HGSE Launches Online Education Leadership Master’s Program Targeting Mid-Career Professionals | News

HGSE Launches Online Education Leadership Master’s Program Targeting Mid-Career Professionals | News

The Harvard Graduate School of Education plans to launch a fully-online master’s program in Education Leadership as part of its efforts to increase access for mid-career professionals, HGSE Dean Bridget Terry Long said in an interview Wednesday.

The new program is an outgrowth of an online, part-time cohort the school accepted through a one-time summer admissions cycle in 2020.

“When we went remote, we realized just how many talented, dedicated people are out there who want a master’s degree in education, who are not able to move to Cambridge, and so we’ve launched an online master’s degree,” Long said.

“[The program is] really focused on that group of people who would not otherwise be able to come to Cambridge, so it’s really about access, and new populations of students who want to benefit from Harvard,” she added.

Long said the program’s first cohort will arrive in summer 2022, and that the school will likely give students the ability to “come to campus for short periods of time” during the two-year duration.

Students currently enrolled in the remote, part-time program have voiced frustruations over remote course offerings and their lack of access to campus. In the interview, Long acknowledged those frustrations and said HGSE remains committed to accommodating remote students.

“When we committed to saying you could take the degree online, we wanted to guarantee for students who don’t have the ability to move to Cambridge that we could support them to degree completion and they wouldn’t have to come,” Long said.

Long defended the school’s remote learning offerings.

“We decided to have half of our courses online because we were so committed to the online students, and in some ways that was safe for us, given the fact that the Delta variant and Covid hurt so much,” she said.

“But this is the difficulty of being in a complex university with every tub on its own bottom — you try to maximize the opportunities, but you can’t quite control,” Long added.

In addition to increasing access through online programming, Long said the school is working toward creating a more engaging student experience in its newly-redesigned master’s curriculum.

The restructured program will graduate its first cohort in spring 2022. It features new Foundations courses held prior to fall term — which will become mandatory for future cohorts after this year — that Long said are an opportunity to “build a relationship with faculty, with teaching fellows” before starting at HGSE.

“We’re hearing a lot about the benefits of that — about how it reduced levels of anxiety, how it helps people feel part of the community and feel included, again, before they had even started,” she said.

Despite ongoing uncertainty over the Omicron variant, Long said the school is working to provide current and recently-graduated students with opportunities to visit campus through “homecoming” events in January and May 2022.

“[These] would be concentrated weekends to invite both those who graduated in spring 2021, as well as those who are continuing in the online program, [to] just have a chance to come to campus, to have some faculty lectures, to have social networking events,” she explained.

Those events would complement the joint commencements in May for the Classes of 2020 and 2021, which the University announced in November.

“The cohort that started fall 2020, as well as the ones that are continuing to this year, they never had a chance to come to campus,” she said. “We know that was a huge desire at some point to come, not just to come to campus, but to also meet their faculty, to meet each other in person.”

—Staff writer Omar Abdel Haq can be reached at [email protected].

Mobile Learning Game Revenue Surges to $9.2 Billion by 2027 | News

Mobile Learning Game Revenue Surges to .2 Billion by 2027 | News

MONROE, Wash., Dec. 9, 2021 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ — The market conditions for Mobile Learning Game developers competing in the US could not be more favorable. There is very high demand, a wave of intense investment and M&A activity, and significant revenue opportunities in all eight buying segments according to a new Metariverse report called “The 2022-2027 US Mobile Learning Game Market”. Consumers are the largest buying segment throughout the forecast period and will be spending $2.5 billion on Mobile Learning Games by 2027.

The five-year compound annual growth rate (CAGR) for Mobile Learning Games in the US is a healthy 18.2{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} and the revenues will more than double to over $9.2 billion by 2027. Content accounts for just under 70{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of all revenues throughout the forecast period. The most significant catalyst is the massive rollout of blazingly fast 5G networks across the US.

The Serious Play Conference (SPC) is the exclusive reseller of both Metaari and Metariverse reports. The new market report can be purchased at:

https://www.seriousplayconf.com/downloads/us-mobile-learning-game-market/

The 2022-2027 US Mobile Learning Game Market report has 320 pages, 28 market forecast tables, and 14 charts. There are four sections in this report: an executive overview with a brief discussion of the primary catalysts, a detailed analysis of the catalysts, a demand-side analysis by eight buying segments, and a supply-side analysis for three Mobile Learning Game products and services. Additionally, there are revenue breakouts for ten distinct types of Mobile Learning Games. Situational games will have the highest revenues reaching over $1.4 billion by 2027.

“Fundamentally new types of Mobile Learning Games have come on the market in the last two years,” reports Adkins.. “They are called prescription digital therapeutics (PDT) games if they require a prescription and are called digital therapeutics (DTx) games if a prescription is not required. The growth rate is a healthy 16.5{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} and revenues will climb to $1.0 billion by 2027.”

Over 1,270 developers competing in the US are cited in this report. This will help international and domestic suppliers identify partners, distributors, resellers, and potential merger and acquisition (M&A) targets.

“One interesting new trend is the launch of incubators by game developers,” adds Adkins. “In 2021. BYJU’S, Roblox, and Spin Master launched incubators designed to fund third-party learning game developers that make games for kids. Roblox initially funded $10.0 million, and Spin Master launched their $100.0 million Spin Master Ventures (SMV) fund in October 2021. Epic Games launched their $100.0 million MegaGrants program in early 2019. It funds developers “working with its game engine, 3D graphics tools, and open-source software.”

About Metariverse

Metariverse (formerly Metaari) is an ethics-based quantitative market research firm that identifies revenue opportunities for advanced learning technology suppliers. We track the learning technology markets in 126 countries. We have the most complete view of the international learning technology market in the industry. Metariverse focusses solely on advanced learning technology research on products that utilize psychometrics, neuroscience, location intelligence, game mechanics, robotics, cognitive computing, artificial intelligence, virtual reality, and augmented reality. For more information about our research, email [email protected].

Media Contact

Sam Adkins, Metaari, +1 360-805-4298, [email protected]

 

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Elementary school to benefit from endowment fund | News

Elementary school to benefit from endowment fund | News

The Friends of Rectortown, a nonprofit created in 2003, has created an endowment fund to benefit Claude Thompson Elementary School. Organization President Henry Lavine is spearheading the effort.

“The principal and teachers use personal funds to help with students’ emergencies,” he said. “Perhaps a child needs a warm coat. Dad has no gas in the car to take a child to the doctor … the list goes on and on. Our teachers are underpaid, and this is a recurring hardship. The fund initially will provide the principal with a modest fund to deal with this. As the fund grows, there will be other benefits for the school.”

Lavine has already collected $20,000 for the endowment fund. The goal for this year is to have $30,000 to $40,000 for this year; over the next few years Lavine would like to raise $100,000 or more. The principle would remain intact; the interest would be used for students’ needs.

Claude Thompson Principal Mary Pat Warter said she — along with her team of administrators and the school’s guidance counselor — will decide how best to utilize the funding. “Students and families have needs that don’t fit into a line in a budget … shoes, backpacks, gas for a trip to the dentist.” She said at least one teacher has driven to Front Royal to pay for and pick up a pair of eyeglasses for a student.

Warter insists, “It’s not just us. I think all teachers are superheroes.”

She said, “We keep track of the expenses, for accountability, but not to judge.” Warter said that a high number of her students come from families that may be economically disadvantaged. “Before COVID, more than 60{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of our students were eligible for reduced lunches. I can’t imagine that it hasn’t gotten worse.”

The pandemic has caused challenges for her students in particular, she said. Last year was so difficult because “the technology is inconsistent. We are all learning new things every single day, but it’s like flying a plane and building it at the same time. There is an academic deficit, and we find ourselves trying to catch up,” she said.

Warter said that the school does some limited fundraising. “We don’t make much from fundraising. Five hundred dollars from an event would be an amazing success. And we don’t like to ask more of our families,” she said.

Friends of Rectortown has contributed in myriad ways to the school, said Warter. “They have helped with weekend meal packs and with our food garden – they and some garden clubs helped us create that.”

Warter remembered when Henry Lavine and his wife Ronda McCrea moved to Rectortown. “We got phone call from this couple that had just moved to the area and wanted to help the school. We thought, ‘Oh, they’ll read to the kids,’ but he said, ‘Ah … no. We want to do more. We want to have people write checks.’”

Warter said, “Hank has a tremendous passion for community. He and his wife have made us a better school, helping us create strong partnerships with our community that have lasted for years.”

Warter has been principal at Claude Thompson for 20 years. “I feel better about everything now because of the community’s involvement.”

Donations to the endowment fund may be made out to Friends of Rectortown, Inc. with the notation: Claude Thompson Endowment Fund. They can be mailed to Friends of Rectortown, c/o Henry Lavine, P.O. Box 333, Rectortown, Virginia 20140.

Donors committed before the end of the  year will be listed as “founding sponsors” on a plaque at the school. 

No administrative fees will be incurred, said Lavine, “Every nickel will go to the endowment fund.”

PACF grant allows Kanawha Elementary School to expand broadcasting program | News, Sports, Jobs

PACF grant allows Kanawha Elementary School to expand broadcasting program | News, Sports, Jobs

PACF grant allows Kanawha Elementary School to expand broadcasting program | News, Sports, Jobs

Fourth-grade teachers Sarah Minor, left, and Stacy Allman, right, stand in the newly-renovated Brave House broadcasting room at Kanawha Elementary School. A nearly $4,000 grant awarded by the Parkersburg Area Community Foundation will allow the school’s Brave House Broadcast Project to purchase new and specialized equipment for students to use to produce new video and audio content. (Photo Provided)

DAVISVILLE — Kanawha Elementary School will revamp and upgrade its student media studio in the coming months thanks to a grant from the Parkersburg Area Community Foundation.

Fourth-grade teachers Stacy Allman and Sarah Minor said the nearly $4,000 grant will allow the Brave House Broadcast Project to purchase green screen equipment, new cameras and microphones and other equipment to produce student-led video content.

Students in Kanawha Elementary School belong to one of four Brave Houses which compete in character-building challenges and community service projects. The student media room has been renovated to include colors and logos from each of the four Brave Houses.

Students do a daily video broadcast called Breakfast with Brave House.

“It’s video announcements with content,” Allman said.

They also create standalone videos of events and projects throughout the school. Fifth-grade students act as house leaders, broadcasters and IT support.

Most of the video recording and editing now is done only with Wood County Schools-issued iPads. Students and staff have repeatedly run into the limitations of the technology, including poor audio, insufficient lighting and limited recording capabilities.

“We noticed the quality of the video was not that good for the amount of effort out students were putting into them,” Allman said. “The sound was pretty poor. When you are broadcasting to the school, you want it to look and sound good.”

The new grant-purchased equipment will allow the students to greatly improve their broadcasting capabilities, and officials hope they will be able to offer help to area agencies in producing video and audio content.

“I’m excited to get new equipment that I have never used, that the kids have never used” Minor said. “A lot of kids are interested in that content creator space. It is popular and very high interest. I think it is really going to benefit the students.”

“They look for stories throughout the school” and opportunities to showcase other classes, Allman said. For example, students produced a segment where kindergarteners told Thanksgiving-related jokes and third-graders created their own Thanksgiving Day Parade balloons.

“The students work really hard. They have a lot of pride in what they do,” Allman said.

Minor said the specialized equipment will not only allow them to produce more polished content, but also will provide more opportunities for students to learn writing, broadcasting and editing skills.

“It is incredible how fast those skills develop,” Minor said.

Officials plan to purchase the equipment and begin producing new and improved content in January.




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Elementary School’s New Anti-Bullying Club Making Waves | Illinois News

Elementary School’s New Anti-Bullying Club Making Waves | Illinois News

By ANTHONY ZILIS, The News-Gazette (Champaign)

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) — Five students in Sara Burgener’s fourth-grade class at Bottenfield Elementary School stood in front of a class full of fifth-graders and read a creed.

“I promise to never bully,” they said in unison. “I promise to be a friend.”

The creed, like the anti-bullying presentation they make to classes around the school and the keychains they hand out to students who decide to join the Anti-Bully Club, was created entirely by students in Burgener’s class, The News-Gazette reports.

In fact, Burgener said, students came up with the entire idea for the club. While neither the school nor the class are experiencing any bullying problems that are out of the ordinary, Burgener said, the students’ responses to classroom incidents was anything but normal.

Political Cartoons

“I have been the facilitator, but that’s it,” Burgener said. “Beyond that, it’s all been them, and that’s really impressive.”

The club began with three members: Cameron Croop, Holden Frederick and Colt Leman. Soon, Burgener’s entire class took up the cause. Holden, who enjoys making artwork in his free time, made posters to put up around the school that read, ‘I Want You to join The Anti-Bullying Club,’ and drew lines for fellow students to write names.

“Things started to take off, and we started to make sign-up sheets,” Holden said. “Whenever we went out into the hallways, there were more names.”

Holden also drew the logo for the keychains the club distributes to new members, although the entire class played a hand in the design. The class also came up with the creed, and they go to other classes to spread the word.

During one of those presentations, a student asked whether the club would continue after the end of the school year. Colt replied that he and his class would continue the club. When he leaves for middle school, he said, “my sister will take over.”

The level of engagement from students has surprised its founding members, and the process has been a rewarding one.

“I really like seeing the joy on peoples’ faces when they get a keychain, or when they see me come in and they’re interested in it,” Colt said.

Throughout the year, Burgener said she’s seen the club’s work play out in real ways. When students see a hint of bullying, they fulfill their creed and put an end to it.

“They’re sticking up for each other,” Burgener said. “It’s nice, because those things are quashed before it even comes to a teacher. It reduces what adults have to be involved in, because they’re sticking up for each other.”

Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Hallsville ISD elementary school raises more than $5,000 for Angel Tree | News

Hallsville ISD elementary school raises more than ,000 for Angel Tree | News

HALLSVILLE — A Hallsville ISD elementary school has raised more than $5,000 this year to contribute to the district’s Angel Tree fund, which provides Christmas presents for families in need.

Each November, Hallsville Intermediate School raises money throughout a two-week period known as the “Penny Wars,” to donate to the Angel Tree Foundation, which provides Christmas presents to area children in need.

The friendly competition sees jugs for teachers set out front of the school’s front office during the two-week period. The teachers who collect the most points from pennies wins.

“Here’s how the game works: each family of teachers has their own plastic jug outside of the front office. Students gain points for the class by adding pennies to their jug. Students can lower their opponents’ points by adding silver change to the opponents’ jug,” Hallsville Intermediate School Counselor Victoria Downs said. “The points are tallied each day and announced over the intercom. The next morning, the students are ready to sabotage whoever is winning and also add more to their own jug.”

In addition to knowing they bested other classes at the game, the winning team at each grade level wins a pizza.

“We also set a campus goal to raise $3,000, and if we reached that goal, the students would be able to pie our principal, Aaron Hoecherl, and our campus officer, Justin Clark, in the face,” Downs said.

The students raised so much, more than $5,300, resulting in both Hoecherl and Clark getting a face full of pie this year.

“This competition is such a fun way to raise money towards a good cause while also integrating math,” Downs said. “The Penny Wars has always been very successful, but this year we were shocked at how well it went.”

Downs and other staff presented the $5,327 check to Hallsville ISD Special Programs Director Amy Whittle recently.

“We sent emails thanking parents for letting their children raid their couch cushions and cup holders, but parents were calling the school and letting us know that their children were using their own allowance for this fundraiser,” Downs said. “I hope our students know how much of an impact they have made on children’s lives and how many children will actually be able to enjoy Christmas this year because of them.”

In celebration of the above and beyond giving, the winning classes received their pizza and the whole school received popsicles and extra recess time, making a win-win for everyone this holiday season.