Educational ReadSources Inc.


  Supporters

  Projects

  More about
  EdReadSources

Search for:

  Educational
  ReadSources
  P.O. Box 43814
  Tucson, AZ
  85733-3814


 
Telephone/Fax:
  520-326-0953
 
  Email/General
  Information:
edreadsrcs@aol.com
 

  Special Bonus Offer!

  If you
e-mail your
  contact information,
  you will receive 2
  free issues of the
 
Educational
  ReadSources
  Newsletter
, plus free
  information on
  Marge Christensen
  Gould's teacher
  training and
  programs for at-risk
  youth.

  Site design by
  Blue Jackrabbit
  Web Site Design,
  Tucson AZ

 

.
Educational ReadSources, Inc. iis a 501(c)(3) organization dedicated to promoting effective classroom reform and helping at-risk youth develop literacy and 21st century workplace skills.

july4flag2.gif (12306 bytes)

  .
Our Mission
Educational ReadSources, Inc. is dedicated to promoting effective classroom reform and helping at-risk youth develop literacy and 21st century workplace skills. To this end, we train teachers to restructure their classrooms and implement a research-based, innovative program, incorporating effective instructional methods, new roles for students and teacher, computers as tools of instruction, a redefined curriculum, which involves community members as classroom volunteers and mentors for students. Through business partnerships and grants, we provide resources for transforming classrooms into 21st Century Workplace Classrooms, and offer teacher support to facilitate and ensure their success.

bluebar.jpg (781 bytes)
.

Marge Christensen Gould is the President of Educational ReadSources, and the author of Developing Literacy and Workplace Skills: Teaching for 21st Century Employment, published by Solution-Tree (National Educational Service), and Reclaiming At-Risk Youth for the 21st Century Workplace, a Case Study, published in the ASCD Curriculum Handbook, (Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development). Marge Christensen Gould
Click HERE to learn more about Educational ReadSources, Inc.

bluebar.jpg (781 bytes)

Teacher Workshops

Learn how to restructure and create your own 21st Century Workplace Classroom.

Click here to learn about 3-day workshops  offered on site.

Teacher Training Workshop
.

.
NEW 3-day Teacher Workshop:

'Transforming High School Classrooms into Smaller Learning Communities and Improving Student Achievement'

Thurs., Fri., Sat., January 19, 20, 21, 2006
Doubletree Hotel at Reid Park, Tucson

Motivating Low-Achieving High School Students to Improve Skills and Performance

 As educators explore strategies for improving student achievement, it is clear that our greatest challenge today is high school reform. Steeped in tradition for too long, high schools have become outdated, and ineffective. Problems such as poor attendance, discipline problems, dropout rate, failure rate, vandalism, classroom disruption, violence, drug/alcohol abuse, teacher burnout, and low teacher morale, which confront high schools today, are much more prevalent in high-poverty, urban neighborhoods than in more affluent ones.

In response to the evidence of academic and social benefits of small schools, government and private foundations are providing millions of dollars for large high schools to create “small learning communities” within the existing school buildings or campuses. Smallness, however, is not enough to improve student achievement.

It is critical that each classroom also be transformed into a “smaller learning community” which personalizes learning, is student-centered, success-oriented, and utilizes differentiated teaching and best practices for improving student achievement.

This workshop will show educators, step by step, how to transform their traditional high school classroom into smaller learning communities which are organized as professional workplace learning environments.

Click here for further information
.

bluebar.jpg (781 bytes)

Uncorrected Vision Problems, Learning Difficulties, and Juvenile Delinquency

Did you know that...

  • 85% of all learning occurs through the visual system?
  • 25% of all children have a vision problem significant enough to affect learning?
  • Over 50% of children of families living in poverty have uncorrected vision problems that interfere with reading, writing, classroom learning, and even sports.
  • Uncorrected vision problems are the most commonly overlooked roadblock to learning. Click here to learn more.

bluebar.jpg (781 bytes)

bv