A Sobering List

dry1.jpg

You’ve heard of the “Party School” rankings that list college campuses reputed for wild, drunken debauchery.

But have you heard of the “Stone-Cold Sober Schools” ranked by Princeton Review?

Here are the top 20 tee-totaling colleges, based on a survey of 120,000 students.

1. Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah.

2. Wheaton College, Wheaton, Ill.

3. U.S. Coast Guard Academy, New London, Conn.

4. College of the Ozarks, Point Lockout, Mo.

5. Grove City College, Grove City, Pa.

6. U.S. Air Force Academy, Colorado Springs, Colo.

7. U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md.

8. Wellesley College, Wellesley, Mass.

9. Thomas Aquinas College, Santa Paula, Calif.

10. Calvin College, Grand Rapids, Mich.

11. U.S. Military Academy, West Point, N.Y.

12. Wesleyan College, Macon, Ga.

13. Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering, Needham, Mass.

14. City University of New York-Queens College, Flushing, N.Y.

15. Webb Institute, Glen Cove, N.Y.

16. Berea College, Berea, Ky.

17. Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.

18. City University of New York-Baruch College, New York.

19. Simmons College, Boston.

20. Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr, Pa.

Do you have any schools to add, to either category?

Susan Simpson

 


DARE – Does it keep kids off drugs?

DARE — To Keep Kids Off Drugs!dareshirt.JPG

I had the shirt with the slogan splashed across the front in bright red letters.

I had the round black button that said the same thing.

I can still hear the stern voice repeating it in commercials.

Because in the fifth grade, I was a graduate of the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program in a Texas school.

My husband, who’s from Massachusetts, also remembers going through the program when he was younger, and went on to be a DARE student teacher.

I reported on the program in today’s Oklahoman, and on the controversy over whether it’s effective.

Did you go through DARE? Did your children? Most importantly, do you think the program does what its name claims: help keep kids off drugs?

Wendy Kleinman
Education Reporter


New York, New York

When New Yorkers say that 90 degrees is sweltering, I’ll no longer look at our weather map of triple-digit temperatures and scoff.

Here, we go from an air conditioned house to an air conditioned car to an air conditioned workplace.

subway2.JPGIn New York City at an education seminar this past weekend, I went from an air conditioned hotel to a subway station more appropriately referred to as a sauna, then up the stairs to conquer a few more blocks of pavement before reaching my air conditioned destination.

All with my laptop bag on my shoulder. So heat is all relative. This is one of the things I learned at the Hechinger Institute’s seminar for new education reporters.

Lifestyle differences aside, I learned an incredible amount about reporting on education. I was an eager student for three days, absorbing everything I could from the speakers and taking copious notes for everything I could possibly need to review later on.

I want to share a few interesting notes with you.

Oklahoma singled out

First, Oklahoma got a shout-out in a session about prekindergarten.

Albert Wat with Pre-K Now cited the Sooner State in his presentation for having at least 70 percent of eligible students enrolled statewide. We’re one of only three states (Georgia and Florida are the others) to enroll more than 50 percent of all 4-year-olds.

He specifically talked about Tulsa, where a study showed that all races of students gained from one year of enrollment, and noted that Oklahoma pre-K teachers are paid equivalent to K-12 teachers, which he said doesn’t often happen.

skyline2.JPGA few degrees of separation

There was another Oklahoma tie in the presentation about academic rigor, even if by a stretch.

One of the two presenters was Jerry Weast, superintendent of Montgomery County Schools.

If that school district sounds familiar, it’s because that’s the last place John Porter worked before moving from Maryland to Oklahoma for his abbreviated tenure as superintendent of Oklahoma City schools.

Working in uni(s)on

Another highlight was hearing from Randi Weingarten, who was elected president of the American Federation of Teachers just five days earlier.

Weingarten advocated for “real collaboration” — politically and practically.

Politically, that means doing reform with teachers, not to teachers, she said. And practically, she’d like to see a collaboration of services that put after-school enrichment, medical clinics and parent help in the school building.

‘Physicians of the mind’

During the Q&A afterward, I asked Weingarten what she thought the union’s role is in recruiting enough teachers in the first place.

“In this instance, money does matter a lot,” she answered. After boosting starting teacher salaries in New York City by more than $5,000 in 2005, the hiring halls were filled and the number of uncertified teachers fell from 17 to 2 percent, she said.

Teachers want to be treated as professionals in their quest to better the lives of their students and the institutions in which they work, she said, adding that “teachers are physicians of the mind.”

Upon reflection

I’m thankful for the opportunities I had to learn from and network with experts and colleagues across the nation, and I can’t wait to start putting all my newfound story ideas and tips to work.

It was all made possible by the Hechinger Institute on Education and the Media at Columbia University’s Teachers College, which is supported by various philanthropies, including the well known Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

header-hechinger.jpg

Oh, and I’m also thankful I won’t have to wait in underground, un-air conditioned subway stations again any time soon.

Wendy Kleinman
Education Reporter


Getting his Kicks

bullitt2.jpgbullitt.jpgbenton31.jpgAndy Benton, a former Oklahoman and longtime president of Pepperdine University,  is on a journey of a lifetime.

And he’s packed some good tunes for the ride.

Benton is driving his 2008 Mustang Bullitt along Route 66 from Chicago to Malibu.

His goal? To explore expectations Americans in the heartland have about education, especially higher education.

Benton is board chairman of the American Council on Education, an advocacy group that hopes to influence both government and public opinion.

He’s bound to get lots of opinion on this trip. About education, about Route 66, about his car and certainly about his eclectic choice of music. Songs include “Life is a Highway” by Rascal Flatts,  the musical score from the movie Gettysburg and “Sunshine of Your Love” by Cream.

Here’s hoping he finds lots of sunshine on his way through Oklahoma tomorrow. I’ll be talking to him as he heads into Oklahoma City for a reception at the Skirvin Hotel with Pepperdine alumni.

In the meantime, you can check out his travel blog at http://www.pepperdine.edu/route66

 Susan Simpson, Education Writer


The crown stays at home

I was looking at school supplies yesterday for my 5-year-old, who starts kindergarten next month. I didn’t have a list of required items, but was temped to buy her some Disney Princess notebooks. Instead I e-mailed her principal about what she’d need.

Turns out that most parents at this school opt to give the teachers a minimal amount to buy the school supplies needed for the class. That way, all the kids have what they need, and there’s no bickering over who has the coolest stuff.

I like this idea, and I’m warming up to the idea of a school dress code; in this case, the kids wear basic shirts, pants and skirts in navy, white and khaki colors.

My daughter will still be my “pink-loving little princess,” she’ll just do most of her costuming at home.

What do you think about rules regarding dress codes and school supplies? Does such conformity squash individuality, or does it allow kids to focus more on the important stuff — learning.

Comment here or e-mail me at ssimpson@oklahoman.com

Susan Simpson, Education Writer


A teacher’s plea for help

Seven Oklahoma schools are in a national running for a $10,000 grant from Big Lots. A teacher at one of those seven schools — third-grade teacher Dawn Dilley at Putnam City’s Apollo Elementary — sent me an e-mail about it.

She hopes the school will get the money so they can build a fitness track, and wrote an essay and put together a 90-second video with some of the school’s students as part of the application.

Twenty-five runners-up will get smaller amounts of money; there are 100 schools nationwide all trying to win.

The thing is, online voters choose the winner, and she wants some help. Here’s what she told me in an e-mail.

Apollo’s is very important because we are considered a 100% Title 1 school. All our kids qualify and get free lunch & breakfast through a federal program. Now, due the economic issues facing our students, we don’t have a lot of PTA funds or giant fundraiser budgets to draw money from. We are also aware that kids in poverty have a higher rate of obesity and a lower rate of overall health. Knowing this, we applied for this grant to get our school a walking track. This grant would allow us to easily motivate our kids to get in shape and help the regular classroom teachers at our school comply with the OK Legislature’s new longer PE times, since we will be taking on this burden.

What I need from you is your vote and possibly the vote of all the people who read your education blog, or anyone else you know who might vote. I would also like to get the word out to support all OK educators. This competition costs nothing but 5 minutes of time from now through July 22nd.

It would be great if we could win, but it would be even greater if all 7 Oklahoma schools won some money.

Here’s how to vote: Go to www.lots2give.com. Use the drop-down menu to select Oklahoma, and Apollo Elementary’s video as well as the others will appear. Vote by clicking the “Vote for this school” button. People can vote up to three times a day through July 22, and you don’t have to watch the video each time.

Wendy K. Kleinman
Education Reporter


Binge Drinking in College

Does just going to college make you more likely to binge drink?

A national study followed students from early adolescence through their mid-20s and found that compared to their peers that never attended college, current college students were less likely to have been binge drinkers prior to their college years but more likely to binge drink once they entered college.

The researchers say this is probably the result of the college environment. Living in an environment in which drinking behaviors are promoted may increase binge drinking. Also, college students with a greater genetic risk consumed more alcohol per drinking episode.

What do you think? Is getting drunk and sloppy on weekends still a “rite of passage” for college students? It’s not harmless fun if you consider the auto accidents and even death that result from drunk driving, or the impact on relationships and studies.

Post a comment here or e-mail me your thoughts at ssimpson@oklahoman.com

Susan Simpson, Education Writer


Pizza, ice cream and security

Oklahoma City School Board members are in their executive session now, so it seems like a good time to share some things with you.

Among other action tonight, board members just approved a smorgasbord of contracts on a consent agenda, including one item worth up to $60,000 for food from Pizza Hut.

The list of consent items on tonight’s agenda is the longest I’ve seen yet — 135 items, compared to 34 at the board’s previous meeting. Board members approve all the items on the consent agenda with a single vote, unless someone wants to discuss a particular one separately.

Here’s a taste of the other types of contracts approved Tuesday:

ice-cream.jpgThe cheapest item is district membership to the Greater Oklahoma City Hispanic Chamber of Commerce with a maximum price tag of $125. The priciest is a contract with ONEOK Energy for $3,403,939.82 for natural gas.

Someone also had the bright idea to include light bulbs on the list.

Still, my favorite just might be the $90,000-maximum contract for “ice cream/novelties” from Blue Bell Creameries, which is, as their commercials say, “The best ice cream in the country.”

No disagreement there. In fact, that sounds pretty good right about now.

Wendy K. Kleinman
Education Reporter


Operation Clean Up

nic-gloves.JPGNo butts about it, Operation Clean Up was a smashing success today at Oklahoma State University.

OSU kicked off its first day as a tobacco-free campus by asking students and employees to pick up cigarette butts littering the Stillwater campus.

Here are the results:

– Approximately 26,667 cigarette butts were collected in one hour (10 pounds)

– This number translates to 293,337 minutes of life lost on campus due to premature death caused by tobacco use (as per British Medical Journal – one cigarette reduces life by 11 minutes – http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/extract/320/7226/53 )

– The “value” of the cigarettes $5,586.74 (average in Oklahoma is $4.19 per pack)

– Time spent smoking this number of cigarettes (assumes 7 minute average) = 186,669 minutes or 3111 hours

– The New York Times reports for each pack of cigarettes smoked, it costs the nation more than $7 in medical care and lost productivity. Based on this average, the number of butts collected today cost the nation $9331 in healthcare and lost productivity.

– Approximately 25 volunteers from across campus participated in the event.

Readers, make sure you check out our new blog by several OSUers trying to quit smoking. http://blog.newsok.com/quitting

 Susan Simpson


New Degree Programs

Looking to learn to write the great American novel?  Or to learn to teach others to write novels, poetry and nonfiction?

State Regents last week approved a new degree program at Oklahoma State University: a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing.

The graduate program aims to train the practicing writer/teacher and will begin enrollment in fall 2012. The Association of Writers and Writing Programs cited an increase in the number of jobs for writers, both in academic jobs and as self-employed or freelance.

The MFA in creative writing requires 42 to 45 credit hours.

Other new programs approved by State Regents are:

OSU-OKC: Associate in Applied Science in Dietetic Technology; East Central University, Ada: Master of Science in Accounting; Tulsa Community College: Associate in Applied Science in Computer Programming, Transaction Processing Facility and Certificate in Computer Programming, Transaction Processing Facility; and Western Oklahoma State College, Altus: Associate in Applied Science in Production Agriculture.