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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Michelle Obama links movement to better test scores

Michelle Obama links movement to better test scores:


Michelle Obama links movement to better test scores

(Manuel Balce Ceneta/Associated Press  )
First Lady Michelle Obama                          (Manuel Balce Ceneta/Associated Press)
First lady Michelle Obama, in an interview with SiriusXM host B. Smith being aired to mark the third anniversary of her “Let’s Move” campaign, said that allowing students to get up and move around helps them concentrate better and get better test scores.
Here are some quotes from the interview on “The B. Smith and ‘Thank You Dan’ Show” on SiriusXM Urban View, channel 128, first aired Tuesday and again Wednesday:
B. Smith: This month marks the third anniversary of your “Let’s Move!” initiative.  Congratulations on that. That is so important.
Michelle Obama: Thank you.  We are excited every day, but we really try to take the time on the anniversary to really take a step back, look at where we have come because we still have work to do.  We’re still dealing with one in three kids in this country that are 

AT&T's lousy lessons for kids


No, ATT, more is not always better than less, and faster isn't either, and neither is bigger — even if your ads to promote phones with 4G say so, in staged conversations with kids, no less.
It's not that I'm not charmed by the kids, which I'm not. It's the crass messages in these ads, in which an adult sits with a group of kids who are asked whether they think more is better or bigger is better or faster is better. Of course they do, Like the adorable little girl who says, "It's better to be fast to not be bitten by a werewolf and then you'll be turned into one and then you will have to stay in and then you will have to be shaved because you are too hot "
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Biggest study ever says KIPP gains substantial

KIPP, previously known as the Knowledge Is Power Program, has had more success than any other large educational organization in raising the achievement of low-income students, both nationally and in the District. But many good educators, burned by similarly hopeful stories in the past, have wondered whether KIPP were for real.
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