Saturday, August 3, 2013

This Saturday in Science (Education)

Blogger's Note: Pottstown Schools Information Minister John Armato pointed this one out to us,from our sister paper, The Times-Herald.

Several Potrstown elementary school teachers are in the midst of receiving direct, hands-on training from scientists with Arkema Inc. in how to teach certain scientific principles in the classroom this year.

For the 18th year, Arkema, a chemical company with research centers spread across the world, will hold its “Science Teacher Program” to combat deficiencies in teaching.

“Arkema developed the Science Teacher Program in 1996 to address a negative trend discovered while interviewing teachers in elementary and secondary education: teachers did not enjoy teaching and were not adequately equipped to teach hands-on science,” a release from the company said.

Teachers choose kits focusing on different science subjects that they will want to teach about in the fall and receive training in those specific areas.

From Thursday through Sunday, the first set of teachers are going through the specific kits they chose at the Arkema King of Prussia Research Center.

Andrea Hunsberger and Nicola Alutius, from Pottstown School District’s Barth Elementary School, are working on a variables science kit, Jamie Fazekas and Allen Ferster, of Pottstown’s Rupert Elementary School, are going through animal studies, and Patti Grzywacz and Donna Kehs, from New Hanover Elementary School in the Boyertown Area School District, are going over motion and design.

Also from Rupert Elementary, Rebecca Wyatt is going over a measurement kit with Sally Jenkins, of Pottstown’s Lincoln Elementary School.

Starting Aug. 5, John Slichter, from Upper Providence Elementary School of the Spring-Ford Area School District, will also receive training from Arkema scientists.

His training will end Aug. 8.

“Arkema’s Science Teacher Program is all about empowering teachers in an age where strict school budgets and curriculum often deny access to the world of science, said Arkema Vice President of Research and Development Ryan Dirkx.

More than 800 teachers took part in the program since it began in 1996, benfefitting more than 50,000 students across the country, according to Arkema.

Friday, August 2, 2013

That's Music to our Ears

Blogger's Note: This news from MC3 really hits the right note.

Montgomery County Community College will be offering expanded music courses at its West Campus in Pottstown this fall.

MCC West Campus on College Drive
"We continue to offer general interest music courses, such as the very popular Music Appreciation, a survey of Western Music History, and Fundamentals of Music, an introductory course in music literacy. But now, thanks to the completion of our Music Keyboard Laboratory, we can offer piano classes and music production classes," says Associate Professor and Coordinator of Music Andrew Kosciesza. "All the classes are open to the public; you do not have to be a music major to enroll.”

The curriculum includes four levels of piano instruction, from beginner to advanced. Classes are taught using touch-sensitive Clavinova digital piano keyboards. Students receive individualized attention and have access to the lab for practice time outside of class.

The North Hall of MCC in Pottstown on High St.
The lab is also equipped with state-of-the-art PROTOOLS digital production hardware, and an array of music production software packages. In the Digital Music classes, students will learn the techniques of recording, sequencing, mixing, and mastering high-quality digital audio materials.

"Of course, we are also offering more traditional classes as well," Kosciesza says. "Like our guitar classes and the West Campus Choir."

Classes are led by highly skilled musicians with advanced degrees and extensive professional experience.

"We are thrilled to have Vincent Ryan come on board as our director for the West Campus Choir," Kosciesza said.

Ryan is well-known in the Pottstown and surrounding communities. 

He serves as the Minister of Music at Advent Lutheran Church, Harleysville, where he directs and oversees the church’s five musical ensembles. Previously, he was organist and choirmaster at The Hill School in Pottstown. He has composed or arranged more than 265 works for a wide variety of solo instruments, ensembles, and choirs.

Also, MCCC’s Piano and Digital Music classes are taught by Howard Gordon, who has been an active musician in the Philadelphia area for more than 20 years. 

He is an experienced studio musician, working extensively with Grammy-nominated producer David Ivory, and has performed session work at Dylanava Studios, Sigma Sound, Studio 4, Philadelphia International Records and numerous other recording studios in the Philadelphia area.

Gordon is a graduate of Philadelphia’s University of the Arts with a master’s degree in Jazz Performance with concentrations in composition and music technology. He also is a recipient of the Steinway Award for Outstanding Pianistic Ability, Musicianship, and Artistic and Academic Scholarship, as well as the National Academy of the Recording Arts and Sciences Award for Excellence.

Guitar classes are led by Dr. Michael Simmons, who holds a Bachelor of Music degree in Guitar
Performance from The University of the Arts, a Master of Music degree in Guitar Performance and Music History from Temple University, and a Doctor of Musical Arts in Music Education from Boston University.

Additionally, he was the winner of the 1993 Philadelphia Classical Guitar Society Competition and a finalist at the 1995 National Guitar Summer Workshop Concerto Competition. 

As a member of the Philadelphia Classical Guitar Trio, he has performed both nationally and internationally, including at the 1999 Festival Internacional de Guitarra de Puerto Rico and the Third Encuentro Internacional de Guitarra Panamá 1999. In addition to teaching guitar and music history at MCCC, Simmons serves as the Fine Arts Department Chair at the Woodlynde School in Strafford, Pa.

To register now for fall classes, visit mc3.edu.

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Meeting Marigold at the Library

Photo by Evan Brandt
Marigold the opossum, bottom, looks for snacks during a visit Wednesday to the Pottstown Regional Public Library.


During these warm summer days, you never know what you might find when you walk into the Pottstown
Regional Public Library.

Wednesday morning, it was a presented from the Academy of Natural Sciences who brought a friend named Marigold for the children to meet.

The children were taught that the opossum is North America's only marsupial and that they have adapted well to cities like Philadelphia because.

1) They are nocturnal and sleep during the day.

2) There are lots of places to hide during the day.

3)) It is slightly warmer in the city than outside the city.

3) There are plenty of food sources, including garbage.



This is just one of many summer programs the library runs both on and off-site.

Earlier this month, we brought you this post of a program the library ran at a summer camp at Ringing Rocks Elementary School.

At the building, the Science in the Summer program, sponsored by GlaxoSmithKline recently wrapped up.

Click here to see Mercury photos of the program.




There are still programs running in August. You can click here for a link to the complete library list.




Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Youth Conference Latest Example of a Church on the Move

Dr. Victor Wyatt, from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, center, was among the presenters at Bethel AME's first-ever Youth Conference held over last weekend and taught students about the science of fats and oils.





Over the weekend, Bethel African Methodist-Episcopal Church held it's first-ever Youth Conference featuring speakers and presenters not only on religious subjects, but also about science and social issues.

A few examples included career planning, parent and youth challenges, the science of fats and oils and understanding your potential.

In addition to Dr. Wyatt, the conference also welcomed Anthony Stevenson, a principal from the Radnor School District, Johnny Corson, 2011 graduate of The Hill School and a junior at Boston College, as well as Dwight Lamar, named best gospel and McDonald's Gospel Fest award winner, who was a guest solist.

Also performing were the newly formed Youth Choir.

"We were attempting to bring the youth off the streets for two days into various workshops, seminars, fun and games," said Bethel AME Pastor, the Rev. Dr. Vernon Ross. "We will even have workshops designed to help parents deal with the challenges of their youth." 

He said the youth conference is just the latest of several church initiatives.

"We have many food programs and we just started a youth choir and we are having health fairs on Sundays, the men are taking their ministry to the nursing homes, and people of all background, experiences, and color are joining the Church," Ross said. 

"We gave out five scholarships to high school graduates last year and they are all in college doing great. We gave out two scholarships this year and they plan to start college this fall," Ross said. "We are starting alcohol and drug abuse ministry, retention ministry, and prison ministry."

The church is also preparing a new capital campaign drive for the next phase of its new church project.

An artist's rendering of the plans for a new Bethel AME Church.

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Living History Month at Pottsgrove Manor

Gunsmithing




Cooking
Step into the past at Pottsgrove Manor and enjoy an afternoon learning about colonial trades and pastimes.

On August 4, 11, 18, and 25, 2013 from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m., Pottsgrove Manor’s living history volunteers, dressed in colonial period clothing, will be living life the 18th-century way.

Activities will include hearth cooking, needlework, quilting, tape weaving, gunsmithing, hornsmithing, and country dancing. 

 Visitors can watch, learn, and even join in fun! Activities will vary from week to week, so call ahead or check Pottsgrove Manor’s webpage at www.montcopa.org/pottsgrovemanor to find out what activities will be offered that day.

A donation of $2 per person is suggested for this program. 
Hornsmithing
Guests can also tour the museum’s current exhibit, “Forging a Lifestyle: Ironworking with the Potts’ Family,” during their visit.

The exhibit can also be viewed during a guided tour of Pottsgrove Manor during regular museum hours now through Nov. 4, 2013. 

Regular museum hours are Tuesday to Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sunday from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.. Tours are given on the hour. 

The last tour of the day begins at 3 p.m. The site is closed Mondays and major holidays. 

Groups of ten or more should pre-register by calling 610-326-4014.

Pottstown Manor is located at 100 West King Street near the intersection of King Street and Route 100, just off Route 422.

Dancing
Pottsgrove Manor is operated by Montgomery County under the direction of the Parks, Trails, and Historic Sites Division of the Assets and Infrastructure Department. 

For more information, call 610-326-4014, or visit the website at www.montcopa.org/pottsgrovemanor. Like Pottsgrove Manor on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pottsgrovemanor.

Monday, July 29, 2013

The Rights Stuff

Molly Girard with Guidance Counselor and the Advisor 
for the Gay Straight Alliance Jen Arnst
With the news last week that the first same-sex couple to obtain marriage licenses in Pennsylvania hailed from and were issued licenses by Montgomery County, a national debate about marriage and equal rights for non-traditional couples has become a very local story.

But Loreen Bloodgood and Alicia Terrizzi are not the only people on the front line of this issue.

Molly Girard, who graduated in June from Owen J. Roberts High School, will be honored Aug. 8 at the National Libery Museum in Philadelphia as part of the the Young Heroes Award ceremony for her work pushing for more rights and understanding for lesbian, gay, bi-sexual, trans-gender citizens.

The award honors young people who have championed liberty through civic engagement, conflict resolution, promoting diversity and school or community leadership.

All winners receive recognition at an awards ceremony at the Museum; a certificate of recognition, medallion and gifts; and a plaque featuring their story in the Museum's Young Heroes Exhibit. 


Here is why she is being honored:

One of the most dedicated members of the Owen J. Roberts Gay Straight Alliance Club, Molly sits on the Executive Officer Board. 


According to her nomination, she has been a huge motivating force behind their ability to reach out to faculty in other schools. After a discussion with staff addressing anti-lgbt language and bullying, Molly and her peers arranged to visit other buildings to help educate staff about LGBT issues and sensitivity to differences. 

So far they've visited the middle school and all elementary schools in the district. 

They coordinated scheduling the visits and planning the presentations and training her peers on running break out portions of the workshop. 

Outside of school, Molly has promoted LGBTQ student equality and understanding and presented at the first annual Rainbow Connection Student Leadership Conference at West Chester University. She presented to student leaders from other high school GSA clubs there.

Sunday, July 28, 2013

Religion's Greatest Hits

So I have a confession to make.

For a guy who is not religious, I am fascinated by religion.

It's power to bring people together, and to divide them into warring factions is unparalleled in human history and if the week I had last week is any indication, the debate isn't going to get resolved any time soon.

Of course, resolving a debate on religion is an oxymoron because despite the many things religion is, it is not something that can be debated to a finite end.

It is, after all, about faith. And by its very nature, faith is not something that can or needs to be proven to be true. That is contrary to its nature, which is the belief in something for which there is no empirical proof.

(Although, I should point out that I think arguably most religions have some kind of "proof," usually in the form is miracles, but that's a whole different subject I think.)

Religion brings society many worthwhile things that often get overlooked by smug-faced, know-it-all agnostics such as myself.

It sets the boundaries of behavior, what's basically right, basically wrong; It creates a structure within which
Mother Thersa
we can find a place and feel like we belong to something larger than ourselves.

Religion also creates a place and framework for ritual, something I think we human beings need more than we realize, to give us that sense of continuity.

Religion is also the source of countless good works, the kinds of things of which history makes little note; caring for the elderly, helping the poor and hospitals for the sick, taking in unwanted children.

The overall impact of these millions upon millions of acts of kindness and love over the course of religion's history always should be weighed in its favor and, if you're being objective, may well put religion in the overall positive column when balanced against its many more notorious offspring.

The Crusades was outright warfare of religious conflict
One need not look too hard through the pages of history to find examples of religion dividing and hurting people: the Crusades, the Spanish Inquisition, Jihad, the split between Suni and Shia, the 100-Years War, the Holocaust, the Salem witch trials (in which, if family lore is to be believed, one of my distant ancestors was tried and convicted) the list goes on and on -- and so millions died because of religion.

These conflicts are most often the result of perhaps the least admirable aspect of religion, righteousness; when faith leads to surety and then intolerance for those who don't agree with your truth, and then to one's "obligation" to spread the "truth" you are so sure is right to others, often whether they're willing to hear it or not.

It's a kind of "my God's better than your God" mentality that often pervades our history.

On some level, it's easy to understand such zealotry.

After all, I would imagine the the faithful are very excited about having found what, for them, is "the answer" and faith, giving them surety, they want to pass it on to others.

The problem, of course, springs from those others resisting the "truth" being brought to them, which casts doubt, or derision, on the truthfulness of the message brought by the bringer.

Well, we can't have that can we, not if we're going to be true to our beliefs?
Roger Williams, the founder of Rhode Island, was exiled from Boston for

espousing different religious views. He was renown for living peacefully
with the native Americans.

Result? Conflict; conflict which is, ironically, often at odds with the very teachings of both sides of the conflict. Ah well, human beings. Can't live with 'em.....

For a time, I think, it seemed that the founding of the United States held out hope for a break in this cycle of religious conflict.

Although the first residents to the North American shores came in pursuit of America's true religion -- profit -- by the time the Pilgrims landed on Plymouth Rock, after shooting a few natives on Cape Cod, the tradition of seeking religious freedom in America had been born.

(Of course, the Pilgrims in Boston had apparently failed to learn tolerance from their experience in England and exiled more than a few of their own members for coming up with their own religious interpretations. And so we gained Rhode Island. I'll leave it to you to decide if we come out ahead as a result of that....)

But the religious freedom which marked America was primarily a freedom to practice Christianity how you wished, and the other religions, well, OK if they were quiet about it.

It was from a desire to avoid Europe's religious wars that the founders sought to separate church and state.

So here in America, we talk about the conflict between religion and politics whereas in many places, Iran for example, the two are one and the same.

And it is from this tension between church and state that we arrived at the two stories last week that have me musing about religion.

The first is hard to miss -- Montgomery County's decision to insert itself into the nation's same-sex marriage debate by issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples.

At issue is a Pennsylvania law, similar to its federal sibling which the Supreme Court found to be unconstitutional, which defines marriage to be between a man and a women.

For the most part, the foundation of this law is a religious one, and the people who turned out at the courthouse Friday to protest it, did so largely on religious grounds.

The second might have escaped your notice because of the first; it was a story about Pottsgrove principal Bill Ziegler's religious radio show.
Mercury Photo by John Strickler
Bill Ziegler

I admire Ziegler not only for being true to his beliefs but also for not foisting them on the unwilling, and for crafting a show that, for the most part, is designed to help Christians peacefully co-exist and thrive in public schools where religious practices can be fraught with Constitutional pitfalls.

The First Amendment protects the rights of Ziegler and the protesters and I was pleased to see that not only did the protesters not harass the same-sex couples coming in the courthouse to get their marriage licenses, but that many of the couples expressed their support for the protesters right to voice their opinion.

I think public opinion is shifting in favor of same-sex marriage, and so far, the change seems to be occurring with little to no violence, something about which I am infinitely grateful.

I suspect its mostly a demographically driven change, the next generation sees it as no big deal.

Perhaps its time we learned from our children.

As for Bill Ziegler, I think that the conversation about religion's proper space in the public sphere will be going on for a much longer time.

As a non-religious person, I feel my frame of reference for understanding western civilization and its history has been handicapped by not being more familiar with the Bible.

(I am still smacking myself, figuratively, for not taking a course in college called "The Bible as Literature" because it might have closed that gap, but let's face it, we don't always make smart choices as college students.)

Like it or not, the Bible is THE major cornerstone of our society and people's fear of allowing its importance and contents to be taught in public schools for fear of the evangelizing that might happen, means schools will not be teaching about what is perhaps the single most important cultural touchstone of western civilization.

And that's a shame.

I wonder sometimes if we could ever walk that line, but my confidence is not high.

Nonetheless, I will confess something else, I am enjoying the conversation.