BULLYING Diane Sullivan Welcome to the massachusetts School of Law Educational Forum. is to get involved with your ptas, get involved with your ptos, http://mslmedia.com/EducationalForum/91 Educational Forum Bullying.htm
Extractions: Diane Sullivan: Welcome to the Massachusetts School of Law Educational Forum. Thank you for joining us. This program is brought to you by the Massachusetts School of Law, and is shown nationwide. The topic for today's show is bullying. What is bullying? Who is the bully? Is school bullying a serious problem, or is it simply a harmless right of passage? Haven't most of the shooters in the high school shootings been kids who were bullied to the breaking point? If this is true, what does it say about our culture? Joining me for this discussion, *Nancy Mullen Rindler, an author and research science at the Center for Research on Women, at the Wellsley Centers for Women. She is currently director of both the Project on Teasing and Bullying, and the Pre-school Empathy Project. Her books include, "Quit It", a teacher's guide to teasing and bullying. Nancy, welcome to the show. Nancy Mullen Rindler: Thank you for having me.
About Us | PTO Today PTO today is dedicated to helping parent teacher groups (like ptos and ptas) help their schools with information on fund raising, playgrounds, http://www.ptotoday.com/about.html
Extractions: Founded June 1, 1999, PTO Today, Inc. has quickly established itself in the center of the parent group world as a valuable resource for parent group leaders and as a reliable connection between those leaders and parent group marketers. With a focus on providing the expertise parent group leaders need and the programs and services that can help those parent group leaders help their schools, PTO Today has built the only connection to all K-8 parent group leaders, regardless of parent group acronym. ( Click here to find out what the difference is between PTO and PTA Several distinct products and services have been developed, all under the PTO Today umbrella. PTO Today Magazine Click here for information on advertising in our magazine and/or through our many other ad vehicles, including regional, direct mail and in-person options.) PTO Manager Software Click here to learn more about PTO Manager. School Family Nights Click here to view schoolfamilynights.com ). For more information on sponsoring our School Family Nights program, contact John Driscoll
Education Teachers Directory Of Florida and incentived, fundraising supplies plus much more. Everything from A to Z. For teachers, principals, ptas, ptos, and parents. http://florida.uscity.net/Education/Teachers/
The Role Of The PTA - Alabama - GreatSchools.net clubs. These clubs serve many of the same functions as ptas, but operate as these groups are sometimes referred to as parentteacher organizations, or ptos. http://www.greatschools.net/cgi-bin/showarticle/al/29/parent
Extractions: Alabama Alaska Arkansas Arizona California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington Washington DC West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming School Name or District Give Us Your Feedback (Page 1 of 1) The PTA is a powerful organization affiliated with many schools across the country. Here's how you can join the club. By GreatSchools.net Staff If you picture the PTA as just a small crew of moms who meet now and then to plan bake sales, you may be in for a big surprise. The Parent Teacher Association, or PTA , is a huge and very influential nationwide organization with state and local affiliates throughout the country. The national PTA is headquartered in Chicago and promotes parent involvement in school communities. It is also a powerful lobbying organization in state legislatures and in Washington, D.C., advocating on behalf of students and schools. PTA vs. PTO
Making The Grade - 2005-04-11 (About 97 percent of massachusetts groups are ptos, Sullivan notes.) How does a brandnew company get recognized against a name like PTA, http://www.bizjournals.com/boston/stories/2005/04/11/smallb1.html
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Rhode Island News | Projo.com | The Providence Journal | Metro Raise the expectation level of local ptas and ptos so that they become more than just a way to raise money for schools but to improve parent support of the http://www.projo.com/metro/content/projo_20041202_epgov2.26bb70.html
Extractions: projo.com 2005 EPpy Winner Best Overall Newspaper Site Providence, R.I., Customize Make this your home page Newsletters MySpecialsDirect ... Most e-mailed stories Council, School Committee take office Joseph S. Larisa Jr. reminds his colleagues on the City Council that "we work for the people, not the other way around." 01:00 AM EST on Thursday, December 2, 2004 BY RICHARD C. DUJARDIN Journal Staff Writer EAST PROVIDENCE Two years after being ousted from office in a close election, Joseph S. Larisa Jr. was sworn in again as mayor of East Providence last night in a festive inauguration for a new City Council and new School Committee. Governor Carcieri administered the oath of office to Larisa. General Treasurer Paul A. Tavares administered oaths to all members of the council and School Committee before a standing-room only crowd at City Hall. Valerie Perry, who was city clerk for 14 years before retiring, is only the third woman to be elected to the council. Last night, her colleagues elected her assistant mayor. The School Committee, which has three new members, turned to two of its more experienced members in electing Tony Gouveia Jr. as chairman and Mildred S. Morris as vice chairman.
Rhode Island News | Projo.com | The Providence Journal | Education Raise the expectation level of local ptas and ptos so that they become more than just a way to raise money for schools but to improve parent support of the http://www.projo.com/education/content/projo_20041202_epgov2.26bb70.html
Extractions: projo.com 2005 EPpy Winner Best Overall Newspaper Site Providence, R.I., Customize Make this your home page Newsletters MySpecialsDirect ... Education Center Council, School Committee take office Joseph S. Larisa Jr. reminds his colleagues on the City Council that "we work for the people, not the other way around." 01:00 AM EST on Thursday, December 2, 2004 BY RICHARD C. DUJARDIN Journal Staff Writer EAST PROVIDENCE Two years after being ousted from office in a close election, Joseph S. Larisa Jr. was sworn in again as mayor of East Providence last night in a festive inauguration for a new City Council and new School Committee. Governor Carcieri administered the oath of office to Larisa. General Treasurer Paul A. Tavares administered oaths to all members of the council and School Committee before a standing-room only crowd at City Hall. Valerie Perry, who was city clerk for 14 years before retiring, is only the third woman to be elected to the council. Last night, her colleagues elected her assistant mayor. The School Committee, which has three new members, turned to two of its more experienced members in electing Tony Gouveia Jr. as chairman and Mildred S. Morris as vice chairman.
OrganizedHome.Com: Clean, Cut Clutter, Get Organized I ma recently retired teacher, and I used a 2 binder with programmed given additional time to request participation in the program, and ptas, ptos and private http://organizedhome.com/ftopic-2959-0.html
Extractions: I have just discovered a great tip. When cleaning tiles, particularly very shiny ones, I often found bits of lint would stick to the floor or wall in the bathroom. I would try to wipe it off with the cloth and end up getting more lint or just moving it around. Wait until the surface is dry and then simply brush over it with a banister brush. No more lint at all!
AEI - Short Publications How many of the schools without ptas in fact have no parentteacher That was a hard question to answer because no one collects data on ptos or other http://www.aei.org/publications/pubID.16054,filter.all/pub_detail.asp
Extractions: Home Short Publications Bowling with Tocqueville Bowling with Tocqueville Print Mail Civic Engagement and Social Capital By Everett Carll Ladd Posted: Saturday, January 1, 2000 SPEECHES Bradley Lecture (Washington) Publication Date: September 15, 1998 If some public pleasure is concerned, an association is formed to give more splendor and regularity to the entertainment. Societies are formed to resist evils that are exclusively of a moral nature, as to diminish the vice of intemperance. In the United States associations are established to promote the public safety, commerce, industry, morality, and religion. . . .The Americans make associations to give entertainment's, to found seminaries, to build ins, to construct churches, to diffuse books, to send missionaries to the antipodes; in the manner they found hospital, prisons, and schools. . . .There is no end which the human will despairs of attaining through the combined power of individuals united into a society. . . . Alexis de Tocqueville
Bowling With Tocqueville Civic Engagement And Social Capital How many of the schools without ptas in fact have no parentteacher That was a hard question to answer because no one collects data on ptos or other http://www.ciaonet.org/conf/aei07/brad_lect01.html
Education K-12 Directory Of Iowa Everything from A to Z. For teachers, principals, ptas, ptos, and parents. Frenchtoast Buy direct from manufacturer of French Toast Official School Wear. http://iowa.uscity.net/Education/K-12/
Page Title office and most state ptas advocate at their respective state capitals. The Rise of ptos. The problem with the PTA is at the local level where http://www.fhcspto.org/page5.html
Extractions: The technical differences between a PTA and a PTO are fairly simple. The national PTA is a formal membership organization headquartered in Chicago with a 103-year history of working for children. Local groups that choose to belong to the PTA must pay dues to the state and national organization and abide by state and national group rules. In return they get member benefits, and they get a voice in the operations of the larger organization. PTA groups also have a political voice, as the national PTA maintains a Washington lobbying office and most state PTAs advocate at their respective state capitals. The PTA protects its name, so thatin theoryonly dues-paying members of the group can call themselves "PTA." "PTO," on the other hand, is a more generic term. It generally represents the thousands of groups that choose to remain independent of the PTA. The acronym PTO is the most popular name, but other common monikers include PCC, PTG, and HSA. These are most often single-school groups that operate under their own by-laws andby and largeconcern themselves with the goings-on at their school, or in their town only. For years, the debate has been exceedingly simple to frame. Do we want to be part of something larger and spend our group dollars outside of our school? Or do we want to focus exclusively on our school where our kids are? Since the PTA was (and still is) the only formal national school parent group, the decision has often been PTA or not-PTA.
The American Enterprise: Summaries Of Important Research the League of Women Voters, ptas, and bowling leaguesPutnam concluded that locally controlled parentteacher organizations (ptos), which dont have http://www.taemag.com/issues/articleid.17072/article_detail.asp
Extractions: Everett Carll Ladd, The Ladd Report . Free Press, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10020. In a celebrated 1995 essay, Harvard political scientist Robert Putnam warned that Americans were far less likely to join groups than in the past. Citing declines in many major organizationslabor unions, the League of Women Voters, PTAs, and bowling leaguesPutnam concluded that Americans had become far less civic-minded, a trend that would inevitably lead to a fractured and balkanized America. Ladd, professor emeritus at the University of Connecticut, disagrees. A great deal of evidence, he contends, shows Americans are now more likely to join associations and aid charities. We are less likely to bowl than in the pastbut more likely to join soccer leagues. Women have shifted their allegiance from the League of Women Voters to less political groups, such as the Soroptimists and local businesswomens associations. And while PTA membership is declining, parents arent abandoning the schools; theyre more likely to create independent, locally controlled parent-teacher organizations (PTOs), which dont have to pay hefty dues to the PTA national headquarters or follow its political lead. Americans are also increasingly donating time to worthy causes. Polls show steady rises in the percentage of Americans who say they volunteer to help others. In 1977, for instance, 26 percent of Americans surveyed said they donated time to help the poor, the sick, and the elderly. By 1995, the percentage had more than doubled to 54 percent. Charitable donations are also rising, from $349 per person in 1970 to $524 in 1996 (measured in constant 1993 dollars).
Extractions: Top Society Organizations ... Education : PTA National PTA - Oldest and largest volunteer association in the United States working exclusively on behalf of children and youth. California State PTA Alaska PTA Georgia PTA Kansas PTA ... PTOtoday Magazine - Exclusively focused on the work of school parent groups (PTOs, PTAs, etc). Includes discussion board for idea sharing. Iowa PTA Maine State PTA Indiana PTA Virginia PTA ... Ohio PTA - State of Ohio PTA Volunteers At Schools Everywhere - Forum for idea sharing regarding school volunteering opportunities; by organizing volunteers and exchanging the unique ways that individuals have helped to make their school function better, we can improve education everywhere. Louisiana PTA Ohio PTA - District 13 www.KOLISRAEL.com LinkExchange Member
Parents Pick Up School Tab - 03/08/04 education foundations and turning to booster organizations, such as ptos, to raise money. Thats what ptas are for, to back up, to help, she said. http://www.detnews.com/2004/schools/0403/09/a01-84983.htm
Extractions: Don't think for a moment that you've seen the last of the lawmakers, what with all the hints this week of a possible return engagement for another crack at school finance â or rather, property tax reduction. So enjoy the reprieve while you can. As with most sessions, the 79th Legislature had its share of highs and lows â the lowest point, the night Democratic Rep. Joe Moreno was killed driving back to Austin from a Rockets-Mavericks playoff game in Houston. As for the high points, that depends on where you stand. Many of us are still relishing that five-hour debate leading up to the death of private school vouchers. It provided one of those rare moments (these days) of Republicans and Democrats teaming up to defeat bad public policy. Another unpredictable alliance had reformist Dems and social conservatives coming together to successfully thwart persistent efforts (mostly from the GOP leadership) to expand the state's gambling footprint. In his post-session assessment on Tuesday, Gov. Rick Perry put his best spin on his 2005 legislative agenda â which he had originally declared would be judged on property tax cuts and school finance reform. Oh, well. On other fronts, Perry got what he sought on lowering workers' compensation costs, curbing "frivolous" asbestos lawsuits, and requiring parental consent for minors seeking abortions. And he got some, but not all, of what he wanted in the way of funding for child and adult protective services, his pet Enterprise Fund, and his new Emerging Technology Fund (maybe next session we'll see an Emerging and Enterprising Video Slot Machine Fund). Concerning his losses â in addition to coming up short on school finance and vouchers, Perry lost his bid to lower the cap on property appraisals, in large measure because of loud and effective opposition from local municipalities and counties.
Telecom News Archives Much of the disparity reflects the fact that ptos, used to doing This new facility will enable the company to save 4 billion ptas peryear in rentals. http://www.igigroup.com/news/archives1999/9910-11-15.html
Extractions: Search for... ADSL Advertise in 2000 ONFOYP Asia Pacific / China Calendar of Events Change Password Conferences Conference Proceedings Daily News Download IGI Graphics Download Tools DWDM Education Employment Opportunities Enterprise Networks Fiber Optics Fiber Optics Training India Telecom Links Mailing List Newsletters "On Sale Now" Optical Networks Payment Options Regional Telecom Studies Submarine Cable Telecommunications Update listing Videos/CD-Rom NEWS Newsletters ... Advertise in the "2000 Optical Networks / Fiber Optic Yellow Pages" see demo of online version coming in 2000 -FREE Subscription to "Today in Telecom" October 11 - 15, 1999 Headlines - October 15, 1999 TOP STORIES ADSL EARNINGS/STOCKS Sun Microsystems Beats First Quarter Expectations, Net More than Doubles
Page 1 NATIONAL ASSEMBLY OF LOCAL ARTS AGENCIES MONOGRAPHS One massachusetts Ave., NW, Ste. 700. Washington, DC 200011431. 202.408.5505 Be Smart, Include Art A Planning Kit for ptas. Published by National PTA http://pubs.artsusa.org/library/ARTS014/simple/1-36.html
Extractions: MONOGRAPHS â¾ Published Monthly for Members â¾ Volume 3, Number 3 â¾ April 1994 MONOGRAPHS ARTS IN EDUCATION: FROM NATIONAL POLICY TO LOCAL COMMUNITY ACTION by Nancy Langan NALAA Arts in Education Coordinator Jane Alexander, Chairman, National Endowment for the Arts If the national arts education landscape has you confused, you are not alone. There are more AIE policy committees and task forces than ever before. This is also an exciting time, with new resources and increased attention to the arts as a catalyst for improving the country's schools. Doug Herbert, Director of the Arts In Education Program at the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), begins this Monograph with a guided tour of the national arts education scene. He describes the initiatives and partnerships that are shaping the policy and agenda for the arts in our children's education. He brings into focus the current momentum for supporting the arts as essential to education reform. Monograph profiles five communities that are making the arts central in their local schools. Schools, together with local arts agencies and arts organizations, are transforming teaching and learning, and redefining the role of the arts community in education, with a variety of funding and partnership strategies. These local initiatives are described in the second part of the
The Fourth (4th Of the +1000 mailings sent to local schools and ptas re. elementary and middle school ptos and work more closely with the http://membership.acs.org/E/ENY/EDCOM.htm
Extractions: ENY ACS Education Committee Some of our upcoming activities for the 2005-2006 academic year: Mini-grants for K-6 Teachers: Small grants to enable teachers to implement science activities into their classrooms. Applications will be available on-line at the start of the school year. National Chemistry Week events: Wed., Oct. 19, ACS President Bill Carroll visits the ENY section as part of his Extreme NCW Tour. Details TBA. Sun., Oct. 23, 2005: NCW Event at The New York State Museum, Empire Plaza. Booths and demonstrations by groups from local industries, academia and government labs. Chemistry magic shows. Free and open to the public! Contact Yvonne Akpalu ( akpaly@rpi.edu ) or Thomasin Miller ( tmiller@xos.com ) to volunteer! Careers in Chemistry Day To introduce high-school students to a range of chemistry-related educational pathways and careers. Tentatively planned for early March. Chemistry Olympiad Competition Local exam will be given in March. Top scorers will be invited to take the national exam in mid-April. The top 20 students nationwide are selected to participate in a 10-day training camp, with four of these chosen to be the U.S. team at the international competition. Contact David Clarke ( clarked@acp.edu