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Summer Camp!
Monday, 26 April 2010 19:10

Monday, April 19, 2010

Summer Camp - Here We Come!


Know that your child is having fun in a summer program designed to be safe and nurturing. One staff person to every ten children; fully air-conditioned, state-of-the art location, incorporating programming built on The 7 Habits of Happy Kids by Sean Covey.


For incoming grades K-5:
6-weeks, July 6-August 13
Monday - Friday, 9:30 am - 2:30 pm
Increments of two weeks, $250/session

Extended Day Available: 2:30 - 5:30 pm
2 weeks - $100; 4 weeks - $200; 6-weeks -$300

For incoming grades 6-8:
Sports Camp
6-weeks, July 6-August 13
Monday - Friday, 9:00 am - noon
Increments of two weeks, $150/session

Attend NYCID summer camp at the new Staten Island School of Civic Leadership (PS 861), located at 280 Regis Drive, Staten Island, NY 10314.

For more information on rates and registration, call (718) 947-4148 or email This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .


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ACE ~ GED BUDGET CUTS
Wednesday, 31 March 2010 18:31

The NY Center's ACE program partners with the College of Staten Island helping out of school youth complete their GED and prepare for the world of work. Budget cuts are taking their toll on this program.


Reprinted from the SI Advance. Photo of Cristine Quinn, from AP

State seeks to cut $$ for GED testing | - SILive.com: "From the Print Edition »
State seeks to cut $$ for GED testing
By Amy Padnani
March 22, 2010, 2:12AM

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- State officials have proposed a drastic cut in funding for GED testing, making it difficult for Staten Islanders to gain access to an already beleaguered system.

The proposal comes weeks after City Council Speaker Christine Quinn vowed to help thousands more people across the city realize the benefits of a GED, a certification of high school-level academic skills, through a three-tiered outreach plan.

'It's a pretty devastating cut for not a lot of savings,' said Council Speaker Christine Quinn. 'And it will have a tremendous impact on people's ability to take the tests.'
According to officials, the state Board of Regents proposed a $1.5 million, or 38 percent, reduction in funding, to $2.4 million from $3.9 million, to help close the state's $9 billion budget deficit. The money is typically used to reimburse testing centers for the cost of renting classrooms, hiring proctors and other administrative tasks.

'It's a pretty devastating cut for not a lot of savings,' Ms. Quinn said. 'And it will have a tremendous impact on people's ability to take the tests.'

NO OTHER PLACE

A spokesman from the state Education Department said there was no other place to trim their budget.

'There aren't any other measures that we can take at this time,' said Jonathan Burman, the spokesman. 'Terminating the contracts is painful for all, but we thoroughly vetted all alternatives and this was our only option.'

Last year, 55,796 people across the state took the GED, 2,317 of them from Staten Island, according to Burman. Of those, 48 percent passed.

Though it costs centers $20 to process each exam, there is no charge to people who want to take it. That means people repeatedly taking the test without studying for it, contended Donna Grant, director of the adult learning center at the College of Staten Island, which issues 97 GED exams per year and has a waiting list of 150 applicants. People are only allowed to take the tests three times per year.

Many times, Ms. Grant said, people will take a practice test and find that they're at a third- or fourth-grade reading level. But instead of enrolling in a basic education, they sign up to take the test and fail.

'People are taking the test who are not prepared to take the test,' Ms. Grant said. 'I think the state feels, in the financial straits they are in right now, to continue to pay $20 per test, particularly for people who are going to take the test over and over and over again who are not in a prep program, that it's sort of ridiculous. I see the state's side, I really do. But there are states that charge a fee of test candidates so they wouldn't be so quick to take the test again every time they fail.'

Ms. Grant said rather than cutting funding, there should be a push to get people into prep programs. Without that, testing centers are liable to offer fewer tests, making it harder for people -- dedicated or not -- to find a way to take them.

It's already difficult for borough residents to find a place to take the exam, said Prince Cobbina, a personal advocate with the Achievement in Career and Education program, a GED prep program based at CSI.

'We have to outsource students to Brooklyn and Manhattan,' he said. 'It's going to make it hard for us. It takes so much motivation just for them to come to classes, then we have to send them across the water to take the GED.'"

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Posted By Ruth Wahtera to
NY Center for Interpersonal Development at 3/22/2010 12:14:00 PM

 
Mediation and Housing
Wednesday, 10 March 2010 21:53

 

Your opportunity to learn about mediation and housing

David Ramsey, Associate Mediation Manager at the NY Center for Interpersonal Development will present a program open to the public for the Staten Island Housing Court Task Force.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

5:00 -7:00 pm

 

David's presentation will include:

  • How to use mediation to resolve landlord/tenant disputes outside of Housing Court
  • Choices you have during mediation, in and out of court
  • Other types of disputes mediation can resolve
  • More...including all your questions

 

Location: Seamen's Society for Children & Families

50 Bay Street, Staten Island, NY 10301


RSVP Mahkeddah

 

 
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