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RESEARCH
General
Education
EARLY
CHILDHOOD
Project supplies ready advice on
preschool years, learning standards
Craig
Chamberlain, Education Editor
(217) 333-2894; cdchambe@uiuc.edu
8/1/02
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Photo
by Bill Wiegand
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| Dianne
Rothenberg, co-director of the ERIC Clearinghouse on Elementary
and Early Childhood Education, and colleagues have developed
the Illinois Early Learning Project, which offers online assistance. |
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CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. Parents, teachers and caregivers of young children have
plenty to worry about, and the approach of another school year often
heightens their anxiety. They know a child's early years can be key
to development and school success.
What they're looking for is easy-to-get, to-the-point advice, by Web
site, e-mail or phone. So much the better if it's directly tied to a
state's learning standards, offered in several languages, and based
on years of experience providing research-based information to teachers
and parents.
The Illinois Early Learning
Project is such a place, according to its team of developers, who
also operate the ERIC Clearinghouse on Elementary and Early Childhood
Education, based at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
The project was initiated and funded by the Illinois State Board of
Education (ISBE), working with Futures for Kids, an initiative of Lura
Lynn Ryan, the wife of Gov. George Ryan. The University of Illinois
team won the $320,000 grant to develop IEL.
Since going online last November, IEL also has gone on the road. Staffers
travel throughout the state to conduct presentations and workshops.
They also work through schools, health centers and other agencies to
promote the Web site and other services and materials. Included among
those are periodic online chat sessions with experts on topics of interest
and IEL's short, easy-to-read tip sheets.
"All of our experience leads us to believe that for Web sites to
become part of the household set of resources, you need more than just
a Web site, you need print materials, you need this face-to-face introduction
of it," says Dianne Rothenberg, co-director of the ERIC clearinghouse
along with Lilian Katz, a professor emerita of education at Illinois
and an oft-cited expert on early childhood issues.
The tip sheets deal with topics of wide interest to caregivers of young
children: "Is My Child OK?" "Hes Teasing Me!"
"Getting Ready to Read," "Getting Ready for Kindergarten."
Most of the tip sheets, as well as many of the project's other resources,
are written in Spanish as well as English, for the benefit of Illinois'
many Spanish-speaking parents, Rothenberg said. IEL also employs a Spanish
translator part-time to deal with questions that come in by phone or
e-mail. Materials are being translated into Polish, for use by the Polish-speaking
population in Chicago.
The early learning project fits well at the University of Illinois because
it builds on similar efforts at the ERIC clearinghouse over the past
35 years, all directed at making information readily available to teachers,
parents and caregivers.
The clearinghouse, for instance, is the home of the National Parent
Information Network (http://npin.org),
itself almost a decade old and the winner of numerous awards for its
parenting-related resources. NPIN produces a bimonthly online newsletter,
"Parent News," and recently published a "Violence Prevention
Resource Guide for Parents."
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