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Archive for the ‘Education’ Category

School is back in session, always…

Tuesday, September 20, 2011 @ 10:09 AM

Everyone involved with a school schedule has probably by now settled into a routine.  It always takes a while to get logistics set up for any family involved with a new school year.  Our school-age patients are a little short on numbers at the very start and end of each new school year.  Once people develop their unique program, it becomes necessary to negotiate, with relative comfort, a successful program for week after week that they can soon relax, exhale, and follow the plan.

At our home, that is a typed daily transport schedule for the 2011-2012 school year.  Each child is listed on a daily time roster, who transports who, and to where, and by when.  And, with multiple children in multiple schools, the schedule can at first seem hectic and confusing.  However, with larger numbers of children, the demand for a clear plan becomes more and more necessary.

With the importance of scheduling, comes the exceptions:  doctor’s appointments, orthodontic’s and dentist’s appointments, eye doctors, etc.  Schedules are made to be broken, or so it seems.  Time outside school can also be educational, as can transport.  Hours of education can be added to a child’s education while being transported.  Siblings or drivers can quiz each other on spelling, multiplication, tables, etc.  Think of it, if just one concept was studied on each trip.

I once told a teacher, who was perturbed with me for taking my child out of school,  that I was taking my daughter out of school on an educational outing and I said, “I think education is more important than school.”  I would not recommend that comment to anyone, since teachers do operate most effectively with everyone present.  My point, however, is if a child must be removed from school, have it be a learning experience.  Ask them to report one thing that they learned by questioning their doctor, orthodontist, dentist, eye doctor, etc., about something they may not have learned in school.  All professionals have much to offer in terms of education.  If you must take off school, then make it an educational outing.  Ask good questions.  The quality of one’s life is measured by the quality of one’s questions.  Ask thoughtful questions and…

Keep smiling!

Dr. James G. Hood

 

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Dental Care Associates of Spokane Valley, P.S.
Family and Cosmetic Dentistry Welcomes Patients
from Age 2 to 102!

James G. Hood, D.D.S., M.A.
507 North Sullivan Road, Suite A-1
Spokane Valley, WA 99037-8576  USA
Phone: (509) 928-9100  |  Fax: (509) 928-0414
Email: drhood@drhood.com

Websites: www.drhood.com
www.dentalcareassociatesofspokanevalley.com

Blogs: www.drjamesghoodblog.com
www.dentalhealthandnutritionblog.com
www.dentalcareassociatesofspokanevalleyblog.com
www.jamesandkarenhoodfoundationblog.org
www.sjogrensblog.org

Online Store: www.dentalhealthandnutritionstore.com

Celebrate Teacher Appreciation Week!

Tuesday, May 3, 2011 @ 11:05 AM
Author: Sibella

Since 1984, the National PTA has set aside the first week of May to celebrate Teacher Appreciation Week. Join in the festivities this May 1-7 by helping your children plan a surprise for their teacher or purchase a meaningful gift for them, or drop a line to your own favorite college professor to let them know how they have had an impact on your life. On the PTA’s website, you can find many resources to help you plan a fantastic TAW, including posters and stickers, ideas for events and activities, certificates of appreciation, and more.

National Teacher Day is part of this week-long celebration. Since it always falls on the Tuesday of Teacher Appreciation Week, this year it is May 3. The first Teacher Day was celebrated in 1953, after a nine year campaign by Arkansas teacher named Mattye Whyte Woodridge to create such an observance. However, it was not celebrated again until the National Education Association, in particular its Kansas and Indiana chapters, lobbied Congress for a national day to celebrate educators in 1980. Congress passed it, and for the next 5 years Teacher Day was celebrated on March 7, until the creation of Teacher Appreciation Week when the date of Teacher Day was changed to correspond with the week-long festivities.

People in the educational field have some of the most important but under-appreciated jobs in our country. They work long hours dealing with sometimes unruly and stubborn children, and must constantly find new and creative ways to reach out to their students. Their dedication to educating current and future generations of Americans is nothing short of heroic, and we owe them our gratitude and admiration. Furthermore, we should not forget the many supportive roles performed by administrative staff, principals, teacher’s aides, cafeteria workers, and janitors in our schools, for they too contribute to the education and betterment of our children. We should express our appreciation for these diligent people far more often than we do, so please take a moment this week to find a way to thank the teachers in your life and the lives of your children.

The American Dental Association

Friday, April 22, 2011 @ 09:04 AM
Author: Sibella

The American Dental Association is the oldest and largest dental association in the world. Founded in 1865, the ADA is widely recognized as the best source of information, dental product recommendations, and oral health advocacy by both dentists and patients alike.

The ADA also has a charitable foundation that raises money to provide scholarships for dental students, fund research in various areas of dental science, bring oral hygiene education programs into schools, and provide disaster relief supplies. Learn more about the ADA Foundation here.

The 2011 Annual Session of the ADA will be held from October 11-13 in Las Vegas, bringing together leaders in dental practice, research, academics and industry to present more than 260 continuing education courses over four days. Condoleezza Rice is this year’s Distinguished Speaker, and there will be a special reception for new dentists and dental students as well as a world marketplace exhibition, presentations on the latest dental technology, and educational courses on a wide range of oral hygiene topics, even a live demonstration of dental surgery techniques. The ADA Annual Session is a great opportunity for members of the dental community to network and keep up-to-date in their profession. Registration is open now.

For the average person outside the dental profession, the ADA offers a wealth of resources on their website that enables you to find a dentist in your area, a comprehensive A-Z list of topics that will address almost every question anyone could have about dental procedures and health, information on dental insurance and financing, tips for dealing with dental emergencies, and more. There are also ADA programs for educators, children, and employers that address the specific needs and viewpoints of each of these groups.

The ADA Seal of Acceptance is perhaps the most well-known facet of the organization, for many Americans recognize the logo immediately as a sign of reliability, safety, and efficacy in dental products. Started in 1930, the Seal of Acceptance program researches and rigorously tests consumer dental products before approving them. Today, over 300 products carry the Seal’s logo. You can find a comprehensive list of these products as well as information about the history of the program, what guidelines are used, and how products are evaluated here.

As a member of the American Dental Association, Dr. James G. Hood is committed to serving his patients with the best quality dental care, up-to-date technology and techniques, and continuing oral hygiene health through the advocacy of home care and education.

School Talks on Dental Health Education

Thursday, October 14, 2010 @ 02:10 PM
Author: Bipasha

James G. Hood, D.D.S., M.A. and his staff  offer school talks to provide dental health education to children and teenagers ages 3 to 18.  Dr. James G. Hood and his staff are professionally trained in all aspects of dentistry and provide educational talks and seminars in the local community and school system.

If you would like to request a member of the staff of Dental Care Associates of Spokane Valley to speak to your children or teenagers about dental health education, please contact us at:

Dental Care Associates of Spokane Valley, P.S.

Family and Cosmetic Dentistry

James G. Hood, D.D.S., M.A

507 N. Sullivan Road Suite A-1

Spokane Valley, WA 99037-8576 USA

Phone: (509) 928-9100 / Fax: (509) 928-0414

Another Incentive to Stay in School: Let’s go America!

Wednesday, September 1, 2010 @ 01:09 PM
Author: James G. Hood

Many English Speakers Cannot Understand Basic Grammar

ScienceDaily (July 6, 2010) — Research into grammar by academics at Northumbria University suggests that a significant proportion of native English speakers are unable to understand some basic sentences.

The findings — which undermine the assumption that all speakers have a core ability to use grammatical cues — could have significant implications for education, communication and linguistic theory.

The research, conducted by Dr Ewa Dabrowska, showed that basic elements of core English grammar had not been mastered by some native speakers.

The project assumed that every adult native speaker of English would be able to understand the meaning of the sentence:

The soldier was hit by the sailor.”

Dr Dabrowska and research student James Street then tested a range of adults, some of whom were postgraduate students, and others who had left school at the age of 16. All participants were asked to identify the meaning of a number of simple active and passive sentences, as well as sentences which contained the universal qualifier “every.”

As the test progressed, the two groups performed very differently. A high proportion of those who had left school at 16 began to make mistakes. Some speakers were not able to perform any better than chance, scoring no better than if they had been guessing.

Dr Dabrowska comments: “These findings are ground breaking, because for decades the theoretical and educational consensus has been solid. Regardless of educational attainment or dialect we are all supposed to be equally good at grammar, in the sense of being able to use grammatical cues to understand the meaning of sentences.

“Of course some people are more literate, with a larger vocabulary and greater exposure to highly complex literary constructions. Nevertheless, at a fundamental level, everyone in a linguistic community is supposed to share the same core grammar, in the same way that given normal development we can all walk.”

The supposition that everyone in a linguistic community shares the same grammar is a central tenet of Noam Chomsky’s theory of universal grammar. The theory assumes that all children learn language equally well and that there must therefore be an underlying common structure to all languages that is somehow “hard-wired” into the brain.

Dr Dabrowska has examined other explanations for her findings, such as limitations to working memory, and even so-called “test wiseness,” but she concluded that these non-linguistic factors are irrelevant.

She also stressed that the findings have nothing to do with intelligence. Participants with low levels of educational attainment were given instruction following the tests, and they were able to learn the constructions very quickly. She speculates that this could be because their attention was not drawn to sentence construction by parents or teachers when they were children.

She adds: “Our results show that a proportion of people with low educational attainment make errors with understanding the passive, and it appears that this and other important areas of core grammar may not be fully mastered by some speakers, even by adulthood.

“These findings could have a number of implications. “If a significant proportion of the population does not understand passive sentences, then notices and other forms of written information may have to be rewritten and literacy strategies changed.

“What’s more, the existence of substantial individual differences in native language attainment is highly problematic for one of the most widely accepted arguments for an innate universal grammar: the assumed ‘fact’ that all native speakers of a language converge on essentially the same grammar. Our research shows that they don’t.”

Dr Dabrowska presented her findings in a keynote lecture at the UK Cognitive Linguistics Association Conference on July 7.

Article courtesy of http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/07/100706082156.htm

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