Thursday, December 01, 2005
12/1/05
Daily Journal
- Today, Thursday Dec. 1 is the magnet open house from 6:30 - 8pm
- All students must report at 6pm; nice dress required (no jeans; collared shirts)
- We need magnet kids to show off their skills and projects
- All students who attend will get extra credit
The issue: Homework.
The problem: The popular misconception that kids have too much.
The fix: Accept homework. It is essential.
The issue: Socializing with friends.
The problem: School performance falls as time spent with friends increases.
The fix: Influence of adults must outweigh that of friends when it comes to school.
The answer is not to lock kids in their bedrooms. Rather, schools and parents need to convey consistently high expectations. Peer values are strong, but adult values are stronger. Even teens realize that; a 1997 survey showed they feel adults don't demand enough of them. "The students seem to be crying out for the adults in their lives to take a stand and inspire them to do more," says Deborah Wadsworth, the president of Public Agenda, a non-partisan polling group that focuses on educational issues.
The issue: Extracurricular activities.
The problem: Sports are all-important.
The fix: Cut back on sports if they interfere with schoolwork.
Do sports affect student learning? In moderation, participation is healthy. For academically weak students, sports can make school more attractive and reinforce the importance of being a good student. Achievement falls off sharply, however, for students who devote more than 20 hours weekly to extracurricular activities.
The issue: Television.
The problem: Television usually is not the problem; people just think it is.
The fix: Limit, don't turn off, the TV.
The key to preventing TV from negatively affecting achievement, like other activities in children's non-school hours, lies in exercising moderation, not in halting the activity altogether.
The issue: Part-time jobs.
The problem: Students work too much.
The fix: Curtail weekday jobs during the school year.
Learning takes effort. It is not innate. The American people never have flinched from tackling tough tasks. The challenge today is to improve education. Schools can't do it all. Neither can parents. Only when schools and parents work together to expect more from children will there be substantial progress. Schools need to stay the course of raising academic standards. Parents need to structure children's out-of-school time so they can meet society's rising expectations for learning.
- Which issues apply to you? (Do you work too much? Watch too much tv?)
- What are some new behaviors you can start using? Explain.
Classwork
Family History Website Design Project
- Work on your family tree design in Fireworks8
- you need to create two different files in Fireworks, one with your family tree, and the other about your country of origin
- see family history website example here
- create your buttons last!
- here are button tips
- Review color contrasts
- Go to Atomic Learning (username: ecis05; pwd: atomic)
- go to FireworksMX 2004 section
- View Section A-Basic Tools and Techniques
- View Section E - layers and Masking!
- practice Fireworks as you watch
Per. 5 Adv. Web1
Daily Journal
- Today, Thursday Dec. 1 is the magnet open house from 6:30 - 8pm
- All students must report at 6pm; nice dress required (no jeans; collared shirts)
- We need magnet kids to show off their skills and projects
- All students who attend will get extra credit
The issue: Homework.
The problem: The popular misconception that kids have too much.
The fix: Accept homework. It is essential.
The issue: Socializing with friends.
The problem: School performance falls as time spent with friends increases.
The fix: Influence of adults must outweigh that of friends when it comes to school.
The answer is not to lock kids in their bedrooms. Rather, schools and parents need to convey consistently high expectations. Peer values are strong, but adult values are stronger. Even teens realize that; a 1997 survey showed they feel adults don't demand enough of them. "The students seem to be crying out for the adults in their lives to take a stand and inspire them to do more," says Deborah Wadsworth, the president of Public Agenda, a non-partisan polling group that focuses on educational issues.
The issue: Extracurricular activities.
The problem: Sports are all-important.
The fix: Cut back on sports if they interfere with schoolwork.
Do sports affect student learning? In moderation, participation is healthy. For academically weak students, sports can make school more attractive and reinforce the importance of being a good student. Achievement falls off sharply, however, for students who devote more than 20 hours weekly to extracurricular activities.
The issue: Television.
The problem: Television usually is not the problem; people just think it is.
The fix: Limit, don't turn off, the TV.
The key to preventing TV from negatively affecting achievement, like other activities in children's non-school hours, lies in exercising moderation, not in halting the activity altogether.
The issue: Part-time jobs.
The problem: Students work too much.
The fix: Curtail weekday jobs during the school year.
Learning takes effort. It is not innate. The American people never have flinched from tackling tough tasks. The challenge today is to improve education. Schools can't do it all. Neither can parents. Only when schools and parents work together to expect more from children will there be substantial progress. Schools need to stay the course of raising academic standards. Parents need to structure children's out-of-school time so they can meet society's rising expectations for learning.
- Which issues apply to you? (Do you work too much? Watch too much tv?)
- What are some new behaviors you can start using? Explain.
Classwork
Begin designing your home page for your portfolio. Your portfolio will showcase your work at North High and your activities after school.
The first two items your portfolio home page will link to are:
- current resume (you must create one of these; find resume formats on the net)
- magnet projects
See Mr. Dino's portfolio example here.
Resources:
- Look at some other student portfolios here.
- Fireworks refresher: Go to Atomic Learning (username: ecis05; pwd: atomic)
- go to FireworksMX 2004 section
- View Section A-Basic Tools and Techniques
- View Section E - layers and Masking!
- practice Fireworks as you watch