Describe the advocacy issue/challenge/need and its impact on children and families.

Overview

This Assessment is a Work Product in which you will research pressing issues in the early childhood field and select one that you are particularly interested in, one for which you have a desire to generate awareness and bring about change. With this issue in mind, you will prepare a communication piece for policymakers or stakeholders to begin the change process. After you receive a response, you will reflect on your efforts to communicate and collaborate with policy-makers and/or stakeholders.

Your response to this Assessment should:

  • Reflect the criteria provided in the Rubric, which provides information on how the Assessment will be evaluated.
  • Adhere to the required Assignment length.
  • Use the APA “Course Paper” template available hereNote: All submissions must follow the conventions of scholarly writing. Properly formatted APA citations and references must be provided where appropriate.

Professional Skills: Written Communication, Critical Thinking, and Information Literacy are assessed in this Competency. You are strongly encouraged to use the Writing Checklist and to review the rubric prior to submitting.

This Assessment requires submission of one (1) document that includes all three parts of this Assessment. Save this file as RC004_firstinitial_lastname (for example, RC004_J_Smith). If you choose to create a PowerPoint for Part II, you may submit two files in total, one Word document and one PowerPoint. When you are ready to upload your completed Assessment, use the Assessment tab on the top navigation menu.

Instructions

Before submitting your Assessment, carefully review the rubric. This is the same rubric the assessor will use to evaluate your submission and it provides detailed criteria describing how to achieve or master the Competency. Many students find that understanding the requirements of the Assessment and the rubric criteria help them direct their focus and use their time most productively.

Rubric

Access the following to complete this Assessment:

  • National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC). (n.d.). Public policy and advocacy. Retrieved March 11, 2019, from https://www.naeyc.org/our-work/public-policy-advocacy
  • Ounce of Prevention Fund. (2009). Early childhood advocacy toolkit. Retrieved from https://www.theounce.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/EarlyChildhoodAdvocacyToolkit.pdf
  • Trend Lines. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://blog.childtrends.org
  • UNICEF. (n.d.). Current issues. Retrieved January 29, 2020, from https://www.unicef.org/media/current-issues
  • ZERO TO THREE. (2010). You have what it takes! A tool for identifying your skills as an early childhood advocate [Interactive media]. Retrieved from http://www.zerotothree.org/public-policy/action-center/advocacy-tool-final-9-7-10.pdf

This assessment has three-parts.  Click each of the items below to complete this assessment.

Part I: Research Brief

Select a topic of interest.

What current problems, policies, or issues affect the health, safety, or education of young children and families? Which of these issues are of greatest interest to you? Perhaps you are concerned about the increased focus on high-stakes testing in primary grades, the lack of opportunity for young children to engage in creative and experiential play, or the need to increase children’s access to books in the home. Explore the web resources provided with the Assessment and/or other resources to gain information and insights on pressing issues, needs, and challenges that affect children and families.

Based on your initial exploration, select a topic of interest, one for which you want to advocate for action that can positively impact the lives of children and families. With this issue in mind, continue exploring reputable resources and investigate advocacy organizations and initiatives that are already in place. Consider how this issue relates to your sphere of influence (e.g., workplace, local community, state, national, global level) and what actions you might take to promote positive changes within this sphere.

Based on your exploration, prepare a 2- to 3-page Research Brief as follows:

  1. Describe the advocacy issue/challenge/need and its impact on children and families.
  2. Include a synopsis of major, compelling research findings that support your position on the cause for which you want to advocate.
  3. Explore local, regional, state, national, and/or global advocacy efforts that have been devoted to this issue. Identify one or more organizations and describe their work in supporting the advocacy issue.
  4. After reading about how established organizations have advocated for your issue, describe an initiative of your own that could further your cause. Your initiative should be one that you can spearhead within your sphere of influence. Your initiative might involve activities that will increase awareness, educate others, change a policy, bring in resources to your workplace, start a community project, create a service to families, or any other forms of advocacy.
    • State at least two measureable goals that you believe can be achieved within the next six months to a year.
    • Include specific action steps you plan to take and a timeline for implementation.
    • Identify any roadblocks you anticipate and plans to overcome them.
    • Identify one or more policymakers or stakeholders to whom you will communicate your advocacy initiative.
    • Explain the purpose of your communication to these stakeholders.

Part II: Communication to Policymakers or Stakeholders

Determine whether your communication will be to policymakers or stakeholders. Consider what you know about this audience and, thus, what type of information and messages would best capture their hearts, minds, and interests about the issue/challenge/need you chose. Then, determine how best to present this information (e.g., PowerPoint presentation, letter, speech, video, proposal, historical timeline, report with statistics, etc.)

With these ideas in mind, prepare your communication piece and then either meet with your audience face to face or send the communication to your audience via e-mail or other means. If you meet with your audience, be sure to engage in dialogue and solicit their responses to the information, messages, and appeals for help. If you send the communication via e-mail or other means, request a response in writing, a phone call, or other form. You will submit your communication piece with this assessment. If it is a PowerPoint, video, or oral presentation, you will submit it as a separate file when you submit the Assessment.

Your communication should include:

  • Statement of issue/challenge/need being addressed
  • Brief explanation of the research you found
  • Description of the initiative you are spearheading and a rationale for its importance
  • Initiation of dialogue or an appeal for support
  • Request for a response
  • Proposal of next steps

Part III: Summary and Next Steps

Once you have received responses from policymakers or stakeholders, reflect on your experience and write a 2- to 3-page summary. Your summary should:

  1. Describe your experience in delivering your communication to policymakers or stakeholders. What worked well? What could you have done differently to better communicate the issue or to better position your intentions related to advocacy?
  2. Describe in detail the responses you received from individuals to who you delivered the communication. What did you learn? Explain how the responses serve to support or present challenges to your advocacy initiative.
  3. Determine at least three action steps for continuing your advocacy efforts (e.g., responding to one or both of the stakeholder groups, communicating with other stakeholders, organizing for action, conducting further research, etc.)

https://www.naeyc.org/our-work/public-policy-advocacy

https://www.theounce.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/EarlyChildhoodAdvocacyToolkit.pdf

https://www.childtrends.org/blog/

https://www.unicef.org/media/current-issues

http://www.zerotothree.org/public-policy/action-center/advocacy-tool-final-9-7-10.pdf

Constitution Day Presentation

Constitution Day Presentation

The following principles have been recognized as core tenets of the U.S. Constitution:

  • Checks and balances
  • Federalism
  • Judicial review
  • Limited government
  • Popular sovereignty
  • Separation of powers

Create a 12-15-slide PowerPoint presentation to educate a group of students or adults about the core tenets listed above for an upcoming Constitution Day celebration in a school setting. You may select a grade level 1-12, teachers, or parents as your audience. Please specify your intended audience and include other pertinent information within the speaker notes. Your presentation should be engaging and appropriate for your chosen audience. Include speaker notes below each content-related slide that represent what would be said if giving the presentation in person. Expand upon the information included in the slide and do not simply restate it. Please ensure the speaker notes include a minimum of 50-100 words in your speaker notes per slide.

In addition to your PowerPoint, include a 250-500-word essay describing two interactive learning activities for your intended audience to coincide with your presentation.

While APA format is not required for the body of this assignment, solid academic writing is expected, and in-text citations and references should be presented using APA documentation guidelines, which can be found in the APA Style Guide, located in the Student Success Center.

Describe the role of motivation in adolescent learning.

Motivation plays a key role in the daily duties of an educator. Students are much more likely to take on the task of learning when they have compelling reasons to do so. Therefore, when students are motivated they are much more likely to succeed.

Digital Presentation

For this assignment, create an 8-10 slide digital presentation to be used as a professional development to be used to educate colleagues on how to use motivational strategies in their classrooms to promote student success.

Include the following in your presentation:

  1. Describe the role of motivation in adolescent learning.
  2. Use your researched knowledge of motivation, as well as physical, cognitive, and socioemotional development principles learned in this course, to suggest 4-5 appropriate instructional strategies that help motivate adolescent students.
  3. Suggest 2-3 prevention or intervention techniques to use in the classroom to support and help motivate students who might be struggling, facing a challenging situation, have a specific learning disability, exceptionality, or language barrier.
  4. Provide an example of a digital tool used to support learning, motivation, and engagement.
  5. A title slide, reference slide, and presenter’s notes.

Support your findings with a minimum of three scholarly resources.

The Lesson Plan

Professora Prestes

Rocky Mountain Elementary

First Grade Portuguese Immersion 

 

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· Instructional challenges and curricular demands of one core content area or grade level.

Because I’m a Portuguese teacher my challenges are basically finding resources and have to create or translate every material I need to teach.

 

· Methods for planning lessons, and the lesson planning tools they use.

I don’t do lesson plans, I don’t write lesson plans. What I have is a curricular map week by week with the content I have to teach. I prepare slides, activities, questions, but I don’t write lesson plans, luckily, because it would be extra time working and I don’t feel the need to write it.

 

· Strategies for differentiating instruction for all students.

I have prepared extra challenging activities for my gifted student and he has a routine about what to do if the finish his work early (and he always do). My low students work in my table or, I’ll work with them in small groups centers during track time. They also work individually with my aide.

 

· Strategies for utilizing technology to support diverse students.

They are just first graders, but I utilize weekly, almost daily, apps like Zearn, Xtra Math and a Portuguese version of Lexia. I also try to implement gamification twice a week if nearpod lessons so they will learn while playing.

 

· The ways in which the curriculum and instruction is related to the school’s vision and mission and Continuous Improvement Plan.

We collaborate as a team twice a week and meet as faculty weekly so we discuss how to adapt curriculum core and adapt our instruction to the District vision os learning.

 

· The support and guidance they receive from their administrators and any additional assistance they would like (if applicable).

We have an innovation coach, to help leverage technologically, we have an instructional coach, we have an intervention team, team leaders and I believe lots of support from the principal.

 

Hi Jolene,

Please make any changes to this as you need!  And let me know if I can add or send you anything else that you might need.

 

Challenges in education are different year to year depending on the students I have.  Speaking for this year, I have a lot of students with mental health challenges (depression, anxiety, suicidal thoughts) and it makes teaching challenging.

 

With that said, this year I have taught a lot of math using real world applications instead of things that students wouldn’t be interested in. I taught a 7th and 8th grade SPED math class and we use the Utah state core curriculum, and their IEP goals to map out the year and what they need to teach.  We broke down what they needed to know and made real work applications and projects. I teach at a very project based school so it fit into our model really well.

 

Planning lessons are very individual based.  I am lucky to have a paraprofessional with me, so I can teach mini lessons and the other students can be working on a project or on Khan Academy.  I use mini white boards, physical objects, and anything the students can physically touch to teach math.

 

I group my students based on their IEP goals and teach mini lessons to differentiate the curriculum.  Then as a whole class we make our way through the core with a lot of breaks, accommodations, and support.  And if there is a particular topic that all the students are struggling with we do whole group instruction and then break into mini work groups.

 

My school is a liberal arts project based Charter school.  We use the Montessori model in K-5 classrooms, and continue with project based hands-on learning 6-12.  The students don’t have textbooks and we are encouraged not to use worksheets that have problem after problem. This model works really well for our IEP students because they need a variety of ways to learn, especially for math.  We have a 1-to-1 ratio of Chrome books for each student, and we use that for Khan academy and google classroom in math. I also use videos to show real work applications as much as possible. We did a whole lesson based around Shark Tank, the TV show!

I am lucky to have a wonderful administration.  They are very supportive of the students with disabilities, and encourage me to ask for support when needed.  They promote community and teaching to the whole child rather than only focusing on academics. It makes the learning environment at Walden exciting, interesting, and challenging.

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This is PERFECT & AWESOME, thank you so much!

 

Please tell me your thoughts: I am graduating in August 2020 with my Leadership & Administration Master’s Degree and then in August 2021 with my Doctoral Education Specialist degree.

 

After owning Bright Kids Academy for 20 years, while being Director and Teacher, I wrote all Curriculum Development for my preschool program. I wondered if your school would allow me to WRITE & DONATE (for free) a preschool curriculum that could be distributed to parents & families wherein they could homeschool their 3 & 4-year-olds how to read, write, and perform Pre-K math to prepare their kiddos better to enter your Kindergarten? My lessons were age-appropriate activities where my students could use hands-on learning strategies to guide an individualized learning process. In my opinion, children learn best through collaborative play instruction. I used lessons to teach the whole child. For example, when I taught: Reading: The sound of the letter “a” a… a…” ant,” we used bread dough to form circles & straight lines and then used food color paint to make the letter “a.” Writing: We first practiced making big circles and straight-lines, in the air, with their arms before using Scented Washable Markers to write an “a.” Art: We made sandpaper “a” art projects made with glue and colored sand, to incorporate the 5-senses. Math: We counted body parts of ants; 1,2,3…then compared to sandpaper dot numbers, which allow them to use touch to correlate. Science: I ordered an “ant farm” so we could study ant colonies. PE: We went for walks to find ant colonies. Social Studies: We talked about their home and why they loved living with their families versus ants who live in colonies. Music: We marched around the room and sang: “The ants go marching one by one, Hoorah, Hoorah!” My greatest desire is that children develop first a life-long love of learning. When education is FUN & EXCITING, children will blossom and progress with individualized learning. Parents are smart and know how to create an atmosphere of love, but could use additional teaching curriculum to inspire and challenge their toddler. I know many schools charge for homeschool Preschool programs, in which the additional income could benefit Walden. Feel free to send this email on to your Board of Trustees and Executive Administrators.  I need to donate 30 hrs/week this summer for my final 2 Intern Experiences. Let me know if there is any way I could be of benefit to Walden this summer! Thanks so much!!

 

Jolene Williams

801.851.0357