Do you have kids who are out of this world?

Then  here is a great project for them to help your kids register  for:

Out of this World- NASA invites you to submit your name to be included on a microchip that will be rocketed into space as part of NASA’s Glory Mission, scheduled to launch in June 2009.

Glory is the first mission dedicated to understanding the effects of particles in the atmosphere and the sun’s variability on Earth’s climate.

 The “Send Your Name Around the Earth” Web site enables anyone to take part in the science mission and place his or her name in orbit for years to come. Participants will receive a printable certificate from NASA.

The deadline for submitting names is Nov. 1, 2008.

 To submit names, visit http://polls.nasa.gov/utilities/sendtospace/jsp/sendName.jsp .

 To learn more about the Glory mission, visit http://glory.gsfc.nasa.gov/.

Superstar Foundation Direct Service Grants

The Superstar Foundation 2008 Veronica Grants will be awarded to five outstanding direct service professionals, one for each of the following categories: Youth Development, Afterschool/Out-of-School Youth Services, Adult Men’s Services, Adult Women’s Services, and Family Services. Grant awards are $2000 each. Applications must be postmarked October 31, 2008.
URL: 
http://www.superstarfoundation.org/

Strengthening Out-of-School Time Organizations

“Modestly funded and often stretched to their limits, the organizations that provide out-of-school time (OST) programming face mounting demands to deliver higher quality services to more children. The Wallace Foundation recently asked several experts in the OST field to identify what they think are the key organizational, administrative and management obstacles impeding OST providers from lifting the quality of their programs and discuss how those might be overcome.” Download the white papers for free at the Wallace Foundation website: “Strengthening Out-of-School Time Nonprofits: The Role of Foundations in Building Organizational Capacity,” by Heather B. Weiss and Priscilla D. Little of the Harvard Family Research Project; “A New Day for Youth: Creating Sustainable Quality in Out of School Time,” by Harvard researcher Gil G. Noam; “A View from the Field: Helping Community Organizations Meet Capacity Challenges,” by Lucy N. Friedman, president of The After-School Corporation, a New York City-based nonprofit.
URL: 
http://www.wallacefoundation.org/KnowledgeCenter/KnowledgeTopics/CurrentAreasofFocus/Out-Of-SchoolLearning/StrengtheningOutofSchoolTimeOrganizationsThreeViews.htm

Adobe Youth Voices – Resources for Educators

The Adobe Youth Voices Program provides resources for educators, including links to a wide range of instructional materials and tutorials on digital photography, digital video, and digital storytelling. It is one of the resources highlighted in the recently launched Technology Curriculum Database, developed by YouthLearn for the U.S. Department of Education-funded National Partnership for Quality Afterschool Learning at SEDL. This global philanthropic initiative to empower youth serves educators and afterschool practitioners who are integrating digital media into their classrooms and learning centers. Through media arts production, young people can give voice to issues that they care about—and share their movies, animation, Web sites or other works with a wide audience. Housed in the Adobe Digital Kids Club, the resources for educators feature lesson plans and curriculum ideas as well as expert advice. In addition, galleries in the Digital Kids Club and on the Youth Voices Web site exhibit a variety of works that model techniques for media making and inspire young artists.
URL: 
http://www.sedl.org/cgi-bin/mysql/afterschool/technology.cgi?resource=6

PicoCrickets – Art and Technology Kits

PicoCrickets give young people the raw materials to build their own artistic creations, which they can program to respond to light, sound, and touch. It is one of the resources highlighted in the recently launched Technology Curriculum Database, developed by YouthLearn for the U.S. Department of Education-funded National Partnership for Quality Afterschool Learning at SEDL. Drawing on the same research base as Lego Mindstorms, the PicoCricket Kit is a robotics kit designed with greater emphasis on artistic expression, in an effort to appeal to girls as much as boys. The Kit includes a miniature computer, sensors, software, Lego bricks, craft materials, and project ideas. The user-friendly Web site provides technical support, additional ideas for educators, and photo and video galleries for showcasing creations.
http://www.sedl.org/cgi-bin/mysql/afterschool/technology.cgi?resource=2

Science After School Market Study

Dear After-school Leaders,

The Arizona Center for Afterschool Excellence is working with the Coalition for Science After School to help improve the quality of science learning resources available to after-school programs.  In order to better understand your interests and needs, we are collecting information about your existing science programming.  This information will be collected specifically for the Arizona Center for Afterschool Excellence to use in securing better resources and opportunities for you.

The survey should take less than 15 minutes to complete.  One response per site is appropriate. 

To complete the survey, please follow this link:

https://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=_2fTFVevLKdEO28riNedrDEQ_3d_3d

DUE DATE: All responses should be received by November 15, 2008.

PRIZES: Everyone who completes this survey will be entered into a drawing for ten $75 amazon.com gift certificates! If you win one of the raffle prizes, you will be notified after November 15, 2008.

In addition to the prizes, you will have the option to subscribe to the Coalition for Science After School listserv which will provide regular updates about curriculum, funding and field test opportunities.

Questions should be directed to Jason Freeman, Director of CSAS, by phone (510-642-8106) or by email (scienceafterschool@gmail.com).

Sincerely, Lisa Rice, Executive Director, Arizona Center for Afterschool Excellence

Coalition pushes community schools agenda

Youth Today

Coalition pushes community schools agenda

10.08

Erika Fitzpatrick

Hundreds of organizations are coming together to promote a unified national agendaf or community partnerships that link schools and youth-development organizations.

The Community Agenda for America’s Public Schools, spearheaded by organizations involved in education, after-school programs, higher education, health, family strengthening and mentoring, is modeled in part on the Chicago Community Schools initiative. That effort, launched in 2001, promoted the idea that schools alone can’t fully help the most disadvantaged kids, who also need health, developmental and enrichment services that are best provided by community-based organizations.

The Coalition for Community Schools is endorsed by the Afterschool Alliance, America’s Promise Alliance, the Forum for Youth Investment, Big Brothers Big Sisters of America, the American Federation of Teachers and the National Assembly on School-Based Health Care, among others.

“We’re just trying to figure out how to create something that’s flexible, which creates incentives for communities to bring together the resources that already exist in a more coherent way,” said Martin Blank, director of the Coalition for Community Schools at the Institute for Educational Leadership.

To do that, the organizations must agree to sing from the same songbook when approaching legislators and policy-makers, which is no easy feat. Blank hopes that by the first of the year, the coalition will have developed a “framework” that can be used in advocacy for community schools.

Coalition members also will hold meetings around the country about how to form school-community partnerships at the grass roots.

Can these groups set aside parochial concerns in the interests of the larger goal? “I don’t see why not,” said Jodi Grant, executive director of the Afterschool Alliance. Enhancing youths’ skills and positive development is vital for them to succeed, especially in this “tough economy,” which creates a “big consensus” to “come together with common messages,” she said.

On the federal level, Blank said, the coalition will work to get the school-community concept into the reauthorization of the No Child Left Behind Act, and to win additional appropriations to expand funding for these programs locally.

The U.S. Department of Education provided nearly $4.6 million for Full-Service Community Schools this year. Applicants had to draw on scientifically based research that established or expanded schools in coordination with community-based organizations with strengths in early childhood education, literacy, mentoring, youth development, mental health, community service and other areas. This summer, 10 received grants averaging $459,000 each. Blank said other legislation that would advance this agenda includes the Keeping Parents and Communities Engaged Act (S. 1302) and the We Care Act (H.R. 3762).

But the emphasis won’t be on crafting a slew of different federal programs, which Blank said encourages a money chase. “Ideally,” he said, “we would create a large enough pool to create strong incentives for partnership that could be sustained over time.”

Contact: Coalition for Community Schools (202) 822-8405,

http://www.communityschools.org.

 

 

 

 

Nominations Invited for Community-Campus Partnerships for Health Annual Award

Sponsor: Community-Campus Partnerships for Health

Deadline: 1/30/2009

Amount: varies

Type: Health, Education

Description: The Community-Campus Partnerships for Health program is designed to promote health through partnerships between communities and higher educational institutions using strategies such as service-learning and community-based participatory research.

The CCPH Annual Award recognizes exemplary partnerships between communities and higher educational institutions that build on each other’s strengths to improve higher education, civic engagement, and the overall health of communities. The intent of the award is to highlight the power and potential of community-campus partnerships as a strategy for social justice. The award recognizes partnerships that are striving to achieve the systems and policy changes needed to overcome the root causes of health, social, and economic inequalities.

Award-winning partnerships embody the CCPH principles of partnership. Partnerships must nominate themselves and need not be members of CCPH. Nominations in English are welcome from any country or nation.

Public recognition of the award-winning partnership’s achievements will be made at an award presentation ceremony at the 11th CCPH Conference, April 29 – May 2, 2009 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

Complete information on the CCPH Annual Award is available at the CCPH Web site.

Website: Link to RFP

Grants Available to Support Summer Camps

Name: Grants Available to Support Summer Camps to Introduce Young People to Careers in Manufacturing and Engineering

Sponsor: Fabricators & Manufacturers Association Foundation

Deadline: 12/12/2008

Amount: varies

Type: Education, Science & Technology

Description: Through a collaborative effort between the Fabricators & Manufacturers Association Foundation and the Nuts, Bolts and Thingamajigs Foundation, grants ranging from $2,500 to $5,000 are available to not-for-profit organizations and educational institutions capable of offering overnight or day-camp experiences in summer 2009 that introduce young people to careers in manufacturing and engineering.

The Nuts, Bolts and Thingamajigs Foundation is dedicated to introducing young people to the joys of tinkering, inspiring the next generation of skilled manual artists, engineers, and inventors. The FMA Foundation is an educational, research, and charitable organization that promotes metal forming and fabricating technology in manufacturing.

The purpose of the manufacturing camps is to provide a positive, hands-on experience so young people will consider manufacturing as a future career option. Camps must target young people between the ages of 12 and 16. Preference will be given to organizations serving minority populations.

Grant funds may be used for expenses related to curriculum development and instruction, as well as direct expenses such as housing, meals, transportation, and supplies.

Further information and the grant application are available at the FMA Foundation Web site.

Website: Link to RFP

NAMM Foundation Offers Funding for Music Making and Research

Name: NAMM Foundation Offers Funding for Music Making and Research

Sponsor: NAMM Foundation

Deadline: 12/1/2008

Amount: varies

Type: Arts & Culture, Education

Description: NAMM, the trade association of the international music products association, is accepting proposals for the NAMM Foundation’s grants program. The foundation annually provides support for community music-making programs, scientific research on the effects of making music, and music programs for seniors and school-aged children.

Grants are available through the following programs:

The Disney Music In You Grant Program: Invites public middle and high schools to apply for a grant to put on their own school stage production of Disney’s High School Musical or High School Musical II. (Deadline: December 15, 2008.)

NAMM Foundation Program Grants: Grants are available to nonprofit public service organizations for innovative music education and hands-on music making programs that reach and serve new audiences with new protocols. (Deadline: December 1, 2008.)

Sounds of Learning: The Impact of Music Education: Grants are available for research projects examining the roles of music education in the lives of school age children as well as school and community. (Deadline: December 1, 2008.)

Sounds of Living: The Impact of Music Making Across the Life Span: Grants are available that examine the role of active participation in music for children, youth, adults, and seniors outside of formal educational settings. This research initiative explores the role of music making in health, wellness, socialization, and other factors that contribute to wellness and quality of life. (Deadline: December 1, 2008.)

Scientific Grants: Grants support leading researchers and research teams to explore the effects of hands-on music making on cognitive processes, development and learning, and psychological, biological, and social/emotional aspects of target populations. (Deadline: December 1, 2008.)

Applicants may only apply to one program per year. See the NAMM Foundation Web site for complete program guidelines and the online application.

Website: Link to RFP