Monday, January 25, 2010

Geocashing is Going Mainstream in Schools

Geocashing is fun! And it is healthy! And it incorporates technology! And its free! So how does it work?

Geocashing is a high-tech game played using coordinates and global positioning systems (GPS) to find hidden stuff (treasures). Very few treasures have any value but many of them are well planned and could take days or months to uncover - moving from one lead to another. Some treasure are found in extreme places. It is rumored that one clue will lead you to the top of Mt. Everest!

For the mere mortals coordinates can lead to a bottle cap imbedded into a tree and painted the color of the bark. Others can lead to logbooks to be signed by those who found it. Fact is that each search is an adventure with a keen sense of achievement when found. Several school districts have embraced it over the past four years with excellent results. Particpants walk, communicate, and explore new areas such as parks, suburbs, and trials.

The Inquirer reports that youth programs, such as offered the Salvation Army, has embraced geocashing to introduce kids to new expereinces, sights, and scenes. Old cities such as Philadelphia is riddled with caches and a great way to learn history. The idea is to find things you would otherwise not have seen or known about.

To get started visit http://www.geocashing.com/

Have fun! Michael Cordier

Thursday, January 14, 2010

The Role of Arts in Schools

The concept of developing 'the whole child' has been around for as long as education became a structured process. With globalization a new premium was placed on competition which resulted in targeted teaching content such as math, science, and reading. Resources for everything else declined and in some cases almost disappeared. Proponents of 'the whole child' movement claims that excellence in core subjects can be reached with an all-encompassing program uses the arts as medium to teach core subjects.


A wonderful program in Tuscon, AZ proves the point. In the program, different fine-arts techniques are used for students' academic development. At the Peter Howell Elementary School, Kindergarteners use instrumental music to develop auditory acuity; first-graders use opera to develop language acquisition; second-graders use dance to develop kinesthetic awareness; third-graders play the recorder to learn composition; fourth-graders play the violin to develop abstract reasoning; fifth- and sixth-graders compose, direct and stage original works to learn how to research, create and perform. By middle school, their learning becomes an integration of all previous experiences.


In an EdWeek article, ( http://www.edweek.org/tm/articles/2010/01/11/fineartsacademics ), the concepts of "Opening the Minds through the Arts" (OMA) program is explained. Says OMA Director, Joan Ashcraft, "The children go to middle school with such a heightened understanding of connections in the world," explains Ashcraft. "The teachers tell us that they have to redesign their classroom lessons because the children are challenging them and they have to elevate their work because the children are thinking more creatively."


Needless to say, when fine arts are infused with traditional lessons, teamwork and creativity are often byproducts. "Fine arts can stand all by itself, but when you take it and purposefully use it as a tool to help academic achievement, it really cements the concepts," says Howell principal and pianist Mary Ann Jackson. Whether acting, singing, dancing or drawing is used to reinforce lessons, the connections students draw are incomparable to textbook-style learning. Who would have thought?


Here is the kicker: Independent research firm WestEd Inc., has determined that students in the OMA program have higher AIMS and Stanford 9 test scores, regardless of ethnicity and socioeconomic backgrounds!
 
My guess is that the preparation, scheduling, and staffing will be offered as excuses not to replicate this living example of a successful program to develop the whole child. Those are poor excuses to excellence in teaching our children.
Michael Cordier

Sunday, January 10, 2010

New Connection Between Fitness and Brain Development

A recent study published by three universities (Sweden & USA) under the authorship of Maria Aberg et al., and titled "Cardiovascular fitness is associated with cognition in young adulthood", is filled with lots of statistical methods and complex formulas. (PNAS  December 8, 2009  vol. 106  no. 49  20911).

What makes the study interesting is that it is a longitudinal study amongst a large group of men (1,221,727) born in 1950 and tracked through 1976. The group included full-sibling pairs, twin pairs, and monozygotic twin pairs (identical). Both physical fitness and intelligence performance data were collected and linked with other national databases for information on school achievement, socio-economic status, and sibship.

Cardiovascular fitness was measured by ergometer cycling and muscle strength by strength tests. Discarding heritability and non-shared environmental influences, the results were striking:

Cardiovascular fitness, not muscle strength, at age 18 years is associated with cognitive performance. Cardiovascular fitness changes between age 15 and 18 predicted cognitive performance at 18 years. Propositional-hazards models showed that cardiovascular fitness at age 18 predicted educational achievements later in life!

Various forms of intelligence exists and the research shows cardiovascular fitness increases:
  • Global intelligence
  • Logical intelligence
  • Verbal intelligence
  • Visiospatial intelligence
  • Verbal intelligence
  • Technical intelligence

The study concluded that "these data substantiate that physical exercise could be an important instrument for public health initiatives to optimize educational achievements, cognitive performance, as well as disease prevention at the society level".

So why is physical activity not a priority nor a part as we reshape the Education model in America?

Monday, January 4, 2010

It now seems likely that the 'Race To The Top' grants for $4 Billion to states across the country is in fact the blue print for the next version of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act that is due to be renewed in the next year. A close adviser of Education Secretary, Arne Duncan, confirmed that the future of our education system will rest on the core foundations of the Race to the Top program:
  1. turning around low-performing schools,
  2. improving teacher quality and distribution,
  3. bolstering state data systems,
  4. improving the use of data and assessments,
  5. Expanding Charter School programs
Glaringly missing from the core of the future of education is the role of arts in the development of the whole child. In particular, nothing has been mentioned about nutrition and physical activity in the formal mouthpieces of education publications.

It has been reported that Mrs. Duncan is a certified PE teacher but even the largest organization promoting physical education and sport has failed to solicit a positive response from her to promote healthy lifestyles. It might be that the Secretary wants to fix the 'big issues' first before being bothered by the mundane such as a healthy body harbors a strong mind.

But if one wants to follow the money, it might behoove our leaders to pay more attention to an article posted in the Atlanta Constitution by Bryan McCullick: http://www.ajc.com/opinion/obesity-wont-improve-without-235301.html It might behoove all of us to not only read the article but pass it on to others.

It is clear that a new generation of students exposed to quality physical education can diminish the escalating costs associated with health care - irrespective any health care reform.
Michael Cordier