The Old Creamery Theatre Announces 2015 Studio Stage Line-Up

Tickets: $30 for adults, $18.50 for Students, $12 Student Rush Studio Stage shows are on Thursdays and Sundays at 2:00 p.m. and on Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 p.m.

 

Billy Bishop Goes to War

April 9 - 26, 2015

By John Gray and Eric Peterson

From a rowdy, unruly, and impetuous youth to a respectable, venerated veteran, Billy Bishop Goes To War follows a boy's journey into manhood. Canadian WWI fighter pilot, Billy Bishop, defies all expectations and becomes a top ace ? a " hero in the sky." With laudable historical accuracy and catchy tunes, this play illustrates Bishop's intimate thoughts about his odyssey through the turbulent trials and tribulations of war.

 

Heroes

July 2 - 19, 2015

By Gerald Sibleyras (Translated by Tom Stoppard)

Winner of the Olivier Award for Best New Comedy! A quirky quartet comprised of three elderly WWI veterans and a stone dog statue, spend their days occupying the terrace of an old soldiers home in France in 1959. The three men share stories, memories, and ideas of varying mental clarity. Troubled over their monotonous lives, they hatch an escape plan ? destination: Indochina or just over the nearest hill. Heroes is a touching and achingly honest portrayal of what it means to be a survivor.

 

Waiting for the Parade

August 20 - September 6, 2015

By John Murrell

Struggling through life at home during WWII, five women brave unique battles. Waiting for the Parade offers a rare glimpse into the effects of war on those left behind. Mirroring the spectrum of emotions that soldiers would likely possess, each woman feels differently about the war, whether it is pride, worry, or loneliness ? each woman must combat adversity, crisis, and pain.

 

Churchill

May 28 - 31, 2015 and October 1 - 4, 2015

By Andrew Edlin

This is a gripping one-man play about famous British statesman, author, orator, journalist and soldier Sir Winston Churchill.   It is April 1955. Churchill, aged 80, after entertaining the Queen and Prince Philip for dinner at No. 10 Downing Street, agonizes in his wartime bunker below London whether to finally resign as Prime Minister as the Cold War gathers pace. He is old, tired and losing his grip. As he tries to decide, he rolls back the years and reviews his uniquely eventful career, filled with history-changing events and famous people, glorious speeches, pithy comments, funny stories, and all the wit and wisdom that has made Churchill beyond merely one of history's greatest figures into an imperishable legend.

 

The Old Creamery Theatre is a not-for-profit professional theatre founded in 1971 in Garrison, Iowa. In 2015, the company will be celebrating 44 years of bringing live, professional theatre to the people of Iowa and theMidwest.

2014 Farm Bill's APH Yield Exclusion to be Implemented for 2015 Spring Crops

WASHINGTON, Oct. 21, 2014 - Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack today announced the implementation of a new Farm Bill initiative that will provide relief to farmers affected by severe weather, including drought. The Actual Production History (APH) Yield Exclusion, available nationwide for farmers of select crops starting next spring, allows eligible producers who have been hit with severe weather to receive a higher approved yield on their insurance policies through the federal crop insurance program.

Spring crops eligible for APH Yield Exclusion include corn, soybeans, wheat, cotton, grain sorghum, rice, barley, canola, sunflowers, peanuts, and popcorn. Nearly three-fourths of all acres and liability in the federal crop insurance program will be covered under APH Yield Exclusion.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA) Risk Management Agency and Farm Service Agency staff worked hard to implement several 2014 Farm Bill programs ahead of schedule, such as the Agricultural Risk Coverage, the Price Loss Coverage, Supplemental Coverage Option and Stacked Income Protection Plan. USDA is now able to leverage data from the Agricultural Risk Coverage and Price Loss Coverage to extract the information needed to implement APH Yield Exclusion earlier than expected.

"Key programs launched or extended as part of the 2014 Farm Bill are essential to USDA's commitment to help rural communities grow. These efforts give farmers, ranchers and their families better security as they work to ensure Americans have safe and affordable food," said Vilsack. "By getting other 2014 Farm Bill programs implemented efficiently, we are now able to offer yield exclusion for Spring 2015 crops, providing relief to farmers impacted by severe weather."

The APH Yield Exclusion allows farmers to exclude yields in exceptionally bad years (such as a year in which a natural disaster or other extreme weather occurs) from their production history when calculating yields used to establish their crop insurance coverage. The level of insurance coverage available to a farmer is based on the farmer's average recent yields. In the past, a year of particularly low yields that occurred due to severe weather beyond the farmer's control would reduce the level of insurance coverage available to the farmer in future years. By excluding unusually bad years, farmers will not have to worry that a natural disaster will reduce their insurance coverage for years to come.

Under the new Farm Bill program, yields can be excluded from farm actual production history when the county average yield for that crop year is at least 50 percent below the 10 previous consecutive crop years' average yield.

RMA will provide additional program details in December 2014.

Federal crop insurance, which is sold through private crop insurance agents, offers a variety of options that may impact coverage and premium costs. Producers are encouraged to work with their crop insurance agent to determine the coverage that best meets their risk management needs. Farmers can find a crop insurance agent in their area at: www.rma.usda.gov/tools/agent.html.

Today's announcement was made possible by the 2014 Farm Bill. The 2014 Farm Bill builds on historic economic gains in rural America over the past five years, while achieving meaningful reform and billions of dollars in savings for taxpayers. Since enactment, USDA has made significant progress to implement each provision of this critical legislation, including providing disaster relief to farmers and ranchers; strengthening risk management tools; expanding access to rural credit; funding critical research; establishing innovative public-private conservation partnerships; developing new markets for rural-made products; and investing in infrastructure, housing and community facilities to help improve quality of life in rural America. For more information, visit www.usda.gov/farmbill.

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SPRINGFIELD, IL (10/19/2014)(readMedia)-- Col. Christopher Hall of Springfield, Illinois, retired after more than 27 years of service in the Illinois Army National Guard, the last five and a half as Illinois' United States Property and Fiscal Officer (USPFO).

"What I'm going to miss about being in the National Guard is being part of a team with a common purpose," Hall said. "I will miss putting on the uniform every day."

Hall, a Mount Carmel native, enlisted in the Illinois Army National Guard in 1987 as a combat engineer. After his unit leadership selected him for Warrior Challenge, a series of boards and reviews where Soldiers can learn more about officer candidacy school, Hall entered Officer Candidate School (OCS) and commissioned as a second lieutenant in 1990.

"I felt honored they selected me," Hall said. "I felt a duty and a responsibility to enter OCS."

As an officer, Hall served in a variety of roles, from quartermaster commander to logistics officer to working for the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS). In December 2008, Hall took over as the USPFO for Illinois and served in that position until June 2014. Hall coordinated with Washington to provide funding and logistic support for the Illinois National Guard.

"Doing the USPFO job (in Illinois) was a good way to finish out my career," Hall said.

Daniel Krumrei, the Adjutant General for the Illinois National Guard, said Hall's service as USPFO was exemplary.

"Colonel Hall always has taken on tough assignments, whether here in Illinois or around the military, including nearly six years as USPFO, proceeded by battalion command and more than 60 months of joint duty service at the JCS and at United States Central Command," Krumrei said.

Hall said his philosophy is to leave any team, place or unit better than he found it. With National Guard Bureau asking Hall's office to teach, assist and develop other USPFOs around the country, Hall feels like he has done that.

"Not on my own, but as a team we've done that," Hall said.

After serving in an active duty capacity since 1995, Hall will transition into his new job with the Federal Highway Administration, continuing a career in government affairs.

"I see many challenges and opportunities to be a key contributor," Hall said. "I knew it was a perfect fit."

Hall met his wife, Kimberly, during his time traveling to Camp Lincoln in Springfield for OCS. The couple have two children, a son Alec, 17, and a daughter Kristin, 13.

Please join the LeClaire Chamber of Commerce for a Ribbon Cutting as we celebrate the opening of Jones Street Java House, 204 Jones Street, LeClaire, Friday, November 7, 9:00 a.m.  The Java House features a variety of fresh pastries, coffees, lattes and teas.  Watch for breakfast items and boxed lunches, soon. Please come help us celebrate!

We, at Churches United of the Quad City Area are excited to remind you that the arrival of the Canadian Pacific Holiday Train is only 4 weeks away, so please mark your calendar!

The train will arrive at 1:45 on December 5, 2014, so please join us at Modern Woodmen Park early to enjoy the festivities! Santa and Mrs. Claus will be there between noon and 1:30, and there will be cookies & hot chocolate, and goody bags for the first 250 children! Kira Isabella, an award winning Canadian country music artist, will be performing when the train arrives. Please join us for a fun-filled Holiday Event!

For information on this event, please contact Anne Wachal or Thea Hansen at Churches United, 563-332-5002.

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BETTENDORF, IA -Run with Carl organizers will announce a new arrangement to allow the Run with Carl Labor Day race to continue at a special press conference.

Media opportunity: An official announcement of this transition will be on Wednesday, November 12 at 10:00 a.m. at the Bettendorf Life Fitness Center track. Representatives will be on hand for a ceremonial signing and interviews.
"This race has been an excellent way to memorialize Carl's life in funding scholarships for graduates of Bettendorf and Pleasant Valley High Schools. Through it we have awarded 30 scholarships. While we are committed that the scholarship program will continue our family involvement in the organization and management of the Run with Carl will discontinue," said Dick Schillig.

Who: Run with Carl
When: Wednesday, November 12 at 10:00 a.mn
Where: Bettendorf Life Fitness Center, 2222 Middle Road, Bettendorf, IA track
Why: To announce a new organizer for Run with Carl

About Run with Carl: The Run with Carl was the primary funding vehicle for The Carl D. Schillig Memorial Fund. The fund was established in 1995 in memory of Carl Schillig who was killed at the age of 15 in a car-pedestrian accident. With Carl's philanthropy as its inspiration, the nonprofit also distributes proceeds from the run to organizations in which Carl was active, including the Bettendorf Pleasant Valley Aquatics, the Cornbelt Running Club, and Our Lady of Lourdes Church. In 2014, Run with Carl celebrated its 20th run and announced that the Schillig family would no longer direct the race. The Carl D. Schilling Memorial Scholarship will continue to support scholarships for students at Bettendorf and Pleasant Valley High Schools.

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For the full listing of all that is going on in downtown Davenport over the course of the next week, please click this link:  Downtown Davenport: 11/7 - 11/13

MOUNT VERNON, IA (11/06/2014)(readMedia)-- Students from Cornell College performed in the Steel Drum Ensemble concert on Oct. 30.

The concert, held in Cornell College's King Chapel, featured Halloween favorites, including the theme from the Addams Family and "The Monster Mash," as well as crowd-pleasers like the theme from "Star Wars" and "Crazy Train."

Stephanie Campbell of Bettendorf was one of the 26 students who performed in the concert.

Andrew (Drew) Klocke of Coal Valley was one of the 26 students who performed in the concert.

The Steel Drum Ensemble is one of seven of the college's highly regarded ensembles, open to all students by audition. In addition to building group performance skills, the ensembles also offer exceptional undergraduate solo opportunities.

One of the 40 "Colleges That Change Lives," Cornell College in Mount Vernon, Iowa, is a national liberal arts college with a distinctive One Course At A Time curriculum. The One Course schedule provides students the chance to dive into their studies, focus more intensely on the disciplines of their choice, and learn authentically with the unique freedom to shed the confines of the traditional classroom to study off-campus, pursue research, or accept an internship-all without missing out on other classes.

Cornell has been recognized by numerous publications for the value its education offers and for academic excellence. This year it was named one of the 20 "Best Buys" in higher education by the "Fiske Guide to Colleges," and one of the 100 best values in liberal arts education by Kiplinger's. It has also been called a "Great School at a Great Price" by U.S. News and World Report. Ninety-three percent of Cornell graduates earn their degrees in four years, compared to the national average of slightly more than five years. In 2013 Cornell was named one of the 25 colleges with the best professors by the Center for College Affordability and Productivity. For more information, visit www.cornellcollege.edu.

By Charles M. Reigeluth, Ph.D.

Think of our schools as a horse and buggy - it worked well in a different time, but times have changed. Educational needs have changed as much as transportation needs.  Retrofitting a horse and buggy will not give us an airplane, and yet we seem to expect that reforms to our schools will meet our new educational needs. And why shouldn't we?

We've never experienced a paradigm change in American education.  All we know is piecemeal reforms.  But there has been a paradigm change.  In the mid 1800s, as our communities transformed from agrarian to industrial societies, the one-room schoolhouse no longer met our educational needs and was gradually replaced by the current, factory model of schools. This was a paradigm change because the fundamental structure of the one-room schoolhouse was different - it had no grade levels, no courses, no standardized norm-referenced tests.

Could it be that once again our educational needs have changed so dramatically that only paradigm change will be effective?  To answer this question, we should first determine whether our current educational systems are meeting our needs.  Consider the following:

• More than half of America's high school seniors are not proficient in reading, and 75 percent can't do math, according to the recently released National Assessment of Educational Progress.

• The PISA test administered by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development in 2012 found that the United States ranked 17th in reading, 27th in math, and 20th in science among the 34 OECD countries (http://www.oecd.org/pisa/keyfindings/PISA-2012-results-US.pdf).

• The hidden curriculum - compliance and tolerance for boring, repetitive tasks - was very important for manual labor during the Industrial Age but is counterproductive for the initiative and problem-solving skills needed for knowledge work in the Information Age.

• Our communities are increasingly segregated by socio-economic status, resulting in greater disadvantages for many students.

Clearly, our schools are not performing as well as we would like and need them to in an increasingly competitive global economy.

This poor performance is not due to lack of effort. Since "A Nation at Risk" was published in 1987, billions of dollars have been spent on educational reforms.  So why have they failed, and why are they destined to continue to fail no matter how much money we spend on them?

The primary reasons have to do with fundamental changes in society - its educational needs and tools.  To understand this, it is helpful to consider a truth about learning: Students learn at different rates.  Yet our current paradigm of education tries to teach a fixed amount of content in a fixed amount of time. So the current structure, by basing student progress on time rather than learning,

• forces slower students to move on before they have mastered the material (thus accumulating gaps in knowledge that make future learning of related material more difficult and virtually condemn those students to flunking out), and

• holds back faster learners, demotivating them and squandering their sorely needed talents.

As described in my recent book, Reinventing Schools: It's Time to Break the Mold (http://www.reinventingschools.net), a system designed to not leave children behind would have each student move on only when s/he has learned the current material, and as soon as s/he has learned the current material.  Until schools make this fundamental structural change, they will continue to leave children behind, no matter what educational reforms we make - be it more high-stakes testing, more teacher professional development, smaller class sizes, more focus on basic skills, longer school day or year, or whatever the latest fad.

So what does this have to do with changes in society?  Alvin Toffler has convincingly described how societies undergo massive waves of change, from the Hunting-and-Gathering Age, to the Agrarian Age, the Industrial Age, and the Information Age.  Each wave has brought about paradigm change in all of society's systems:

• the family (extended family in the Agrarian Age, followed by the nuclear family, and now the working-parent family - dual-income and single-parent);

• transportation (horse and sailboat in the Agrarian Age, followed by a combination of the railroad and steamboat, and now the automobile and airplane);

• lighting systems (flame, incandescent bulb, LED);

• health-care systems;

• legal systems;

• communication systems;

• and, of course, education systems.

The one-room schoolhouse was the predominant paradigm of education in the Agrarian Age, the current factory model of schools in the Industrial Age, and the learner-centered paradigm (which exists only in about 1 percent of U.S. schools so far) in the Information Age.

The reason for these paradigm changes is that each wave of change creates different ends and means - different purposes for education and different tools for education.  Regarding purposes, during the Industrial Age, manual labor was the predominant form of work.  We did not need to educate many people to high levels; rather we needed to separate the future laborers from the future managers and professionals by flunking them out.  We needed a system that could sort the students - that would leave the slower students behind.  So we invented time-based student progress, norm-referenced testing, and letter (or number) grades.

But in the Information Age, knowledge work is becoming predominant. We need a system that is focused on maximizing every student's learning, which is evidenced by our talk about "no child left behind."  This requires a system in which student progress is based on learning, not time.  Furthermore, the hidden curriculum in the Industrial Age paradigm was training students to be compliant and tolerant of boring tasks, important preparation for the assembly line. That curriculum is counter-productive for knowledge work.  Now we need a hidden curriculum of initiative, problem-solving, collaboration, and lifelong learning, which can perhaps best be achieved through self-directed, project-based learning.

As for education tools, information technologies make it much easier and less expensive to customize student progress and other aspects of instruction, enhance intrinsic motivation, integrate criterion-referenced testing with teaching (as is done in the Khan Academy - http://www.khanacademy.org/about), and keep track of what each individual student has learned.

There are many schools in which paradigm change has already been happening - more than 140 are listed in Reinventing Schools.  But in contrast to piecemeal reforms, paradigm change entails fundamental changes throughout the entire system :

• the instructional subsystem (from teacher-centered to learner-centered and self-directed, from standardized to customized, from extrinsic to intrinsic motivation),

• the assessment subsystem (from norm-referenced to criterion-referenced, from separate from instruction to integrated with instruction, from artificial to performance-based),

• the record-keeping subsystem (from comparative grades to an inventory of attainments),

• the roles of teachers (from "sage on the stage" to "guide on the side"),

• the roles of students (from passive, teacher-directed to active, self-directed),

• the roles of parents (from cookie bakers to partners in their children's learning),

• the roles of technology (from tool for the teacher to tool for the learner),

• and much more.

Where piecemeal educational reforms are destined to fail, paradigm change will eventually succeed. This is a point that policy-makers fatally overlook, with devastating consequences for our children and consequently our communities and economy.

The recognition that students learn at different rates also requires rethinking the definition of "achievement gap." It is traditionally defined as the gap in achievement between groups of students of the same age - typically by racial or socioeconomic groups.  This definition arose out of Industrial Age thinking, expecting all students to be the same, and results in a misplaced emphasis for improving education.

The achievement gap that we should be most concerned about is the gap between what an individual student has learned and what that student could have learned.  The goal should be for all children to reach their potential, not for all to have learned the same things by the same age.  The only way for all to learn the same things by the same age would be to hold back the faster learners.

The United States espouses the goal of leaving no child behind, but it is clear that our Industrial Age system with time-based student progress is designed to leave children behind, and no educational reforms within that paradigm can change that dismal fact.

Toffler's insights show us why paradigm change is needed at this point in history - indeed, why it is inevitable, just as the transformation from the one-room schoolhouse to the factory model was inevitable.  The major concern is how long this paradigm change will take, and how much damage will be done to our children, their communities, and our economy before it happens.

Toffler's insights also help us to see what the new paradigm should be like and how it will greatly improve student learning, equity and cost-effectiveness while simultaneously professionalizing the teaching occupation.  The book Reinventing Schools elaborates on that vision, describes three school systems that fit the new paradigm, along with evidence of their effectiveness, and offers guidance for what school systems and policymakers can do to engage in this transformation.

Until educators, policymakers, and the public understand that the paradigm must change from one in which student progress is based on time to one in which it is based on learning, we will continue to leave children behind, regardless of what piecemeal reforms we make.

About Charles M. Reigeluth

Charles M. Reigeluth, www.reigeluth.net, has a B.A. in Economics from Harvard University and a Ph.D. in Instructional Psychology from Brigham Young University.  He taught high school science for three years, was a professor at Indiana University for 25 years, including department chairman  for three years.  His research, conducted in schools, focuses on paradigm change in educational systems, the design of high-quality instruction, and the design of technology systems for the learner-centered paradigm of education. He is the author of Reinventing Schools: It's Time to Break the Mold (http://www.reinventingschools.net).

BOURBONNAIS, IL (11/06/2014)(readMedia)-- Olivet Nazarene University presented its fourth annual Young Alumni Awards to alumna Katherine Kalemkarian of Los Angeles and alumnus Scott Karalis of Palatine, Illinois, during the morning chapel service on Friday, October 31, as part of the 2014 Homecoming and Family Weekend activities. She is the daughter of George and June Kalemkarian of Moline, Illinois.

With a vision for a fashion industry career, Kalemkarian graduated summa cum laude from Olivet in 2006 with a degree in family and consumer sciences. Majoring in fashion merchandising, she also completed minors in business management, marketing and French.

In 2006, Kalemkarian was hired by TJX Companies as an allocation analyst and moved to Boston to work out of the corporate headquarters there. This is the parent company of TJ Maxx, Marshalls and HomeGoods in the U.S., as well as retail chains in Canada and Europe. In 2010, her two-year assignment as a planning manager with TK Maxx, the European division, took her to London to live and work.

Currently, as a ladies dress buyer with TJX, she is based in the Los Angeles satellite buying office. Each year, she purchases dresses that ship to nearly 2,000 stores nationwide. Identified as a potential leader for her company, she is on a leadership mentoring and training track.

Kalemkarian enjoys traveling and has visited 22 European countries. Experiencing new cultures, foods and people is one of her passions. As a self-described foodie and an excellent cook, she often ministers to others by hosting dinner parties for them at her home.

Each year, as part of the Homecoming celebration, Olivet honors one outstanding alumna and one outstanding alumnus with this award. Recipients are chosen by vote of the Alumni Board, and must have graduated from Olivet within the last 10 years. These awards are underwritten by alumni Mel and Judith (Tucker) Sayes, 1973 Olivet graduates, of Little Rock, Arkansas.

Olivet Nazarene University is an accredited Christian, liberal arts university offering more than 100 areas of undergraduate and graduate study, including the Doctor of Education in ethical leadership. Olivet has one main campus in Bourbonnais, Illinois, just 50 miles south of Chicago plus four additional sites - Rolling Meadows and Oak Brook, Illinois; Indianapolis, Indiana; Grand Ledge, Michigan; and Hong Kong - and more than 100 School of Graduate and Continuing Studies learning locations throughout Chicagoland and the Midwest. From Oxford to Tokyo, hundreds of Olivet students also experience the global classroom each year, whether through study abroad opportunities or worldwide mission trips.

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