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Winter 2003-2004--Notebook
One-Page Fliers on No Child Left Behind
No Child Left Behind (NCLB), the 2002 reauthorization of the Elementary and
Secondary Education Act, is an enormous, confusing, and extremely important
law. It is far from perfect—legislation never is. Nevertheless, NCLB
presents a vehicle for achieving many of the AFT’s foremost goals—including,
identifying the achievement gap between advantaged and disadvantaged
students, strengthening research-based reading instruction, and making sure
that every teacher in every school is qualified. The AFT stands behind
NCLB’s objectives, but it is also working to revise important aspects of the
law’s implementation. To help members sort out the law’s requirements—and to
ensure that AFT’s positions and resulting actions are well known—AFT is
developing a series of one-page fliers on NCLB.
So far, fliers have been developed on the law’s
requirements about: adequate yearly progress, paraprofessional
qualifications, and teacher qualifications. They are available online at
www.aft.org/esea and are great for
posting in school staff lounges, placing in union newsletters, mailing, and
distributing at meetings.
Skill Standards for Paraprofessionals Can Aid Teachers and Education
This new report sets forth, in the form of employment standards, the skills
that today’s educational support staff need—not just to meet the minimum
requirements of today’s K-12 and early education settings, but to be high
performing. This clear overview should help teachers better understand the
kinds of knowledge and skills paraprofessionals bring to their work (e.g.,
understanding of age-appropriate curriculum requirements and how to
recognize various types of disabilities) and the wide range of tasks these
staff can undertake (e.g., providing feedback to students, planning for
extra-curricular activities, and communicating with families). These
standards could spark ideas about how best to deploy educational support
staff—and alert teachers to the kind of training they should advocate for on
behalf of their classroom assistants.
The report was developed by the Education and
Training Voluntary Partnership (ETVP), a coalition of over 150 organizations
with knowledge of and interest in the work of educational support and early
education staff. The effort was launched in 1998 by just five organizations,
including the
AFT. The standards describe the major
responsibilities of paraprofessionals, related competence measures, and the
academic, workplace, and occupational knowledge they need to perform well in
their jobs. They were developed through an extensive research and validation
process including focus groups with hundreds of frontline workers across the
country and reviews by dozens of subject-matter experts. In addition to the
immediate help they can provide teachers, the ETVP hopes that these
standards will become the basis for paraprofessional certifications,
vocational courses, professional development, and meaningful job
evaluations. To see the complete set of standards, go to
www.etvp.org/ALLFinalStandards.pdf.
HELP WANTED: MAKE HISTORY
Preserve the Memory of a Human and Labor Rights
Champion
“When will our consciences grow so tender that we will act to prevent human
misery rather than avenge it?” Eleanor Roosevelt asked this question in the
February 16, 1946, edition of her “My Day” column. From her strong support
of the Women’s Trade Union League to her push for civil rights and living
wages, working to stir our consciences was a central theme of her tireless
efforts. Mrs. Roosevelt chaired the United Nations’ subcommittee that
drafted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights; helped shape the New
Deal; and pushed for youth programs, employment assistance for women,
inclusion of blacks in federal programs, and the creation of planned
communities with adequate housing.
Today, the Eleanor Roosevelt Papers Project aims to
develop a comprehensive, Web-based archive of Mrs. Roosevelt’s extraordinary
life—and it needs your help. The Project wants to hear from everyone who has
a personal story about Mrs. Roosevelt. If you heard her deliver a speech,
read her “My Day” columns, know some connections between her and your family
or your union, or have some other tie to her, please contact Brigid
O’Farrell at the Eleanor Roosevelt Papers Project, The George Washington
University, 2100 Foxhall Road N.W., Washington, DC 20007. Telephone: (in
Washington, D.C.) 202-242-6717 or (in California) 650-728-3380. E-mail:
mbofarrell@aol.com. To learn more about Eleanor Roosevelt and the Project,
visit www.gwu.edu/~erpapers/.
You and Your Students Can Contribute to the
Veterans History Project
Famous or ordinary, we each hold part of the nation’s collective memory and,
whether through stories at the dinner table or speeches in front of
thousands, we each share some of that history with others. But, like all
those who in some way placed their country above themselves, our veterans
embody an especially important piece of our national heritage. Now you and
your students can recognize their sacrifices while learning research skills
by volunteering for the Veterans History Project. Created by the American
Folklife Center, a division of the Library of Congress, the project
“enlists” regular people of all ages to conduct oral history interviews and
collect photos, diaries, and other materials that veterans may want to
share. To participate, just follow the step-by-step guide on the project’s
Web site—from biographical data forms to interview questions to an online
seminar, everything you need is here: www.loc.gov/folklife/vets/ vets-home.html.
Once your project is complete, submit it to the Library of Congress or to
one of the hundreds of partner organizations all over the U.S., including
libraries, school history clubs, museums, American Legion Posts, and
universities.

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