INDIANAPOLIS, IN (06/03/2014)(readMedia)-- Allison Shanks, a Biology B.S. major and a resident of Bettendorf, IA, was one of 824 Butler University students who completed degree requirements in May 2014. Allison also is on Butler University's Dean's List for the spring semester of the 2013-2014 academic year. Recipients range from freshman to sixth-year pharmacy students. Degree-seeking undergraduate students at Butler who carry at least 12 academic hours in a given semester are eligible for the Dean's List in the college in which they are enrolled. Students on the list are in the top 20 percent of their college, as determined by the semester grade point average of all eligible students in each college.

Urges Critical Investment in Education to Give Every Child the Opportunity for Success

CHICAGO - Governor Pat Quinn today visited students and teachers at the Jane Addams Elementary School in Chicago to continue his push to properly fund education in Illinois. In March, Governor Quinn proposed an honest and responsible budget that made historic investments in education. Last week the Illinois General Assembly instead chose to send the Governor an incomplete budget that delays the important fiscal decisions.

"I will never stop fighting for public education," Governor Quinn said. "Our children deserve access to a great education. No matter where they live. No matter who they are. Every child deserves an opportunity to learn and succeed."

In his budget address this year, Governor Quinn laid out an honest and responsible budget for the next fiscal year along with a five-year blueprint to secure the state's finances for the long-term and invest like never before in education and early childhood. The Governor's budget was lauded by all three bond-rating agencies for its comprehensive approach to paying down bills, enhancing revenue and enacting spending restraints.

The Governor's 5-year blueprint includes a historic $6 billion increase in classroom spending over the next five years, doubling the investment in college scholarships for students in need and increasing access to higher education through dual enrollment and early college programs. Over the next five years, the Governor's plan would bring classroom funding to the highest levels in Illinois history.

###

Will discuss positive impact of HELP Legal Aid Center in Davenport

DES MOINES - Senator Tom Harkin (D-IA) announced today that his aide, Alison Hart, will visit Scott County on Tuesday, June 17, as part of a summer tour highlighting Harkin's partnership with Iowa communities through the years.  The "In the Footsteps of History" tour will include all Iowa counties and feature local projects aimed at keeping Iowa communities healthy and safe, keeping communities thriving through targeted education, research, and economic development projects and promoting local agriculture and conservation, while mitigating disasters.  The media is invited to attend.

Hart will meet with administrators at the HELP Legal Aid center to discuss the impact of the center on the community. Legal Aid lawyers provide counsel for under-served and at-risk populations, including victims of crime, the elderly, veterans and low-income people in the Davenport community. Harkin was a Legal Aid attorney in Iowa early on in his career and went on to fight in Congress to ensure that low-income Americans have access to the legal services they need. As a senior member of the Appropriations Committee, Harkin has offered numerous amendments to save and increase funding for the Legal Services Corporation, which funds Legal Aid.  In addition, he has worked to secure more than $2.7 million above their base funding for Legal Aid services in Iowa since 2006. In 2009, he introduced the Civil Access to Justice Act, a bill to reauthorize the Legal Services Corporation and increase its annual authorized funding level. In 2007, he co-sponsored the Civil Legal Assistance Attorney Loan Repayment Act, a bill to forgive a portion of federal student loan debt for civil legal-aid attorneys who vow to stay in the practice for at least three years following degree completion.

"Every American deserves equal access to our justice system," said Harkin. "Having been a Legal Aid attorney early on in my career, I know firsthand how crucial legal assistance is to protecting the safety, security, and health of struggling families who have no place else to turn. I look forward to learning about how this center in Davenport is assisting those in need."

Details of the event are as follows:

 

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

12:00 PM HELP Legal Aid

736 Federal Street

Davenport, IA 52803

###

Sweepstakes Includes 'Free Donuts for a Year' and Facebook Donation Campaign.

The first National Donut Day was celebrated by The Salvation Army in Chicago in 1938 to help raise needed funds during the Great Depression and commemorate the work of the "donut lassies" who helped make the donut what it is today by feeding the tasty confection to American soldiers during World War I. The donuts became synonymous with The Salvation Army, as well as the American soldiers who were returning home with the nickname, "doughboys."

This significant occasion established the donut as a long-standing symbol of the services The Salvation Army continues to provide. The partnership between Entenmann's and The Salvation Army reinforces Entenmann's as a brand synonymous with National Donut Day.

In its continued support of The Salvation Army, from April 21 to June 30 Entenmann's Bakery will donate to the organization $1 for every person who "likes" the Entenmann's Facebook page ( http://www.facebook.com/entenmanns), up to $30,000. Entenmann's Bakery has donated a total of $70,000 to The Salvation Army through the first three years of the partnership and plans to hit the $100,000 mark through this year's donation campaign.

"We're very excited to partner with The Salvation Army for the fourth year in a row and hit the $100K charitable donation mark with the debut of our newest flavored Red Velvet donut," said Maureen Sticco, Director of Entenmann's Marketing Services.

In this the fourth year of the partnership and in celebration of the historical day, Entenmann's will be rewarding lucky "fans" with 'Free Donuts for a Year' and additional prizes through the sweepstakes link on the Entenmann's Facebook page. All entries must be received by 11:59: p.m. ET on June 30, 2014. Winners will be randomly selected from all submissions. Official Rules can be found at www.entenmanns.com.

"Entenmann's has been a terrific partner and supporter of our mission of goodwill and we look forward to making the 2014 National Donut Day the best one yet," said Major Ron Busroe, National Community Relations and Development Secretary for The Salvation Army.

National Donut Day Fun Facts:

The Salvation Army:

  • National Donut Day commemorates the "donut lassies," female Salvation Army volunteers who provided writing supplies, stamps, clothes-mending and home-cooked meals, and of course, donuts, for soldiers on the front lines.

  • With limited resources, these treats were fried, only seven at a time. The Salvation Army's Ensign Margaret Sheldon and Adjutant Helen Purviance cleverly thought of frying donuts in soldiers' helmets.

  • Approximately 250 Salvation Army volunteers provided assistance to American soldiers in France starting in 1917 during WWI.

  • In 2013, 30 million Americans received assistance from The Salvation Army's 3,600 officers, 60,000 employees and 3.4 million volunteers.

Entenmann's Bakery:

  • With donut bakeries in Carlisle, Pennsylvania and Montebello, California, Entenmann's produces more than 780 million donuts a year, which equivalents to 15 million donuts a week and more than 100,000 donuts every hour to keep up with the demands of Entenmann's donut lovers nationwide.

  • The Rich Frosted Donut has been the #1 seller since its introduction in 1973.

  • Entenmann's produces a number of varieties of donuts and Pop'ems each year including Cinnamon and Snickerdoodle Pop'ems and Devils Food Crumb Donuts to seasonal varieties including Halloween Rich Frosted Sprinkled, Harvest Pumpkin Donuts, Holiday Pop'ems and Rainbow Pop'ems.

  • In the early '50s, Frank Sinatra used to call the Bay Shore Bakery to place weekly orders from Entenmann's.

 

Urges CHCs to Apply for $300 Million Fund made available through ACA

WASHINGTON, D.C.–Senator Tom Harkin (D-IA) today released the following statement after the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services announced that it would make available up to $300 million through the Affordable Care Act (ACA) to Community Health Centers (CHCs) to expand services to underserved populations.  The funds will be used to help the nation's community health centers expand service hours, hire more medical providers, and add oral health, behavioral health, pharmacy, and vision services.

For more than a decade, Harkin has worked to expand CHC's in Iowa and around the country through his dual roles in the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, where he played a pivotal role in the Senate passage of the ACA, and as chair of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services and Education (the LHHS subcommittee) that funds health programs such as community health centers.

"Community health centers are a critical part of our nationwide health care system, providing essential health care services to thousands of Iowans every year," Harkin said.  "New funding made available through the Affordable Care Act will help these centers expand care to individuals and families in need, while adding good-quality jobs in our communities.  Between the Health Insurance Marketplace, which helped more than 29,000 Iowans enroll in health coverage for 2014, and expanded resources for CHCs, the ACA is helping bring affordable, quality health care to more Americans every day.  I encourage Iowa's community health centers to apply for this crucial funding and my office stands ready to assist CHCs throughout the process."

More information on this funding opportunity announcement can be found at www.grants.gov. Iowans can find a health center in their area at findahealthcenter.hrsa.gov.

###

QCAIR is pleased to announce the receipt of a $20,000 grant from the New Americans Initiative. The grant will be used to assist Lawful Permanent Residents in the Illinois Quad Cities by providing information, to those who desire it, on citizenship eligibility and provide assistance in obtaining citizenship.

This program will work to identify Lawful Permanent Residents interested in naturalization. We will also refer immigrants and refugees to the Quad Cities World Relief office and Black Hawk College for screening, any necessary education and paperwork completion for obtaining US Citizenship.

The purpose of QCAIR is to build stronger, long-lasting relationships among refuges, immigrants and the receiving community of the Quad Cities.

Please call Nana Ouro-Agoro, QCAIR NAI Coordinator, 309-716-7437 or email nana.ouro-agoro@acair.org with requests for additional information on the grant. For information on QCAIR please contact our Executive Director: Ikponwonsa Oriaikhi, 309-786-2995 (office) or email: IK@qcair.org.

* * *

Educator, Researcher Describes 4 Ways to Reboot

In spite of the billions of dollars spent on educational reform since "A Nation at Risk" was published in 1987, 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.

"Clearly, the current approaches to educational reform are failing," says notes educational researcher and consultant Charles M. Reigeluth, author of "Reinventing Schools: It's Time to Break the Mold" (www.reigeluth.net). "The problem is that major aspects of our educational system were devised to meet the societal needs of a bygone era."

"We need to change the paradigm - we need to move from Industrial Age 'factory model schools' to accommodate and reflect Information Age needs and realities."

The Industrial Age in the United States, roughly 1830 to 1960, was shaped by machinery and mass production. Many jobs moved from farms to factories, which required workers - and therefore students - who would follow instructions and endure repetitive, boring tasks, he says.

"We did not need to educate many people to high levels, so Industrial Age schools sorted students, promoting the few needed for managerial and professional work, and flunking out the many needed for the assembly lines," says Reigeluth, a former high school teacher and Indiana University professor.

"Today, knowledge work is more common than manual labor, and our systems are far more complex. All adults need a higher degree of knowledge just to function in society, so we can no longer afford a system that is designed to leave many children behind."

Here are four Industrial Age educational artifacts, according to Reigeluth, and how to update them for the Information Age:

•  Time-based student progress: Currently students in a class move on together to the next topic according to the calendar, regardless of whether they have learned the current material.  Slower students accumulate learning gaps that make it more difficult for them to master related material in the future, virtually condemning them to flunk out. The system is designed to leave many children behind.

A paradigm designed to leave no child behind would allow each student to move on as soon as he or she has learned the current material, and no sooner.  This requires "personalized learning'' and "learner-centered instruction" that is both high-tech and high-touch.

•  Standardized and other broad tests: Rather than evaluating a student based on how much he or she has learned in a certain amount of time, such as a 9-week period, each student should be evaluated to determine when the material has been learned, so we know when the student is ready to move on. This is called "criterion-referenced assessment," a different paradigm from "norm-referenced assessment."

"A big test with 20 different topics, as we use now, shows only how much a student knows compared to other students," Reigeluth says. "In the Information Age paradigm, all students are expected to finish learning whatever they undertake to learn. Like a Boy Scout working on a badge, each student continues to work until the material is mastered."

Assessments, then, are incremental and cover a single competency, or a small set of competencies. They certify mastery while also helping guide learning by showing students what they need to continue working on.

•  The traditional grading system : The traditional grading system indicates how well a student performed compared to the other students in a class - a tool that is only effective in sorting students. It's not an effective way of guiding and ensuring individual student learning, and it tells you little about what the student has learned.

"Rather than achievement reflected as grades on a report card, it would be reflected as lists of skills and concepts that the student has mastered," Reigeluth says.

•  Locking students into grades: Grade levels are incompatible with the Information Age model because students learn at different rates and become ready to move on to different material at different times. Grade levels are a key feature of the time-based, sorting-focused paradigm that served us well during the Industrial Age, but are detrimental to meeting Information Age educational needs.

Instead, group students into similar developmental levels, which typically span three to four years.

"Grouping developmentally, rather than based on age or rigid levels of content learning, accounts for the different rates at which children develop socially and emotionally," Reigeluth says. "Children can remain in their social-emotional peer group while working on projects typically tackled by students of a higher or lower age."

About Charles M. Reigeluth

Charles M. Reigeluth is a distinguished educational researcher who focuses on paradigm change in education. He has a B.A. in economics from Harvard University, and a Ph.D. in instructional psychology from Brigham Young University. He was a professor at the Instructional Systems Technology Department at Indiana University, and is a former chairman of the department. His new book, "Reinventing Schools," (www.reigeluth.net), advocates and chronicles a national paradigm change in K-12 education. He offers presentations and consulting on this topic.

This Saturday, June 7, Iowans can help Strike Out Malaria while enjoying an I-Cubs baseball game and a special concert from Manic Drive - whose current single 'Save a Life' can be heard in the popular movie "God's Not Dead."

All ages are encouraged to attend the concert and game at Principal Park in Des Moines. Each ticket includes a lifesaving donation to Imagine No Malaria, an extraordinary ministry of the people of The United Methodist Church that puts faith into action to end preventable deaths from malaria in Africa. Efforts have already cut the death rate in half.

"We have never done anything like this before," said Pastor Phil Rogers, youth minister and creator of the statewide Strike Out Malaria event. "This event brings Christian youth together for music, inspiration, fun and to save lives. They see that they have a voice and can make a difference."

In addition to the game and concert, there will be an all-night event for youth and their adult sponsors. Churches and youth organizations are encouraged to learn more and register at http://www.inmiowa.org/strikeout.

Admission for the youth lock-in is $40 and will include a lifesaving $10 donation to Imagine No Malaria, a ticket to the I-Cubs game, concert by Manic Drive, dinner and breakfast, a Strike Out Malaria t-shirt, overnight activities in the stadium (including worship with United Methodist Bishop Trimble) and a youth march to annual conference on Sunday morning.

For youth and adults who wish to only attend the game and concert, tickets are $25 and include a lifesaving donation to Imagine No Malaria, admission to the game and concert and a Strike Out Malaria t-shirt.

To register, go to http://www.inmiowa.org/strikeout.

GRADE 6 - PRINCIPAL'S LIST

Alexandra Amacher Grace Anders Samantha Coleman Emma Cowles Tyler Estes Riley Frederick Jaylen Gore Adam Hyder Gianna Jewhurst Madilynn Klauer David Moens Tony VanDeWalle
GRADE 6
HONOR ROLL Erik Coulter Grace Moore Megan Tanghe Maggie Schaecher Michael Showalter Vanessa Verschoore Alexis Wilkens

GRADE 7
PRINCIPAL'S LIST Emma Beardsley Gabe Beardsley Chloe Boyd Anna Darrow John Do Tony Dockery-Jackson Sydney Elliott Jonathan Fernandez Grant Florence Parker Georlett Lauren Hird Hannah Luppen Olivia Manternach Aaron Mickleson Haley Mosley Paige Nimrick Mackenzie Parboosingh Taylor Parker Faith Pickslay Mary Powers Vanessa Reger Ava Reynolds Lily Schoeck Logan Swartz
GRADE 7
HONOR ROLL Ben Eder Emily Elliott Morgan Mander Natika Woods Kaitlyn Zonnevylle

GRADE 8
PRINCIPAL'S LIST
Zoe Arvanitis
Makenna Freyberger
Amber Guzzo
Brendan Hird
Mindy Hoang
Kale Hyder
Cloie Jennings
Alyssa Klauer
Benjamin Luppen
William Mihm
Rebecca Nonnenmann
Jenna Pauley
Jessica Pauley
Lauryn Praet
Collin Solorzano
Luke Trondson
Clare VanSpeybroeck
Aviana Zahara
GRADE 8
HONOR ROLL
Jonathan Berry
Justin Bost
JC Brenny
Madeline Chambers
Haley DeWitte
Bridget Ferguson
Emily Ferreyra
Erik Hoffman
Zach Larson
Isabella Milani
Daniel Powers
Caden Punkiewicz
Collin Rogiers
Claudia Ruiz
Brenon Wilson

Iowa Fraud Fighters - Shield Your Savings Public Education Program
Who: Iowa Insurance Division and other state agency partners. Presenters and panelists:
  • Tom Alger, Iowa Insurance Division Communications Director
  • Kevin McCarthy, Iowa Assistant Attorney General
  • Paige Thorson, Iowa Department on Aging Legal Assistant
  • Patty Price, Iowa Senior Health Insurance Information Program (SHIIP) Training and Education Coordinator
Why cover it? Informative and emotional human-interest stories. Con artists are targeting Americans age 60 and older, swindling more than 5 million Americans out of a $3 billion each year. This is the sixth forum in the state. At past forums, we've had very vocal seniors willing to share their stories with the press. Some have brought documentation of scams and the AG has opened up cases at forums. From RSVPs, we anticipate 150 in attendance.
When: Thursday, June 5
11:30 a.m.: Registration & information tables
Noon: Lunch
12:30 p.m.: Presentations and Q&A panel
1:30 p.m.: Information tables
2 p.m.: Adjourn
Where: The RiverCenter, 136 E. Third Street, Davenport
# # #

Pages