Early life experiences have disproportionate importance in organizing the mature brain and are directly connected to children's optimal development.
B.D. Perry, M.D. , Incubated in Terror: Neurodevelopmental Factors in the ‘Cycle of Violence’

home schooling

expanding world view

“I believe that current formal education still prepares students primarily for the world of the past, rather than for possible worlds of the future….[we have] not yet figured out how to prepare youngsters so that they can survive and thrive in a world different from one ever known or even imagined before.” Howard Gardner

Learning Cities: Optimizing Economic and Social Well-being through Lifelong Learning for All

Canadian cities—now home to 80% of Canada’s citizens—offer economic, educational and cultural opportunities, but also face problems related to equity, maintenance of social cohesion, and civic engagement. Pioneered in Europe and Australia, the creation of “Learning Cities” recognizes that optimal social and financial well-being occurs under conditions that favour lifelong learning for all.
(Source: Canadian Council on Learning)

Reducing class size improves student health

Reducing the number of students per classroom in U.S. primary schools may be more cost-effective than most public health and medical interventions, according to a study by researchers at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health and the Virginia Commonwealth University. ( ScienceDaily ) (Oct. 17, 2007)_
Read [[http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/10/071016131350.htm| full story]]

Opinion: Teach low-income parents how to become involved

Low-income parents must learn how to work the education system in the same way wealthier families do, writes Edwin C. Darden, education-policy director at Appleseed, a network of public-interest justice centers. Maryland’s Montgomery County schools, for example, offer around 35 free Parent Academy workshops, as well as a call center that will answer questions in both English and Spanish. Education Week (premium article access compliments of Edweek.org) (12/26)
[[http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2007/12/26/17darden_web.h27.html?tmp=929586154]]

The Freedom Writers Diary: How a Teacher and 150 Teens Used Writing to Change Themselves and the World

Thu, 12/27/2007 - 10:04 -- admin

The Freedom Writers Diary is the amazing true story of strength, courage, and achievement in the face of adversity. In the fall of 1994, in Room 203 at Woodrow Wilson High School in Long Beach, California, an idealistic twenty-four-year-old teacher named Erin Gruwell faced her first group of students, dubbed by the administration as “unteachable, at-risk” teenagers. This group was unlike any she had ever interacted with.

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