Blogs from Ellen Gannett - /WCW-Blog-Bloggers/Authors/Egannett Sat, 03 May 2025 08:02:43 -0400 Joomla! - Open Source Content Management en-gb Middle School Expanded Learning Opportunities: 20 Years and Growing /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Middle-school-expanded-learning-opportunities-20-years-and-growing /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Middle-school-expanded-learning-opportunities-20-years-and-growing A few weeks ago we recognized Middle School Month--dedicated to re-emphasizing the importance of middle school programming and the unique developmental needs of adolescents. The National Institute on Out-of-School Time (NIOST) has worked with many concerned educators and policy makers over the years to ensure that middle school children have quality opportunities. Eric Schwarz, CEO and founder of Citizen Schools, has been one of the most dynamic partners in his work. Recently, he announced plans to step down from his role as the organization that serves low-income, at-risk middle school students approaches its twentieth anniversary. Back in the mid 1990s, specialized afterschool programs for middle school youth were virtually unknown. But Eric had a vision that paved the way for a not only a new area of programming, but a body of knowledge and research that stressed the importance of giving low-income middle school students the skills and access to learning...

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Women Change Worlds Tue, 15 Apr 2014 08:31:15 -0400
Is Grit Another Name for Resiliency? /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Is-grit-another-name-for-resiliency /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Is-grit-another-name-for-resiliency

Over the past few months, in my role as the Chair of the American Camp Association’s (ACA) Task Force on Non-Cognitive Skills, I have been immersed in the research and popular literature on what journalist-author Paul Tough calls “non-cognitive skills.” Numerous discussions, papers, books, and organizations have surfaced that are creating a great deal of confusion about what we are actually talking about. From Angela Lee Duckworth of the University of Pennsylvania, who uses the term “grit,” to Ellen Galinsky’s Mind in the Making, to the Partnership for 21st Century skills, to CASEL's work on Social and Emotional Learning, I have become overwhelmed with the attention this issue is currently receiving. But what exactly are we all talking about? Is nomenclature getting in the way of a shared understanding of the “it”? Several labels or terms have been used (grit, life skills, applied skills, executive function, emotional intelligence, non cognitive skills,...

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Women Change Worlds Wed, 14 Aug 2013 14:54:26 -0400