A day to smile about math

Although it is not scored as a team competition, Wallace Middle School from Lake Isabella distinguished itself with four category winners, while Fruitvale Jr. High and Ollivier Middle schools had three category champions of their own among approximately 950 students from 40 schools who competed at the 38th annual Kern County Middle School Mathematics Field Day held at Ridgeview High School in Bakersfield on May 3. The math talent was spread among many with 14 different schools claiming at least one category champion. Sponsored by the Kern County Superintendent of Schools, Westchester Kiwanis Club, Bakersfield Math Council, California Math Council, Kern County Science Foundation American Petroleum Institute-San Joaquin Valley Chapter and Ridgeview High, the competition is a fun day of problem solving games and events. Some have playful names such as "leap frog" and "mad hatter." Still others offer the flavor of athletic competition with names such as "power relay," "circuit training," "individual medley" and "triathlon games." Some of the cheering, during the outside team relay, math solving events, took on the air of a sporting event with one spirited student spectator shouting out, "Three plus two equals five," for no apparent reason. More
Posted: 5/5/08; 10:11:45 AM | Permalink(#)

PG&E answers special needs

It was almost as if a light bulb came on in teacher Kevin Crosby’s head when he saw that Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E) was willing to invest $5,000 in schools that could harness energy to educate students. Crosby, who teaches a severely handicapped class for the Kern County Superintendent of Schools at Sunset School in Lamont, came up with the idea of creating a "solar garden and greenhouse" for his students. After lots of research and planning, Crosby applied for a "Bright Ideas Grant" under PG&E’s "Solar Schools" program in September. Word came back from the energy giant on January 2 that Crosby’s idea, "Project Solar Garden," had been selected and that he would be recipient of the maximum grant award of $5,000. Crosby was excited about the news."Project Solar Garden will provide our students with hands-on scientific experiences," Crosby said. "It will definitely help our students who have developmental delays and struggle with basic academic skills. Our students learn the most from visual and kinesthetic activities. If they can see and feel the plants and dig up the soil with their own hands, they can make the connection between how a seed becomes a plant. If they are able to water the plants everyday and monitor their growth, then they will learn the growth cycle of plants." Crosby got even more ideas when PG&E paid for him to go to Sacramento on March 18 to attend a series of workshops on wind power, solar and hydrogen energy. He also received a National Energy Development Project Science of Energy Kit to supplement his classroom curriculum with measurable experiments. More
Posted: 5/5/08; 9:11:34 AM | Permalink(#)

Project 180 - gang prevention

No one, other than gang members, wants gangs in their schools and communities. Much has been said about the destructive nature of gangs and how the perception of their power influences at risk children. The Kern County Superintendent of Schools is doing more than talking, having just hired Kevin Keyes and Salvador Arias to join the office as Gang Prevention Specialists. Assigned to the School-Community Partnerships program, Keyes, Arias and their boss, Prevention Programs Coordinator Daryl Thiesen, have begun a county-wide program of gang prevention, collaborating with law enforcement, courts, local service agencies, schools, parents and children to bring it about. The program, called Project 180, arose out of Kern County’s gang prevention funding. You probably could not have hired two people with a greater understanding of gangs than Keyes and Arias. They have lived it. Arias, by his own admission, was a gang member. He was beaten up and urinated on as a kindergartner because his brother was in a gang. The beatings continued through third grade, when he decided the only way to protect himself was by joining a gang. It caused him to miss school from which he was expelled in the sixth grade. Arias remembers being chased across a school campus by gang members wielding guns and chains. His house was the target of a drive by shooting. When his best friend was killed in that manner, a convincing school counselor advised the Arias family to quit their jobs and move to save their own lives. More
Posted: 4/28/08; 2:59:41 PM | Permalink(#)

Fire science on the mountain

There is a different philosophy applied to the old saying, "Where there is smoke — there is fire" at Frazier Mountain High School. It is not an uncommon sight to see students dressed in U.S. Forest Service yellow and green firefighting gear aiming water hoses at areas not on fire. They are students in the Kern County Regional Occupational Program (KCROP) Fire Science class, learning to fight fires without fires at the almost 4,000-foot-level-campus in mountainous southern Kern County. Fire Science is one of the dozens of vocational skills offered to high school students enrolled in KCROP programs operated by the Kern County Superintendent of Schools. It is a particularly practical one, since the students who attend Frazier Mountain High are in an area that is susceptible to forest fires in the dry days of summer, and the forest service needs new recruits to meet the demands of the season which runs May through October. "It is an entry level course aimed at training the students to be certified as entry level firefighters at the end of the program. If they are at least 18 years of age, they can apply for voluntary firefighting positions," said U.S. Forest Service Captain Ryan Bridger, advisor to KCROP in charge of overseeing the Fire Science class. "It would be very difficult to recruit for the summer firefighting season, were it not for the program. We would have to go to campuses and recruit and then try to quickly train new recruits during the busiest part of the season. This way, the Fire Science students are ready to come on board when the season starts." More
Posted: 4/21/08; 10:23:18 AM | Permalink(#)

‘Summit’ zeroes in on child abuse

Awareness was the key word organizers stressed at the Child Abuse Prevention Summit held on April 9 at the Holiday Inn Select in Bakersfield. The free to the public event, sponsored by Kern County Network for Children (KCNC), Kern Child Abuse Prevention Council and Kern County Department of Human Services, attracted approximately 550 local citizens in the fields of child abuse/neglect prevention seeking to enhance their skills and knowledge. One of the most anticipated documents released each year at the Summit is the "Kern County Network for Children Conditions of Children Report Card," an annual "barometer of where the county is in terms of health and well-being of children." KCNC Director Tom Corson said of this year’s report card, "It is a mixed message showing for instance a decline in substantiated reports of child abuse, but there were still approximately 1,700 children needing foster care. The report also shows that poverty, education, health and social development are areas we have to move to the forefront." KCNC Research Analyst Kim Silva, who compiled and wrote the report from information gathered by dozens of government, public and private agencies dealing with children, agreed there were many areas of optimism in the report and areas where work still needs to be done. More
Posted: 4/14/08; 9:44:48 AM | Permalink(#)