Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Girls and mathematics: confidence and success are directly proportional

Monday, February 1st, 2010

This post was written by guest blogger Sally Reid, whose name is similar but not identical to mine, and whose skill set is vastly different! She has taught mathematics at girls’ schools for many years, and now teaches at Dana Hall School, (longtime NCGS member) in Wellesley, Massachusetts.

math-problems-for-girls-

A study recently published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found that female elementary school teachers who suffered from math anxiety could instill negative gender-biased stereotypes in the girls they teach.  Really? Now that’s not good! From my own personal experience (not statistically significant, I know) as a young girl it never occurred to me that boys could be better in math than girls, never mind that they actually were.  Maybe my teachers suffered no math unease, or maybe I simply just loved math no matter what, or maybe my parents both valued math as much as they valued reading and made that quite obvious at home.  As a young student, the only thing I objected to was a boring teacher or one who was unfair.  I don’t remember any who demonstrated angst of any sort; perhaps they hid it well.  But, let’s assume for a minute that the research is conclusive and that there really are girls out there identifying with their overly math-anxious female teachers to the detriment of their mathematical future.

To use math terminology, success and confidence are directly proportional.  One of the most loved and competent teachers I have ever known taught first grade for over thirty years.  When asked to identify the most profound indicator of student success she replied, “It is amazing to see what kids can do when they think they can, compared to what they can do when they think they can’t.” How true this is for all of us.  I received phone calls from two of my sons last week; both had just started up new courses, one an undergraduate -level mathematics course and the other a graduate-level course about security in the Middle East.  Both guys remarked that their professors were fabulous, and went on to explain that what made these men so extraordinary was their robust, self-assured delivery, which made them absolutely convincing.  Confidence matters!

So what about math education for girls?  Girls need confident, competent women around them every day from the time they first set foot in a school building.  We have come a long way in our understanding of math anxiety, girls and math, and gender differences in learning, but we must still have a way to go if this research is accurate.  I send a big thank you to every elementary school teacher for helping our girls build the foundation they need to succeed in this modern, technical world.

And, for those teachers who are anxious when arithmetic time rolls around, I encourage you to do something about it.  Like your own students, you must be confident about what you do to be the best you can be for the kids.  If this means diving into another math class at the local university, do it.  If it means signing up for a summer math program for educators, do it.  You owe it to yourself and to the girls you teach.

For the parents out there, look for signs that your girls are losing confidence in their math ability and address it.  If you, yourself, disliked math in school or thought you were terrible at it, consider keeping that to yourself (let’s face it, you don’t tell them everything you think or did).  Don’t give girls license to dislike math, don’t let them think it is only for boys, and don’t let them fall behind.  The National Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM http://www.stemedcoalition.org/) initiative is funding programs in our schools across the country to promote these fields; the premise being that we cannot compete as a nation unless we produce top-thinkers in these disciplines.  Now, more than ever, we need the female perspective in design and research.

Girls deserve a solid mathematical foundation.  As a math teacher at an all girls’ school in Massachusetts, I see first-hand that a single-sex environment could be the answer for many of our students.  Here the best math student is a girl, the most outspoken math student is a girl, and all of the kids in the BC Calculus class are girls.  But, for a typical young woman in high school, the boy sitting next to her in math class can influence her in ways I won’t even begin to address.  The bottom line:  If she has a strong foundation and believes in herself, she’ll have what it takes to succeed in mathematics and the future will be a better one for all of us.  Let’s do what we can to make sure this happens.

—Sally Reid

Chase Community Giving Facebook follow-up

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

chaseAfter the Facebook votes were in, the St. Bernard Project was not the million dollar winner. That honor went to Invisible Children. Be sure to have look at their website to see the good work they are doing and the very effective ways they are spreading the word and leveraging their efforts. Inspiration for those of us who hope to do the same!

However, in its wisdom, the Chase Community Giving Advisory board made some additional grants to charities that seemed to them particularly worthy and had received a large proportion of votes. We are happy to report that The St. Bernard Project received $37,000, and hope that NCGS involvement helped the Advisory board reach their decision. Camfed International (Campaign for Female Education) received the same amount, towards educating girls in Zimbabwe. Their cause is certainly one that NCGS can support wholeheartedly.

Chase Community Giving found their first Facebook giveaway to be an overwhelming success, and they have plans to repeat it, so “fan” them on Facebook, and use your votes to do some good in the world.

Answering the call to service

Monday, January 18th, 2010

Most of us have a fundamental belief that in our hour of pain, aid will come.  The child with an earache cries for mama; the wounded soldier calls for a medic. Help me.

Martin Luther King We want to respond; it’s basic to our humanity — to help, to heal, to feed, to comfort. To do what we can, whether by bringing water to the thirsty, cleaning wounds, giving blood or writing checks. Disasters large and small can bring out the best in us —  we rise to individual acts of heroism and collective acts of charity when we heed that call to service.

This Martin Luther King Day I have three things on my mind: the genius of the great Dr. King, the disaster in Haiti, and the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. I’m wishing right now we had a Martin Luther King, Jr. for this millennium — someone whose words and courage could inspire, persuade and uplift. We‘ll always need that.

The disaster  in Haiti is a nightmare of violent death, entrapment, and grievous injury, all exacerbated by an infrastructure that is missing, crushed, or carried away. And because of that, medical care on the island has been jerked rudely backward to the time of the Civil War and before. People are dying of sepsis and dehydration; bloated corpses are putrefying in the heat. Can this really be 2010? Paul Farmer’s organization, Partners in Health will be the lifeline here, with their deep connections in Haiti and excellent command of the best ways to deliver lifesaving medical aid in resource-poor settings.

In the footage and photos from Port-au-Prince, we see and hear the echoes of the aftermath of hurricane Katrina. There are many parallels, the heartbreaking images of suffering people being only one of them. Lest we forget: Katrina’s fifth anniversary is this coming summer. Let’ s not be guilty of a short attention span. The “crisis du jour” mentality of charitable giving is powerfully reinforced by on-again/off-again TV coverage, and we need to remember that even as Haiti is in ruins and desperately needs our help, distress did not disappear in New Orleans when the news photographers went home. There’s pluck and hard work afoot in NOLA, but help of many kinds is still needed quite urgently.

The girls’ schools represented by NCGS have made a commitment to the St. Bernard Project. We’ll work together  to raise money to build a house for a displaced family, and we’ll do it in time for our annual conference in June, this year in New Orleans at Louise McGehee School.  As part of our plan, we want to get every single person who reads this blog to vote for St. Bernard in the Chase Community Giving challenge on Facebook, and to spread the word. Wouldn’t it inspire a great feeling of hope to see the St. Bernard project be awarded a million dollars? It would please the likes of Dr. King. So as we celebrate his birthday, let’s keep his dream alive. We have the power to help make it happen. If you are on Facebook you can vote for five charities. Please use your power to vote for the St. Bernard Project.

Consider how recently it was that New Orleans was getting the hand-wringing news coverage, and think about the courageous and hardworking people who are still in the trenches in the absence of much recognition or praise. Think of them as you read this stanza of Marge Piercy’s poem To Be of Use—

I want to be with people who submerge
in the task, who go into the fields to harvest
and work in a row and pass the bags along,
who stand in the line and haul in their places,
who are not parlor generals and field deserters
but move in a common rhythm
when the food must come in or the fire be put out.

And certainly the great Dr. King would agree. In his own words — “Their destiny is tied up with our destiny, and their freedom is inextricably bound to our freedom; we cannot walk alone.” Please, we only have through Friday, January 22nd to vote for St. Bernard on Facebook. Do it now while it’s on your mind.

(read the whole poem here)

Yes is a pleasant country

Friday, January 1st, 2010

It’s New Year’s Eve and your loyal blogger is home with a head cold and a hot toddy. The cold was acquired in the course of several days with a delightful but contagious pre-schooler, my granddaughter, whom I don’t see often enough. But I wouldn’t have traded that time with her for anything mundane like a foofy New Year’s party and the ability to breathe through my nose. So I’m home in my bathrobe tonight, looking at the paintings we made, missing her extraordinary carillion-style laughter, and contemplating the new decade. yes001

Resolutions don’t seem to work for me. I always take on too much and then disappoint myself. And it’s a drag to be calling yourself down over failed self-improvement when it’s only February. I try now to think more in trends. What worked last year? How can I do more of that, and less of what didn’t.

Here’s what worked for me in 2009: Say yes whenever possible. The idea is certainly not proprietary with me. One of the many places you’ll see it put forward is in literature about improvisation. Patricia Ryan Madson’s book Improv Wisdom, explains the aptness of yes in a very entertaining way. Here’s a brief excerpt:

Saying yes (and following through with support) prevents you from committing a cardinal sin “blocking.” Blocking comes in many forms; it is a way of trying to control the situation instead of accepting it. We block when we say no, when we have a better idea, when we change the subject, when we correct the speaker, when we fail to listen, or when we simply ignore the situation. The critic in us wakes up and runs the show. Saying no is the most common way we attempt to control the future. For many of us the habit is so ingrained that we don’t notice we are doing it. We are not only experienced at blocking others, we commonly block ourselves . . . A sophisticated critic may even appear to be agreeing by offering the “yes but” response. Try substituting “yes and” for “yes but” — this will get the ball rolling.

So what about kids who are asking for impossible things? The nine year old who desperately wants a pony even though you live in a two bedroom condo in the city? Just say Yes? How about just agreeing with the desire: “Yes, wouldn’t that be great, to have your own pony? I wish I could give it to you, and a silver saddle, too. Imagine my Annabelle, galloping across an open field!  I wonder if we could think of some ways to get a pony into your life?” (Saving money for riding camp, for example) See how different this feels from, “No we can’t afford a pony, and anyhow it’s ridiculous, there’s no place to keep it.” Whatever the currently unfulfillable wish, I think it’s nice to add: “Someday I hope your dream comes true.”

And while we are dealing with kids, “Yes, later,” is a happy re-do of “No, not now.”

So this year, when I can’t decide, my default will be yes. Go see a movie I’m not sure I’ll like? Yes. Do I have time to help stretch a huge canvas this weekend? Yes, we’ll figure it out. Show up at your concert or opening? Yes, I can.

It’s good, too, to be able to see the important yes inside some of your nos.  Someone once told me that when you say no to a request, understand that it can be a way of saying yes to something else. So it’s — No, sorry, I can’t help with the fundraiser for the animal shelter (because I am saying Yes to a young person who needs me right now.) Or —No, can’t hang that exhibition (because I am saying Yes to my own painting.) This helps me feel good and strong about my nos, rather than guilty or ungenerous.

So I am starting the new decade by saying YES to all its possibilities and adventures which are yet to be revealed. If you need a little extra inspiration today, I hope you’ll take the time to watch this TED talk by the irrepressible Benjamin Zander. Don’t ask me what it’s about. Just say Yes.

yes is a pleasant country:
if’s wintry
(my lovely)
let’s open the year

—e.e. cummings

Grant opportunities for science teachers

Friday, December 18th, 2009

I want to make sure that all you hardworking teachers out there get rewarded whenever possible, so here are two more possibilities:

The Amgen Award for Science Teaching Excellence is an annual awards program that recognizes extraordinary contributions by educators who are elevatinf the level of science literacy through through creativity in the classroom An independent panel of judges selects the winners based on the following criteria: creativity and effectiveness of teaching methods; the plan for the use of grant money to improve science education resources in their schools; and an innovative science lesson plan showcasing innovative methods in the classroom. Thhairirty-four teachers will be honored. Read all about it.

The Toshiba/National Science Teachers Association ExploraVision Awards Program, the world’s largest K–12 science and technology competition, is now accepting entries for its 2010 program year. The ExploraVision program, sponsored by Toshiba and administered by the National Science Teachers Association (NSTA), challenges teams of 2-4 students to research scientific principles and current technologies as the basis for designing innovative technologies that could exist in 20 years. Students on the four first-place ExploraVision winning teams will each receive a $10,000 U.S. Series EE Savings Bond valued at maturity.  Students on second-place teams will each receive a $5,000 bond valued at maturity. Student-team coaches/teachers will receive an expense paid trip to Washington, DC in June for ExploraVision Awards Weekend for the coach and mentor of each national winning team; a one-year NSTA membership to coaches of the national winning teams; a Toshiba-branded product for the coach and mentor of each regional winning team; a certificate of participation and an entry gift for each coach and mentor of every team that submits a complete entry; and a special discount on Toshiba computer products.
Schools will receive a Toshiba laptop for each of the schools of the regional winning teams and an awards ceremony for each regional winning team at their school where they will receive a winner’s banner, plaque, and other gifts. Details and how to apply are here.

A semester on the Maine coast: science and adventure for girls, starts in February

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

The liminal space of the seacoast, that threshold between land and sea, and between sea and sky, is an ideal thinking and growing place for adolescents, who are also in transition, between childhood and adulthood.

When this opportunity in Maine showed up in my email, I found myself humming Gordon Bok’s Hay Ledge Song,” . . . give sadness to the wind, blown alee and gone . . . ” But sea chanties and sentiment aside — Coastal Studies for Girls is something I would have loved at age 15. (See earlier post on opalescent squid, if you don’t believe me.) Read on and see if you know a girl who would love it, too. Public school, private school, or home school background, it’s all good at CSG.

Coastal Studies for Girls is the country’s first residential science and leadership semester school for 10th grade girls. The girls who will thrive here have a love for learning and discovery, curious minds,CSGGirl-With-Laptop-] adventurous spirits, and a desire to challenge themselves.

CSG is much more than school—it is a profound experience with the potential to change a life. Girls leave here empowered to make a difference at home, in school, and in their communities.

The curriculum is built around three strands:

Scientific Research: comprises the challenging and rigorous science-based exploration that is the foundation of Coastal Studies for Girls. The Coastal Marine Ecosystems course is based in authentic research-based inquiry. Using the Maine coast as a natural laboratory, students design and conduct original research projects and present their results to an audience of peers, staff, family and community members.

The Core:
ensures that students maintain good standing at their local high schools, enhances their college admissions prospects and adds the perspective of environmental stewardship in all subject areas.

Leadership: offers opportunities for personal growth and environmental stewardship. In the Leadership Adventure girls learn traits of an effective leader as well as a cooperative group member, through activities such as ocean sailing, backpacking, sea kayaking, team challenges on a ropes course, rock climbing and snow camping.

Do you know of a current tenth grade girl who would be successful at CSG? Is she willing, capable, adventuresome? Would she like the opportunity to live on the Maine coast in an 1850s farmhouse with a bunch of other girls, for 16 weeks, beginning in February?

Some very generous donors have committed to making this opportunity available to ALL girls, regardless of their ability to pay. Go to the CSG website and get excited. Tell them the NCGS AllGirls blog sent you.

For teachers: follow your dream

Friday, December 4th, 2009

FFThome
Is now the winter of our discontent?  No, no, it’s not discontent, exactly. But these next few weeks before the winter solstice are the darkest days of the year, and in these parts, the cold is starting to settle in.

Teachers, here’s something to dream about, and better: a way to make those dreams come true. The Fund for Teachers offers $12 million in grants for summer fellowships which are open to teachers from both independent and public school schools.  Grants of $5,000 for individuals and $10,000 for teams are available for teachers who design their own professional development experiences and apply online. Applications for 2010 are due on January 29th. It could be a glorious summer!

Kibera School for Girls: “I’m going to work, you’re going to work; let’s work together.”

Thursday, November 19th, 2009
Viviane, age 4, proud new student

Viviane, age 4, proud new student

The inaugural class of little girls

The inaugural class of little girls

We care about girls, and we believe in the power of education to transform their lives. So let’s take an imaginary trip to Africa — to Nairobi, Kenya — to the Kibera Slum, the largest slum in Africa, second largest in the world, where 1.5 million people live in an area the size of Central Park. There is no sanitation, no reliable access to clean water, no school.

Imagine you are a girl born in Kibera. If you are strong enough to survive past the age of five, odds are before adolescence you will have been raped and/or you will have turned to prostitution to survive, because you have no possessions, and your young female body is the only thing you have to trade for food. Odds are, too, that you will be infected with HIV before adulthood. If you are like most women in Kibera, you will be illiterate. As a girl, what could you possibly hope for, given the givens?

Jessica Posner, a Wesleyan student, teamed up with Kennedy Odede, who is Executive Director of Shining Hope for Communities, and also one of the very, very few who got out of Kibera. Together they started a free school: Kibera School for Girls — for the orphans, the victims,  and the street children of the slum — offering protection, nourishment, and education to these bright, motivated, vulnerable little girls. You can read more about it here, and please, please be sure to see the newest video from Kibera, just posted November 19th on YouTube. If you fan Kibera School for Girls on Facebook, it’s easy to stay informed.

So here’s what they need, right now, that you may have the skills to provide at a cost of nothing but your time and talent — a school website. Who among the readers of this blog, NCGS members and friends, is willing to help? Please leave a comment on the blog with leads or offers, or contact sallyreed@ncgs.org. Thank you.

Shrinky-Dinks for biomedical engineering

Monday, November 9th, 2009

shrinkydink1shrinky-dinks2No way.

Way!

Serious play is not an oxymoron; it is the  essence of innovation. Although Michelle Khine describes the motivator for her breakthrough as “impatience,” clearly her work had taken on the qualities of play when she dreamed up the idea of using Shrinky-Dinks right off the shelf of the local toy store as a stop-gap solution to a manufacturing problem in her new lab. A little Autocad, a laser printer, a few sheets of shrinky-dink material and yes, a hot toaster oven later, and Khine had created a  microfluidic chip without using the $100,000 equipment everyone else relied on to manufacture them. And guess what? it works! Read about this clever young woman in MIT’s Technology Review.

Next, we want to see what she can do with Silly Putty.

Thanks to Monique Paturel for bringing this story to my attention on Facebook.

Beauty pageants without boundaries

Monday, November 2nd, 2009
Alison, age 10.

Alison, age 10.

Ashley, age 8.

Ashley, age 8.

I stumbled across a link to these photos by Los Angeles photographer Susan Anderson on an art website. Her series is titled High Glitz. As art patrons, I think we are supposed to view the work ironically, but I am unable to do so, finding it frightening and disturbing. These are little beauty pageant girls, of course, and we are familiar with the genre.  Seeing them up close in detail like this is far creepier than the video footage I have seen. The children are objectified, sexualized, and fetishized. They are turned into some kind of exaggerated joke, like over-the-top drag queens. But it’s not funny is it?  Follow the link and see for yourself.

It seems to me that more and more the boundary is blurred between girlhood and  womanhood. Little girls are sexy, the media tells us in pictures: pouting centerfold models with lollipops in their mouths are seductively posed with white teddy bears. And how about other end of the spectrum — older women employing everything including injectibles and surgery to look younger and thus more alluring. If young equals sexy, how low do we go? Look at the world of fashion. Most runway models are between 14 and 19 years old, and some are as young as 12. What does that say about us, about what we have learned to want? (I’m asking about both men and women.)

Of course there is a powerful commercial motivation to these activities. So perhaps we are looking at a slippery slope, with Bratz dolls at the top and criminal underworld of child sex trafficking down at the bottom. (According to the United Nations, it is the fastest-growing area of organized crime). It’s striking to me that the role of child prostitute provided the original momentum for the careers of several female movie stars: 12-year-old Brooke Shields in Pretty Baby, 14-year-old Jodie Foster in Taxi Driver, and 13-year-old Penelope Cruz in a French soap opera, Série Rose.

Most women I know react immediately with rage and revulsion to these photos of children dressed and groomed to look like sexy women. But if you can get past those feelings for a moment, what comes after the anger, when you calm down and think about it?
I’d be interested to hear your thoughts, as I try to sort out mine.