Wednesday, March 9, 2011
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
How Women Use Social Media
I can't speak for other women, but most of my facebook friends are other moms.
We do silly stuff like post photos of our kids and play Scrabble. But facebook also provides a forum for us to discuss real things with each other...and each other's friends.
The fun part - Right now I have at least 10 facebook Scrabble games going. For me it is a quick and necessary distraction from homework and work. In-person games are still better though. A group of us has Scrabble parties during the Christmas and summer breaks so the kids can play together while we play our games.
We also use facebook to vent or ask for ideas. At the beginning of the school year I owned up to being the worst mom ever because I sent my son to school with two plain pieces of bread for lunch - I forgot the PB&J part. I got 19 responses.
The useful part - Social media extends our contact with others.
My facebook friends have friends that I don't know.
The current budget situation in our local school district and snow days have been the hot topics lately.
In a school budget comment that one of my friends posted, I was able to join a discussion with strangers that I would not otherwise have been able to join.
We do silly stuff like post photos of our kids and play Scrabble. But facebook also provides a forum for us to discuss real things with each other...and each other's friends.
The fun part - Right now I have at least 10 facebook Scrabble games going. For me it is a quick and necessary distraction from homework and work. In-person games are still better though. A group of us has Scrabble parties during the Christmas and summer breaks so the kids can play together while we play our games.
We also use facebook to vent or ask for ideas. At the beginning of the school year I owned up to being the worst mom ever because I sent my son to school with two plain pieces of bread for lunch - I forgot the PB&J part. I got 19 responses.
The useful part - Social media extends our contact with others.
My facebook friends have friends that I don't know.
The current budget situation in our local school district and snow days have been the hot topics lately.
In a school budget comment that one of my friends posted, I was able to join a discussion with strangers that I would not otherwise have been able to join.
Tuesday, March 1, 2011
PCDC Slated to be Eliminated - Parents ask for a Chance to Save Program
| Parents (from left) Mel Hite, Reiner Bohlen, Melissa Bledsoe, and Cary Carson-Rieke, go over their notes before a meeting with LB President Hamann. |
In that process, the Periwinkle Child Development Center (PCDC) is also being eliminated. When LBCC student Mel Hite learned of the decision to close PCDC, she wrote a letter to the mayor of Albany about her concerns.
Hite and a handful of other students and community members who use the PCDC for child care are on a mission to reverse the decision to discontinue the program.
“We were under the impression that a teacher might get cut. We didn’t think the program was going to be cut.” None of the current faculty and staff will remain after the spring term.
As it stands, the school is in talks with HeadStart to take over child care. Families will need to qualify for HeadStart in order to use the program. Education students, who use PCDC as their practicum, may also need to go off-campus to fulfill the requirement, after the closure.
Caila Williams, a dual-enrolled student who is in her last term at LBCC said, “This (PCDC) is the only reason I’ve been able to come to school.
If I don’t find affordable quality child care, I’m in trouble.” She submitted a letter to the Democrat-Herald about the way the program has benefited her family.
It isn’t only about LBCC students - it’s also about their children.
“I don’t want them having to struggle because I can’t get an education in order to get a better job,” said Hanna Smith. She has two children attending PCDC and is two terms away from
finishing her AAOT degree. After graduation she hopes to go into diagnostic imaging.
While a majority of the participants are students, community members who are not LBCC students may also enroll their children at PCDC.
Reiner Bohlen, a local business owner who uses the co-op for child care, said one of the things he and his wife enjoy about the program is that it is not just daycare, it’s a preschool.
Bohlen said, “It is hard to imagine people who are more invested in child care than parents and education students.”
Hite, Bohlen, and fellow PCDC co-op members Melissa Bledsoe, and Cary Carson-Rieke, met with Hamann Monday afternoon.
“We just want a chance,” Hite said.
In the hour-long meeting, the group asked what they could do at this point to keep PCDC open. Bohlen asked Hamann for specifics about the “hurdles” they need to overcome and for a deadline.
Hamann, who said he was “never absolutely closed to anything,” agreed to get back to the group with the answers to their questions by the end of the week.
At Hite’s request, Hamann will be visiting the PCDC Thursday morning.
Friends of Periwinkle Child Development Center
Follow the Friends of PCDC on facebook
Some members of the co-op have started a petition to keep PCDC open
Sunday, February 27, 2011
Jennifer Moody Visit
Democrat Herald reporter Jennifer Moody visited our feature writing class last week the day after live-feeding a school board meeting on the budget cuts I've been following.
I had some reporting related questions for her, but the thing I really wanted to ask was how she balanced family and reporting. During the feed, she wrote "I'm turning the keyboard over...for a few minutes so I can pick up my kid from drama rehearsal. Back soon."
Family/Work Balance - Moody said she works about 30 hours a week and her time is flexible. Before her kids were old enough to be in school full time, she got help from family and babysitters. But she would take them on assignment with her if necessary. And she said that you don't always have to say "yes" to an assignment.
AP Style and the Conventions of Writing - Clarity matters more than AP style Moody said. The conventions of writing always matter though. People judge your intelligence by your writing. She said even her 10 year-old daughter is critical of poor writing and grammar.
Go to the Top - Moody said that one way to try to get around prepared statements is to avoid the person in the middle. Go straight to the person who handles whatever you want to know about. If I want to know why the GAPS superintendent is proposing a certain strategy, I should talk to her, not her assistant.
At a Glance
Jennifer Moody
Democrat Herald
I had some reporting related questions for her, but the thing I really wanted to ask was how she balanced family and reporting. During the feed, she wrote "I'm turning the keyboard over...for a few minutes so I can pick up my kid from drama rehearsal. Back soon."
Family/Work Balance - Moody said she works about 30 hours a week and her time is flexible. Before her kids were old enough to be in school full time, she got help from family and babysitters. But she would take them on assignment with her if necessary. And she said that you don't always have to say "yes" to an assignment.
AP Style and the Conventions of Writing - Clarity matters more than AP style Moody said. The conventions of writing always matter though. People judge your intelligence by your writing. She said even her 10 year-old daughter is critical of poor writing and grammar.
Go to the Top - Moody said that one way to try to get around prepared statements is to avoid the person in the middle. Go straight to the person who handles whatever you want to know about. If I want to know why the GAPS superintendent is proposing a certain strategy, I should talk to her, not her assistant.
At a Glance
Jennifer Moody
Democrat Herald
Tuesday, February 15, 2011
ERDC Rally at the Capitol
Over 50 people joined the Rally to Save Employment Related Day Care (ERDC) last Wednesday afternoon at Oregon’s state capitol.
LBCC student Lisa Bauman set the date last month for the Rally to Save ERDC thinking she might be on the steps of the state capitol alone.
But Bauman’s many phone calls, e-mails and presentations payed off. Individuals and organizations signed up to attend the rally.
One of the first organizations to respond to Bauman, Children First For Oregon (CFFO), was key in spreading the word because of the many supporters they have acquired through their long time commitment to child advocacy.
On Feb. 9, the 50 plus rally participants included those who benefit the most from ERDC - children in day care.
Autumn David runs Salem’s Island Adventure Day Care. About half of the families she serves use the assistance program. If ERDC is cut, the day care she has operated for 14 years will not be able to stay open. She and Yuchin Johnny, who also works at Island Adventure Day care brought nine of the 16 children they care for.
Sue Mackey is a child care provider who currently does not have any clients on ERDC, but came to the rally because she is concerned about the children who will be effected if funding is cut. “It effects me right here,” Mackey said as she patted her heart. “I’m worried we’re going to get kids left at home alone or in cars.”
If ERDC is cut, many of the families currently receiving it will not be able to afford day care, and thus will not be able to work. For the day care facilities losing clients, and income, that means they will have to lay-off their employees or close their doors altogether. That means possibly two more families on full public assistance.
Rebekah Whittaker of SEIU 503, brought her young son Jackson with her to hand out information about the rally to state representatives. “The main focus of our child care workers has been ERDC,” Whittaker said. “ERDC saves the state economy.”
Regan Gray of CFFO said, “Probably the biggest thing that is helping us out right now is that the governor announced his recommended budget. He wishes to expand the Employment Related Day Care to 11,000 families. We’re very supportive of that, so the timing of this rally couldn't be better. The fact that we can say ‘thank you governor.’”
Tuesday, February 8, 2011
Lucette Wood: Writing With a Purpose
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| Photo courtesy of Lucette Wood |
Wood is used to juggling her time this way. She has several jobs: writing and English instructor at LBCC, coordinator of the LBCC Valley Writers Series, technical writer, and grant writer. What seems to matter most to Wood is the positive impact she can make with each of these ventures.
She has been a writing and English instructor at LBCC going on 11 years. Currently she teaches technical writing, college composition, and children’s literature.
While she enjoys teaching writing, Wood said she loves teaching children's literature: "It’s a lot of fun and people actually use the information and they share books with their children and with the children in the classroom; they’re (students who take the class) either teachers or parents usually. It’s really fun to hear all of the reports back. so you get to see the effects of it which is nice."
Wood shares an office with writing instructor Jed Wyman. The space is cramped but the officemates don’t seem to mind: “Sharing an office with Lucette is wonderful. I could not ask for a better office mate. We have many good laughs together. She is thoughtful, considerate, EXTREMELY smart, and someone whom I consider to be a good, good friend. I am rather in awe of her.”
In fact, one of their conversations led to a program idea for the Valley Writers Series, a project Wood coordinates with Jane White.
Wood said the idea for a dead authors reading came from a conversation with Wyman about honoring past writers: “We were talking about a time a friend of his dressed up as the author Beatrix Potter. So that’s what inspired it. We decided we should dress up and honor our favorite authors and just read.”
In her little spare time, Wood writes for both pleasure and purpose. She writes poetry and recently started a short story inspired by Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s "The Yellow Wallpaper."
Wood also channels her writing skills to benefit others: "I do a lot of grant writing for free. For a lot of organizations who just need it. We’ve received a lot of good grants.”
Wood said one of her favorite grant awards resulted in new playground equipment for a school in Eugene. They were awarded the National PTO Today Lowe's grant. "There was only one award chosen nationally, and the award was $15,000 for their obesity grant. When the money was received, I coordinated the installation to completion."
She has also taken on grant writing for more urgent needs: “Coburg Elementary School is being shut down, and it is the only school in that rural area, meaning students would have to be bused at least an hour each way to the next closest grade school.”
“To prevent the doors being closed, the school closure committee petitioned the Oregon Department of Education to become a charter school.”
Wood’s children do not go to that school, but when she learned of the situation she took the initiative to contact the committee and volunteered to write for the grant.
“The funding cuts and sacrifice of the quality our children's education is brutal. Grant writing is a powerful outlet to affect this crisis,” Wood said.
Ultimately the grant was denied by ODE but approved by 4J. The school will become a charter school next year.
But Mollie Smith, of the Coburg Community Charter School, is grateful for Wood’s involvement with the process. “We found out about the grant roughly a month before it was due. I know Lucette spent countless hours familiarizing herself with the purpose of the grant and integrating information that was outlined in the school proposal into the grant. She was very professional and we are thankful for her in kind help with this project.”
Even though the grant was denied, Smith said they “did learn a lot about the process and are able to apply again with this new knowledge.”
Wood counts these grant writing opportunities as blessings: "Grant writing has combined my passions, to help children and to promote children's literacy, to provide for the practical needs in the community. I am blessed to be a part of it."
Office: SSH-208
Office hours: Mon. 3:30-4:30 p.m.; Wed. 11:30 a.m. -12:30 and 3:30-4:30 p.m.
Phone: 541-917-4620
WOODL@linnbenton.edu
Sunday, February 6, 2011
Funding GAPS
Update: Superintendent Maria Delapoer announced that Takena Elementary is no longer on the proposed chopping block. The Democrat Herald reported Saturday that Delapoer is now also against moving fifth-graders to North Albany Middle School.
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The Greater Albany School District is facing a $7 million shortfall next school year. And an $8 million shortfall for the 2012-13 school year.
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The Greater Albany School District is facing a $7 million shortfall next school year. And an $8 million shortfall for the 2012-13 school year.
Though Executive Assistant Jim Haggart says the superintendent is considering a number of options for the coming school year, the most talked about in the community is the closure of three Albany elementary schools. This was a main focus at the series of public meetings the board held in February.
Superintendent Maria Delapoer is recommending the closure of the three elementary schools and moving fifth-graders to North Albany Middle School, which currently houses sixth through eighth grade, for the 2011-12 school year. Additionally, for the 2012-13 school year, she is recommending a 4-day work/school week and cutting all athletics and activities.
Delapoer said they have to make some difficult decisions because of the budget shortfall. This is the third time in her career she's been through difficult financial times in a school district, and she wants to make sure that the measures they take now will not negatively affect the district when this crisis is over.
She was realistic about the difficult situation. She said real things like "Teachers will continue to see heavier workloads with fewer resources."
When Jane Evans, the principal of NAMS, finished her bit at the parent/public forum at the Feb. 10 meeting, she got a round of applause. Evans framed the closure of Fir Grove Elementary as a positive: "We want you to know how excited we are about having your students with us."
She talked about pairing the incoming fifth-graders with NAMS' sixth-graders and how they would be "cocooned" but not completely separated from the older kids.
Evans said that she understands parents' concerns about grouping younger children with middle-schoolers, but cited Timber Ridge as a successful example of this integration. Timber Ridge currently has children from third to seventh grade.
In a separate conversation, board member Sandi Evans said "The school (Timber Ridge) was built with that in mind; it has separate floors. NAMS is not divided that way. Models we've looked at are the model we already have: Timber Ridge, which is built for grades 3-8. The administrators from N. Albany have gone there, watched kids move in and out of class, noting how they’re segregated. That building, however, was designed that way, these other schools are not. That's a challenge."
Haggart said the superintendent and board are not considering the 4-day school week for the 2011-12 school year because they want more time to study 4-day plans and consult with other districts. Considering the limited research that went into exploring the impact of a middle-school environment on fifth-graders, it seems a 4-day week for next year should still be an option.
Parents are concerned about integrating their fifth-graders into NAMS. The GAPS Funding Ideas blog serves as an open forum for discussing school budget options. It is apparent though that the moderators are strong proponents of starting the 4-day plan in the 2011-12 school year rather than closing schools.
The site is managed by community members and parents, Gwen Christensen, and Dawn and Brent Davis. They have recent research on 4-day school weeks posted on their site. There is also research that introducing younger children to a middle-school environment can be detrimental to a child's success in school.
Participants are encouraged to join the discussion by posting on the site. Beyond being a space to voice opinion, the site lists contact information for state and local representatives.
What happens next depends on the state budget, which won't be released until May or June. “I think what the superintendent wants to say is that no decision has been made about closing the schools,” said Haggart, Delapoer's assistant.
At a Glance
Get Involved
Greater Albany Public Schools: GAPS Continuous Improvement Initiative
GAPS Funding Ideas blog: GAPS Funding Ideas
Thursday, February 3, 2011
Lucette Wood Office Hours
Lucette Wood teaches English and writing at LBCC. She also helps organize the Valley Writers Series.
What are your favorite classes to teach? I teach a lot of the professional work place writing, which I enjoy. I love teaching children’s lit. It’s a lot of fun and people actually use the information and they share books with their children and with the children in the classroom; they’re (students who take the class) either teachers or parents usually. It’s really fun to hear all of the reports back. so you get to see the effects of it which is nice.
Are there any classes you would like to teach, that you aren’t now?
Probably more minority lit courses. I taught Latin American lit six years ago now. I taught a critical thinking course lately and I used a lot of diversity components in that course which was fun.
Is there a particularly memorable experience from one of your classes or the Writer's series that you would like to share?
Some of my favorite experiences at the VW events are the writing workshops. The creative fabric that is woven after an inspiring reading and in the supportive presence of an engaged and appreciative audience is remarkable. The last time Paulann Petersen came, three years ago now, is one of my cherished moments. The room was equally filled with students, community members, staff and faculty and all were responding to a springboard Petersen provided. When participants volunteered their results, written in just a few minutes, the quality was astounding. It was a testament of the marriage between reading and writing and the fruits of the inspiration authors provide. Paul Hawkwood read a poem about a homeless man he encountered after leaving a building in a metropolitan area, and the image lingers with me. His work was just one of countless shared.
In the classroom, the moments that make me smile are those where students' discussions guide and fill the classroom, exploring the boundaries of the learning objective I hold and filling it in a way that mere instruction could not. Those are the times I don't need to be present. Those are the moments I cherish
It seems that student interaction is a key aspect of your teaching style. Have you ever taught an online course? If so, did you feel you were able to engage the students on the same level you have in a traditional on-campus course?
Yes, student interaction is a central element in my teaching strategy. When I first began teaching, my mentor told me to ever only be 80% prepared for class. I had no idea what that meant. Through the years, I've come to believe it is essential to give enough room for a class to breathe and move in a direction that may not follow my outline but is drawn by student engagement. It means you have to have flexibility to allow students to engage and, in return, engage with them, not disengage behind a scope you are cemented to or with a student you are disinterested in. Learning is about processing and applying information to the context of our understanding and experience; it is not simply about receiving information. My job is bigger than delivering information. I need to know individuals in order to effectively teach them.
When I teach online, it is also important to know the individuals I teach, and there are ways to build that relationship with them individually. First, I work to develop a friendly, approachable persona through the tone and the words I use to communicate. I build assignments that ask students to process and reflect on the information personally; I want to know what their experiences are, how they filter the information, and what they build out of their analysis.
My approach to teaching is relational. In order to learn, we have to believe we have something to learn and believe the teacher has something to teach. Additionally, the credibility of the teacher is built on an foundation of ethics and goodwill. When we smile in the hallway, we communicate our goodwill, and it is no different in the classroom. The final component to being an effective learner and teacher is humility. Offer what you know, admit what you don't, and be open to receiving what students and others can teach you. Humility always comes before wisdom.
Office: SSH-208
Office hours: Mon. 3:30-4:30 p.m.; Wed. 11:30 a.m. -12:30 and 3:30-4:30 p.m.
Phone: 541-917-4620
WOODL@linnbenton.edu
Tuesday, February 1, 2011
Descriptive
Another student signs in at the entrance and looks for a free table. She lucked out. There is a spot to share with an outlet to power her laptop while she works.
Most students in this space have set up camp - spreading their homework and notes out around them.
Some look for friends. Some snack on lunch.
Other students, slouched in the comfy chairs, wait for their names to be called.
Most students in this space have set up camp - spreading their homework and notes out around them.
Some look for friends. Some snack on lunch.
Other students, slouched in the comfy chairs, wait for their names to be called.
Thursday, January 27, 2011
Profile
Profile: Lucette Wood
Additional sources: Robin Havenick, and Jane Walker, Jane White, Beth Camp (nominated Wood for teacher of the year 2005), look up some authors who have participated in the Valley Writers Series for comment on the program.
Questions:
Wood has been an instructor at LBCC for ten years. She teaches a range of writing and literature courses. Her passion for writing and literacy led her to the Valley Writers Series (which she started in 2007?).
Questions:
1- What led you to start the Valley Writers series?
2 - Do you have a particularly memorable experience from the series you'd like to share?
3- What is your favorite class to teach?
4- Where did you go to school?
5- What are you passionate about outside of work?
Stuff to look up still
1- what has Wood published
2- articles in dh and in eugene
3 - what orgs is she a member of
4 -
http://tyca-pnw.org/files/Pacific%20View%20Fall%2005-06.pdf
Additional sources: Robin Havenick, and Jane Walker, Jane White, Beth Camp (nominated Wood for teacher of the year 2005), look up some authors who have participated in the Valley Writers Series for comment on the program.
Questions:
Wood has been an instructor at LBCC for ten years. She teaches a range of writing and literature courses. Her passion for writing and literacy led her to the Valley Writers Series (which she started in 2007?).
Questions:
1- What led you to start the Valley Writers series?
2 - Do you have a particularly memorable experience from the series you'd like to share?
3- What is your favorite class to teach?
4- Where did you go to school?
5- What are you passionate about outside of work?
Stuff to look up still
1- what has Wood published
2- articles in dh and in eugene
3 - what orgs is she a member of
4 -
http://tyca-pnw.org/files/Pacific%20View%20Fall%2005-06.pdf
Saturday, January 22, 2011
Three Tips from Stephen King that I Can Use in Feature Writing
I've learned so much from "On Writing" that I may make this a weekly entry regardless of my actual assignment.
Last week I wrote about lessons I've learned from Stephen King's "On Writing." This week's actual assignment is to write about three tips from King's book - so I'll add the things I didn't have room for in my previous post.
1) "Read the magazines publishing the kind of stuff you write." This is like researching a company you want to work for. The more you know about the business, the better suited you are to contribute to it and the more desirable you are to the company.
2) "The best form of dialogue attribution is said." This one is great, especially for feature writing. The point here is that the writing should be good enough that you don't have to use an adverb to explain how a quote is meant to be read. Wrong: "Yes, that would be wonderful," she said enthusiastically. Right: "Yes, that would be wonderful," she said.
3) "When you re-write, your main job is taking out all the things that are not the story." When King had his first paying writing job at a newspaper, the editor marked up his article and said "I only took out the bad parts." One of the most helpful parts of this feature writing class is the instructor's feedback - usually "talk to more sources!" Likewise, working at The Commuter I get lots of feedback. Sometimes the suggestions are to change a couple words or add some context and sometimes they're comments like "why is that there!?"
Last week I wrote about lessons I've learned from Stephen King's "On Writing." This week's actual assignment is to write about three tips from King's book - so I'll add the things I didn't have room for in my previous post.
1) "Read the magazines publishing the kind of stuff you write." This is like researching a company you want to work for. The more you know about the business, the better suited you are to contribute to it and the more desirable you are to the company.
2) "The best form of dialogue attribution is said." This one is great, especially for feature writing. The point here is that the writing should be good enough that you don't have to use an adverb to explain how a quote is meant to be read. Wrong: "Yes, that would be wonderful," she said enthusiastically. Right: "Yes, that would be wonderful," she said.
3) "When you re-write, your main job is taking out all the things that are not the story." When King had his first paying writing job at a newspaper, the editor marked up his article and said "I only took out the bad parts." One of the most helpful parts of this feature writing class is the instructor's feedback - usually "talk to more sources!" Likewise, working at The Commuter I get lots of feedback. Sometimes the suggestions are to change a couple words or add some context and sometimes they're comments like "why is that there!?"
Friday, January 21, 2011
Student Rallies to Save Child Care
Next fall, some college students may not be able to afford to work.
Employment Related Daycare (ERDC) is a childcare subsidy plan that is set to be phased out beginning this February. With new cuts, workers lose eligibility when they are unemployed for more than 30 days and will be removed from the program to be placed on a waiting list where applicants are awarded benefits in a lottery system.
To Lisa Bauman, a student who also works two jobs at LBCC, this means that when school is out of session over the summer, she will lose eligibility. In the fall when she returns to work and school, she will no longer have help paying for child care. Hourly child care expenses will be greater than her wages. She may not be able to work or finish her degree.
One of the biggest concerns advocates voice about cutting ERDC, is that working families won’t be able to afford day care. Parents may have to stop working and go on Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), costing the state much more than continuing ERDC.
“As a taxpayer, I can’t help but to be outraged at the expense of taking this program away,” Bauman said.
So Bauman decided to take action.
Bauman is organizing a rally, to take place Feb. 9 at the State Capitol Building. The effort has garnered support across campus, the community, and from child advocacy groups such as Children First for Oregon and Family Forward Oregon. Information and flyers are available on the event blog, saveerdc.blogspot.com and facebook group page, Rally to Save ERDC.
On campus, Robert Harrison, advisor of the LBCC Democracy Club, immediately agreed to help Bauman when she contacted him. Harrison admits he did not know about the issue until Bauman called him. “We are mostly focused on a trip to Egypt,” Harrison said, “but we’re going to try to help her out. It is a very worthwhile cause.” The club is sponsoring an informational event on Tuesday, Jan. 25 from noon - 1 p.m. in the Fireside Room, CC211.
Bauman will also be speaking in the DAC, Forum room 220 on Tuesday, Feb. 1 at 12:30 p.m. Information will be updated at Bauman's website on the Google event calendar.
Children First of Oregon, which is participating in the rally, campaigned for ERDC last year when it faced cuts. The campaign resulted in extended funding to February 2011. CCFO reports “a survey of ERDC recipients done by OSU and UO found that nearly 100% of ERDC recipients would be unable to maintain employment without the help they receive from ERDC.”
This year as the program is threatened again, Regan Gray, of CFFO, says that cuts to the program will affect entire communities. In addition to the families that will lose this resource, day cares will lose business, and day care employees may lose their jobs. In fact some Oregon Head Start programs have already been suffering from layoffs because of the issue. Bauman has been contacted by at least two former Head Start employees, from different locations, that said their facilities had closed.
How You Can Get Involved
Blog: saveerdc.blogspot.com
facebook page: Rally to Save ERDC
The Rally to Save Employment Related Daycare
Where: State Capitol Building: 955 Center Street N.E., Salem, Ore.
When: Wednesday, Feb. 9, 12 p.m.
Employment Related Daycare (ERDC) is a childcare subsidy plan that is set to be phased out beginning this February. With new cuts, workers lose eligibility when they are unemployed for more than 30 days and will be removed from the program to be placed on a waiting list where applicants are awarded benefits in a lottery system.
To Lisa Bauman, a student who also works two jobs at LBCC, this means that when school is out of session over the summer, she will lose eligibility. In the fall when she returns to work and school, she will no longer have help paying for child care. Hourly child care expenses will be greater than her wages. She may not be able to work or finish her degree.
One of the biggest concerns advocates voice about cutting ERDC, is that working families won’t be able to afford day care. Parents may have to stop working and go on Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), costing the state much more than continuing ERDC.
“As a taxpayer, I can’t help but to be outraged at the expense of taking this program away,” Bauman said.
So Bauman decided to take action.
Bauman is organizing a rally, to take place Feb. 9 at the State Capitol Building. The effort has garnered support across campus, the community, and from child advocacy groups such as Children First for Oregon and Family Forward Oregon. Information and flyers are available on the event blog, saveerdc.blogspot.com and facebook group page, Rally to Save ERDC.
On campus, Robert Harrison, advisor of the LBCC Democracy Club, immediately agreed to help Bauman when she contacted him. Harrison admits he did not know about the issue until Bauman called him. “We are mostly focused on a trip to Egypt,” Harrison said, “but we’re going to try to help her out. It is a very worthwhile cause.” The club is sponsoring an informational event on Tuesday, Jan. 25 from noon - 1 p.m. in the Fireside Room, CC211.
Bauman will also be speaking in the DAC, Forum room 220 on Tuesday, Feb. 1 at 12:30 p.m. Information will be updated at Bauman's website on the Google event calendar.
Children First of Oregon, which is participating in the rally, campaigned for ERDC last year when it faced cuts. The campaign resulted in extended funding to February 2011. CCFO reports “a survey of ERDC recipients done by OSU and UO found that nearly 100% of ERDC recipients would be unable to maintain employment without the help they receive from ERDC.”
This year as the program is threatened again, Regan Gray, of CFFO, says that cuts to the program will affect entire communities. In addition to the families that will lose this resource, day cares will lose business, and day care employees may lose their jobs. In fact some Oregon Head Start programs have already been suffering from layoffs because of the issue. Bauman has been contacted by at least two former Head Start employees, from different locations, that said their facilities had closed.
How You Can Get Involved
Blog: saveerdc.blogspot.com
facebook page: Rally to Save ERDC
The Rally to Save Employment Related Daycare
Where: State Capitol Building: 955 Center Street N.E., Salem, Ore.
When: Wednesday, Feb. 9, 12 p.m.
Thursday, January 20, 2011
No-School Days Impact Parents
This is Sarah Kruse’s first term at LBCC. With enrollment at an all-time high, she took whatever classes she could get into. Her schedule includes day and evening classes on three of LBCC’s campuses. Kruse also works and has two children in elementary school. Her schedule sometimes conflicts with the early release days the Greater Albany School District has implemented this year.
On Wednesday, when her two children get out of school at 1:25 p.m., Kruse will be in class. Fortunately her husband, a stay-at-home dad, will be there to pick up the kids. “We’re lucky that way,” says Kruse, “a lot of people don’t have that option.”
According to its website, the Greater Albany School District has 11 no-school days, 14 early-release Wednesdays, and three unpaid cut days this year. LBCC is in session most of these days, posing a problem for students with children in the Albany district.
To help alleviate timetable issues, the Albany School District has partnered with several community organizations. These choices may help parents solve childcare problems, but they can be costly.
The Community Before & After School Child Care Program (CAP) provides supervised activities for $10, after a one time $35 registration fee.
Albany Parks & Recreation offers themed activities, but only at two of the 16 elementary schools, also for $10 each day.
Themed events can be found at the YMCA each Wednesday for a one-time $10 registration fee, which includes a t-shirt. The cost is $5 for members and $7 for non-members. One added bonus at this location is that kids can swim in an indoor heated pool.
The Boys & Girls Club is the most affordable option, however. Their annual membership fee is only $25. There is no extra fee for care on early-release days, though there is a $6 fee on days when a child attends before 10 a.m.
LBCC operates the Periwinkle Child Development Center, which offers a kindergarten class on campus with extended care, "but for older kids (1st grade and above) or students enrolled in other public schools, there is not an on-campus option" said a contact at the PCDC office.
As a last resort, LBCC students may have to choose between missing class or bringing their child(ren) to class with them. But students should take their classmates and instructors into consideration before bringing children to class with them.
While LBCC’s policy prohibits bringing children into college classrooms, it does allow some wiggle room: “Under most circumstances, children are not allowed in classrooms. Faculty may make exceptions to this rule on a case-by-case basis.”
Biology instructor Diana Wheat says early in her career at LBCC, she served as a substitute for a class in which a student was unable to find a babystitter and asked if her “child (could) stay if she took the test in the back of the class.” Having sympathy for the student, Wheat allowed the child to stay and later found out “a lot of students complained to the instructor later about how disruptive that was for them to take the class. I learned a hard lesson. Hence the policy.”
Wheat says “It often comes down to what is in the best interests of all the students in the class not just the mother or father.”
While some instructors do allow children to sit in their classrooms on an occasional basis, others expressly state in their sylabi that children are not allowed. It is a good idea for parents to contact their instructors as soon as they realize there are conflicts with their class schedules and those of their children. Many instructors are parents, too, and understand. Oftentimes, tests, assignments and attendance arrangements can be worked out when instructors are aware of the students’ needs.
Child Care Options
541-917-7777
333 Broadalbin St. SW
Albany, Ore
541-926-6666
1215 Hill Street SE
Albany, Ore
541-967-9322
250 SW Broadalbin St., Suite 2B
Albany, Ore
541-926-4488 ext 318
3311 Pacific Blvd. SW
Albany, Ore
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Three Things I've Learned in Feature Writing...So Far
The three most important things I've learned in my Feature Writing class, we haven't even discussed in the classroom yet - when I was there anyway. I missed three of the seven days class days this term. Thankfully some great reading was assigned.
I found out that I love Stephen King! King's "memoir of the craft," as he calls it, "On Writing," is full of the experiences that shaped him into the writer he is and offers tons of wisdom for aspiring writers.
The most useful nuggets of wisdom to me are these:
1) "If you don't have time to read, you don't have time to write."
Every time I read - anything - I learn something about writing. Whether I'm reading Time or popping around on the internet I'm learning different ways that writers communicate.
2) "Close the door when you write." This is a tough one since I don't really have my own space separate from my husband and son (who just got done showing me his spelling homework and is talking to to me still!) Ok. I just went into my room and am now sitting on floor typing this - but the door is indeed closed.
3) "Put your vocabulary on the top shelf of your toolbox, and don't make any conscious effort to improve it." This one is great and I've used it with my own writing and at the Writing Center helping other students. This isn't to say that I don't still strain over finding just the right word to say what I want to, but just that I make sure it sounds natural to me - the way I would say it.
Well, my husband just walked in and the phone just rang and it is "family activity" time, so I'll end my entry here. Number 2 is next on my priority list. My next blog entry will be made without interruption even if it means writing it at 2 a.m.
I found out that I love Stephen King! King's "memoir of the craft," as he calls it, "On Writing," is full of the experiences that shaped him into the writer he is and offers tons of wisdom for aspiring writers.
The most useful nuggets of wisdom to me are these:
1) "If you don't have time to read, you don't have time to write."
Every time I read - anything - I learn something about writing. Whether I'm reading Time or popping around on the internet I'm learning different ways that writers communicate.
2) "Close the door when you write." This is a tough one since I don't really have my own space separate from my husband and son (who just got done showing me his spelling homework and is talking to to me still!) Ok. I just went into my room and am now sitting on floor typing this - but the door is indeed closed.
3) "Put your vocabulary on the top shelf of your toolbox, and don't make any conscious effort to improve it." This one is great and I've used it with my own writing and at the Writing Center helping other students. This isn't to say that I don't still strain over finding just the right word to say what I want to, but just that I make sure it sounds natural to me - the way I would say it.
Well, my husband just walked in and the phone just rang and it is "family activity" time, so I'll end my entry here. Number 2 is next on my priority list. My next blog entry will be made without interruption even if it means writing it at 2 a.m.
Wednesday, January 5, 2011
First Feature Story
How are the LBCC students with children coping with all the early release and days off this year in Albany’s public school system?
Questions for other student parents
1. How old are your children?
2. What do you do when your child has the day off school but you don't?
2. Have you ever had to bring your child(ren) to school with you?
3. Do you have other childcare options?
a. If so, what are they?
4. How have your instructors reacted to your bringing your child(ren) to class?
5. How have your classmates reacted to your bringing your child(ren) to class?
6. How does your child(ren) feel about coming to school with you?
7. What does your child(ren) think about college?
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