Math program offers variety of methods

The Charlotte Observer
City News
Saturday, January 3, 2015

Seventh-graders work in small groups to learn math in a Teach to One classroom at McClintock Middle School.

Seventh-graders work in small groups to learn math in a Teach to One classroom at McClintock Middle School.

Seventh-graders at McClintock Middle School gather at work stations in Teach to One math classrooms.

Divided by wooden storage shelves, students review math taught by teachers, through online instruction and with each other.

Teach to One was created for middle school math by New Classrooms – a nonprofit organization created by Joel Rose and Christopher Rush as an offspring of their New York City Department of Education program School of One, which was named one of Time Magazine’s 2009 inventions of the year.

“It’s the way public education needs to go … it’s hard to differentiate education without technology,” said McClintock Principal Paul Williams.

Jennifer Brown, the school’s New Classrooms Director of Growth & Expansion, said the math program was created to reach each student at their skill level and help them move forward.

Seventh-graders takes exit assessment on Teach to One online program. Students share laptops across grades, that means one laptop is shared among three students – one from each grade.

Seventh-graders takes exit assessment on Teach to One online program. Students share laptops across grades, that means one laptop is shared among three students – one from each grade.

“At the end of every class, students take a five question skills assessment test and receive an exit ticket,” Brown said. “That exit ticket explains their progress and assigns their skill and learning modality for the next class.”

Williams said it’s a well-choreographed symphony, the way students and teachers move from station to station – 12 teachers always teaching different skills to different students in different ways.

There are several methods used to teach math at McClintock: live instruction, virtual instruction, small group collaboration, peer-to-peer instruction, virtual reinforcement, live investigation and small group projects.

Students are given four opportunities to learn a math skill, each time the program generates a new way of learning based on the level of difficulty for each individual student.

“By meeting students at their skill level, it makes education the same across the board,” Williams said. “It’s just not feasible to create an individualized learning plan for every student every day, but Teach to One helps us do that … we need this to support teachers and students.”

Dawn Salters, one of McClintock’s Math Directors and TTO teachers, said the program has been beneficial to all of her students. She said some have moved from being two to three grade levels behind to learning ahead of what’s required.

“In a traditional classroom, I had to teach to the middle – hoping the ones who were ahead didn’t get bored and the ones that were behind were able to catch up,” she said.

However, teachers have had to learn new ways to do their jobs.

“We’ve made students very dependent on teachers and we’ve conditioned teachers as the givers and owners of knowledge,” Brown said. “Twelve teachers equals a lot of distinct perceptions – we had to spend a lot of time working together, learning to collaborate in a new setting.”

Salters, who’s been teaching math for 10 years, said, “It’s been life-changing for these kids and it really helps (teachers) meet their needs.”

Brown and Williams said McClintock Middle School was the first school in the Carolinas to adopt this approach. They also said, since starting the program, the students’ math EOG scores have increased by 8 percent and the school’s Measures of Academic Progress (MAP) assessment places McClintock students 1.8 years of learning math concepts ahead of the national average.

The program costs CMS $125,000 per year, Brown said. She also said that amount will decrease because the fee is based on need. There’s also an annual $225 per student license fee.

Math Director Dawn Salters stand with one her students, Joel Holder.

Math Director Dawn Salters stand with one her students, Joel Holder.

For everyone involved, it appears to be money well-spent.

Joel Holder, a 13-year-old seventh-grader, is in the program for his second year.

“The Teach to One math program is a fun and interactive way to learn math …. I’ve learned a large amount of math skills that I may not have learned in a traditional classroom,” he said. “I’m really enjoying math.”

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GenerationNation gets young people involved

- COURTESY OF SCOUT ROSEN Steven Armendariz, Jordan Murdock, Quentin Blair, Lade Aladeniyi and Clarissa Brooks, from left, all are Charlotte-Mecklenburg Youth Council alumni. The youth council and GenerationNation are intended to involve and educate students in how local governments and communities work.

– COURTESY OF SCOUT ROSEN
Steven Armendariz, Jordan Murdock, Quentin Blair, Lade Aladeniyi and Clarissa Brooks, from left, all are Charlotte-Mecklenburg Youth Council alumni. The youth council and GenerationNation are intended to involve and educate students in how local governments and communities work.

Deirdre Jonese Austin, a 17-year-old Independence High School senior, said that before joining GenerationNation, she hadn’t given much thought whether her voice mattered.

“Now I know it does,” she said.

“Each time a city council member, county commissioner, school board member or other city official takes time out of his or her busy schedule to meet with us, I feel like our voice matters,” Austin said.

Austin said that some of her most memorable moments include speaking with former Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools Superintendent Heath Morrison on the achievement gap and participating in a “speed-dating style” forum with Mecklenburg County commissioner candidates.

Austin, a member of GenerationNation since 2011, said, “It’s great to be able to speak to government leaders from our community about what we the students are passionate about.”

GenerationNation Executive Director Amy Farrell said that’s one of the reasons the organization changed from Kids Voting Mecklenburg – an annual election-day event – in December 2011 to GenerationNation, to provide programs for Mecklenburg students to better understand and become involved with local government.

Farrell, involved with what now is GenerationNation for more than 10 years, said, “There was a huge need for students and officials to collaborate on community problems and solutions. Students are stakeholders in the community, and officials were eager to have this partnership to better understand their needs.”

GenerationNation does more than give students an outlet for their opinion; it also gives them the tools to make informed decisions, said Farrell. She said they regularly discuss current events, compare and contrast headlines and discuss different viewpoints.

“It’s important for them to learn how to use all the tools in the toolbox, learn to think critically, analyze information for the facts and collaborate and problem-solve with people from different backgrounds and perspectives,” Farrell said.

Members also get behind-the-scenes access to all aspects of government, working with city, county and school officials to address social and educational issues and receive hands-on experience in community planning and budgeting.

Farrell said that in January, students will meet with Charlotte City Manager Ron Carlee, County Manager Dena Diorio and CMS interim Superintendent Ann Blakeney Clark to discuss priorities and budgets. Before those meetings, Farrell said, she will work with students to teach them about budgeting.

While budgeting may seem difficult even for some adults to understand, Farrell said, students shouldn’t worry about what they don’t know about local government.

“This is an opportunity to learn hands-on and to collaborate with officials on real life issues,” Farrell said.

“You can come into this hating politics, and that’s okay. All you need is a desire to make a difference. It’s all about improving the community we live in.”

Area high school students from public, private and magnet schools and homeschooled students are invited to sign-up for the council. All meetings take place at the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Government Center: 600 E. 4th Street, Charlotte, NC 28202. Free CATS passes and carpool information is available to help students who have transportation conflicts. Find out more information about the youth council and sign-up by visiting http://generationnation.org/index.php/youthvoice.

Area high school students from public, private and magnet schools and homeschooled students are invited to sign-up for the council. All meetings take place at the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Government Center: 600 E. 4th Street, Charlotte, NC 28202. Free CATS passes and carpool information is available to help students who have transportation conflicts. Find out more information about the youth council and sign-up by visiting http://generationnation.org/index.php/youthvoice.

GenerationNation is a nonprofit organization founded in 1992 by former Charlotte Observer Publisher Rolfe Neill and other civic leaders to give Mecklenburg County youths an opportunity to learn how local government and communities work.

During the 2013-14 school year, more than 35,000 public, private, magnet and home-schooled students engaged in civic-minded activities including mock elections and the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Youth Council.

The youth council is a program of GenerationNation that operates in partnership with Charlotte, Mecklenburg County and CMS. The council currently has 65 members from more than 28 schools, including Providence Day School, West Mecklenburg and Myers Park.

The council always has open enrollment for high school students. There are no set hours of participation, and no prior achievements or accolades are necessary.

“Anyone who wants to make a difference should get involved,” Farrell said. “It’s a great way to network and explore future job opportunities.”

Austin, also a senior youth council member, said, “It means a lot to me to have this opportunity, because it has opened the door to many other opportunities for me.

“Other students should join because it will give them a chance to hear various perspectives on several topics, meet with prominent city officials and let their voices be heard.”

Posted in Charlotte Observer, Civic and Government News, Education, Newspaper, Philanthropy, Traditional Journalism | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Behailu Academy’s awards go to Thomas Davis, Stuart Scott

The Charlotte Observer
City News
Saturday, November 22, 2014

Behailu Academy, a nonprofit after-school creative arts enrichment program, held its first Mosaic Awards ceremony and fundraiser Nov. 14 at Carolina Golf Club on Old Steele Creek Road.

At the Mosaic Awards, there was food, entertainment and a silent auction of Behailu’s students’ artwork. The painting on the right is titled Different Perspectives.

At the Mosaic Awards, there was food, entertainment and a silent auction of Behailu’s students’ artwork. The painting on the right is titled Different Perspectives.

Two of the awards recipients have been involved with Behailu from the beginning. They are Thomas Davis, Carolina Panthers linebacker and founder of the Thomas Davis Defending Dreams Foundation. The other honoree is ESPN SportsCenter anchor Stuart Scott.

When accepting his award, Davis said, “The past doesn’t determine the future. … I’m living proof that it’s not where you start that determines where you finish.”

The Davis family also donated $15,000 to the transitional housing program.

The Scott family accepted the award on behalf of Stuart Scott. Due to his long battle with cancer and ongoing treatment, he was unable to attend.

His sister, Susan Scott, of Durham said, “Young people everywhere deserve to have the experiences we’ve had. … Stuart would have said Behailu represents everything that’s important to him.”

The third honoree of the evening was the 2014 Burroughs Wellcome Fund N.C. Teacher of the Year James Ford, a ninth-grade, social studies teacher at Garinger. He got involved with Behailu 1 1/2 years ago and now serves on the board.

Ford said he likes to help kids who have been “written off and labeled and help them see themselves” beyond the stereotypes.

About Behailu he said, “There’s so much that doesn’t get taught in the classroom and at home. … Through the arts, they free themselves and learn more than they’ve ever set out to know about who they are and what they want out of life.”

More than 200 people attended the awards banquet, which raised $35,000 for the current creative arts program and a future transitional living housing program for young male adults who’ve graduated from Behailu. The housing program is expected to begin in 2015.

Since opening in October 2012, the program boasts a 100 percent graduation rate. The program is open to middle and high school students in Charlotte.

Deedee Mills, Behailu’s founder, said students in the program have found their voice.

Deedee Mills, left, stands with Behailu students as they read their thoughts about Behailu on colorfully decorated, paper hands. The hands were displayed on every table in the country club. Areanna Townsend is holding the mic and reading a poem she wrote about Behailu.

Deedee Mills, left, stands with Behailu students as they read their thoughts about Behailu on colorfully decorated, paper hands. The hands were displayed on every table in the country club. Areanna Townsend is holding the mic and reading a poem she wrote about Behailu.

Garinger High School 11th-grader Areanna Townsend proudly stood in front of Mosaic Award attendees and expressed how Behailu Academy affected her.

“We paint our joy on the walls,” she said.

Another 11th-grader from Garinger, Charles Holland privately said, “When I am fighting with family and friends and when I feel misunderstood, I have Behailu.”

Similar sentiments were voiced throughout the night by Behailu’s students.

Director Lori Krzeszewski said they hosted the recent event to change more lives and recognize other difference-makers in the community.

Krzeszewski held the mic and tried to gain composure for her final speech. With glassy eyes and tear-stained cheeks, she talked about what Behailu had meant.

“To be at a place where children don’t want to go home, it’s a beautiful problem,” she said. “However, we need to do more. What do you say when a kid tells you, I don’t have anywhere to stay.

“I can’t get rid of these kids. … There’s a big need to serve them and their families beyond what we are doing now. We hope to build a community center in NoDa to support all ages, from toddlers to grandparents. This is going to happen.”

Krzeszewski optimistically glanced at Mills and said, “Deedee and I always say that if you keep doing the right thing for the right reasons, doors will open.”

Posted in Achievements and Awards, Charlotte Observer, Education, Entertainment/Creative Arts, Events and Galas, Newspaper, Philanthropy, Traditional Journalism | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Burmese store owner keeps strong ties to culture, those who need help

The Charlotte Observer
South Charlotte News (North Division)
Saturday, November 15, 2014

Thanei Taithio proudly stands behind the counter at his convenience store, Taithio Family Store on the corner of Richland Drive and Monroe Road, greeting customers in their native tongue – Burmese and Chin.

Thanei Taithio said the most challenging thing about resettling in the United States was learning to budget money. Families lived in large-extended family, communal homes, and household budgets didn’t exist in Burma.

Thanei Taithio said the most challenging thing about resettling in the United States was learning to budget money. Families lived in large-extended family, communal homes, and household budgets didn’t exist in Burma.

He opened the predominantly Burmese ethnic store three years ago. He said he’d always wanted to open his own business.

“If you work hard and stay healthy, this is the land of opportunity,” he said.

Taithio knows. He’s lived where there was no opportunity.

He grew up in northwestern Myanmar, formerly Burma, in the Chin State in a town called Falam. It is a metropolitan area but is too small to be classified as a city. It’s a site where roughly 100 villages converge to do business. There, he studied theology at Zomi Theological College, married his wife, Manghrin, and they had their firstborn son, Zalan Luai Taithio.

In August 1988, after years of ethnic minorities being suppressed under the reign of Ne Win, student democratic groups led an uprising known as “8888.”

The groups demanded restoration of democratic government. The effort failed and resulted in continued military reign. Many ethnic minorities were killed for having democratic affiliation.

Taithio said, at age 22, he had been part of Falam’s democratic student group and had to flee with his brother, Run Bik.

Taithio had to leave behind his wife and child, and he and his brother moved to nearby Mizoram, India. Taithio lived there for three years. His family joined him in 1992, and they moved to New Delhi a year later.

There he found work as an interpreter and translator for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. He worked and studied theology at Presbyterian Theological Seminary, and he came to the United States in 2001.

“When I was young, in Burma, we couldn’t hope; we didn’t know where our next meal would come from, and we were dependent on our parents,” he said. “India was worse. Our future there was uncertain.

“Here, we have a chance to grow, and our children can prosper.”

Taithio, 49, has lived in Charlotte since June 2006. He has three sons and rents a house near Fairview and Providence roads.

Before opening his store, he worked as a caseworker at two refugee resettlement agencies, Interfaith Refugee Missionary in New Bern – their first home in the U.S. – and Carolina Refugee Resettlement Agency in Charlotte.

“I was very happy to help them settle here, find jobs and enroll their children in school,” Taithio said. “I could help them, because I know what it feels like to be there – feeling stuck in-between and suspicious.”

Taithio said he has helped approximately 2,000 Burmese refugees settle in Charlotte.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

In 2013, he said he decided to concentrate on building his business and spending more time with his family. However, he still helps the community.

“I have a family of five (Burmese refugees) staying in my home now while they wait for their apartment to be ready,” he said.

He also has worked to create a Chin Christian service at Park Road Baptist Church every Sunday and established the Chin Community of North Carolina, which he said will hold a Chin New Year in Charlotte in October 2015.

“I want my children to know where they come from. We are American citizens, but we are also Asian. And that’s important,” he said.

Fellow Burmese families enter the family store. The adults look through rows filled with rice steamers, fish broth, sesame and bean nut snack packs, and candied dried fruit. One young mother approached the counter with government paperwork. She needed Taithio’s help filling it out.

“I still help people, when they need it. They know they are always welcome here,” he said. “That’s another reason I opened this store, to give them the sights and scents of home.”

Posted in Business, Charlotte Observer, Civic and Government News, Human Interest, Human Rights, Newspaper, Philanthropy, Traditional Journalism | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Hip-hop culture finds ‘Next Level’ in Bangladesh

The Charlotte Observer
City News
Saturday, November 15, 2014

Singer, songwriter and beatmaker JocElyn ellis and professional DJ Andre “A-Minor” Barden recently traveled to Bangladesh to teach hip-hop.

On Nov. 4, the two went to the country as part of Next Level, an international cultural exchange initiative created by UNC Chapel Hill’s music professor Mark Katz. The program selects U.S. hip-hop artists to travel with one of six residency teams to Bosnia-Herzegovina/Montenegro, India, Serbia, Bangladesh, Senegal and Zimbabwe. Each residency team contains 4-5 DJs, emcees, beatmakers and dancers.

Their job is to teach hip-hop technical and creative skills, while also discussing and exemplifying conflict resolution strategies and U.S. diplomacy to international youths.

Courtesy of jocElyn ellis JocElyn ellis said her album, “Life of a Hologram,” was a two-year project that reflects a time in her life when she was trying to find herself. A singer, songwriter and beatmaker, Ellis recently traveled to Bangladesh to teach hip-hop as part of the Next Level program.

Courtesy of jocElyn ellis
JocElyn ellis said her album, “Life of a Hologram,” was a two-year project that reflects a time in her life when she was trying to find herself. A singer, songwriter and beatmaker, Ellis recently traveled to Bangladesh to teach hip-hop as part of the Next Level program.

JocElyn ellis is a 27-year-old banking professional who lives in north Charlotte and has been singing and playing piano since childhood. She composed her first song at age 12 and started playing in a band, D4G, at age 16.

She moved to Charlotte from Durham at age 18 to attend UNC Charlotte, where she graduated in 2009 with a degree in international business. Ellis released her first solo album, “Life of a Hologram,” in November 2013.

She calls her music neon folk – a mixture of urban, electronic and folk music. Ellis said her beats and musical baselines are inspired by hip-hop, and that influence came from her mentor and album co-executive producer Benie Beatz.

“Hip-hop represents something that transcends cultures,” she said. “It’s the unification of something so ingrained in all of us.”

Ellis said she hopes to spread a message of love, unity and authenticity.

“It’s all about vibe,” Ellis said. “ The truth of what the moment means to you, and you have to live and embrace that moment.”

Barden, 30, got into music after he was hurt during a college wrestling match at UNC Chapel Hill. He said he started working as a music promoter; then, in 2007, he was asked to help deejay at UNC’s Rams Head Dining Hall.

COURTESY OF DJ ANDRE “A-MINOR” BARDEN “Music allows me to speak more clearly than I do a lot of the time,” DJ Andre “A-Minor” Barden said. Barden says he doesn’t like to be the center of attention, but through the Next Level program, he was recently able to travel to Bangladesh to teach hip-hop.

COURTESY OF DJ ANDRE “A-MINOR” BARDEN
“Music allows me to speak more clearly than I do a lot of the time,” DJ Andre “A-Minor” Barden said. Barden says he doesn’t like to be the center of attention, but through the Next Level program, he was recently able to travel to Bangladesh to teach hip-hop.

“I accidentally blended two songs together,” he said. “ After that, I got lost in the music for hours.”

Barden became a success on the local club scene and left school. In 2010, he performed well in hip-hop competitions, such as the Winston Salem Hip-Hop Summit and Red Bull Thre3Style battle in Charlotte. He then became part of Jukebox Heroes DJ Crew, a community of DJs from across the state.

In 2011, Barden gave his demo to Katz for one of the professor’s music classes. Katz then offered a music class on the art and culture of the DJ, and he asked Barden to co-teach the class. Since spring 2013, Barden has co-taught three classes.

Barden has lived in Charlotte the past two years. He regularly works as one of the Charlotte Hornet’s digital DJs.

“There’s not much in the world like music,” said Barden, who lives in Plaza Midwood. “You don’t even have to speak the same language to understand it or to connect through it.”

Barden said he will teach some technical aspects of his craft on the trip, but it’s important not to get consumed by the rules.

“The founding purpose of DJing is no rules,” he said. “The most important part is learning to read the floor. … You have to be a sociologist without a degree, read and react.”

Next Level was funded through a grant from the U.S. Department of State Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs in September 2013.

Katz said he applied for the grant because he’d been teaching hip-hop classes and using the genre to reach out to minorities and the poor.

“The program the State Department was advertising complemented what I was already doing, so I decided to apply,” he said.

The Bangladesh residency program takes place through Nov. 17. Calvin Hayes, cultural affairs officer of the U.S. Embassy in Dhaka, is helping coordinate Next Level’s cultural connections and facilitate workshops.

“This is the first time ever a group of American hip-hop artists have visited Bangladesh,” Hayes said. “This is sure to break barriers and forge new bonds.”

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