Voices from the Dust Bowl.

Maps

 Maps are portable and provide images that document places at certain times in history.  They give visual documentation of terrain and claimed territory, environmental characteristics and more.  They can offer clues to a particular mapmaker’s point of view. 

Student might choose “A mapp of Virginia discovered to ye hills.”    There are Railroad maps, “Broadside and Printed Ephemera.”

“Endless Instructional Possibilities”

Bell-Russel suggests that teachers will find millions of digitized items to be used by students across all grade levels and subjects.

For assistance, she suggests that teachers check out the self-guided professional development modules, Themed Resources for Teachers, web guides developed by the Library’s Digital Reference Section, or Ask a Librarian.

sole source: Danna Bell-Russel’s article in the current TPS Quarterly from the Library of Congress.  Bell-Russel is an Educational Resources Specialist at the Library of Congress. 

She previously served as a member of the Library’s Digital Reference Section, the first reference division created to specifically answer questions about the online resources found on www.loc.gov.

tutoring in Columbus OH:  Adrienne Edwards  614-579-6021  or email aedwardstutor@columbus.rr.com

 

+ Council for Learning Disabilities Conference in October

other topics: use search box

The 33rd International Conference on Learning Disabilities will be held in Austin Texas on October 27-28, 2011.

Presented by The Council for Learning Disabilities, the theme is:

 Evidence-based Practices: How researchers develop evidence-based interventions, and how practitioners implement evidence-based interventions.

The conference will provide attendees with an excellent opportunity to learn and network in one of the nation’s most exciting cities.

Those in higher education want information about the latest research in this field, as well as methods and statistics used in that research — this is the place.

Practitioners will find in-depth sessions on how to teach students with learning disabilities how to read, write, and compute.

Administrators interested in policy or how to implement RTI in their schools and districts will be able to see the latest developments.

For more information visit http://cldinternational.org/Conference/Conference2011.asp  

  • Location: Austin Convention Center
  • Dates: October 27-28, 2011
  • Hotel: Special rates available at the Hilton Austin

More info visit website at http://www.cldinternational.org  or email Monica Lambert at lambertma@appstate.com or 828-262-7173.

tutoring in Columbus OH:  Adrienne Edwards  614-579-6021 or email aedwardstutor@columbus.rr.com

+ Dyslexia Association Creates Social Network Site for Conference

other topics: use search box

IDA has launched a new social network created exclusively for those interested in attending the annual IDA conference on November 9-12 in Chicago.

The IDA Conference Zone allows members to interact and network with others, upload photos and videos, stay up to date on all the latest information and promotions, chat live with others online, and more! IDA Conference Zone is a safe and secure online community for attendees to connect before, during, and after the IDA conference.

We encourage you to share this with anyone else interested in attending the conference. This way they will be able to see what the conference entails and stay in tune with the latest news!

 What are you waiting for?! Follow the link below to join the Zone now!

The link to IDA Conference Zone is: http://www.idaconferencezone.ning.com

 

Keynote SpeakerRowland_Keynote

 

Pleasant Rowland is a noted educator, business leader, and philanthropist whose career began as a primary-grade teacher. Her lifelong interest in teaching children to read grew from her classroom experience and ultimately led to her authorship of reading and language arts programs used widely for years in schools across the country.

 In 2004, Ms. Rowland established the Rowland Reading Foundation which is dedicated to improving reading instruction in the primary grades. With all the challenges our nation faces today, the Rowland Reading Foundation deeply believes none is more critical than the need to solve the reading crisis.

Additionally, Ms. Rowland is infamous for the line of historically accurate books, dolls, and accessories she created known as The American Girls Collection. Ms. Rowland will give this year’s Keynote Address on Wednesday night at 6:00 p.m. 

 

tutoring in Columbus OH:  Adrienne Edwards 614-579-6021  or email  aedwardstutor@columbus.rr.com

+ Free Parent Seminars at Marburn Academy

other topics: use search box

Every year, Marburn Academy, the premier school in Columbus Ohio for bright children with learning differences, offers free seminars for parents in the community.

Marburn Academy was founded with a dual mission.  The first goal was to provide the finest day school program possible for bright but learning-challenged students, along with related diagnostic services.

The second goal was to serve as a resource to the community at large, by providing valuable, free  informational seminars to parents regarding the latest research on the brain and the diagnosis and treatment of learning differences. 

This year upcoming seminars in 2011 are

  • Tuesday September 13, 2011 at 7:00 pm — “When Children Struggle With Reading: Is It Dyslexia?”  Many of us were told that dyslexia means a child reverses letters and words; some were told that the letters “move around on the page.”  Learn the truth about the most common reading problems experienced by children and why many of our schools aren’t addressing the situation properly.
  • Tuesday October 4th, 2011 at 7:00 pm — “Solving Reading Problems.”  If you are the parent of a child who struggles with reading, you will want to know about the most effective approaches to teaching reading.
  • Tuesday October 18, 2011 at 7:00 pm — “Understanding the Problems of ADHD Children (Part I of a series).  We parents can’t be effective advocates and coaches for our ADHD children unless we truly understand the reasons for their reactions and behaviors.
  • Tuesday November 15, 2011 at 7:00 pm — “Improving Self-Management Skills for ADHD Students (Part II of a series).  In this presentation, Oremus builds on the information of the previous seminar, discussing techniques for teaching self-management at home and at school.
  • Tuesday December 13, 2011 at 7:00 pm — “How to Get High School to Work for ADHD Students (and How to get ADHD Students to Work in High School).”  Hear about how the social and academic demands of high school — and the reality of being a student with ADHD — requires thoughtful and unique management plans and how to set them in motion.
  • To see the schedule for the entire year, go to www.marburnacademy.org    

These Community Parent Seminars are presented each school year and are free to central Ohio parents, whether or not their child is a student at Marburn.  (The fee for professionals is $40 per seminar.)

The presenter is Marburn Headmaster Earl B. Oremus. a nationally recognized leader in developing methods for helping nontraditional learners acquire academic and social skills.  Oremus has been at the helm of the Academy for the past 23 years.

All seminars are held at Marburn and begin at 7:00 pm.  Reservations are required: please contact bdavidson@marburnacademy.org or phone 614-433-0822.

tutoring in Columbus OH: Adrienne Edwards  614-579-6021  or email aedwardstutor@columbus.rr.com

+ Three Days of Poetry This October in Manhattan

other topics: use search box

The Academy of American Poets is holding their Poets Forum on October 20-22, 2011 in New York City.  You may purchase tickets online at www.poets.org/poetsforum or by calling 212-274-0343.

The Poets Forum gives this most intimate of art form as a public context in which it can shine.  [–Mark Wunderlich]

The Pass price is $120 (before September 15, $95).  A limited number of Saturday-only tickets for the discussion sessions are available for $60.

Poets Reading or Participating in Discussions

  • Victor Hernandez-Cruz
  • Mark Doty
  • Rita Dove
  • Marilyn Hacker
  • Lyn Hejinian
  • Juan Felipe Herrera
  • Edwards Hirsch
  • Naomi Shihab Nye
  • Ron Padgett
  • Carl Phillips
  • Marie Ponsot
  • Kay Ryan
  • Gerald Stern
  • Anne Waldman
  • Susan Howe
  • Yusef Komunyakaa
  • Joan Larkin
  • Carol Muske-Dukes
  • Gabrielle Calvocoressi
  • Matthew Dickman
  • Cathy Park Hong
  • Ilya Kaminsky
  • Cate Marvin
  • Matthew Rohrer
  • Evie Shockley
  • Tracy K Smith
  • “and many others”

The Poets Forum is a true assembly of minds, a market-place of ideas.  You’ll find no posturing or pronouncements, no peacocks or princesses — just poetry poetry poetry.  [–Rita Dove]

Thursday, October 20 

7:00 pm:  Readings.  An unforgettable evening — on one stage — by some of the most acclaimed poets of our day reading from their latest work.  New York  University Skirball Center for the Performing Arts.

Friday October 21

10:30 am and 2:00 pm: Poetry Walking Tours through the same streets traveled by Walt Whitman, Marianne Moore, EE Cummings, Langston Hughes and countless others.  The tours will explore the literary history of Harlem, the West Village, the Museum of Modern Art and SoHo.

12:30 pm and 2:00 pm: Discussions on Contemporary Poetry: two panels of younger poets examine imaginative uses of language and how ideas of place and travel operate in their work and in the poems that have influenced them.  New York University School of Law, Greenberg Lounge.

Vision & Innovation in Contemporary Poetry” with Hong, Kaminsky and Shockley

Regional Aesthetics & Sensibility in American Poems” with Calvocoressi, Dickman and Marvin

3:30 pm: The Blaney Lecture on the topic of poetry and telepathy, by Susan Howe, winner of the 2011 Bollingen Prize in poetry.  NYU School of Law, Greenberg Lounge.

7:00 pm: Poets Awards Ceremony to celebrate recipients of the premier collection of awards for poetry in the United States.  Reception will follow.  The New School, Tishman Auditorium.

Saturday October 22

10 am to 4 pm: NYU School of Law Tishman Auditorium 

  • Getting Away With It: Risk in Poems” with Hacker, Komunyakaa, Stern
  • Humans & Others” with Herrera, Ryan and Waldman
  • Breaking the Line, Breaking the Narrative” with Dove, Olds and Padgett
  • Suffering Through Joy” with Doty, Hirsch and Shihab Nye
  • Repetition and Refrain” with Hernandez Cruz, Phillips and Ponsot. 

 Says Edward Hirsch:

Poetry is an ancient art that is ever new, which is proved each fall by the Poets Forum — a splendid gathering, a rambunctious and diverse chorus, a forum of spirited solitaries.  As John Berryman put it, “We are on each other’s hands / who care.”

The Academy of American Poets is located at 75 Maiden Lane, Suite 901, New York, NY 10038.  Ph: 212-274-0343; FAX 212-274-9427.

tutoring in Columbus OH:  Adrienne Edwards  614-579-6021  or email aedwardstutor@columbus.rr.com.

+ COBIDA Offers Webinars August 9 and 11, 2011

other topics: use search box

Project Read Webinars – Learn at Your Computer
 
Written Expression (Framing Your Thoughts) – August 9, 6 – 8 PM EST
Reading Comprehension – August 11, 6 – 8 PM EST
$35 per webinar ($25 for IDA members)
 
Register online now at:  www.cobida.org
For more information contact:  info@cobida.org
 
Hope to see you on-line!
 
Full courses will be offered in the fall if interest dictates.
If you are interested in a full-course, please let us know after you have done this initial webinar.
 
tutoring in Columbus OH:  Adrienne Edwards  614-579-6021 or email aedwardstutor@columbus.rr.com

+ International Dyslexia Association (IDA) Conference Nov 9-12 2011

other topics: use search box

On November 9-12, 2011, The International Dyslexia Association (IDA) will hold its 62nd annual conference at the Hilton Chicago.

The International Dyslexia Association promotes literacy through research, education and advocacy.  The purpose of the organization is to provide the most comprehensive range of information and services that address the full scope of dyslexia and related difficulties in learning to read and write.

The aim is to do so in a way that “creates hope, possibility and partnership.  The goal is that every individual has the opportunity to lead a productive and fulfilling life.”

The annual conference attracts thousands of outstanding researchers, clinicians, parents, teachers, psychologists, educational therapists and people with dyslexia.

Sessions By Theme

  • Accommodations
  • Adults with dyslexia
  • Alphabetic principle
  • At-risk students
  • Attention and executve control/ADHD
  • Critical reading skills
  • Definition
  • Developing self-advocacy
  • English language learner
  • Families and informed parenting
  • Federal legislation (IDEA/RTI/NCLB/Reading First)
  • Fluency
  • Handwriting/dysgraphia
  • Identification for school support services
  • Identification/diagnosis/screening/assessment
  • Language disorders
  • Mathematics/dyscalculia
  • Morphology
  • Oral language
  • Phonemic/phonological awareness
  • Psychological and neuropsychological assessments and treatments
  • Research behavior (psychophysics/psycho-educational)
  • Research/neurobiology (anatomical/physiological)
  • Response to intervention/inclusion
  • School administration
  • Social-emotional
  • Speech and language assessments and treatments
  • Spelling
  • Technology
  • Text comprehension
  • The college student and dyslexia
  • The gifted dyslexic student
  • Training the trainers, teachers and professors
  • Vocabulary
  • Written expression

You can register online at http://www.interdys.orgRegistration fees are cheaper for members.

Why be a member? The membership is comprised of people with dyslexia, their families, educators, diagnosticians, physicians and other professionals in the field. 

IDA is a clearinghouse for valuable information and provides information and referral services to thousands of people every year.

tutoring in Columbus OH:  Adrienne Edwards  614-579-6021  or email aedwardstutor@columbus.rr.com

+ Central Ohio Dyslexia Community: June Dates

other topics: use search box

RAVE-O Workshop 

 JUNE 14+15 .

RAVE-O  workshop at Marburn Academy.  This is a first time it has been offered in Ohio.  RAVE-O (Reading through Automaticity, Vocabulary, Engagement, and Orthography) is a proven initiative .  It’s an interactive, multisensory small group reading intervention that targets serious reading challenges. 

 It activates multiple sources of information, connects them, and integrates them quickly enough to foster deep reading and therefore deep comprehension.

There are still a few seats left for this professional development opportunity.    For information contact COBIDA president Charlotte Andrist, 614-767-0438 or email charlotteandrist@gmail.com

SUMMER BEACH PARTY

June 18, 1:30-4pm.

A Summer Beach Party for Children With Dyslexia!  Join the fun  at the Shealy’s home, 4626 Gwynedd Ct, Dublin OH 43016.  614-760-7725.  

Meet some new friends.  Bring your towel for swimming and a water balloon toss.  And don’t miss out on creating your own ice cream sundae masterpiece.  Bring your favorite topping to customize the sundae the way you like it!

Find out about

  • COBIDA’s upcoming fall parent meeting and parent support seminars.
  • COBIDA’s  grass roots efforts to work on dyslexia legislation in Ohio.
  • Dyslexia resources and information.
  • Becoming an active member of the dyslexia community in Columbus, including COBIDA’s new Facebook parent-to-parent group. (Beginning this month, parent membership rates have been reduced from $80 to $45)
  • Due to limited space, they ask that siblings stay home.  However if it means your child could not attent, they would rather you come with the siblings!
  • RSVP to Suzanne and Ray Shealy at suzshealy@columbus.rr.com

tutoring in Columbus OH:  Adrienne Edwards 614-579-6021  or email aedwardstutor@columbus.rr.com

+ Abstract Ideas: Some Brain Calisthenics Helps

other topics: use search box

In an article in Science Times, by Benedict Carey, we learn that   cognitive scientists are making the case for  strengthening “perceptual” learning. 

This is what might be called “gut instinct,” the instantaneous grasp of a problem like that of a ballplayer who can “read” pitches early or the chessmaster who “sees” the best move.  They believe it can be trained into being.

At New Roads School in Santa Monica California, students are using an online program that prompts them to match graphs to equations, dozens and dozens of them, and fast — often before they have time to work out the correct answer.

An equation will appear on the screen and below it three graphs (or a graph with three equations below).  A student clicks on one and the screen flashes to tell herwhether she’s right or wrong and immediately jumps to the next problem.  Says junior Wynn Haimer,

I’m much better at it.  In the beginning it was difficult, having to work so quickly; but you sort of get used to it, and in the end it’s more intuitive.  It becomes more effortless.

 For years curricula have stressed a top-down instruction for topics like math and science.  Learn the rules first — the theorems, the order of operations, Newton’s laws — and then work on solving some problems.  This method turns top-down strategies on their head.

A small group of cognitive scientists argues that the brain is a pattern-recognition machine.  They say that when focussed properly, it can quickly deepen an individual’s grasp of a principle.  New studies are suggesting this is true.

Read Carey’s article at http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/07/health/07learn.html?_r=1&scp=3&sq=Benedict%20Carey&st=cse

tutoring in Columbus OH: Adrienne Edwards  614-579-6021  or email aedwardstutor@columbus.rr.com.