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	<title>A new step forward for education and leadership &#187; Family Help</title>
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		<title>A thought provoking thought&#8230;</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 24 Jan 2008 12:56:40 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[&#8220;If you are living out of a sense of obligation you are slave.&#8221; &#8211; Dr. Wayne Dyer
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>&#8220;If you are living out of a sense of obligation you are slave.&#8221; &#8211; Dr. Wayne Dyer</p>
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		<title>Young son of Birmingham Radio Host Rick Burgess Drowns</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Jan 2008 22:51:30 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Young Son Of Birmingham Radio Host Drowns In Swimming Pool

Sunday, Jan 20, 2008 &#8211; 07:32 PM 



By Associated Press


BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) &#8211; The 2-year-old son of a popular Birmingham radio personality has drowned in a residential swimming pool in Shelby County.In a statement, Sheriff Chris Curry says the child, William Bronner Burgess, the youngest son of [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=anewstepforward.wordpress.com&blog=251405&post=130&subd=anewstepforward&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><div class="articleContentTitle">Young Son Of Birmingham Radio Host Drowns In Swimming Pool</div>
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<div><span class="articleContentDate">Sunday, Jan 20, 2008 &#8211; 07:32 PM</span> <span class="articleContentDateUpdate"></span></div>
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<div class="articleContentAuthor">By Associated Press</div>
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<div class="articleContentText">BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) &#8211; The 2-year-old son of a popular Birmingham radio personality has drowned in a residential swimming pool in Shelby County.In a statement, Sheriff Chris Curry says the child, William Bronner Burgess, the youngest son of Rick and Bubba Show co-host Rick Burgess, was pronounced dead last night at Children&#8217;s Hospital.</p>
<p>Shelby County 911 received a report at 7:24 p.m. Saturday of a possible drowning, according to the sheriff. Deputies and North Shelby Fire and Emergency Medical personnel responded to a house on Indian Crest Drive in Indian Springs Village.<br />
The sheriff says a preliminary investigation indicates that this is a tragic accident and he extended &#8220;deepest sympathy&#8221; to the Burgess family.</p></div>
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		<title>Young son of Birmingham Radio Host Rick Burgess Drowns</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Jan 2008 02:59:53 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Young Son Of Birmingham Radio Host Drowns In Swimming Pool

Sunday, Jan 20, 2008 &#8211; 07:32 PM 



By Associated Press


BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) &#8211; The 2-year-old son of a popular Birmingham radio personality has drowned in a residential swimming pool in Shelby County.
In a statement, Sheriff Chris Curry says the child, William Bronner Burgess, the youngest son of [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=anewstepforward.wordpress.com&blog=251405&post=131&subd=anewstepforward&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><div class="articleContentTitle">Young Son Of Birmingham Radio Host Drowns In Swimming Pool</div>
<div style="height:20px;"></div>
<div><span class="articleContentDate">Sunday, Jan 20, 2008 &#8211; 07:32 PM</span> <span class="articleContentDateUpdate"></span></div>
<div style="padding-right:7px;"></div>
<div style="height:20px;"></div>
<div>
<div class="articleContentAuthor">By Associated Press</div>
<div class="articleContentAuthorContact"></div>
</div>
<div class="articleContentText">BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) &#8211; The 2-year-old son of a popular Birmingham radio personality has drowned in a residential swimming pool in Shelby County.</p>
<p>In a statement, Sheriff Chris Curry says the child, William Bronner Burgess, the youngest son of Rick and Bubba Show co-host Rick Burgess, was pronounced dead last night at Children&#8217;s Hospital.</p>
<p>Shelby County 911 received a report at 7:24 p.m. Saturday of a possible drowning, according to the sheriff. Deputies and North Shelby Fire and Emergency Medical personnel responded to a house on Indian Crest Drive in Indian Springs Village.<br />
The sheriff says a preliminary investigation indicates that this is a tragic accident and he extended &#8220;deepest sympathy&#8221; to the Burgess family.</p></div>
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		<title>Bullying is no longer something that will just go away&#8230;</title>
		<link>http://anewstepforward.wordpress.com/2008/01/19/123/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 19 Jan 2008 07:41:16 +0000</pubDate>
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Local




Parents blame bullying for Mo. fifth-grader&#8217;s suicide
By ALAN SCHER ZAGIER, The Associated Press
2008-01-15 18:10:33.0
Current rank: # 479 of 8,228
LEE&#8217;S SUMMIT, Mo. -The bedroom bears the telltale signs of a typical boy on the cusp of his teen years: discarded food wrappers, video game consoles, clothes scattered on the floor.
The disarray hides tragedy inside the suburban [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=anewstepforward.wordpress.com&blog=251405&post=123&subd=anewstepforward&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
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<div><strong><em>Parents blame bullying for Mo. fifth-grader&#8217;s suicide</em></strong></div>
<p class="article_meta">By ALAN SCHER ZAGIER, The Associated Press<br />
2008-01-15 18:10:33.0<br />
Current rank: # <strong>479</strong> of 8,228</p>
<p><span style="font-weight:bold;">LEE&#8217;S SUMMIT, Mo.</span> -The bedroom bears the telltale signs of a typical boy on the cusp of his teen years: discarded food wrappers, video game consoles, clothes scattered on the floor.</p>
<p>The disarray hides tragedy inside the suburban <a href="http://null/Subject-Kansas_City.html" title="Kansas City">Kansas City</a> home. The room is a memorial to <a href="http://null/Subject-Brandon_Myers.html" title="Brandon Myers">Brandon Myers</a>, who killed himself in February 2007. He was 12.</p>
<p>For <a href="http://null/Subject-Kim_Myers.html" title="Kim Myers">Kim Myers</a>, her youngest son&#8217;s death is the result of what she calls incessant bullying that his teachers and other administrators at Voy Spears Elementary School failed to stop.</p>
<p>&#8220;He was teased in class on the day he died for acting depressed,&#8221; said Myers, a single parent. &#8220;He was screaming for help. If he had got the help he needed, he would still be alive.&#8221;</p>
<p>The details of how Brandon was harassed &#8211; and the school&#8217;s response &#8211; are incomplete. Myers has hired an attorney and said she plans to sue the <a href="http://null/Subject-Blue_Springs_School_District.html" title="Blue Springs School District">Blue Springs School District</a> for her son&#8217;s wrongful death. She and her ex-husband, Brandon&#8217;s father, don&#8217;t want to jeopardize the pending lawsuit by discussing it publicly.</p>
<p>A school district lawyer said officials would discuss only Brandon&#8217;s &#8220;educational experience&#8221; with <a href="http://null/Subject-The_Associated_Press.html" title="The Associated Press">The Associated Press</a>, and then only with his parents&#8217; permission.</p>
<p>The case is not without precedent. In 2005, a small-town teenager from <a href="http://null/Subject-Tonganoxie.html" title="Tonganoxie">Tonganoxie</a>, <a href="http://null/Subject-Kansas.html" title="Kansas">Kan.</a> who was bullied for years by classmates because they believed he was gay was awarded $440,000 in a settlement against a school district. The student, who said he was not gay, he was harassed with homophobic slurs from seventh grade until he quit school before graduating.</p>
<p>For Brandon, life was never easy. Born with a cleft palate, he endured several corrective surgeries that improved his smile but didn&#8217;t get rid of a pronounced speech impediment.</p>
<p>His parents divorced when he was five. Diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in the third grade, and later depression, he took a daily chemical cocktail to combat those impulses and regularly saw a counselor outside school.</p>
<p>In the days and weeks leading up to his suicide, Brandon dropped several hints to classmates and teachers that his troubles may have grown life-threatening, Kim Myers said. She didn&#8217;t learn of those warning signs until it was too late.</p>
<p>Suicide has long been considered one of the greatest risks faced by vulnerable adolescents. But an increasing number of mental health experts warn that younger children such as Brandon are also susceptible.</p>
<p>Nationally, more than 1,600 children ages 10 to 14 committed suicide from 1999 through 2004, according to the federal <a href="http://null/Subject-Centers_for_Disease_Control_and_Prevention.html" title="Centers for Disease Control and Prevention">Centers for Disease Control and Prevention</a>. In <a href="http://null/Subject-Missouri.html" title="Missouri">Missouri</a>, 34 children in that age group took their own lives from 2001 through 2005, state records show.</p>
<p>The direct effect of bullying on those suicides is impossible to determine.</p>
<p>But as in the case of <a href="http://null/Subject-Megan_Meier.html" title="Megan Meier">Megan Meier</a> &#8211; the 13-year-old suburban <a href="http://null/Subject-St._Louis.html" title="St. Louis">St. Louis</a> girl who committed suicide after receiving cruel messages on a <a href="http://null/Subject-MySpace_Inc..html" title="MySpace Inc.">MySpace</a> page &#8211; the social pressures that drive some children to suicide are immense, said bullying expert <a href="http://null/Subject-Hilda_Quiroz.html" title="Hilda Quiroz">Hilda Quiroz</a>.</p>
<p>&#8220;Schools are social settings,&#8221; said Quiroz, a former teacher who now works for the <a href="http://null/Subject-California.html" title="California">California</a>-based <a href="http://null/Subject-National_School_Safety_Center.html" title="National School Safety Center">National School Safety Center</a>. &#8220;And in social settings, there are kids who wield power.&#8221;</p>
<p>A nationwide survey of more than 15,000 students in grades six to 10 showed that 30 percent reported experience with bullying &#8211; 11 percent as targets, 13 percent as bullies themselves and an additional 6 percent who said they had been both aggressor and victim.</p>
<p>Bullying victims direct their anger in two directions, Quiroz said: at themselves or toward others, including their tormentors.</p>
<p>The Blue Springs School District has had a bullying policy since April 2004. The policy was expanded in 2006 to add that threats in writing, including e-mails and text messages, could be considered acts of bullying</p>
<p>In the weeks after Brandon&#8217;s death &#8211; including a contentious school board meeting where angry parents brought up the case &#8211; officials said they adhered to the policy.</p>
<p>The day after Christmas 2007 would have been Brandon&#8217;s 13th birthday. His absence made the holiday a painful one for the Myers family.</p>
<p>&#8220;This is the first year he&#8217;s not been around,&#8221; said his father, <a href="http://null/Subject-Randy_Myers.html" title="Randy Myers">Randy Myers</a>. &#8220;We&#8217;re struggling.&#8221;</p>
<p>Down the block from Brandon&#8217;s house, a solitary plaque marks his shortened life, a tribute to the passion that drove him to awaken in the pre-dawn darkness each morning so he could fish at the neighborhood lake before school.</p>
<p>&#8220;Forever Fishing,&#8221; the plaque reads. &#8220;Brandon Myers.&#8221;</p>
<p>Fishing was an escape for Brandon, a respite from the daily taunts at <a href="http://null/Subject-Voy_Spears.html" title="Voy Spears">Voy Spears</a>. He would fish at the pond with his buddy Trystyn, or with his mother&#8217;s boyfriend at nearby Lake Lotawana. Summer meant bullfrog hunting trips with his grandfather in southwest Missouri.</p>
<p>Inside <a href="http://null/Subject-Trystyn_Wagner.html" title="Trystyn Wagner">Trystyn Wagner</a>&#8217;s home, toy frogs of all shapes and sizes surround a hallway display of baseball cards, fishing photos and other reminders of his late best friend.</p>
<p>A few days before Brandon&#8217;s death, the two friends argued over a girl. They quickly patched up the dispute, but guilt from that encounter and its proximity to Brandon&#8217;s suicide hangs over Trystyn, his mother said.</p>
<p>&#8220;He said he wanted to be next to Brandon,&#8221; said <a href="http://null/Subject-Amy_Wagner.html" title="Amy Wagner">Amy Wagner</a>, who has since moved Trystyn and his younger sister to a private school as a result of what she says was bullying toward her son.</p>
<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s just been a nightmare,&#8221; she said.</p>
<p>During a <a href="http://null/Subject-Lee's_Summit.html" title="Lee's Summit">Lee&#8217;s Summit</a> police investigation of Brandon&#8217;s death, Trystyn told officers that Brandon drew a picture of himself hanging from a rope. The drawing was found by another student and turned in to a teacher, according to a police report.</p>
<p>Another classmate later shared a note from Brandon that further hinted at his risks of suicide.</p>
<p>I &#8220;have had enuf of this crap(p)y life,&#8221; the note reads. &#8220;I will hang myself tonight so if you have anything to say to me I suggest you tell me before 4:35 p.m. tonight.&#8221;</p>
<p>In the note, a copy of which was provided to the AP by Kim Myers, Brandon asked the unknown student to notify others in their class and listed the phone numbers for two classmates he wished to alert.</p>
<p>Kim Myers said she first learned of the warning note in May 2007, nearly three months after Brandon&#8217;s death, from Lee&#8217;s Summit police. The note was given to school officials on March 2 by a student&#8217;s parent.</p>
<p>The unidentified student&#8217;s mother told police and school officials that she found the note folded on a table in her home two days after Brandon&#8217;s death and brought it to school later that week.</p>
<p>Another, earlier comment made by Brandon for a December 2006 school assignment shows his struggles for acceptance by his classmates.</p>
<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sorry for all the things I&#8217;ve done,&#8221; he wrote. &#8220;I regret standing outside the circle.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8212;</p>
<p>Brandon&#8217;s unkempt bedroom isn&#8217;t the only reminder Kim Myers carries of his brief life. She wears a frog ring on her right hand, a Mother&#8217;s Day gift to commemorate her son&#8217;s amphibious passion.</p>
<p>She keeps a jar of green BB gun pellets in his honor &#8211; tiny remembrances that have mysteriously turned up in the most unlikely of places, from the doctor&#8217;s office where she works to the beaches of <a href="http://null/Subject-Puerto_Vallarta.html" title="Puerto Vallarta">Puerto Vallarta, Mexico</a>, where she and her mother traveled to seek peace after Brandon&#8217;s death.</p>
<p>&#8220;As soon as I picked it up the tide came in and washed everything away,&#8221; she recalled.</p>
<p>&#8220;I think it&#8217;s him talking to me &#8230; letting me know he&#8217;s around. He&#8217;s watching over me.&#8221;</p></div>
<p><span style="font-style:italic;">Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.</span> <!-- end body content --></td>
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		<title>Do we prepare kids for college or for life?</title>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 19 Jan 2008 07:37:28 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[January 16, 2008

The College Question

Is our K-12 education system too focused on preparing all kids for college, at the expense of preparing them for life?  This basic question has been setting the edusphere ablaze recently.At A Place at the Table, Susan Graham&#8217;s blog at Teacher Magazine, Graham asks &#8220;Have we all been part of a [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=anewstepforward.wordpress.com&blog=251405&post=116&subd=anewstepforward&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><h2 class="date-header">January 16, 2008</h2>
<div class="entry">
<h3 class="entry-header">The College Question</h3>
<div class="entry-content">
<div class="entry-body"><strong>Is our K-12 education system too focused on preparing all kids for college, at the expense of preparing them for life?</strong>  This basic question has been setting the edusphere ablaze recently.At <a href="http://blogs.edweek.org/teachers/place_at_the_table/"><font color="#003366">A Place at the Table</font></a>, Susan Graham&#8217;s blog at <em>Teacher Magazine</em>, Graham asks &#8220;Have we all been part of a collusion that promises our young people an Emperor’s New Education when we insist that success, fulfillment, security and happiness can only be cut and stitched from the fabric of a four-year college degree? &#8221; Several recent posts explore various aspects of the issue: Are students choosing college for the right reasons &#8211; or any reason at all? How is the college choice affected by increasing global economic competition? Is the push to college robbing some students of other, more fulfilling options?</p>
<p>Over at the ed blog <a href="http://principleddiscovery.com/?p=757"><font color="#003366">Principled Discovery</font></a>, a hotly debated post noted the significant number of students who don&#8217;t go to college and asked, &#8220;could forcing college as the only path to the workforce actually be limiting real opportunities by not valuing other skills and turning a blind eye to the majority of Americans who do not earn a degree?&#8221;</div>
<p><a id="more"></a></p>
<div class="entry-more">We at InService couldn&#8217;t let this mini-meme pass by without throwing the issue out to our readers. <strong>Is there too much emphasis on college for all? Are we providing appropriate post-secondary options for all students? </strong>Check out the blog posts above and their lively comment threads, and then let us know what you think.For perspective from <em>Educational Leadership</em>, see the April 2007 issue, <a href="http://www.ascd.org/portal/site/ascd/template.MAXIMIZE/menuitem.459dee008f99653fb85516f762108a0c/?javax.portlet.tpst=d5b9c0fa1a493266805516f762108a0c_ws_MX&amp;javax.portlet.prp_d5b9c0fa1a493266805516f762108a0c_viewID=issue_view&amp;javax.portlet.prp_d5b9c0fa1a493266805516f762108a0c_journalmoid=c4c101cd75eb1110VgnVCM1000003d01a8c0RCRD&amp;javax.portlet.begCacheTok=token&amp;javax.portlet.endCacheTok=token"><font color="#003366">&#8220;The Prepared Graduate&#8221;,</font></a> particularly the articles &#8220;The Challenge of College Readiness&#8221; and &#8220;What About Those Who Don&#8217;t Go?&#8221;</div>
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<p class="entry-footer-info"><span class="post-footers">Posted by David Snyder in <a href="http://ascd.typepad.com/blog/education_policy/index.html"><font color="#003366">Education Policy</font></a> </span><span class="separator">|</span> <a href="http://ascd.typepad.com/blog/2008/01/the-college-que.html" class="permalink"><font color="#003366">Permalink</font></a></p>
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<div class="comment-content">Too often I hear the reasoning for practice being &#8220;because they need to know this (or do this) in college&#8221;. The practice is seldom examined as to whether it is a sound pedagogy for teaching high school students. (In some cases, it is not a sound pedagogy for college students!) Often, we have only managed to further alienate our students who do not plan on college as an option. Certainly, we need to prepare students for post-secondary options, however, we should stop treating high school as only a stopgap between middle school and college with no purpose of its own in preparing students for life.</div>
<p class="comment-footer">Posted by: Marlene | <a href="http://ascd.typepad.com/blog/2008/01/the-college-que.html#comment-97592228"><font color="#003366">January 17, 2008 at 10:55 PM</font></a></p>
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<div class="comment-content">I look forward to the day when high schools will brag about the number of graduates who DON&#8217;T have to go on to college. If high school were more useful fewer graduates would have to go on to college. The current college preparatory curriculum is useless in the work world. We can prepare kids for the work world in high school</div>
<p class="comment-footer">Posted by: Larry Schlack, Kalamazoo, Michigan | <a href="http://ascd.typepad.com/blog/2008/01/the-college-que.html#comment-97682794"><font color="#003366">January 18, 2008 at 03:37 PM</font></a></p>
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<div class="comment-content">Of course college is important&#8230;&#8230;.if you plan to become a teacher, a doctor, an engineer, an attorney, or enter into a profession that requires specific training at a level beyond high school. But not everyone wants to enter into one of these fields of endeavor. There are many who are talented in the arts, music and other fields that need post-secondary training, but not in a college/university setting.<br />
With the current emphasis on testing we no longer have the time, let alone the energy to teach our students to be good citizens, to balance their checkbooks, to study geography so they know where in the world they are, or to learn about such things as the fabulous world of culinary arts or fashion design.<br />
It is time we took a close look at the damage being done to our students by emphasizing that college=success. That is definitely not true. Look at Bill Gates and others who either did not attend college or dropped out prior to completing their studies. And, we certainly would not label them as failures. College is not the only pathway to success and it is time that politicians and educators acknowledged this fact!</div>
<p class="comment-footer">Posted by: Janet | <a href="http://ascd.typepad.com/blog/2008/01/the-college-que.html#comment-97686242"><font color="#003366">January 18, 2008 at 04:04 PM</font></a></p>
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<div class="comment-content">Take a look at any high school&#8217;s course offerings. Are there any courses that are specifically designed to assist students with &#8220;real-life&#8221; challenges: writing resumes, determining the cost of financing a home, searching want ads for apartments, etc.? If these skills are embedded in college-prep courses, then students are getting the best of both worlds: preparation for college coursework and for the world outside of college.If the school doesn&#8217;t have these skills incorporated into the current curricular offerings, seek help. Ask a principal, guidance counselor, community leader, etc. to establish at least some electives in that school to help all students be ready to confront life head-on!</div>
<p class="comment-footer">Posted by: Rusha | <a href="http://ascd.typepad.com/blog/2008/01/the-college-que.html#comment-97692906"><font color="#003366">January 18, 2008 at 04:59 PM</font></a></p>
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<div class="comment-content">At the risk of duplicating arguments already covered by others in the other comment threads linked above, I&#8217;d like to make two observations.First, it&#8217;s true that many kids don&#8217;t go to college. They should have the opportunity to pursue preparation for their post-high school lives that will be relevant to them and enhance their success in the field they actually choose, rather than a hypothetical future that involves a four-year college.</p>
<p>Second, though, the viable career options for adults without a college education are rapidly decreasing in number. I&#8217;m not convinced that pushing all kids to pursue higher education &#8211; whether two-year or four-year &#8211; is a bad idea.</p>
<p>The strength of vocational programs, of course, is that it links these two concerns, connecting kids who won&#8217;t go to college with careers that will make it OK for them to have not gone to college. This means living-wage, skilled work, which does require training and apprenticeship, in most cases.</p>
<p>But I don&#8217;t think it will work to just offer &#8220;career&#8221; education without a specific skilled trade in mind, because of the decreasing job prospects in (what&#8217;s classified as) unskilled work.</p></div>
<p class="comment-footer">Posted by: <a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://www.typepad.com/t/comments?__mode=red&amp;user_id=569388&amp;id=97718280" title="http://www.eduleadership.org"><font color="#003366">Eduleadership</font></a> | <a href="http://ascd.typepad.com/blog/2008/01/the-college-que.html#comment-97718280"><font color="#003366">January 18, 2008 at 09:36 PM</font></a></p>
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		<title>Malnutrition and Children&#8230;what can we do?</title>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 19 Jan 2008 06:40:56 +0000</pubDate>
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Malnutrition Responsible for a Third of Child Deaths Worldwide



By Amanda Gardner
HealthDay ReporterThu Jan 17, 5:02 PM ET


THURSDAY, Jan. 17 (HealthDay News) &#8212; A international epidemic of maternal and childhood malnutrition accounts for more than one-third of childhood deaths and 11 percent of the world&#8217;s disease burden, [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=anewstepforward.wordpress.com&blog=251405&post=115&subd=anewstepforward&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
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<p>Malnutrition Responsible for a Third of Child Deaths Worldwide</h1>
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<div class="storyhdr"><span><font size="2"><b>By Amanda Gardner</b><br />
<em>HealthDay Reporter</em></font></span>Thu Jan 17, 5:02 PM ET</p>
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<p>THURSDAY, Jan. 17 (HealthDay News) &#8212; A international epidemic of maternal and childhood malnutrition accounts for more than one-third of childhood deaths and 11 percent of the world&#8217;s disease burden, researchers report.</p>
<p>&#8220;The key messages here are that the international nutrition system is fragmented and dysfunctional, and reform is needed,&#8221; lead researcher Dr. Robert Black, a professor at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, said during a news conference Wednesday. &#8220;The problems are long standing and embedded in organizational structure, but a concerted effort can provide greater progress and accountability. Progress is possible.&#8221;</p>
<p>Black was lead author of a special series on maternal and child malnutrition appearing online Jan. 17 in The Lancet.</p>
<p>The issue was hailed by different development agencies at the news conference.</p>
<p>&#8220;[The World Bank] does agree with the conclusions in the series. They have huge implications for the architecture of an international nutrition system,&#8221; said Joy Phumaphi, vice president and network head of human development at the World Bank. &#8220;We want to associate ourselves with the report.&#8221;</p>
<p>According to Kent Hill, assistant administrator for global health at USAID, there are some 852 million chronically hungry people living in the world today, and roughly half are children. Even though many can eat enough to ward off hunger, many still don&#8217;t get the nutrition necessary for growth and development. Mothers and children are the most vulnerable, Hill added.</p>
<p>The quandary has far-reaching consequences for individuals, societies and economies, the experts said.</p>
<p>&#8220;Malnutrition and nutrition as a whole is an economic imperative,&#8221; Phumaphi said. Nutrition affects productivity as well as cognitive functioning and performance in school. &#8220;It also increases health costs and, therefore, has catastrophic implications,&#8221; she noted.</p>
<p>According to Jayaseelan Naidoo, board chairman of the Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN), in the absence of proper nutrition, many people are abandoning therapy for HIV/AIDS because of side effects.</p>
<p>The Lancet series starts off with a paper from the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health in Baltimore and Aga Khan University in Karachi, Pakistan, which finds that one-third of child deaths and 11 percent of the total disease burden globally are a result of maternal and child malnutrition.</p>
<p>Deficiencies in vitamin A and zinc had the greatest effect among the micronutrients studied and caused 0.6 million and 0.4 million deaths, respectively, in 2005. Deficiencies in iodine and iron are of lesser concern because of successful interventions. But suboptimal breast-feeding is estimated to be responsible for 1.4 million child deaths worldwide.</p>
<p>&#8220;We concur with the report that the first six months of a child&#8217;s life should be exclusively focused on breast-feeding,&#8221; Naidoo said.</p>
<p>The second study reported that poor fetal growth or stunting during a child&#8217;s first two years of life can lead to shorter adult height, lower school attendance and reduced adult income potential. Better nutrition can remedy much of this.</p>
<p>Other researchers found that implementing existing nutrition-related interventions for mothers and children could prevent one-quarter of all child deaths in the 36 countries with the most severe deficits. Breast-feeding counseling and vitamin A supplementation would provide the greatest boost.</p>
<p>The fourth study found that 80 percent of undernourished children worldwide live in just 20 countries. The final paper reported that the international nutrition system is fragmented and needs reform.</p>
<p>&#8220;We need to take this amazing piece of work and translate it into practical, measurable results,&#8221; Naidoo said.</p>
<p>But in addition, said other experts, the world needs better knowledge.</p>
<p>&#8220;As much as we know about food, we know very little about the science of food,&#8221; said Dr. Tadataka Yamada, president of the Global Health Program at the Bill &amp; Melinda Gates Foundation. &#8220;In a sense, nutrition has been a little bit of a fractious community, because the less you know, the more your opinion counts. We need new knowledge in nutrition, and we have to invest in this because that will allow other investments we make in nutrition to be wisely and strategically placed.&#8221;</p>
<p>More information</p>
<p>Visit the World Health Organization for more on nutrition and malnutrition.</p>
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		<title>Arthur Ashe on true success&#8230;</title>
		<link>http://anewstepforward.wordpress.com/2008/01/19/arthur-ashe-on-true-success/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 19 Jan 2008 06:19:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>anewstepforward</dc:creator>
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“True heroism is remarkably sober, very undramatic. It is not the urge to surpass all others at whatever cost, but the urge to serve others at whatever cost.”
-Arthur Ashe
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<p>“True heroism is remarkably sober, very undramatic. It is not the urge to surpass all others at whatever cost, but the urge to serve others at whatever cost.”<br />
-Arthur Ashe</p>
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		<title>On Father&#8217;s Day</title>
		<link>http://anewstepforward.wordpress.com/2006/06/18/on-fathers-day/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 18 Jun 2006 13:21:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>anewstepforward</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[On Father&#39;s day it is important for all fathers to understand the influence that they have and how they have been given a responsibility to be difference makers.
I would go as far to say if one is not going to start at home making a difference then one is really not going to leave a [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=anewstepforward.wordpress.com&blog=251405&post=42&subd=anewstepforward&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>On Father&#39;s day it is important for all fathers to understand the influence that they have and how they have been given a responsibility to be difference makers.</p>
<p>I would go as far to say if one is not going to start at home making a difference then one is really not going to leave a positive legacy in this world. You can do many things but if it does not start at home &#8230;then your greatness has not started yet.</p>
<p><em>When all is said and done, as a rule, more is said than done.</em></p>
<p><em>-Lou Holtz&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <img src="http://rds.yahoo.com/_ylt=A9htfR4aU5VE5.gAYMCjzbkF;_ylu=X3oDMTA4NDgyNWN0BHNlYwNwcm9m/SIG=12b9hktkt/EXP=1150723226/**http%3a//www.parkwayreststop.com/archives/Fathers-day.jpg" /></em></p>
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		<title>Autism&#8230;a much misunderstood disability</title>
		<link>http://anewstepforward.wordpress.com/2006/06/05/autisma-much-misunderstood-disability/</link>
		<comments>http://anewstepforward.wordpress.com/2006/06/05/autisma-much-misunderstood-disability/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 05 Jun 2006 02:26:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>anewstepforward</dc:creator>
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Autism is something that with inclusion being implemented through out the country all teachers and administrators must learn more about and can no longer just leave the autistic student to the Special Education teacher.  Recent research has made some phenomenal strides in helping everyone understand the mind of the autistic person. Time magazine recently [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=anewstepforward.wordpress.com&blog=251405&post=21&subd=anewstepforward&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
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<p><strong></strong><strong>Autism is something that with inclusion being implemented through out the country all teachers and administrators must learn more about and can no longer just leave the autistic student to the Special Education teacher.</strong> <img align="middle" width="418" src="http://rds.yahoo.com/_ylt=A9gnMiBBmYNExmoA4w6jzbkF;_ylu=X3oDMTA4NDgyNWN0BHNlYwNwcm9m/SIG=12mq7h57g/EXP=1149561537/**http%3a//www.autism-society.org/images/content/pagebuilder/26051.jpg" height="338" /> <strong>Recent research has made some phenomenal strides in helping everyone understand the mind of the autistic person. Time magazine recently had an issue that had several articles about autism. Time is not a scholarly journal but it is able to put the information in an understandable format. The research on Autism can be technical and hard to understand. Below I have pasted one of the articles on Autism out of the special edition of Time on Autism.</strong></p>
<p><strong>A great link for more information on Autism is <a href="http://www.autism-society.org/site/PageServer?pagename=homepage">http://www.autism-society.org/site/PageServer?pagename=homepage</a></strong> <img src="http://rds.yahoo.com/_ylt=A9htfR6plYNE6QkAc5.jzbkF;_ylu=X3oDMTA4NDgyNWN0BHNlYwNwcm9m/SIG=1249an8r5/EXP=1149560617/**http%3a//web.mit.edu/newsoffice/nr/2003/autism.jpg" /></p>
<p><strong>Dr. Hulsey, Special Education professor at Alabama A&amp;M University has said that part of a Special Education teacher&#39;s job is to be a resource person to help the families of Special Education students find the help that they might need. This blog continues that spirit of being a resource person of posting some of the latest information and being a resource of help for educators and students through the aid of cyberspace. If there is a issue that you need to know more about please let me and the readers of this blog know. Let&#39;s maximize the possibilities of technology to help this generation&#39;s children.<img src="http://rds.yahoo.com/_ylt=A9gnMiOGl4NEtGgBL8mjzbkF;_ylu=X3oDMTA4NDgyNWN0BHNlYwNwcm9m/SIG=12gfmj7rr/EXP=1149561094/**http%3a//www.steveliss.com/images/jpegs/covers/full/autism.jpg" /></strong></p>
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<td colSpan="2" width="487"><strong><font size="5"><font face="Arial">Inside the Autistic Mind </font></font><font color="#666666"><font face="Arial">A wealth of new brain research&#8211;and poignant testimony from people who have autism&#8211;is lifting the veil on this mysterious condition </font></font></strong><font size="2" face="Arial">By</font> <font size="2" face="Arial">CLAUDIA WALLIS</font><font size="2" color="#990000" face="Arial">Sunday, May 7, 2006</font></p>
<p class="regtext">The road to Hannah&#39;s mind opened a few days before her 13th birthday.Her parents, therapists, nutritionists and teachers had spent years preparing the way. They had moved mountains to improve her sense of balance, her sensory perception and her overall health. They sent in truckloads of occupational and physical therapy and emotional support. But it wasn&#39;t until the fall of 2005 that traffic finally began to flow in the other direction. Hannah, whose speech was limited to snatches of songs, echoed dialogue and unintelligible utterances, is profoundly autistic, and doctors thought she was most likely retarded. But on that October day, after she was introduced to the use of a specialized computer keyboard, Hannah proved them wrong. &quot;Is there anything you&#39;d like to say, Hannah?&quot; asked Marilyn Chadwick, director of training at the Facilitated Communication Institute at Syracuse University.</p>
<p>With Chadwick helping to stabilize her right wrist and her mother watching, a girl thought to be incapable of learning to read or write slowly typed, &quot;I love Mom.&quot; A year and a half later, Hannah sits with her tutor at a small computer desk in her suburban home outside New York City. Facilitated communication is controversial (critics complain that it&#39;s often the facilitator who is really communicating), but it has clearly turned Hannah&#39;s life around. Since her breakthrough, she no longer spends much of her day watching Sesame Street and Blue&#39;s Clues. Instead, she is working her way through high school biology, algebra and ancient history. &quot;It became obvious fairly quickly that she already knew a lot besides how to read,&quot; says her tutor, Tonette Jacob. During the silent years, it seems, Hannah was soaking up vast storehouses of information. The girl without language had an extensive vocabulary, a sense of humor and some unusual gifts. One day, when Jacob presented her with a page of 30 or so math problems, Hannah took one look, then typed all 30 answers. Stunned, Jacob asked, &quot;Do you have a photographic memory?&quot; Hannah typed &quot;Yes.&quot; Like many people with autism, Hannah is so acutely sensitive to sound that she&#39;ll catch every word of a conversation occurring elsewhere in the house, which may account for much of her knowledge. She is also hypersensitive to visual input. Gazing directly at things is difficult, so she often relies on her almost preternatural peripheral vision. Hannah&#39;s newfound ability to communicate has enabled her intellect to flower, but it also has a dark side: she has become painfully aware of her own autism. Of this, she writes, &quot;Reality hurts.&quot; MORE THAN 60 YEARS AFTER AUTISM WAS first described by American psychiatrist Leo Kanner, there are still more questions than answers about this complex disorder. Its causes are still uncertain, as are the reasons for the rapidly rising incidence of autism in the U.S., Japan, England, Denmark and France. But slowly, steadily, many myths about autism are falling away, as scientists get a better picture of what&#39;s going on in the bodies and brains of people with autism and as more of those who are profoundly affected, like Hannah, are able to give voice to their experience. Among the surprises: <!--pagebreak-->&acirc;&euro;&cent; Autism is almost certainly, like cancer, many diseases with many distinct causes. It&#39;s well known that there&#39;s a wide range in the severity of symptoms&#8211;from profound disability to milder forms like Asperger syndrome, in which intellectual ability is generally high but social awareness is low. Indeed, doctors now prefer the term Autistic Spectrum Disorders (ASD). But scientists suspect there are also distinct subtypes, including an early-onset type and a regressive type that can strike as late as age 2. &acirc;&euro;&cent; Once thought to be mainly a disease of the cerebellum&#8211;a region in the back of the brain that integrates sensory and motor activity, autism is increasingly seen as a pervasive problem with the way the brain is wired. The distribution of white matter, the nerve fibers that link diverse parts of the brain, is abnormal, but it&#39;s not clear how much is the cause and how much the result of autism. &acirc;&euro;&cent; The immune system may play a critical role in the development of at least some types of autism. This suggests some new avenues of prevention and treatment. &acirc;&euro;&cent; Many classic symptoms of autism&#8211;spinning, head banging, endlessly repeating phrases&#8211;appear to be coping mechanisms rather than hard-wired behaviors. Other classic symptoms&#8211;a lack of emotion, an inability to love&#8211;can now be largely dismissed as artifacts of impaired communication. The same may be true of the supposedly high incidence of mental retardation. &acirc;&euro;&cent; The world of autism therapy continues to be bombarded by cure-of-the-day fads. But therapists are beginning to sort out the best ways to intervene. And while autism is generally a lifelong struggle, there are some reported cases in which kids who were identified as autistic and treated at an early age no longer exhibit symptoms. THE CURIOUS INCIDENCE DR. THOMAS INSEL, DIRECTOR OF THE National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), which funds much of the nation&#39;s autism research, remembers a time when the disorder was rarely diagnosed. &quot;When my brother trained at Children&#39;s Hospital at Harvard in the 1970s, they admitted a child with autism, and the head of the hospital brought all of the residents through to see,&quot; says Insel. &quot;He said, &#39;You&#39;ve got to see this case; you&#39;ll never see it again.&#39;&quot; Alas, he was mistaken. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), about 1 in 166 American children born today will fall somewhere on the autistic spectrum. That&#39;s double the rate of 10 years ago and 10 times the estimated incidence a generation ago. While some have doubted the new figures, two surveys released last week by the CDC were in keeping with this shocking incidence. No one can say why the numbers have soared. Greater awareness and public health campaigns to encourage earlier diagnosis have surely played a part, since in the past, many such children were probably labeled retarded or insane and hidden in institutions. But environmental factors may also be contributing to the spike. To get to the bottom of that mystery and others, federal funding for autism research has more than tripled in the past decade, to $100 million, although it pales in comparison with the estimated $500 million spent on childhood cancers, which affect fewer youngsters. <!--pagebreak-->At the Center for Children&#39;s Environmental Health and Disease Prevention at the University of California at Davis, toxicologist Isaac Pessah is studying hair, blood, urine and tissue samples from 700 families with autism. He&#39;s testing for 17 metals, traces of pesticides, opioids and other toxicants. In March Pessah caused a stir by releasing a study that showed that even the low level of mercury used in vaccines preserved with thimerosal, long a suspect in autism, can trigger irregularities in the immune-system cells&#8211;at least in the test tube. But he does not regard thimerosal (which has been removed from routine childhood vaccines) as anything like a smoking gun. &quot;There&#39;s probably no one trigger that&#39;s causing autism from the environmental side,&quot; says Pessah, &quot;and there&#39;s no one gene that&#39;s causing it.&quot; Indeed, most researchers believe autism arises from a combination of genetic vulnerabilities and environmental triggers. An identical twin of a child with autism has a 60% to 90% chance of also being affected. And there&#39;s little doubt that a vulnerability to ASD runs in some families: the sibling of a child with autism has about a 10% chance of having ASD. Gene scientists working on autism have found suspicious spots on chromosomes 2, 5, 7, 11 and 17, but there are probably dozens of genes at work. &quot;We think there are a number of different autisms, each of which could have a different cause and different genes involved,&quot; says David Amaral, research director of the MIND (Medical Investigation of Neurodevelopmental Disorders) Institute, also at U.C. Davis. Amaral is heading MIND&#39;s efforts to assemble a database of clinical, behavioral and genetic information on 1,800 autistic kids. One goal is to clearly define autism subtypes. &quot;It&#39;s hard to do the genetics if you&#39;re talking about four or five different syndromes,&quot; says NIMH chief Insel. &quot;Does the presence of seizures define a separate illness? What about the kids who seem to develop normally for the first year and a half and then regress&#8211;is that a separate thing?&quot; And what about the large number of autistic kids who have serious gastrointestinal problems and the many with immune dysfunctions&#8211;are they distinct subtypes? Amaral and colleague Judy Van de Water believe they are onto a major discovery about the origins of at least one type of autism&#8211;a strongly familial variety. They have detected aberrant antibodies in the blood of kids from families with a pattern of ASD and, significantly, in mothers with more than one autistic child. &quot;These antibodies are actually raised against proteins in the fetal brain,&quot; says Amaral, who recently submitted a paper on the discovery. The working hypothesis is that these antibodies may alter brain development in ways that lead to autism. If correct, the finding could lead to a maternal blood test and the use of a therapy called plasmapheresis to clear antibodies from the mother&#39;s blood. &quot;You get a sense of the excitement,&quot; says Amaral, &quot;if you could prevent, say, 20% of kids from getting autism. But we don&#39;t want to raise false hopes.&quot; THE AUTISTIC BRAIN <!--pagebreak-->WHETHER THE CAUSE IS MATERNAL antibodies, heavy metals or something else, there is no question that the brains of young children with autism have unusual features. To begin with, they tend to be too big. In studies based on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and basic tape-measure readings, neuroscientist Eric Courchesne at Children&#39;s Hospital of San Diego showed that while children with autism are born with ordinary-size brains, they experience a rapid expansion by age 2&#8211;particularly in the frontal lobes. By age 4, says Courchesne, autistic children tend to have brains the size of a normal 13-year-old. This aberrant growth is even more pronounced in girls, he says, although for reasons that remain mysterious, only 1 out of 5 children with autism is female. More recent studies by Amaral and others have found that the amygdala, an area associated with social behavior, is also oversize, a finding Amaral believes is related to the high levels of anxiety seen in as many as 80% of people with autism. Harvard pediatric neurologist Dr. Martha Herbert reported last year that the excess white matter in autistic brains has a specific distribution: local areas tend to be overconnected, while links between more distant regions of the brain are weak. The brain&#39;s right and left hemispheres are also poorly connected. It&#39;s as if there are too many competing local services but no long distance. This observation jibes neatly with imaging studies that look at live brain activity in autistic people. Studies using functional MRI show a lack of coordination among brain regions, says Marcel Just, director of Carnegie Mellon&#39;s Center for Cognitive Brain Imaging in Pittsburgh, Pa. Just has scanned dozens of 15- to 35-year-old autistic people with IQs in the normal range, giving them thinking tasks as he monitors their brain activity. &quot;One thing you see,&quot; says Just, &quot;is that [activity in] different areas is not going up and down at the same time. There&#39;s a lack of synchronization, sort of like a difference between a jam session and a string quartet. In autism, each area does its own thing.&quot; What remains unclear is whether the interconnectivity problem is the result of autism or its cause. Perhaps all that excess wiring is like the extra blood vessels around the heart of a person who has suffered a heart attack&#8211;the body&#39;s attempt to route around a problem. Or perhaps the abnormal growth of the brain has to do with the immune system; researchers at Johns Hopkins have found signs that autistic brains have chronic inflammation. &quot;It&#39;s impossible to tell the chicken from the egg at this point,&quot; Just says. Autistic people have been shown to use their brains in unusual ways: they memorize alphabet characters in a part of the brain that ordinarily processes shapes. They tend to use the visual centers in the back of the brain for tasks usually handled by the prefrontal cortex. They often look at the mouth instead of the eyes of someone who is speaking. Their focus, says psychologist Ami Klin of Yale&#39;s Child Study Center, is &quot;not on the social allegiances&#8211;for example, the longing gaze of a mother&#8211;but physical allegiances&#8211;a mouth that moves.&quot; <!--pagebreak-->Do these differences reflect fundamental pathology, or are they downstream effects of some more basic problem? No one knows. But the fact that early intervention brings better results for children with ASD could be a clue that some of the odd brain anatomy and activity are secondary&#8211;and perhaps even preventable. Studies that look at whether early therapy might help normalize the brain are beginning at York University in Toronto, but results are probably years away. AUTISM FROM THE INSIDE IN THE MEANTIME, 300,000 SCHOOL-AGE American children and many adults are attempting to get through daily life with autism. The world has tended to hear from those who are highest functioning, like Temple Grandin, the author and Colorado State University professor of livestock behavior known for designing humane slaughterhouses. But the voices of those more severely affected are beginning to be heard as well. Such was the case with Sue Rubin, 27, a college student from Whittier, Calif., who has no functional speech and matches most people&#39;s stereotyped image of a retarded person; yet she was able to write the narration for the Oscar-nominated documentary about her life, Autism Is a World. What such individuals have to say about their experience is offering new clues to their condition. It also conforms remarkably to what scientists see inside their brains. By and large, people with ASD have difficulty bringing different cognitive functions together in an integrated way. There is a tendency to hyperfocus on detail and miss the big picture. Coordinating volition with movement and sensation can be difficult for some. Chandima Rajapatirana, an autistic writer from Potomac, Md., offers this account: &quot;Helplessly I sit while Mom calls me to come. I know what I must do, but often I can&#39;t get up until she says, &#39;Stand up,&#39;&quot; he writes. &quot;[The] knack of knowing where my body is does not come easy for me. Interestingly I do not know if I am sitting or standing. I am not aware of my body unless it is touching something &#8230; Your hand on mine lets me know where my hand is. Jarring my legs by walking tells me I am alive.&quot; Such descriptions shed light on seemingly self-destructive behavior like biting, scratching, spinning and head banging. For people like Rajapatirana, banging against a wall can be a useful way to tell, quite literally, where their head is at. &quot;Before we extinguish [such behaviors], we need to understand what they are telling us,&quot; writes Judith Bluestone, a Seattle-based therapist who is autistic, in The Fabric of Autism. In his new book Send in the Idiots, British journalist Kamran Nazeer, who is also autistic, describes the need for repetitive motions or words as a search for &quot;local coherence&quot; in a world full of jarring randomness. He also conveys the social difficulties: &quot;Striking up conversations with strangers,&quot; he writes, &quot;is an autistic person&#39;s version of extreme sports.&quot; Indeed, at a recent retreat for people with ASD, attendees wore colored tags indicating their comfort level with spontaneous conversation: red meant don&#39;t approach, yellow meant talk if we&#39;ve already met, green indicated, &quot;I&#39;d love to talk, but I&#39;m not good at initiating.&quot; <!--pagebreak-->Perhaps the worst fate for a person with ASD is to have a lively intelligence trapped in a body that makes it difficult for others to see that the lights are on. Neuroscientist Michael Merzenich at the University of California, San Francisco, studied an autistic boy who is unable to speak or even sustain his attention to a task for more than a few moments, and yet is aware of his condition and writes remarkable poetry. How many other autistic kids, Merzenich wonders, &quot;are living in a well where no one can hear them&quot;? Luckily for Hannah, her voice and thoughts are being heard. Since learning to type, she has begun to speak a few words reliably&#8211;&quot;yes,&quot; &quot;no&quot; and the key word &quot;I&quot;&#8211;to express her desires. All this seems miraculous to her parents. &quot;I was told to give up and get on with my life,&quot; says her mother. Now she and her husband are thinking about saving for college<b><i>&nbsp;With reporting by Dan Cray/Los Angeles</i></b></td>
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		<title>Character&#8230;an option or should it be standard equipment?</title>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 04 Jun 2006 15:25:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>anewstepforward</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[&#160;This blog is not only for my own ideas but to forward great ideas and resources. Educators have been taught a collaborative approach but the collaboration seems to stop at the classroom door. Any type of&#160;collaboration seems to be anathema for an educator for some reason. I understand that I do not have a monoploy [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=anewstepforward.wordpress.com&blog=251405&post=16&subd=anewstepforward&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p><strong><em>&nbsp;This blog is not only for my own ideas but to forward great ideas and resources. Educators have been taught a collaborative approach but the collaboration seems to stop at the classroom door. Any type of&nbsp;collaboration seems to be anathema for an educator for some reason. I understand that I do not have a monoploy on great ideas. The business world focuses and uses as a key for success the concept of</em> NETWORKING<em>. Teachers, Administrators, School System Personnel and Parents would do well to network with as many people as possible to accomplish the goal of helping today&#39;s students have the best education possible! Networking is more of a solution for education than legislation&#8230;.below is an example of networking&#8230;.</em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em>The following is a web site that should be booked marked and passed along&#8230;</em></strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.itsallaboutcharacter.com/index.htm">http://www.itsallaboutcharacter.com/index.htm</a></p>
<p align="center"><a href="http://rds.yahoo.com/_ylt=A9gnMiIt.4JEGxMBq56JzbkF;_ylu=X3oDMTBjb3ZrYjNkBHBvcwM0BHNlYwNzcg--/SIG=1f2bcbsev/EXP=1149521069/**http://images.search.yahoo.com/search/images/view?back=http%3A%2F%2Fimages.search.yahoo.com%2Fsearch%2Fimages%3Fp%3Dschools%26ei%3DUTF-8%26fr%3DFP-tab-img-t-t400%26x%3Dwrt&amp;w=145&amp;h=102&amp;imgurl=www.cityofmentor.com%2Fgraphics%2Fliving%2Fphoto-schools.jpg&amp;rurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.cityofmentor.com%2Fliving%2Fschools.shtml&amp;size=3.8kB&amp;name=photo-schools.jpg&amp;p=schools&amp;type=jpeg&amp;no=4&amp;tt=3,141,160&amp;ei=UTF-8"><img width="125" src="http://mud.mm-a2.yimg.com/image/470867555" alt="Go to fullsize image" height="87" /></a></p>
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<p align="center"><font face="Arial"><font color="#285c78"><b>Website:</b>&nbsp;<br />
</font>itsallaboutcharacter.com<br />
</font></p>
<hr width="84%" />
<font face="Arial"><font color="#285c78"><b>Address:</b>&nbsp;</font><br />
It&#39;s All About Character<br />
5748 Royal Lytham Court<br />
Dublin, Ohio 43017</font><font face="Arial"><b><font color="#285c78">Phone:&nbsp;</font><br />
</b>(614) 798-8239<br />
(800) 290-2482</p>
<p><font color="#285c78"><b>Fax:</b>&nbsp;<br />
</font>(614) 798-8244<br />
</font><br />
<hr width="84%" />
<p align="center"><font face="Arial"><font color="#285c78"><b>Chairman:</b>&nbsp;</font><br />
Dr. Mike Thomson<br />
<a href="mailto:drmike@itsallaboutcharacter.com"><font size="2">E</font></a><a href="mailto:drmike@itsallaboutcharacter.com"><font size="2">-mail Dr Mike</font></a><br />
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<p>I don&#39;t know about you but the accusations of rape and the arrests of two Duke University Lacrosse players on first-degree rape, sexual offense and kidnapping charges makes my stomach ache for several reasons.<br />
Whether you think it happened or didn&#39;t&#8230; Whether you think it&#39;s a racial incident or not&#8230; Whether you think it&#39;s blown out of proportion or not, one thing is certain &#8211; several things happened and most of them were not good. The only thing that I can see that happened quickly is that the Duke University administration took quick and decisive action. They suspended the program and accepted the &quot;resignation&quot; of the coach.</p>
<p>The big question I have is &quot;What happened to the leadership on the team???&quot; And when I say team, I mean coaches, captains, athletes and the parents of these players. This cannot be blown off as &#39;Boys will be boys.&#39; C&#39;mon, that excuse has been used before and it&#39;s a lame one at best. Give me one better excuse why you can&#39;t be better than what you might be seeing around you?</p>
<p>The actions of these &#39;boys&#39; were disgusting at best. I&#39;m not naive to think that University students will have these types of parties but has it really dropped to the level that NONE of the 47 players ever stepped up and said, &quot;This is getting out of control &#8211; we need to stop this right now?&quot;</p>
<p>Another thing for sure is that we can all learn that there is no good that is going to come from hiring strippers, drinking (and you know many were beyond drinking and into drunking) and a bunch of people hanging out in a house where no one was in charge. Maybe the lesson here is &quot;Don&#39;t raise your daughters to become strippers and don&#39;t raise your sons to hire strippers.&quot; When trouble arises, and you know it will with the variables at work here, the stripper has no credibility and the ones who hired her don&#39;t either. Isn&#39;t that what were seeing on the news right now?</p>
<p>And what happened to any comments from the parents of either the alleged perpetrators or the others on the team?? If that were my son, I swear you would have seen me on TV embarrassing my University aged son by pulling him by the ear into my waiting car for a quick ride back home for good. &quot;The First National Bank Of Mom And Dad&quot; would now be closed for not stepping up, speaking up or doing the right thing EVEN when we were not watching. We raised you better than that!</p>
<p>As a parent I&#39;m not obligated to send my kid to college or in this case, have him stay at one where he is out of control and so are the others around him. The other lesson here is &quot;Be careful who your friends are, where you should be at and when to know the right time to leave.&quot;</p>
<p>And what happened to the coaching staff?? As a former coach, I know that if you don&#39;t confront the little things on a team, whether it&#39;s language, on or off field behaviors that you know are not right, then athletes, just like anyone, will assume that what they say and/or do is okay. And once these opportunities to step up and say and/or do something are missed, then indirectly, permission is given for athletes to behave any way that they want.</p>
<p>Coaching provides a golden opportunity to teach right from wrong, moral from immoral whether on or off the field. Here&#39;s a quick tip to help anyone teach whether something is right or not: The next time you&#39;re thinking about doing something, ask yourself &quot;Would I want others to read about my decision(s) on the front page of the newspaper?&quot; Just think how things might have been different if this one question were ingrained in those Lacrosse players heads from the time they became a part of this team.</p>
<p>As a former coach I also know that if you don&#39;t come at coaching with the mindset that &quot;I am a teacher&quot; to all that come before you, then you will miss these teaching opportunities along the way. Here&#39;s a quick history lesson to take note of&#8230; In the 1500s the word coach was defined as &quot;A horse drawn carriage.&quot; Its specific purpose was to transport a person of importance from one place to another. Just take that definition and equate it with coaching and ask yourself whether you believe it occurred on this team or not?</p>
<p>Here&#39;s still another lesson that was learned: Sports by itself does not automatically build character unless the coach purposefully and passionately teaches it. If, as a coach, you put yourself in the mindset that you are transporting a person of importance from one place to another, and you are a &quot;teacher,&quot; then the familiar concept of &quot;Building Men For Others&quot; becomes not only your purpose but your passion as a coach-teacher. With this framework as your guide, you are on a path to teaching &quot;boys&quot; to become young men with every opportunity that comes before you. You are teaching them that behaviors like these will not be tolerated as a member of a team and will never help anyone become a better friend, teammate, leader, boyfriend, husband or father. And guess what, this has nothing to do with the win/loss column! This has to do with the real value of sport involvement.</p>
<p>Here&#39;s some questions that might have helped these Lacrosse players along the way to stay focused on really what sports is all about: &quot;What kind of son am I becoming?&quot; &quot;What kind of friend or boyfriend am I becoming?&quot; &quot;What kind of captain or athlete am I becoming?&quot; &quot;What kind of leader am I becoming&quot; &quot;Am I using sports as an opportunity to build myself for others?&quot; Just think what a difference we could make on our teams today if we were to use questions like these on a regular basis with our athletes&#8230;</p>
<p><a target="_self" href="http://anewstepforward.wordpress.com/utilities/sports/Together%20We%20Can%20Brochure.pdf">Here&#39;s a link</a> to a cutting-edge workshop I am doing all around the country in my attempt to help Middle and High School coaches,captains, athletes and parents become a team that builds men and women for others. This is NOT a happy talk workshop (the ones where you go and feel good for awhile). This is a workshop that gets right down to the business of making a difference through the vehicle of sports. AND, if you attend as a &quot;working team&quot; of coaches, captains, athletes and parent representatives as I suggest, it gets everyone involved in a &quot;Together We Can&quot; fashion to accomplish this goal.<br />
And if &quot;Repetition&quot; really is the mother of success, then what sets this workshop apart from others is the &quot;on-going&quot; personal contact I have with every administrator,coach,captain, athlete and parent that attends this workshop via audio podcasts, blogs like this one and videocasts on a regular basis throughout the year. Attending the workshop is just the start. Implementing &quot;Character In Action&quot; within your own team is the key once you leave the workshop.</p>
<p>You and I both know that there are too many good administrators, coaches, captains, athletes and parents out there to not take a stand against what we are seeing around us by stepping up, speaking out and raising the bar for good character through the vehicle of sports.</p>
<p>Maybe, just maybe if I can get to athletes BEFORE they enter the next level of their life with talks and workshops like this, things might look a little different around us today. It&#39;s worth a try.<br />
_____________________________</p>
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<td width="100%"><font size="2" face="Arial">It&rsquo;s All About Character was formed to help teach individuals and organizations how to build and promote good character.<br />
Our program is a proven, systematic method for equipping people of all ages, and in all types of relationships, with new problem solving and productivity skills. These simple steps, once learned and utilized, become tools that allow a person to make better<br />
choices based on good character traits. The end result is reduced conflict, enhanced communication, and new levels of understanding and respect to help promote a general sense of cooperation and social progress.</font></td>
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<td width="100%"><font size="2" face="Arial">At the center of our identity is a pyramid, the universal symbol of structural integrity for thousands of years. Around the pyramid you will we see three essential groups: Parents, School and Community. These groups must provide a consistent message and then work together to create a strong foundation on which to build.</font></td>
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<td width="100%"><font size="2" face="Arial">Our unique program is simple, logical and easy to use. It helps people discover how to think productively and achieve better results in all areas of their daily lives. By guiding people through eight areas we call, &ldquo;The Eight Areas of the Power of Productive Choices&rdquo; and our thought-provoking &quot;Six Critical Questions&rdquo;, people quickly see things from a new perspective to help them solve conflict and build teamwork. This proven system offers practical, no fluff answers to everyday situations in areas such as:<br />
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