Taken on Sunday October 30th
Hardscrabble just off of 120 and just past the gargoyle bears.
Pender says she wanted, in part, to hold public officials more accountable.
Later in the article, the author seems to be implying that NCN has affected local elections. NCN seems to get or take credit for Gregg Bresner's victory 3 years ago.“I was shocked at how much people in a small town like this were willing to say, ‘Those people know what they’re doing, there’s no reason to question the superintendent of the school board,’” she said by way of example. “The problem is there are things that need to be investigated.”
The news site has had a discernible impact on the area. Since it launched, a challenger has successfully unseated an incumbent in the local school board election - an unheard-of scenario in a town where elected school officials typically serve until they decide to step down.I have not been able to find causal effect or make the leap in analysis that because there was a new site writing posts in New Castle that an incumbent lost his position to a new comer. Another problem with that statement is that in every election since Bresner's when an incumbent ran against a challenger, the incumbent won. Yet another problem is how they measure their impact on an election. What were the polls saying before they got involved? Are they implying that they are trying to affect local elections for their candidates and that they are not impartial reporters?
New Castle NOW’s coverage of a controversial high school schedule change “had much to do with its modification a year later,” said managing editor Christine Yeres. But if the site had been operating before the controversy began, “we could have helped people to know the details of the largely hidden decision process of the Board of Ed ... and residents could have expressed their opposition more effectively,” she said.Here is a case of NCN pressing their own personal agenda. Transparency goes to both sides of an issue. A newspaper's mission is not accountability. It is to report the news, good, bad or indifferent. Accountability comes from the reporting of the news and asking questions. Part of reporting as a newspaper is to bring information to the community. The dissemination of information in itself leads to transparency and accountability. News can be "good" news as well as "bad" news. If your goal is only accountability and not reporting, your are a niche site that is a blog not an online newspaper.
“Sometimes we want to be The New York Times and sometimes we want to be the church bulletin,” Pender said.Yes, we as publicly elected officials should be held accountable. Accountable to all the community, not just a loud subset. We should be transparent. Sometimes, take yes for an answer and recognize that we are trying and that there are some terrific things going on in the schools. Or at least do both.
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NEW: Updates from Board of Ed meeting Tuesday, October 11
October 11, 2011by Christine Yeres
• Random survey taking place now; finished by next week
• Kiesel announces that advisory committees are not required to be publicSurvey is afootBoard President Alyson Kiesel announced that the district’s telephone survey of 250 randomly chosen residents is currently taking place and will be finished at the end of this week or early next week. “Once we have the data,” she said, “we’ll have a report analyzing the data, then a presentation to the board and community from the survey company.”District committees are not required to be publicYesterday afternoon, Superintendent for Business John Chow declined to respond to the question of whether the meetings of the budget advisory committee will remain closed and the committee members remain unnamed, referring NCNOW to the video tape of Tuesday’s board meeting. See “New schools budget advisory committee up-and-running; meetings will be closed,” NCNOW.org, 9/30/11.On that tape, without referring specifically to Chow’s budget advisory committee, as part of her President’s Report Kiesel stated that “the district has a whole variety of committees, some board committees, some administrative” that are “not called for by statute or regulation, and are not required to be public meetings. They may be put together for any variety of reasons by administrators for any purpose and unless two board members or more attend, they are not considered board meetings or board-sanctioned meetings.”
Harvard Project Gets Good Marks from Chappaqua School District
EcoMUVE, a virtual immersion and assessment technology, has been tried out with middle school students in the district, as an alternative to convention learning.
- By Tom Auchterlonie
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- October 14, 2011
&nbps;0 CommentsAvatars in virtual reality are no longer just for movies and video games. Thanks to researchers at Harvard University, they are now being used by middle school kids to learn things in creative and immersive ways.The result of this is a virtual reality program called EcoMUVE, which students at Seven Bridges and Robert E. Bell middle schools have been trying out since last year. The program has received positive feedback from Chappaqua teachers, according to Harvard professor Chris Dede, who gave presentations on the results at this week's school board meeting and at a PTA event held at Bell.The program was given good reviews by teachers for being engaging, in science content learning, complex causality and inquiry.The intent of EcoMUVE is do encourage immersion in course subject matter, on "situated learning," which focuses on how people learn in life, as opposed to a conventional classroom.“No longer do classrooms have to be isolated from the real world," Dede was recorded as saying in his board presentation (click here for it on the NCCMC website).For example, in EcoMUVE, students using their avatars can learn about complex problems, such as how fertilizer dumping impacts a pond's eco system and harms fish in the span of about a month. Students can also drag their avatars into different terrains, and shrink down to the atomic level, like in the TV show The Magic School Bus.Assessments done under EcoMUVE allow for teachers to grade students on how they handle inquiry and the various step they take in solving problems, as opposed to just having a simple answer from a test. The program leaves an audit trail that shows what students looked at in the program in the course of their problem solving. The virtual system that focus on assessment are compressed on-spot problems.The program, the product of three years of research and federal funding, could be commercialized by Harvard, according to Dede, either given to a publisher ot given away free to schools if a publisher isn't found.The next big step will be next spring, while a mobile version of EcoMUVE is introduced to students, made possible by a grant from the National Science Foundation. This will allow for kids to engage in what is called augmented reality, which Dede said “will open up a new form of education.” An example of augmented reality, Dede explained, would be to a sign in a foreign language and point your phone at it, which would translate the signage into English. This technology could be applied on a personal level, according to Dede, with students using it around town to learn local history.Board members were impressed with the results.“I just think it’s interesting to see how we can get a handle on that," said Victoria Tipp, pointing out its usefulness in teaching critical thinking, being creative and problem solving.School board President Alyson Kiesel noted that if the students feel the learning environment feels like play for the students, “It’s just a beautiful thing.”Going forward, the technology could progress to the point where teachers and even students can create their own augmented realities for the curriculum, Dede explained.
Greeley to Get Fireworks for Homecoming Rally
Revamped pre-homecoming event is intended to cater towards families and make the Greeley Sports Boosters a more vital organization, its president says.
- By Tom Auchterlonie
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- October 14, 2011
&nbps;0 CommentsNext week, students at Horace Greeley High School, along with their families, will have a chance to watch fireworks, partake in athletic clinics and root for their teams at a revamped homecoming pep rally.The new lineup got approval from the school board at its meeting this week and will be held the evening of Oct. 21, the night before the Oct. 22 football game against Harrison. It will also include recognition of all fall sports teams.The changes, backed by the Greeley Sports Boosters, will serve several purposes, according to Boosters President Jim Nottingham. They include making homecoming more of a community event, which will include students' parents and siblings, and to make the Boosters "much more of a go-to organization" than it has been before.A format including fireworks is uncommon in area, although Armonk's Byram Hills High School holds them, according to Nottingham.Preparing for the event, Nottingham consulted Assistant Superintendent for Business John Chow about insurance logistics, as well as the Chappaqua Fire Department's second assistant chief, Russell Maitland.Maitland came to the board meeting to assure the members of the event being safe. The fire department will be there with a presence.School districts officials were receptive to the goal of the revamped pep rally.“I think it could be very exciting," said school board President Alyson Kiesel.Greeley Principal Andrew Selesnick was supportive of making the pep rally a family oriented event.