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Education

More education linked to better cognitive functioning later in life

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Written by: Kathleen Maclay
Published: 27 August 2017
BERKELEY, Calif. – Higher levels of education are tied to later ages of peak cognitive functioning, according to new research published this month in the journal PLoS One.

The study, led by University of California, Berkeley, researchers, examined relationships between educational attainment, cognitive performance and learning in order to quantify the cumulative effect of attending school.

Its findings suggest that higher levels of education may help stave off age-related cognitive decline. In addition, the team found that education didn’t have a large impact on novel learning, or learning something new at various points in time.

The work, which reviewed the performance of around 196,000 subscribers to Lumosity online brain-training games, is believed to be the largest to date to evaluate cognitive effects of prior educational experience on past and future performance.

Researchers said their findings may be of value to psychologists, sociologists, neuroscientists, education researchers and policymakers.

Grading educational achievement

Conventional wisdom has long accepted that higher education is likely to boost incomes and helps prepare individuals for a workplace with often-changing skill sets.

Yet fewer than 40 percent of adults in the United States are expected to graduate from college in their lifetimes, and the percentage declines for more advanced degrees.

Until now, research has been inconclusive about the cognitive impacts of higher education and whether the quantity of schooling can influence the acquisition and maintenance of cognitive skills over time.

The researchers of the paper, which appears in the August 23 edition of PLoS One, are Silvia Bunge, a professor of psychology at UC Berkeley professor and at the Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute; Belén Guerra-Carrillo, a graduate student in Bunge’s Building Blocks of Cognition Laboratory and a National Science Foundation Fellow; and Kiefer Katovich, who was a statistician with Lumos Labs while the study was conducted.

Bunge and her team say higher levels of education are strong predictors of better cognitive performance across the 15- to 60-year-old age range of their study participants, and appear to boost performance more in areas such as reasoning than in terms of processing speed.

The study’s findings are consistent with prior evidence that the brain adapts in response to challenges, a phenomenon called “experience-dependent brain plasticity.” Based on the principles of plasticity, the authors predicted improvements in cognitive skills that are repeatedly taxed in demanding, cognitively engaging coursework.

Differences in performance were small for test subjects with a bachelor’s degree compared to those with a high school diploma, and moderate for those with doctorates compared to those with only some high school education.

The researchers noted that people from lower educational backgrounds learned novel tasks nearly as well as those from higher ones.

“The fact that the cognitive tests were not similar to what is learned in school is a strength of the study: It speaks to the idea that schooling doesn’t merely impart knowledge – it also provides the opportunity to sharpen core cognitive skills,” said Bunge.

Background data

The researchers analyzed anonymized data collected from around 196,000 Lumosity subscribers in the United States, Canada and Australia who came from a range of educational attainment and diverse backgrounds.

Participants complete eight behavioral assessments of executive functioning and reasoning that are unrelated to educational curricula as part of their subscription.

The research team also looked closely at a subset of nearly 70,000 subscribers who finished Lumosity’s behavioral assessments a second time after about 100 days of additional cognitive training.

Testing before and after the assessments measured cognitive performance in areas such as working memory, thinking quickly, responding flexibly to task goals and both verbal and nonverbal reasoning.

“Given the size and wide age range of our sample, it was possible to test whether these age effects are influenced by education – and, importantly, to determine how the cognitive effects of educational attainment differ across the lifespan, as one’s experience with formal education recedes into the past and is supplanted by other life experiences,” the team wrote.

Bunge said that collaborating with Lumosity was a golden opportunity to analyze data from around 196,000 participants – an anonymized dataset that would have taken a lifetime to collect in a laboratory.

“We’re thrilled to see how Bunge and her team used the Lumosity dataset to illuminate an area as important as educational attainment,” said Bob Schafer, head of research at Lumosity. “As we approach the company’s tenth anniversary with over 4 billion gameplays, it is a top priority to facilitate more large-scale, innovative research like this from experts in education and cognitive science.”

Kathleen Maclay writes for the UC Berkeley News Center.

Twenty-four California Community Colleges move forward with Makerspace initiatives

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 22 August 2017
Makerspace initiatives at 24 community colleges from Orange County to Oroville are being awarded a total of $6 million in grants from the California Community Colleges Chancellor’s Office to establish maker programs that foster student innovation and entrepreneurial skills.

Makerspaces are do-it-yourself centers where people get together to learn and invent using technology such as 3-D printers and computer-aided design (CAD) software that might otherwise be unaffordable for an individual to purchase.

Grants awarded to the 24 community colleges are funded through the California Community College CCC Maker initiative, which is aimed at inspiring learning by doing, teaching in-demand skills, engaging employers, introducing students to dynamic careers and encouraging collaboration among multiple disciplines and colleges to deliver innovative education that strengthen the workforce.

Thirty-four colleges were awarded seed grants in January to develop makerspace plans. Twenty-eight submitted implementation proposals in June.

From there, 24 colleges were awarded the latest grants of $100,000 to $350,000 per year for up to two years.

“These 24 colleges have demonstrated their commitment to establishing makerspaces, placing students in internships, developing curriculum that prepares students with 21st century skills and participating in a statewide network of college makerspaces that are tailored to meet the needs of regional economies,” said Van Ton-Quinlivan, California Community Colleges Vice Chancellor of Workforce & Economic Development.

California community colleges awarded grant money are:

Allan Hancock College
American River College
Butte College
Cabrillo College
Chaffey College
City College of San Francisco
College of Alameda
College of San Mateo
College of the Canyons
Folsom Lake College
Foothill College
Glendale College
Golden West College
Hartnell College
Laney College
Moorpark College
Moreno Valley College
Mt. San Antonio College
Mt. San Jacinto College
Orange Coast College
Sacramento City College
San Bernardino Valley College
Sierra College
Woodland Community College

“The selected colleges were taken through a rigorous planning process to qualify for funding. Steps included examining the range of models for building a makerspace; mapping the ecosystem of assets, stakeholders and collaborators; performing a self-study; creating a logic model; and connecting with students,” said Carol Pepper-Kittredge, statewide project manager for CCC Maker, which is based at Sierra College.

“Math and anthropology instructors talked about how they paired with career technical education instructors to develop curriculum that integrated student projects created in the maker environment,” Pepper-Kittredge said. “Innovation and learning will come from a cross-disciplinary approach. That’s why there are so many examples of this now in the workplace.”

Dale Dougherty, chairman and CEO of Maker Media and chair of the CCC Maker Advisory Committee, compared college makerspaces to libraries that are a resource to the entire campus.

“Makerspaces are about learning and the intersections of all disciplines, and the kinds of experiences that we can give students,” Dougherty said. “In a makerspace, students learn not to live within comfortable boundaries but to take creative risk and try things. If given the opportunity, a little support, and shared context like a makerspace, we could get a lot of amazing work from people. And they in turn, would see themselves as amazing which I think is the real goal here.”

The CCC Maker is a California Community Colleges initiative under Doing What MATTERS for Jobs and the Economy.

The California Community Colleges is the largest system of higher education in the nation composed of 72 districts and 114 colleges serving 2.1 million students per year. Community colleges supply workforce training, basic skills education in English and math, and prepare students for transfer to four-year institutions.

For more information about the community colleges, please visit http://californiacommunitycolleges.cccco.edu.

More on Doing What Matters for Jobs and the Economy can be found at http://doingwhatmatters.cccco.edu.

Lakeport Christian Center Preschool welcomes new students

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Written by: Editor
Published: 21 August 2017
LAKEPORT, Calif. – Lakeport Christian Center Preschool Director Mary Paarsch and staff are gearing up for a great school year and they welcome you to register your preschoolers in their preschool, pre-K and daycare programs.

The first day of school is Tuesday, Sept. 5, and orientation night will also take place that same day at 6:30 p.m.

LCC Preschool is open daily from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. NCO is accepted.

The school is located at 175 "C" St. For information call 707-262-5520 or visit www.lcchub.com.

Schools of Hope program adds new schools in Lake County

Details
Written by: Editor
Published: 20 August 2017
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Education is the cornerstone of individual and community success and reading is a core building block.

Yet, in Lake County, less than 25 percent of third graders are reading at grade level.

Those students who continue to struggle with reading into adulthood are likely to have trouble finding and keeping a job with a livable wage and health benefits.

In an effort to help improve student reading scores, United Way of the Wine Country is partnering with North Coast Opportunities Volunteer Network and local schools to offer the Schools of Hope program in two new schools this year, beginning in October.

The program is now serving Lakeport Elementary and Kelseyville Elementary schools.

This fall two new schools will come on board – Lucerne Elementary and Riviera Elementary.

Schools of Hope is an early intervention strategy for children (K-3) who struggle with reading. This model is based on best practices from Dane County, Wisconsin, where in 10 years it virtually eliminated the achievement gap.

The success of this program depends upon volunteers willing to work one on one with students for 30 minutes a week.

“It was wonderful experience for the tutors and the students,” said Kathy Windrem, a Schools of Hope tutor at Kelseyville Elementary. “I loved getting to know my second grade student and watch his progress. Each week I looked forward to seeing him and he was always excited to see me too. Toward the end of the school year, he asked me to read a story to his entire class.”

Those who wish to tutor more than one student may do so provided they are able to commit an additional 30 minutes of volunteer time per student.

Training and materials will be provided so tutors can feel confident.

Is it successful?

An evaluation of Schools of Hope by Sonoma State University found that first- and second-grade students who received tutoring showed reading proficiency growth between 28-percent and 50-percent higher than non-Schools of Hope students who started with similar scores.

An information and orientation session will be held at North Coast Opportunities (NCO) in Lakeport on Tuesday, Aug. 22, at 6 p.m. and on Thursday, Aug. 24, at 10 a.m.

Anyone interested in becoming a volunteer or hearing more about the program should plan to attend.

NCO is located at 850 Lakeport Blvd., Lakeport.

For more information or to RSVP for the orientation/information session, please call the NCO Volunteer Network at 707-462-1959 or email Joan Reynolds at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
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