A review of current education industry topics from the publisher of Learning A–Z

“Every day I make an effort to go toward what I don't understand. This wandering leads to the accidental learning that continually shapes my life.”
Yo-Yo Ma, cellist

Bob Holl is the co-founder and VP/Publisher of Learning A–Z. His passion is creating and delivering high-quality educational resources that help teachers help kids learn.

January 2010 Archives

Friday, January 22, 2010

Yeah, We've Got an App for That

Learning A-Z continually works to find innovative, creative ways to get the most useful educational resources into the hands of students and teachers. As a pioneer in delivering leveled readers and other content via the Web, we are proud to now partner with Language Technologies in offering our resources as Apps Edition(TM) ReadSmart on Apple's dynamic App Store.

 

We're offering eleven free apps as well as one hundred twenty (120) Reading A-Z leveled readers available for purchase at Apple'siTunes® App Store as ReadSmart Edition™ Apps. This catalog is the largest release of PreK-6 reading skills and literacy educational materials ever offered on the App Store and designed specifically for the iPhone® and iPod® touch.

 

Literacy is the foundation of all learning, but not all children learn at the same level or in the same way. As more schools integrate handheld devices into their classrooms, we think it is crucial to provide even wider access to our resources, and we view this offering as another way Learning A-Z can help teachers differentiate their instruction with customized learning solutions for each student. We also see this as an opportunity for parents to purchase developmentally appropriate resources that increase a child's reading outside the classroom.

Monday, January 11, 2010

It's a Bird, It's a Plane, It's (Gasp!) My Teacher!

As a former science teacher, I went to great lengths to capture the interest of my students. While I like to think I succeeded more often than not, I doubt that I achieved rock-star status. Perhaps if I'd participated in the Weightless Flights program as these teachers did, things would have been different.

The weightless flight experiences are expensive--about $5,000 per person--a price out of reach for most schools and teachers. Northrup Grumman Foundation accepts applications from eligible middle-school teachers for its Weightless Flights of Discovery Program, with the goal of giving them tools to stimulate their students' interest in the sciences. After one flight, teacher Adrienne Manzone pronounced, "My coolness factor will go up 100 percent." Teachers who are selected participate in hands-on science workshops as well as zero-gravity flights and experiments.

Geoffrey Bergen, another teacher on the flight, commented on how hard it is "to teach out of a textbook" when you consider the technological world students live in. The Weightless Flight program "gives you a new tool for Newton's laws." To achieve the weightless experience, the airplane flies in series of parabolas (a sort of curved freefall). The teachers experience zero gravity as well as gravity comparable to that of the Moon and Mars.

Very cool, indeed.