Thursday, February 25, 2010

Cutting GED, adult education would deepen Arizona's budget deficit


Many of Gov. Jan Brewer's proposed budget cuts are painful - but eliminating all GED testing is a disservice to our citizens that will earn us national disgrace.

Arizona has one of the highest high school dropout rates in the nation. Without GED testing there will be no opportunity for high school dropouts to earn their diplomas. Arizona would become the only state in the nation without this service.


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Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Stories that Soar!


Stories that Soar!’s Sharon O’Brien stood atop the Mission Manor Elementary School stage Wednesday proudly looking out at a packed cafeteria of young children. “Who here wrote a story?” she shouted to the assembled mass of students. Immediately almost half of the packed cafeteria leaped to their feet, and quickly the gaps filled until almost every student was standing, and applauding, to say that yes, they too were part of the work that had been done. “We had over 600 stories come in,” Ms. O’Brien continued, to cheers and applause of the students and teachers, “and we needed every single one for the Magic Box to work!”

The children recognize the Magic Box. Weeks before, O’Brien and Stories that Soar! had come to the school and requested that the kids write stories to ‘feed’ it, and assured them that with enough stories something magical could happen. So the children excitedly wrote; individually and collectively, stories and songs. 600 entries later Stories that Soar! was back, this time with professional performers from the Stories that Soar Ensemble, to act out the children’s stories.

During the performance the stories come at a manic pace, referencing each other, interwoven with an ongoing story about a ball that bounces across the world. The show features more than 20 of the stories written by the children authors. They ranged from the silly – a girl who wished herself into becoming a dog and causes trouble, to the serious – a family crossing the border in Mexico who are attacked by a Chupacabra and picked up by the border patrol.

“Children think about a lot of things. They are aware of some of the more serious aspects of life and often write to the Magic Box as a way of making sense of the world around them,” O’Brien said. “We believe it is important for children to have a space to explore serious subjects and to be honored as complex human beings- no matter what their age.”

Research suggests that there is an overabundant focus on reading and phonetics in the classroom today. And consequently, children have fallen behind, not only writing skills, but also comprehension and critical thinking abilities.

“Children read to take in information and write to express their thoughts and understanding,” O’Brien said. “With Stories that Soar!, children are given a platform to use writing as a means of voicing what is important to them- be it silly, fantastical, poetic or serious. They find that writing can be used beyond academic purposes and that their words and ideas have power beyond themselves.”

After the performance, the children authors are invited onstage and recognized for their work. One can only imagine the confidence these kids gain looking out over an audience of their peers knowing that they have played an integral part in such a well-received performance.
“Teachers, parents, and principals tell us stories of how children see themselves in a whole new light after their stories have been performed by Stories that Soar!,” O’Brien said. Their confidence soars and they now identify as ‘writers.’ One of the most common remarks we get from kids, regardless if their story was selected or not, is that after the show they want to know when the Magic Box is coming back because they already have a bunch of new stories to share.”

To learn more about Stories that Soar! please visit their website at storiesthatsoar.org. The next theater production will be held Thursday February 18, 8:30 a.m., at Homer Davis Elementary.

Monday, February 8, 2010

When Words and Pictures are in Balance - AZ Daily Star

Husband and wife. He is a photographer. She is a writer.

They decide to try something: Working together to produce a book made up of his pictures and her prose.

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