Michigan Chronicle

Local

31st Metro Detroit Youth Day set for July 17 on Belle Isle

Community 06-18-2013 Hits:107 Michigan Chronicle Staff - avatar Michigan Chronicle Staff

31st Metro Detroit Youth Day set for July 17 on Belle Isle

  Metro Detroit Youth Day celebrates youth, focuses on reducing crime, and emphasizes education The 31st annual event takes place Wednesday, July 17 on Belle Isle WARREN – (June 13, 2013) – For more than 30 years, Metro Detroit Youth Day (MDYD) has welcomed Detroit’s youth for a day of encouragement, fun, guidance, and to award college scholarships. On Wednesday, July 17 from 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., Belle Isle will host more than 34,000 students from Flint to Windsor, and Ypsilanti to Detroit. “The main goal of Metro Detroit Youth Day is to reduce crime and bullying by bringing together metro Detroit’s youth for a day of positive experiences, fun and constructive activities, sports workshops, exposure to Michigan’s colleges and universities, and much more,” said Ed Deeb, co-founder and chairman, of Metro Detroit Youth Day; and chairman of the Michigan Food and Beverage Association. Deeb added, “When we started Metro Detroit Youth Day 31 years ago, it was to instill peace in the community following altercations. It is truly a success story about people and organizations working together for harmonious relationships and a better community. We must continue to work together to also protect our youth and inspire them to do the most good.” This year’s event features workshops, clinics, entertainment, contests, dignitaries, and more, including the following: Reduce Crime With an emphasis on reducing crime, MDYD will offer four workshops for students focused on student and general crime, health and wellness, anti-bullying, and entrepreneurship. Sports MDYD will include sports clinics including martial arts, golf, tennis, weight lifting, boxing, track and field, football, basketball, and more. New to Metro Detroit Youth Day this year are partnerships with The Detroit Pistons and the NFL Alumni Detroit Chapter/Gridiron Institute. The NFL Alumni Detroit Chapter and the Gridiron Institute have partnered with the 2013 MDYD to present their 2013 Youth Football Clinic for metro...

Read more

Thrill of victory: Success among many feels better

Community 06-18-2013 Hits:63 Michigan Chronicle Staff - avatar Michigan Chronicle Staff

Thrill of victory: Success among many feels better

  Success feels good, but it is better when people win in big groups—even if the chance of success is the same, a new University of Michigan report indicates. Researchers found that people feel happier and more satisfied if their accomplishment is against competitors in larger groups than identical success among smaller groups. "Success among larger pools is associated with more positive emotional reactions because people perceive the performance as more indicative of real superiority," said Ed O'Brien, the study's lead author and a U-M doctoral student in social psychology. In other words, the win against many competitors represents their "true" abilities, not an outcome that might be described as a "fluke" with fewer individuals seeking victory, O'Brien said. O'Brien and Linda Hagen, a doctoral student in marketing at U-M's Ross School of Business, conducted five studies to understand people's reaction to victories depending on the number of competitors in different scenarios, holding constant the chance of success. In one experiment, participants read about a runner who placed in the top 10 percent of a race with few (20) or many (20,000) competitors, and estimated how happy he felt. They also rated how prestigious they thought the race was. The results indicated that participants thought the runner would be happier placing among the top 10 percent in a race with many runners, as well as consider it a prestigious race compared with the smaller event. Using the same race example, another experiment asked participants to rate what they thought the runner would infer about his true running abilities after the victory and winning future races. The participants thought the runner's victory against many people was significantly representative of his real running abilities and future success than the same win versus fewer people. "These findings suggest...

Read more

NATIONAL PROGRAM OFFERS INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY INTERNSHIPS (AND JOBS) TO LO…

Community 06-18-2013 Hits:161 Michigan Chronicle Staff - avatar Michigan Chronicle Staff

NATIONAL PROGRAM OFFERS INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY INTERNSHIPS (AND JOBS) TO LOW INCOME YOUNG ADULTS

  Nationwide (BlackNews.com) -- Year Up is a one-year, intensive training program that provides low-income young adults, ages 18-24, with a combination of hands-on skill development, college credits, and corporate internships. Their program emphasizes academic and professional rigor, setting expectations high for quality of work and professional behavior. A strong structure guides students through the steps necessary for achieving success in the classroom and the workplace. For the first six months of the program, students develop technical and professional skills in the classroom. Students then apply those skills during the second six months on an internship at one of Year Up's 250+ corporate and government partners. Students earn up to 23 college credits and a weekly stipend, and are supported by staff advisors, professional mentors, dedicated social services staff, and a powerful network of community-based partners. Since its founding in 2000, Year Up has served over 6,000 young adults. For more details on how to apply, visit: www.findinternships.com/2013/06/year-up-it-internship.html To search hundreds of other internship programs, visit: www.FindInternships.com  

Read more

Detroit's Michigan Science Center to unveil new 'Science of Rock 'n' Roll' …

Community 06-18-2013 Hits:100 mlive staff - avatar mlive staff

Detroit's Michigan Science Center to unveil new 'Science of Rock 'n' Roll' exhibit

  DETROIT, MI - Get ready to rock at the Michigan Science Center. The museum, at 5020 John R, will unveil to the public Thursday a new exhibit called "The Science of Rock 'n' Roll" that show visitors how science and technology have changed the way music is made today. The exhibit is expected to included "a series of fun, engaging musical displays" and all visitors to "create their own compositions, remix famous songs and even use state-of-the-art technology to record themselves as singing, guitar playing and drumming rock stars," according to a press release. For complete story click here

Read more

Apple joins Facebook and Microsoft in revealing US surveillance requests

News Briefs 06-18-2013 Hits:52 theGauardian staff - avatar theGauardian staff

Apple joins Facebook and Microsoft in revealing US surveillance requests

  Tech giant promises that iMessage, FaceTime, location details and Siri requests remain private in effort to reassure customers. Apple has joined rivals including Facebook, Google and Twitter in calling on the US government to allow it to publish more details of the secret court orders its receives to disclose customers' information. The company gave more details of its dealings with US authorities Monday as it sought to reassure customers in the wake of the scandal surrounding the National Security Agency's Prism surveillance program. For complete story click here

Read more

Michigan Consumers may Save due to SCOTUS decision

Community 06-18-2013 Hits:103 Michigan Chronicle Staff - avatar Michigan Chronicle Staff

Michigan Consumers may Save due to SCOTUS decision

  AARP: Supreme Court Decision May Save Money for Michigan Consumers on Prescription Drug Costs AARP is hopeful a U.S. Supreme Court decision today will end pay-for-delay prescription drug agreements that cost consumers and taxpayers billions of dollars a year in Michigan and across the nation. Pay-for-delay agreements involve brand name and generic drug manufacturers entering into arrangements that pay the generic drug manufacturer to delay bringing its lower-priced alternative to market. This practice not only denies consumers access to lower-cost treatment options as soon as possible, but also prevents competition, said Joyce Rogers, AARP Senior Vice President, Government Affairs. AARP, which filed an amicus brief in the case, is pleased the High Court’s decision recognizes that pay-for-delay arrangements may violate antitrust laws, Rogers said. Given that in Michigan more than 120 million prescriptions were filled in 2011, pay-for-delay agreements for Lipitor and other drugs (including other popular prescriptions like Nexium, Plavix, Provigil and Cipro) can hit consumers in their pocketbooks. In 2011, Michigan had about 1.2 million uninsured people. “The delay and lack of low-cost options reverberates throughout the health care system – including Medicare and Medicaid – and is especially burdensome for consumers,” Rogers said. “AARP is hopeful this decision will lead to an end to such agreements and that ultimately courts will find them anticompetitive and illegal, promoting more competition and helping reduce prescription drug costs for programs like Medicare and Medicaid as well as for consumers and other payers of health care.” Ending these harmful agreements is an example of a responsible way to reduce Medicare costs without cutting benefits or forcing seniors and future retirees to pay more. AARP has long advocated for ending these agreements that excessively extend patent monopolies and can result in patients foregoing needed treatment because of the high cost of brand name drugs. These agreements also artificially inflate health...

Read more
A+ A A-

DPS Board Is Pathetic

200pxschoolchldrn1

There is no better word to describe the lame excuses, finger-pointing and irrelevant self-focused testimony provided in Lansing last Thursday by Detroit Board of Education members, their interim superintendent, and their small but regrettably vocal band of supporters, whose existence and claim to fame is owed fully to the confusion, ineptness, and unfocused world that this board has created and festered for more than four years now.


If you listen to these people, you’d believe that they have had absolutely no role in, no tools at their disposal to correct, and no responsibility whatsoever for the academic emergency facing our schoolchildren. That, my friends, is BS.


Granted, Detroit’s test scores did not all of a sudden hit the crapper within this time frame solely. And the well documented societal, family, emotional, cultural, medical and economic frameworks our kids find themselves in makes the job all the more tough. Further, it is well known that turning a fully loaded freighter or ocean liner around, particularly in tight straights is not something one can do on a dime. Moreover, there is blame sufficient blame to be spread about.


But those stepping forward and elected to lead our schools, in office now for some 1,470 days have had ample time to develop plans, build a community constituency, and put those plans in place. To bluster forward now, to suddenly see the light, to get religion when threatened with losing what minor control legal purists may still be bestowing on them, is too little, too late. Robert Bobb, in less than a quarter of that time, has on the financial side of the house put controls in place, developed cost-savings plans while retaining essential and valuable services, and basically shown the kind of take-charge, no- nonsense leadership that a sizable majority of the citizens seem to embrace as the solution they have been looking for.


The Board did not have to wait this long to develop its plans. In fact, it could have stepped into office, day one, with the blueprints laid out by the hundred or more community members, as drafted by the Governor’s Transition Team. Board members could have embraced the constructive criticism of peer district officials submitting reports under the Council of Great City Schools in several operational areas as well as curriculum and academics. It should have heeded nearly 90 audit findings in changing the way it and the district did business. In fact, in each of these cases, the Board not only did not follow these recommendations, they arched their figurative backs in a manner that suggested to all that they knew better and, make no mistake, they were in charge.


In charge they were, and they failed. Failed so much so that these staggering statistics compiled by DPS now face our children, our schools, and our community:


•    More than 10 percent of the entire student body, and at the ninth grade as many as 25 percent of the students, are not promoted to the next grade.
•    More than a third of the district’s high school students are overage for their current grade.
•    A mere 58 percent of the students graduate on time. 27 percent drop out.
•    Forty-two percent of the students read at grade level.
•    More than two-thirds of the schools do not make adequate yearly progress.
•    Sixteen percent of the students are absent on an average day.
•    Detroit Public Schools students score an average of 15.6 on the American College Testing (ACT) program, well below the national average of 21.1.
•    MEAP reading, writing, math, science and social studies scores are each 22-29 percent below the state average.


This is in addition to the devastating national test scores, released in December, that show 69 percent of the district’s 4th graders and 77 percent of the district’s eighth graders earning a score of “below basic.”


Standing before the state legislature and cheering because DPS fields such top-notch schools as Renaissance and Cass misses the point entirely. Surely there are success stories within DPS. Clearly some students are moving on to college well prepared and flush with scholarship and grant offers. Undoubtedly one can attend a school performance or assembly and witness outstanding singers and dancers, superb orators and fine poets.

Surely there are scholar athletes who should be our heroes. We are well aware of those. This newspaper arguably does a better job of chronicling these achievements year-round than any other media in town.


But the overall grade is an F. And it’s time for this community and the state legislature to make the needed changes to raise that grade. Putting the tools necessary in the hands of Robert Bobb and his academic deputy, Dr. Barbara Byrd-Bennett, is the most obvious solution and the one that can be implemented most quickly.

Digital Daily Signup

Sign up now for the Michigan Chronicle Digital Daily newsletter!

Trending Topics

Free Digital Edition

Powered by Real Times Media  © 2009 - 2015 • All rights reserved • Website Developed by ETECH Design Studio

Register

User Registration
or Cancel