Monday, December 8, 2014

Exciting News.... New Business Model for Us!!!!

To Our Loyal Clients, Parents, Staff and Friends,

Learning Magic opened its doors for business in 2003 and 11 years have flown by! We have  offered quality academic enrichment, test prep, mentoring, academic support, and tutoring services in our 23 Trescott Street center, libraries, schools, private homes,  colleges, community rooms, food courts, professional buildings, restaurants, and even coffee shops!!

We are now focusing on changing our business model to improve our efficiency and build a more competitive edge.  Effective January 1, 2015, we will no longer retain the 23 Trescott Street location. 

We look forward to providing our quality services through in-home sessions and at other convenient venues. We ask your patience and understanding with the schedule during this transition time.

We are having a moving sale Sunday December 28, 2014 from 9 AM -1 PM and Monday December 29, 2014 from 2 PM - 6 PM. Great buys on bookcases, text books, furniture and more! Save the date!!!

We thank you for your support and are looking forward to our new model.


Monday, November 3, 2014

Beth's Book of the Month

I'm going to mix things up a bit this month, and use this section to promote a beautiful campaign. Just think of all the most popular characters in children's literature today: Harry Potter, Katniss Everdeen, Junie B. Jones, Augustus Waters, Greg Heffley, even Captain Underpants. Do you see the racial similarities between these characters? There is VERY little diversity amongst children's literature today.

A group of people are working diligently at creating awareness for this issue. "We Need Diverse Books" is their moniker as well as their mission statement. Minority children and adolescents will gain so much from seeing characters that they can identify with. And those who are not minorities will learn so much from exposure to diversity. Please visit http://www.weneeddiversebooks.org for more information and for help in choosing a book for your child that supports this campaign's ideals.

When you look back at the books I've reviewed over the months in this blog, I'm guilty of choosing books that lack the diversity that these kids need. I'm going to be more careful and do my best to support this campaign by choosing some of their recommended books.


Thursday, October 16, 2014

Common Cell Sense... Not so Common...

You are annoying your boss and colleagues any time you take your phone out during meetings, says new research from USC’s Marshall School of Business, and if you work with women and people over forty they’re even more perturbed by it than everyone else.
The researchers conducted a nationwide survey of 554 full-time working professionals earning above $30K and working in companies with at least 50 employees and found: 
86% think it’s inappropriate to answer phone calls during meetings
84% think it’s inappropriate to write texts or emails during meetings
66% think it’s inappropriate to write texts or emails even during lunches offsite
The more money people make the less they approve of smartphone use.
The study also found that Millennials are three times more likely than those over 40 to think that smartphone use during meetings is okay, which is ironic considering Millennials are highly dependent upon the opinions of their older colleagues for career advancement.
TalentSmart has tested the emotional intelligence of more than a million people worldwide and found that Millennials have the lowest self-awareness in the workplace, making them unlikely to see that their smartphone use in meetings is harming their careers.
Why do so many people—especially successful people—find smartphone use in meetings to be inappropriate? When you take out your phone it shows a:
Lack of respect. You consider the information on your phone to be more important than the conversation at hand, and you view people outside of the meeting to be more important than those sitting right in front of you.
Lack of attention. You are unable to stay focused on one thing at a time.
Lack of listening. You aren’t practicing active listening, so no one around you feels heard.
Lack of power. You are like a modern-day Pavlovian dog who responds to the whims of others through the buzz of your phone.
Lack of self-awareness: You don’t understand how ridiculous your behavior looks to other people.
Lack of social awareness: You don’t understand how your behavior affects those around you.
I can’t say I’m surprised by the USC study’s findings. My company coaches leaders using 360° assessments that compare their self-perception to how everyone else sees them. Smartphone use in meetings is one of the most common coworker complaints.
It’s important to be clear with what you expect of others. If sharing this article with your team doesn’t end smartphone use in meetings, take a page out of the Old West and put a basket by the conference room door with an image of a smart phone and the message, “Leave your guns at the door.”

Monday, October 6, 2014

Fascinating Editorial

This is a great editorial about the Public School system. What are your thoughts?
The Myth About Public Schools 
Catherine Rampell
Have America's public schools gotten worse over the years?
Americans seem to think so. Every time I write about why attending college is so crucial for moving up the income ladder -- or, these days, for landing any job at all -- I'm inundated with emails blaming the country's K-12 system. Today's workers have to go to college, readers argue, because our increasingly broken public schools have ceded responsibility for educating them.
Data from the annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup poll, a survey about education, reflect similar views. Over the past four decades, respondents have become increasingly likely to say that today's students receive a "worse education" than they themselves did.
But it's not clear that any of this is true, at least at the national level.
Few consistent tools are available to measure the quality of U.S. education over time; the best is probably the National Assessment of Educational Progress test, first administered in 1971. And believe it or not, NAEP scores have been steadily improving, with most national measures now at or around all-time highs. The biggest gains have generally gone to nonwhite students, helping narrow -- though not eliminate -- the achievement gap. Other metrics, too, suggest that schools are improving. Dropout rates are at record lows, and the share of high school students who take higher-level courses has risen.
On some level, parents seem to know this. At least, they appear happy with the schools their own children attend.
In the most recent Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup poll, about 67 percent of public school parents said they would give their oldest child's school a grade of "A" or "B." But just 17 percent of the respondents would give "public schools nationally" the same score. This grading gap has widened in recent decades.
It's a bit like "Fenno's paradox," named for political scientist Richard Fenno Jr.: Americans hate Congress but like their own congressman; they hate the public school system but like the school they actually interact with.
It's hard to pinpoint why perceptions of national school quality seem to depart from reality.
It could be the heavy media attention paid to the nation's most troubled schools. Rising expectations might play a role, says Dana Goldstein, the author of "The Teacher Wars." Decades ago, policymakers and education advocates pledged to close the achievement gap, and though it has narrowed, its persistence leads to disappointment.
Schools are also expected to make more students college-ready today than in the past. "The '30s, '40s and '50s are often talked about as a golden age of public schools. Well, only 10 percent of students were going to college back then," Goldstein says. "If our goal today is that only 10 percent get to college, then we're doing awesome."
Misplaced nostalgia may also weigh on public opinion. Just as elders like to claim they once walked 15 miles in the snow to school, uphill both ways, perhaps they misremember how rigorous their own educations were.
"Going back to at least 1880, the business community has never said a nice word about public schools. Every generation of graduates is supposedly stupider than the last," says David C. Berliner, a professor emeritus of education at Arizona State University. "The demonization of youth is a national pastime in the U.S."
Diane Ravitch, a research professor of education at New York University, argues that schools are also being demonized because of clear-eyed ideology rather than rose-colored nostalgia.
"U.S. public education is the victim of a propaganda campaign to discredit it and promote privatization," she says.
She traces this back to the 1983 "A Nation at Risk" report from President Ronald Reagan's education commission and argues that business leaders and politicians have increasingly used public schools since then as scapegoats for other societal ills.
I suspect other, less nefarious factors affect perceptions.
With college becoming the norm, workers with no more than a high school diploma are more likely to be in the lower part of the talent distribution today than they were a generation ago. Employers might conflate this shifting composition of high-school-educated workers with a diminishing quality of high school education itself.
The truth is, today's young people do need more, or at least different, kinds of training and education to succeed in the global marketplace for talent.
And plenty of policy changes -- like making the most challenging school districts more attractive places to work -- could help improve outcomes for our most disadvantaged students.
In the meantime, let's stop denying the measurable, if modest, progress that U.S. schools have made in the last half-century.
Catherine Rampell writes for the Washington Post Writers Group. Email: crampell@washpost.com.

From  http://www.sunherald.com/2014/10/04/5835844/catherine-rampell-the-myth-about.html




Read more here: http://www.sunherald.com/2014/10/04/5835844/catherine-rampell-the-myth-about.html#storylink=cpy

Monday, September 29, 2014

Beth's Book of the Month: Ready Player One!

Imagine my confusion upon reading the cover of a novel that proclaims “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory meets the Matrix!” What in the world could those two stories have in common!? This paradox was enough to pique my curiosity and pickup a copy of Ready Player One by Ernest Cline.

I devoured the book in a few days, deeply engrossed by it's thrilling plot and exciting storyline. Believe it or not, it WAS accurately described as a mix between the two aforementioned tales. In Ready Player One,we follow the adventures of Wade, a teenage boy on a quest to inherit the estate of the world's most powerful computer developer, James Halliday. Halliday, an eccentric Willy Wonka-ish character, has developed a virtual reality based world, nicknamed the OASIS which has replaced the Internet and gave people an “escape” from the dystopic world that Earth has become.

The technological jargon and abundance of 1980s references may seem overwhelming to some readers, but somehow it's still easy for today's teens to comprehend. This is the ultimate book for those who enjoy geeky pop-culture, yet it was recommended to me by a completely un-nerdy14 year old girl, who had to read it for school, and loved it!

This book breaks all stereotypes and can get even the most avid video-game player a reason to put down the game controller and pick up a great book!


Monday, September 22, 2014

College Application Process

Keeping busy with your senior year? It is just beginning...

Princeton Review suggests these steps to get organized in the college application process:

When you apply to a college, you'll submit several things: an application, high school transcript, SAT or ACT score report, letters of recommendation and one or more personal statements or essays.
An important heads–up: applying for financial aid is a separate process that requires you to fill out a separate set of forms.
Application
You can fill out a paper application or apply online. Most schools require you to list basic information about you and your family, as well as your GPA, standardized test scores, and any extracurriculars or awards you earned in high school.
Over three hundred colleges and universities now accept the Common Application, a single form that you can fill out and submit to multiple schools. The Common Application is meant to simplify the admissions process for you. Using it means you don't have to fill out individual application forms for each school you apply to.
There is no penalty for using it: Colleges are required to give equal consideration to students who use the Common Application and those who use the school's own application. If you do use the Common App, however, be advised that schools may have supplementary forms you'll need to fill out (including additional essays!).
Transcript
Some colleges require that your high school send your transcript directly, others allow you to send it. In the latter case, your high school will give you a sealed envelope. Do not break the seal on the envelope or your transcripts will not be accepted!
SAT or ACT Score Report
When you take the SAT or ACT, you can request that a score report be sent to your prospective colleges. Make sure you leave plenty of time for your scores to be processed and sent.
Beginning in March 2009, students will be able to choose whether colleges see one, some or all of their scores for the SAT and SAT Subject Tests. You must opt into this program online or via telephone; otherwise schools will see all your scores. Be advised that you cannot mix and match sections (you can't send in your great Math score from June and your great Verbal from January).
Letters of Recommendation
Colleges usually require two or three letters of recommendation from high school teachers or guidance counselors.
When requesting a letter of recommendation, pick someone who knows you well and can speak to your strengths. Approach your potential letter–writers about two months prior to the actual due date. Teachers and guidance counselors are usually swamped with term papers and other college application requests toward the end of the fall semester.
Personal Statement or Essay
This is by far the most time–consuming and difficult part of any application. The personal statement or essay is usually about 300 to 500 words in length, occasionally longer, depending on the college. The prompt or question will be provided in the application. Be sure to write in your own voice about a topic unique to you. We recommend writing several drafts. Proofread carefully, and ask a teacher to edit your work.
http://www.princetonreview.com/college-application.aspx

Saturday, September 20, 2014

Easy Reading

Here are some easy suggestions to get your child to read. 


You can motivate reluctant readers when you ….
  1. Read aloud to them. 
    Choose books that you love, and read aloud with passion and expression. Get silly and change your voice to mimic the characters. (If you’re not comfortable doing this, offer to babysit for a friend and practice reading to a child. It’s fun!) When you’re reading aloud, stop at the good parts and say, “Looks like we’re out of time today….” Leave ‘em wanting more!
  2. Let them choose their own books. 
    The biggest turnoff to reading is being required to read boring books. Provide a wide variety of books from different authors and across different genres, and let students choose the books they want to read. You can use reading interest surveys to help them find books on topics that interest them.
  3. Provide time for reading. 
    This one’s a no-brainer, but sometimes it’s difficult to do if you have to teach from a basal reader. Kids need class time to read, and lots of it. The room needs to be quiet, and everyone needs to be reading, not playing games or doing centers. Just reading. If you’re not sure how to implement this effectively, you can find helpful information and a free webinar on Teaching Resources that explains the Reading Workshopapproach. 
  4. Let them create a cozy reading nook.
    Who wants to sit at a desk for six hours a day? Collect an assortment of folding chairs, pillows, beanbags and other items that your kids can move to another spot in the room to read. Let reading be a time when they can get away from their desks and get comfortable.
  5. Confer with them.
    An important part of the Reading Workshop approach is conferring with students individually about what they are reading. You’ll learn about your students as readers and as individuals, and you’ll be able to connect with them personally. You’ll also find out if the books they’re choosing are on the right level. If not, you can help them find better choices, books that are just right. 
  6. Read what they’re reading.I used to get a secret thrill when the Scholastic Book Clubs flyer arrived! I know it’s silly, but I love seeing the new books that are available and trying to decide how to spend my bonus points. I discovered that it’s fun to let students help me pick out books for the class, and I often ordered an extra copy for myself. If you’re not in the habit of doing this, you’ll be amazed at how quickly you can become engrossed in a book like The City of Ember. You might even discover that the inner quirky kid in you loves The Diary of a Wimpy Kid or Captain Underpants!
  7. Introduce them to audio books. Think audio books are for little kids? Maybe you haven’t listened to Madeleine L’Engle read A Wrinkle in Time! Audio books are some of the best reading motivators you’ll ever find, and they help students become better readers as well. One reason is that when students follow along in the book as they listen, they see the words in print as they hear them. Powerful stuff. Not to mention the benefits of hearing amazing stories read by fluent and proficient authors!
  8.   8.Make it social. Do you have a social bunch of students this year? If so, get your kids talking about books by forming classroom book clubs. Book clubs are groups of students who read the same books and get together to talk about them, sort of like Literature Circles without roles. Check out this YouTube video posted by Texas teacher Chase Young that shows Literature Circle in action. You can also use kid-safe social networking sites like Edmodo.com and Kidblog.org to get online discussions going about books. If you want to know more about Literature Circles, check out the Literature Circles resources on my website. 
  9. Let them read other stuff. If books don’t interest your students, let them read magazines, graphic novels, informative websites, or instruction manuals for their favorite game systems. Be sure to check for appropriateness, but you can often turn kids on to reading by letting them read nontraditional forms of literature.
  10. Get them hooked on a series. I must have read every single Nancy Drew book in the library when I was a kid! And I fell hook, line, and sinker for Harry Potter long before the series was turned into a movie. When kids get to know the characters in a series, they feel connected and want to know more about them. So find a great series, read the first book aloud, and make sure you have plenty of copies of the sequels on hand!
  11. Let kids give book talks. Why not start each day with a short student-led book talk? Ask students to sign up in advance to do a 2-minute informal book share. Letting them tell about their favorite book will motivate other kids to want to read that book or others by the author.
  12. Use technology. Books in print might not be a thing of the past, but ebooks seem to be edging them out. However, you don’t have to have a Kindle or an iPad in your classroom to introduce your students to ebooks. Younger kids will enjoy StorylineOnline.net, and older students will enjoy reading ebooks on free Kindle software that you can download from Amazon.com and display on your computer.