Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Save the Date: Important Back to School Events

Save the Date:  Important Back to School Events
Mark your calendars to join friends of CARES for these upcoming events. Our thanks go to our local park districts and all the sponsors who are coordinating back to school events. Volunteering to work at CARES tables at these events offers a great way to get to know other parents who are similarly committed to improving local schools.  

Sunday, August 18th, 12:30 PM (Proksa Park)
District 100 Back to School Carnival
Bring your family for lunch off the grill, school supply giveaways, information booths, 'meet & greet' with teachers & principals, carnival games and petting zoo. CARES needs volunteers in 2 hour shifts from 11:00-5:00.  Volunteers will set up and man a CARES booth to distribute information about Berwyn CARES and offer activities/crafts for kids. Contact Shelley Titzer (titzers@yahoo.com) if you are interested in helping.

Monday, August 19th  
First Day of School for D100  
Early dismissal (11:25 for Elementary, 11:35 for Middle School)

Sunday, August 25th, 1:00 PM
District 98 Back to School Picnic 
(Location: 16th Street across from Sokol Tabor and North Berwyn Park District facility.) 
This picnic event also offers school supply giveaways and the chance for families to meet teachers and principals. CARES needs volunteers in 2 hour shifts from noon-4 pm.  Volunteers will set up and man a CARES booth to distribute information about Berwyn CARES and offer activities/crafts for kids.  Contact Amanda Mansk-Perryman (Amanda@ampdesigns.net) if you are interested in helping.

Monday, August, 26th  
First Day of School for Morton West  

Wednesday, August 28th  
First Day of School for D98   

Saturday, September 21st  
Oktoberfest in the Depot District
CARES will offer kids activities and an information booth from noon-5 pm.  Contact Debbie Durrer (debbie.durrer@gmail.com) if you are interested in volunteering to lead this effort on behalf of CARES. We are looking for creative ideas!!

With best wishes for a terrific 2013-2014 school year!

The Board of Directors for BerwynCARES

Monday, July 1, 2013

Baseball Team Gathers to...READ!



Some AWESOME Baseball coaches made a difference in their players lives this summer by not only nurturing their athletic interests but by encouraging them to read and write over the summer through the Berwyn CARES Summer Reading and Writing Program. Research shows that kids who do NOT read and write over the summer may lose months or more of achievement gained in the previous school year!  

Berwyn CARES has received dozens of mini-books and reading logs due to Mayor Lovero's generous donation of Chicago Fire tickets.  What a GREAT incentive!  One team gathered at Over The Rainbow Ice Cream Parlor to read their original stories aloud to their teammates, celebrating a winning baseball season AND a summer of learning. Thanks to Mayor Lovero, The Berwyn Recreation Center, Over the Rainbow Ice Cream Parlor and all the coaches and parents who made a difference.  

IMPORTANT:  It is not too late to submit your books or reading logs.  Go to www.berwyncares.org.  You can download a printable copy of the mini-book or reading log to work on for the rest of the summer.  Please turn in to Over the Rainbow Ice Cream Parlor for a free ice cream cone by August 1st.  

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

CARES to Coaches: You Can Make a Difference!




Dear Berwyn Rec Baseball Coaches:

BerwynCARES Summer Writing & Reading Program for Berwyn Rec Baseball
At picture day a few weeks ago, BerwynCARES provided younger players with blank books to create their own original story over the summer.  Older players were given a reading list of books available at the library with a log for parent signatures.  More information about the program is in our Letter to Coaches.

New Prizes Offered
We have some exciting news!  Mayor Robert Lovero, has donated 60 tickets for the July 3rd Chicago Fire game to support this program.  The first 15 children that turn in their completed books or logs by June 30th will receive 4 tickets to the game. 

Please remind your players to get started on their books or reading logs.  When completed, players can turn them in at Over the Rainbow Ice Cream Parlor (6836 Windsor in Berwyn).  Players will get a FREE ICE CREAM CONE when they bring in their books or reading logs.

Players, parents and coaches can find printable blank books and reading logs at  http://www.berwyncares.org/students.html.  Please consider printing extras and passing out the materials at the next practice.  Research shows that kids who do NOT read and write over the summer may lose 2 months or more of achievement gained in the previous school year!  Reading and writing over the summer means higher achievement in the fall.

Your encouragement can and will make a difference!
Berwyn CARES thanks you for your willingness to partner with us in this important effort.

Sincerely,
BerwynCARES

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Standardized Testing: Is it ALL bad?

Today's guest blogger is Gloria Mitchell.  
Gloria Mitchell is a BerwynCARES board member and parent of two girls.  She is pursuing a teaching degree and  is a regular contributor to this blog.  
A friend of mine recently sent me a link to an online petition to the White House to end high-stakes testing in the American education system.  I signed it, and I’d like to share why, in case readers of this blog would like to sign, too.
First, let me say that I didn’t sign it because I think all standardized tests are worthless. As an involved parent and now a preservice teacher, I know that there are worthwhile assessment tests that can help parents and teachers evaluate a child’s skills in order to determine the level and style of instruction that will help him or her learn best.
I didn’t sign it because I think bad teachers should be allowed to keep their jobs. I believe our country needs more good teachers: more intelligent, well-informed, well-educated, creative and caring people who work to bring out the best in every child. That’s why I want to be a teacher and am committed to becoming an excellent one.
I didn’t sign it because I think evidence is unimportant in evaluating the work of schools. Evidence is tremendously important. 
But we need to know that the data schools gather and share is based on valid tests, and just as importantly, we need to ensure that people who use the data are making valid interpretations and therefore worthwhile policy recommendations. These recommendations can have real impact on thousands or millions of teachers, children, and families.
With that in mind:
We should be careful not to use achievement test data to make decisions based on interpretations that are not valid for what the tests measure.  A fourth-grade reading test measures whether a student reads at a fourth-grade level. It is not designed to measure whether the student’s teacher is good or whether the school he or she attends is good. But administrators and policymakers would like to have some objective means of evaluating teachers and schools, and because achievement tests are scored objectively, it is tempting to try to convert the achievement scores for students into “effectiveness” scores for teachers and schools. 
Some researchers have attempted to construct methods of measuring a teacher’s “value-added assessment,” which would be how his or her students perform on achievement tests compared with how the same students would perform with a hypothetical average teacher. This sounds useful, but different methods of calculating “value-added” can lead to different results, and any of the methods may be prone to errors, as can the tests themselves. The Seattle teachers who are currently protesting their district’s use of MAP tests pointed out that the margin of error on the test was in some cases greater than the achievement gains their students were supposed to show. 
For more on this, high school math teacher Gary Rubinstein has some incisive things to say about the use of achievement test scores as school/teacher evaluations on his blog.
We should keep in mind that we want and need outcomes from education that are not assessed on achievement tests. What do we overlook when achievement test results are used as a stand-in for educational outcomes in general? A multiple-choice test is by nature a test of convergent thinking (choose the right answer from a given set). Creativity relies on divergent thinking (generate new possibilities or many answers). It is interesting to note that while scores of American schoolchildren have gone up on the National Assessment of Educational Progress, they have gone down on the Torrance test of creativity.  Since creativity, as we are beginning to notice, drives innovation and thereby economic growth, this may give us cause for concern. 
More broadly, we might ask whether educational testing distorts the process it is designed to measure, namely teaching and learning. If we create high-stakes assessments of one range of subjects and skills, do we in effect force schools and teachers to reduce or eliminate time for untested subjects (history, geography, fine and applied arts, music, foreign language, physical education) and untested skills (social skills, self-regulatory skills, public speaking, creative problem-solving) in favor of the tested ones? Do we force teachers to spend more time on test-taking skills, and if so, what are we crowding out in order to make that time? What about the time spent administering the tests? 
We should remember that just because a test can be scored objectively does not mean the test itself is objective. Educational research attempts to describe and to quantify hypothetical constructs. A machine may be able to tell us whether a student picked answer A, B, C, or D, but human beings are the ones who must decide whether a given test adequately measures intangibles like “comprehension,” “analysis,” and so on.
This is of particular concern when researchers are trying to design one test that will be valid for many populations. One example of the questionable validity of reading comprehension tests comes from a researcher at the University of Wisconsin. She found that a group of boys who performed at or below grade level when tested on a passage from a grade-level social studies text, all performed at or above grade level when tested on an article about video games, even though it was 3 to 6 levels beyond their purported reading levels (much harder than the social studies text). Did their reading comprehension skills improve overnight?  Not exactly. The students’ performance on the second test was analyzed and found to be primarily a result of increased persistence on the part of the readers: they “self-corrected” much more frequently when presented with text on a topic of interest to them.  
Researchers in the social sciences use the term construct-irrelevant variance to describe what happens when results are affected by factors other than the performance ability of the test subject. Construct-irrelevant variance reduces test validity and undermines the usefulness of test results. Educational testing is rife with it, from math tests that inevitably test English reading skills, to test formats that do not work equally well for all learners, to test questions that reflect cultural biases.
Should kids be tested in school? Yes, to the extent that the tests are reliable, valid, and the results are used for valid purposes.
Should standardized test results be used to evaluate schools? 
As I write this, my daughter is at school taking a standardized test. She has been promised that she may attend a pizza party tomorrow if her scores are higher now than they were in the fall. Her scores in fall were quite high, and she rightly perceives that it may be hard for her to improve on them. She’s nervous. 
Who or what is being evaluated here?
What’s wrong with this picture?