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Juice Plus+®
Juice Plus+...The Next Best Thing
Juice Plus+ is the simple, convenient, and inexpensive way to add more nutrition from fruits and vegetables to your diet, every day.
Studies Prove: Taking Juice Plus+ is the next best thing to eating fruits and vegetables.
Juice Plus+ provides nutrition from 17 different fruits, vegetables, and grains. Each ingredient is specially selected to provide you with a wide range of nutritional benefits.
Juice Plus+ contains not only a much wider variety of naturally occurring vitamins than vitamin supplements, but it also contains other phytonutrients, antioxidants, and nutrients -- even some of the fiber -- found in the fruits and vegetables it's made from. These nutrients work together in combination to provide you more of the nutritional benefits of eating healthful whole foods.
Take Juice Plus+ for a healthy life!!!
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- San Diego: Pioneer Day School
- San Diego: Sunny Days
- San Diego Kid's Yoga/Kidspiration Physical Therapy
- Elizabeth McCoy, Esq., Special Needs Trusts, etc.
- El Cajon: St. Madeleine Sophie's Center
- Pasadena: Foothill Autism Assoc.
- San Diego: OT Etc, Excel Speech Therapy, and PT in Motion
- North County: Training Education & Research Institute, Inc. (T.E.R.I.)
- North County: Golden Steps, OT
- Thousand Oaks: Pause4Kids
- San Diego: Exceptional Family Resource Center
- Autism Research at the UCSD
- San Diego Regional Center
- Southern CA: Ability Awareness
- Coachella Valley Chapter, ASA
- San Diego Treatment Network
- Central California Chapter, ASA
- Los Angeles Chapter, ASA
- San Francisco Chapter, ASA
- Ventura County Chapter, ASA
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I never endorse anyone or anything. Opinions expressed in what I send out, may not be shared by me. Everything is for informational purposes only.
People who "advertise" through this newsletter have never been checked out by me. This includes professionals and even people who are interested in babysitting, etc.
Please take the time to throughly check out anyone and everyone that will be working with or caring for your child. We are all sadly aware, through news stories and word of mouth, of people who pray upon special needs children because of their extra vulnerability.
Thank you,
Valerie Dodd-Saraf
Check out my new website!
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Autism Research Institute ENewsletter
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click below
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read here |
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CMA Testing (Ca Modified Assessment)
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Hi everyone! Thanks to two wonderful Jennifers (you know who you are!) it has come to my attention that there is another test out there, the California Modified Assessment otherwise called the CMA. It looks like this was put into action in November of 2007. The CA Dept of Ed's information on this can be found at:
http://www.cde.ca.gov/ta/tg/sr/documents/cmaparticipcr iteria.doc
Thank you for sharing this information!
Lucile
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No, Vaccines Aren't Behind the Rise in Autism
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I have hesitated to wade into this acrimonious public debate. Yet my family has gotten forwarded HuffPo columns that hype the supposed link between vaccines and autism. As a public health researcher and as a caregiver, I take umbrage.
I should say at the outset that I have never in any way taken a dime from a vaccine manufacturer. I should also that I accept the need to closely regulate the vaccine industry. Four million children are born in America every year. Most greatly benefit from vaccination. There are a small number of real tragedies in which some vaccine harms specific children.
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read on |
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The Autism Group expanding to Sacramento Area
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The Autism Group, Inc. is expanding to the Greater Sacramento area! We are currently accepting new clients who wish to begin a Relationship Development Intervention (RDI®) Program or who are interested in learning more about the program. We are willing to travel as well so please specify your location. For additional information, please visit our website www.theautismgroup.com, email aolts@theautismgroup.com or call (858) 342- 5990. We look forward to hearing from you!
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Autism Intervention Workshop by Dr. Arnold Miller March 29-30
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Autism Intervention Workshop by Dr. Arnold Miller March 29-30
Come see an internationally renown pioneer in autism intervention and the founder of one of the most successful schools for autism for the last 45 years.
Dr. Miller developed his compelling method during 45 years of clinical practice as a psychologist, and its success has been documented in such award- winning films as Edge of Awareness and Come Back, Jack.
Dr. Miller's method works for children across the autistic spectrum, but his most impressive achievements were with the kids toughest to treat--the children who came to his school with no language, catastrophic emotions, and an inability to cope with any change. Families from all over the United States and Canada moved so their children could attend Dr. Miller's school, The Language and Cognitive Development Center, and many of the children achieved meaningful language and social interaction.
Visit www.MillerinSanDiego.org for more info and great videos!
If you would like Dr. Miller to meet your child and give a consultation (no cost) fill out the form on the website.
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NCCSE CAC Excellence in Special Education Award Nominations are Open!
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Nominations for the NCCSE Community Advisory Committee Excellence in Special Education Awards are open! Everyone is encouraged to take a few minutes to nominate someone who has made a difference in the life of children who receive special education services. Nominations can be made in the categories of: general education teacher, special education teacher, administrator, support personnel, provider of designated services, collaborative teams, community agency personnel, parent, and student. The deadline for nominations is March 21, 2008.
Nomination forms are available in English and Spanish at the top of the NCCSE website home page at www.nccse.org.
Nominations will be confirmed via letter, award recipients will be selected in April, and nominators will be notified at that time as to whether their nominee was selected to receive an award.
The Awards Ceremony will be held on June 2, 2008 at the San Marcos Civic Center Community Room from 6:30 - 8:00 pm. Please save the date now and come help to celebrate the people who show excellence in the support of our students. We hope to see you there!
Lisa Houghtelin, Parent Liaison
North Coastal Consortium for Special Education
255 Pico Avenue, Suite 101
San Marcos, CA 92069
760-761-5120
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Looking for Barbers/Hairstylists for kids with autism
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Hi, I'm looking for resources in the community for barbers/hairstylists that are good with young autistic children (approx 3-7 years old). Do you have any recommendations? I was referred to you by the San Diego Autism Society.
Thanks.
Jeni Shur
Case Manager
Home Start, Inc.
(619) 692-0727 ext. 135
(619) 692-0785 fax
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Including Samuel
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Please come to a screening of the new film
Including Samuel
A Documentary by Photojournalist Dan Habib
WHAT: A San Diego-area screening of the new documentary, Including Samuel.
WHERE: University of San Diego, Mother Rosalie Hill Hall Auditorium (Room 116), 5998 Alcalá Park, San Diego, CA 92110. This theatre is fully accessible. Directions and locations can be found at www.sandiego.edu/directions.
WHEN: Friday, April 4th, 2008, 6:30 p.m.-8:30 p.m. Following the screening, there will be a Q&A discussion with director Dan Habib.
RESERVATIONS: The screening is $10 per person and open to the public, but space is limited and reservations are strongly recommended. To reserve, call (619)260- 7667 or visit: www.includingsamuel.com/screenings
Including Samuel, a documentary by nationallyrenowned photojournalist Dan Habib, examines the social and educational inclusion of youth with disabilities. The 55-minute film is built on the story of Habib's own family as they work to include Samuel, 7, in all facets of school and community. Including Samuel also features four other families with varied inclusion experiences, plus interviews with dozens of teachers, young people, parents and disability rights experts.
SCREENING HOSTED BY USD Compass Family Center
SCREENING SPONSORED BY United Cerebral Palsy of San Diego County
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ASA Launches "Bounce for Autism" this April!
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New Nationwide Event to Raise Awareness, Support Families Affected by Autism
ASA and Pump It Up, the nation's largest and fastest- growing franchise of giant indoor inflatable playgrounds for private parties, are pleased to announce the launch of "Bounce for Autism," a new nationwide, community-based fundraising event that combines family fun with raising awareness and support for autism.
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OFF TOPIC: What Makes Finnish Kids So Smart?
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A good friend sent me this article and I found it interesting and I thought I would share. -Val
WSJ: Finland's teens score extraordinarily high on an international test. American educators are trying to figure out why.
By ELLEN GAMERMAN
February 29, 2008; Page W1
Helsinki, Finland
High-school students here rarely get more than a half- hour of homework a night. They have no school uniforms, no honor societies, no valedictorians, no tardy bells and no classes for the gifted. There is little standardized testing, few parents agonize over college and kids don't start school until age 7.
Yet by one international measure, Finnish teenagers are among the smartest in the world. They earned some of the top scores by 15-year-old students who were tested in 57 countries. American teens finished among the world's C students even as U.S. educators piled on more homework, standards and rules. Finnish youth, like their U.S. counterparts, also waste hours online. They dye their hair, love sarcasm and listen to rap and heavy metal. But by ninth grade they're way ahead in math, science and reading -- on track to keeping Finns among the world's most productive workers.
The Finns won attention with their performances in triennial tests sponsored by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, a group funded by 30 countries that monitors social and economic trends. In the most recent test, which focused on science, Finland's students placed first in science and near the top in math and reading, according to results released late last year. An unofficial tally of Finland's combined scores puts it in first place overall, says Andreas Schleicher, who directs the OECD's test, known as the Programme for International Student Assessment, or PISA. The U.S. placed in the middle of the pack in math and science; its reading scores were tossed because of a glitch. About 400,000 students around the world answered multiple-choice questions and essays on the test that measured critical thinking and the application of knowledge. A typical subject: Discuss the artistic value of graffiti.
The academic prowess of Finland's students has lured educators from more than 50 countries in recent years to learn the country's secret, including an official from the U.S. Department of Education. What they find is simple but not easy: well-trained teachers and responsible children. Early on, kids do a lot without adults hovering. And teachers create lessons to fit their students. "We don't have oil or other riches. Knowledge is the thing Finnish people have," says Hannele Frantsi, a school principal.
Visitors and teacher trainees can peek at how it's done from a viewing balcony perched over a classroom at the Norssi School in Jyväskylä, a city in central Finland. What they see is a relaxed, back-to- basics approach. The school, which is a model campus, has no sports teams, marching bands or prom.
Trailing 15-year-old Fanny Salo at Norssi gives a glimpse of the no-frills curriculum. Fanny is a bubbly ninth-grader who loves "Gossip Girl" books, the TV show "Desperate Housewives" and digging through the clothing racks at H&M stores with her friends.
Fanny earns straight A's, and with no gifted classes she sometimes doodles in her journal while waiting for others to catch up. She often helps lagging classmates. "It's fun to have time to relax a little in the middle of class," Fanny says. Finnish educators believe they get better overall results by concentrating on weaker students rather than by pushing gifted students ahead of everyone else. The idea is that bright students can help average ones without harming their own progress.
At lunch, Fanny and her friends leave campus to buy salmiakki, a salty licorice. They return for physics, where class starts when everyone quiets down. Teachers and students address each other by first names. About the only classroom rules are no cellphones, no iPods and no hats.
Fanny's more rebellious classmates dye their blond hair black or sport pink dreadlocks. Others wear tank tops and stilettos to look tough in the chilly climate. Tanning lotions are popular in one clique. Teens sift by style, including "fruittari," or preppies; "hoppari," or hip-hop, or the confounding "fruittari-hoppari," which fuses both. Ask an obvious question and you may hear "KVG," short for "Check it on Google, you idiot." Heavy-metal fans listen to Nightwish, a Finnish band, and teens socialize online at irc-galleria.net.
The Norssi School is run like a teaching hospital, with about 800 teacher trainees each year. Graduate students work with kids while instructors evaluate from the sidelines. Teachers must hold master's degrees, and the profession is highly competitive: More than 40 people may apply for a single job. Their salaries are similar to those of U.S. teachers, but they generally have more freedom.
Finnish teachers pick books and customize lessons as they shape students to national standards. "In most countries, education feels like a car factory. In Finland, the teachers are the entrepreneurs," says Mr. Schleicher, of the Paris-based OECD, which began the international student test in 2000.
One explanation for the Finns' success is their love of reading. Parents of newborns receive a government- paid gift pack that includes a picture book. Some libraries are attached to shopping malls, and a book bus travels to more remote neighborhoods like a Good Humor truck.
Finland shares its language with no other country, and even the most popular English-language books are translated here long after they are first published. Many children struggled to read the last Harry Potter book in English because they feared they would hear about the ending before it arrived in Finnish. Movies and TV shows have Finnish subtitles instead of dubbing. One college student says she became a fast reader as a child because she was hooked on the 1990s show "Beverly Hills, 90210."
In November, a U.S. delegation visited, hoping to learn how Scandinavian educators used technology. Officials from the Education Department, the National Education Association and the American Association of School Librarians saw Finnish teachers with chalkboards instead of whiteboards, and lessons shown on overhead projectors instead of PowerPoint. Keith Krueger was less impressed by the technology than by the good teaching he saw. "You kind of wonder how could our country get to that?" says Mr. Krueger, CEO of the Consortium for School Networking, an association of school technology officers that organized the trip.
Finnish high-school senior Elina Lamponen saw the differences firsthand. She spent a year at Colon High School in Colon, Mich., where strict rules didn't translate into tougher lessons or dedicated students, Ms. Lamponen says. She would ask students whether they did their homework. They would reply: " 'Nah. So what'd you do last night?'" she recalls. History tests were often multiple choice. The rare essay question, she says, allowed very little space in which to write. In- class projects were largely "glue this to the poster for an hour," she says. Her Finnish high school forced Ms. Lamponen, a spiky-haired 19-year-old, to repeat the year when she returned.
Lloyd Kirby, superintendent of Colon Community Schools in southern Michigan, says foreign students are told to ask for extra work if they find classes too easy. He says he is trying to make his schools more rigorous by asking parents to demand more from their children.
Despite the apparent simplicity of Finnish education, it would be tough to replicate in the U.S. With a largely homogeneous population, teachers have few students who don't speak Finnish. In the U.S., about 8% of students are learning English, according to the Education Department. There are fewer disparities in education and income levels among Finns. Finland separates students for the last three years of high school based on grades; 53% go to high school and the rest enter vocational school. (All 15-year-old students took the PISA test.) Finland has a high- school dropout rate of about 4% -- or 10% at vocational schools -- compared with roughly 25% in the U.S., according to their respective education departments.
Another difference is financial. Each school year, the U.S. spends an average of $8,700 per student, while the Finns spend $7,500. Finland's high-tax government provides roughly equal per-pupil funding, unlike the disparities between Beverly Hills public schools, for example, and schools in poorer districts. The gap between Finland's best- and worst- performing schools was the smallest of any country in the PISA testing. The U.S. ranks about average.
Finnish students have little angstata -- or teen angst -- about getting into the best university, and no worries about paying for it. College is free. There is competition for college based on academic specialties -- medical school, for instance. But even the best universities don't have the elite status of a Harvard.
Taking away the competition of getting into the "right schools" allows Finnish children to enjoy a less- pressured childhood. While many U.S. parents worry about enrolling their toddlers in academically oriented preschools, the Finns don't begin school until age 7, a year later than most U.S. first-graders.
Once school starts, the Finns are more self-reliant. While some U.S. parents fuss over accompanying their children to and from school, and arrange every play date and outing, young Finns do much more on their own. At the Ymmersta School in a nearby Helsinki suburb, some first-grade students trudge to school through a stand of evergreens in near darkness. At lunch, they pick out their own meals, which all schools give free, and carry the trays to lunch tables. There is no Internet filter in the school library. They can walk in their socks during class, but at home even the very young are expected to lace up their own skates or put on their own skis.
The Finns enjoy one of the highest standards of living in the world, but they, too, worry about falling behind in the shifting global economy. They rely on electronics and telecommunications companies, such as Finnish cellphone giant Nokia, along with forest-products and mining industries for jobs. Some educators say Finland needs to fast-track its brightest students the way the U.S. does, with gifted programs aimed at producing more go-getters. Parents also are getting pushier about special attention for their children, says Tapio Erma, principal of the suburban Olari School. "We are more and more aware of American- style parents," he says.
Mr. Erma's school is a showcase campus. Last summer, at a conference in Peru, he spoke about adopting Finnish teaching methods. During a recent afternoon in one of his school's advanced math courses, a high-school boy fell asleep at his desk. The teacher didn't disturb him, instead calling on others. While napping in class isn't condoned, Mr. Erma says, "We just have to accept the fact that they're kids and they're learning how to live."
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