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1 In 5 Workers Laid Off In Past 5 Years Still Unemployed, Survey Finds

WASHINGTON — Twenty-two percent of workers laid off in the past five years are still unemployed, according to a new survey.

Posted by Sherwen Mohan

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The John J. Heldrich Center for Workforce Development at Rutgers University surveyed more than 1,100 workers, including nearly 400 who are unemployed. A slim majority of laid-off workers in the survey, or 54 percent, said they received unemployment insurance when they lost their jobs. However, 83 percent of those who received benefits said the compensation ran out before they found jobs.

Congress dropped extended unemployment benefits at the end of last year, despite complaints from Democrats and a few Republicans. Last week House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), who refused to allow a House vote reauthorizing the benefits, said that some unemployed people want to “just sit around” instead of trying to work.

The number of long-term unemployed in the country has fallen to 3 million, down from a high of 6.6 million in 2010. While some are finding jobs, others are no longer counted as unemployed because they’ve given up looking for work. Economists are unsure how much the decline in long-term joblessness owes to people finding jobs.

The Rutgers findings are consistent with a recent U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics report on displaced workers, which found that among the 9.5 million workers laid off from January 2011 through December 2013, nearly a quarter remained unemployed in January of this year.

The BLS survey is a bit more positive than the Rutgers report because it shows some progress in recent years. Compared with its previous displaced workers survey in 2012, the government’s latest data show that more laid-off workers had gotten new jobs at the time of the survey. Among displaced workers who had lost jobs they’d held for more than three years, a majority of the re-employed were earning more money than in their previous positions — up from 46 percent in the previous survey.

HuffPost has been telling our readers’ stories about unemployment and bad pay. Have a story you’d like to share? Email us at workingpoor@huffingtonpost.com or give us a call at (408) 508-4833, and you can record your story in your own words. Please be sure to include your name and phone number.

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Teaching Google Natives To Value Information

Terry Heick from Te@chThought is one of the most prolific and insightful writers in education today. This article, published in Te@chThought on September 22, 2014 gives a great perspective on essential skills the Google Generation need. Enjoy!

Posted by Sherwen Mohan

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The usual term is a digital native–students born into our digital, connected, and uber-social world who have always had Wikipedia to ask questions, and Google to bail them out.

There is nuance to this phenomenon that can distract a bit from the big picture. As with so many complex issues, it is tempting to over-generalize things—claims that 21st century students need to be taught with 21st century tools, or raging against the machine and forcing students to use books, dammit.

Both extremes miss the point that while neurological functions may not change, how students access, use, share, and store information is. This makes 21st century thinking simply different whether we acknowledge it or not.

The Solution

There is no solution. There is no single way to respond to a changing world—no correct path that we all can take to make digital rainbows jump out of the monitor and color the room in brilliant, perfect spectacle. But we can slow down for a moment, look at some trends, and respond with some good old-fashioned diversity.

The most immediate and relevant trends is that students use Google quite a bit. In fact, we all do, to the tune of over 5,000,000 searches every single day (if my own Googling skills haven’t failed me). That number’s almost impossible to fathom or appreciate. Did we all pour into public libraries by the billions when we were young? Or did we just not ask so many questions?

Our Response

Borrowing for a moment from basic business principles, if supply-demand ratio contributes to value, in an increasingly broadband, social, and digitized world, information itself is in danger of losing apparent value, yes?

Put another way, the easier something is to access, the less it is valued. It still may be useful, but the process of seeking information—one so full of learning potential in and of itself—is replaced by smarter keyword searches, and improvement by Google of their own search engine algorithm.

None of this is bad in and of itself, but in the long-run it provides students with the convenient and troubling misconception that searching for information is a waste of time that needs to be circumvented by “smarter searching.”

And worse, it creates an illusion where the packaging and popularity of information determines its relative value, rather than its credibility, insightfulness, or relevance. This is not to say that students should spend hours lost in dusty old libraries pouring over out-of-date information because by golly that’s what we had to do. But it does suggest the possible need to re-impress upon digital natives the importance of thinking in absence of endless—and endlessly accessible–data sources.

(So help me if I see one more student type full-on and open-ended questions into Google, I’m going to pull a Henry David Thoreau and go sit in the woods and chew on tree bark for the next five years.) So then, 10 strategies for you and your classroom to help students think before they search, more naturally contextualize information, improve how they use information once they’ve found it, and ultimately better appreciate the value of information.

Or that’s the idea anyway. They’ll probably Google a way out of it.

10 Strategies To Encourage Digital Natives To Value Information

  1. It sounds counter-intuitive, but periodically create information-scarce circumstances that force students to function without it.
  2. Illuminate—or have them illuminate—the research process itself.
  3. Do entire projects where the point is not the information, but its utility.
  4. Use think-alouds to model the thinking process during research.
  5. Create single-source research assignments where students have to do more with less.
  6. Change the assignment mid-course by demanding new resources other than those most accessible.
  7. Create the need for “open-ended data” they can’t possibly Google.
  8. Have them create a visual metaphor, analogy, or concept map before and after the research process that demonstrates the role that Google, and Google-sourced information, played.
  9. Have students create a concept-map or other clever characterization for the limits of Google (or any other search engine).
  10. Use a balance of both post primary and secondary sources.

Image attribution flickr user tulanepublicrelations and khamtran; Teaching Google Natives To Value Information

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Marzano’s 9 Instructional Strategies In Infographic Form

Bob Marzano is known for, above all else, identifying “what works,” and doing so by reviewing and distilling research, then packaging it for schools and districts to use. Among his most frequently quoted “products” is the “Marzano 9?–9 instructional strategies that have been proven by research to “work” by yielding gains in student achievement. This September 18, 2014 article by  Dr. Kimberley Tyson and Te@chThought staff  turns the nine instructional strategies into infographic form.

Posted by Ian Jukes

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In education, louder than the call for innovation, engagement, thought, or self-direction is the call to be research-based.

In fact, being research-based may even trump being data-based, the two twins of modern ed reform. The former stems, in part, from deserved skepticism of trends that have little evidence of performance, and the latter comes from a similar place. The big idea behind the both is “proof”–having some kind of confidence that what we’re doing now works, and that because of both data and research, we can more or less nail down what exactly it is that we’re doing that works or doesn’t work, and why.

To be clear, being data or research-based isn’t anywhere close to fool-proof. So many of the modern trends and innovations that are “not grounded in research,” or don’t “have the data to support them” suffer here not because of a lack of possibility, potential, or design, but because of research and data itself being sluggish in their own study and performance.

But this is all way, way beside the point–a long-winded contextualizing for Robert Marzano’s work. Marzano is known for, above all else, identifying “what works,” and doing so by reviewing and distilling research, then packaging it for schools and districts to use. Among his most frequently quoted “products” is the “Marzano 9?–9 instructional strategies that have been proven by research to “work” by yielding gains in student achievement.

And so Dr. Kimberly Tyson thought to gather these nine instructional strategies into infographic form because like moths to a flame, teachers to infographics.

Marzano’s 9 Instructional Strategies  

  1. Identifying similarities and differences
  2. Summarizing and note taking
  3. Reinforcing effort and providing recognition
  4. Homework and practice
  5. Non-linguistic representations
  6. Cooperative learning
  7. Setting objectives and providing feedback
  8. Generating and testing hypotheses
  9. Cues, questions, and advance organizers

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Example Blog Post

sixteen-nine

Why Magnetic Headlines Are Crucial for Your Posts

Welcome to Rainmaker. This is a sample post to get you started on your journey. Don’t forget that your headline is the most important aspect of writing a great post, and getting readers to read your opening paragraph. The first four to six sentences of your post are critical, because if you don’t hook your audience, they will get bored and click away. What is the benefit you will provide readers that you promised in the title? Be sure to describe the signs of the problem you will offer a solution to toward the end of your post.

Use subheads to improve readability and gather interest

Here you can begin to describe the underlying causes of the problem you have the solutions to, using persuasive arguments and great storytelling, and readers will have no choice but to read more.

Subheads help readers scan your content quickly

Bullet points are helpful to keep your copy reader-friendly, and a proven standard for making a solid argument:

  • Tell a great story, but don’t over-write it. Be authentic!
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Subheads draw readers’ attention to your call to action

When you provide real solutions and insights for your prospects and customers, you build trust and authority that will allow you to deepen the conversation further with an opt-in or call-to-action. Sign up here! This is where a compelling call to action makes it clear to your readers what they need to do next to implement your solution. Good luck!