 |

2010 NAREN National Conference Schedule
On this Page...
More info...
|
One or two graduate credits are available through Marian University (NCATE Accedited). In order to get two credits, you must attend both the pre-conference and the conference, and attend all sessions. You may get one credit for the pre-conference or for the conference, individually. Each credit is $225; two credits is $450. You may register on-site. For questions about the graduate credits, email the instructor, Dr. Dallmann-Jones. Course Title is: Quality Education for At-Risk Learners. 18 hours of CEUs are also available at no charge. Contact Amy for a form. Again, full attendance is required to get 18 hours of continuing education credits. |
Cost: $150 per person ($120 for NAREN Associates)
Register now for the 2010 Pre-Conference Seminar!

Anthony Dallmann-Jones |
Monday, February 15, 2010
8:30am - 4:00pm — Strategies for Differentiating Classrooms for All Learners, with Dr. Anthony Dallmann-Jones, PhD.
Attendees will examine all the reasons for the widening achievement gap and what some programs are doing to narrow it. The NAREN Nine will also be discussed as a universal scaffolding for building, rebuilding or assessing a quality at-risk program.
Each participant will receive a free copy ($30 value) of the Handbook for Effective Teaching and Assessment Strategies. Instructor of the course will be Dr. Anthony Dallmann-Jones, Professor of Educational Psychology at Marian University.
7:00pm - 8:30pm — Early Registration & Reception
Early Registration: You may stop in and register if you have not before and/or pick up your conference materials.
Reception: Informal mixer with cash bar, and snacks, including the famous Mystical Milk Chocolate Fountain with fondue goodies.
Register now for the 2010 Pre-Conference Seminar!

Register now for the 2010 Conference!

Dr. Humor |
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
7:30am - 8:15am — Continental Breakfast will be provided. We start early the first day because our kickoff speaker begins at 8:15am. Dr. Humor is worth getting up early for! We will save opening remarks and announcements until after the first break.
Registration: Signing up for the conference or picking up your conference materials.
8:15am - 9:45am — KEYNOTE: Dr. Stu Robertshaw, a.k.a. "Dr. Humor".
"Dr. Humor" will share with you what he has learned about the power of humor in connecting and teaching at-risk students. One characteristic of many great teachers in our lives was a good sense of humor. One characteristic of many of the poor teachers we had in our lives was a missing sense of humor! Humor is important in a classroom filled with 25+ kids and one surrogate parent/teacher. It shows confidence and rapport, the two most important characteristics of any progressive classroom, next to academic content. Humor is often a way to encourage learning, to de-stress the classroom, and to let students know that hope is in laughter.
Biographical Sketch: Dr. Stuart Robertshaw received his Bachelors degree in Education from MacMurray College, his Masters degree in Psychology from Illinois State University, his Doctorate in Special Education from the University of Kansas and his law degree from the University of Wisconsin Law School. He has been a teacher of at-risk students, an attorney whose practice primarily focused on children's rights, a special education hearing officer, and a Professor of Special Education at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse. In 1998, he retired from the university to assume full time responsibilities as President and CEO of the National Association for the Humor Impaired.
Dr. Humor, author of the book Dear Dr. Humor, has presented to over 500 educational, governmental, medical and business organizations, including (really) the FBI, the CIA, and the IRS!
"I have never had a keynote speaker who overwhelmingly connected with the audience in the manner you did ... your presentation was spectacular."
— Orange County Department of Education (CA)
"Montana may never recover!! Those of us who attended the Montana State Reading Conference and witnessed your presentation are still waking up in the middle of the night laughing uncontrollably!! Your keynote address was truly a highlight of the conference and many of us can't wait until we have the opportunity to see you in action again."
— Montana State Reading Conference (MT)
"Your message to over 1,300 employees has received phenomenal reviews. We laughed, we cried and we learned... Dr. Humor you have given us permission to become a healthier and more humorous staff, and our students will benefit greatly."
— School District of Janesville (WI)
9:45am - 10:00am — Booksigning, with Dr. Stu Robertshaw.
10:00am - 10:20am — Welcoming Speech by Anthony Dallmann-Jones PhD, NAREN Director.
10:30am - 11:40am — Kids These Days: Preparing At-risk Youth for the Workplace — A Special Workshop with Steve Parese.
Troubled youth often have difficulty with peers and authority figures — difficulties sure to cause problems in the workplace. This highly interactive workshop explains why at-risk youth and young adults have trouble adjusting to the culture of the workplace, and offers strategies for teaching them how to work through workplace problems, rather than blowing them out of proportion.
All Grade Levels
Steve Parese, Danbury NC
Dr. Parese has helped over 25,000 educators nationwide to improve their skills in reaching and teaching challenging students. As a former special educator and counselor of troubled teens, Dr. Parese brings his dynamic presentation style and keen insight to all his work.
11:40am - 1:00pm — Lunch on your own at nearby eateries, one being the Edgewater Resort's Ocean's Grill onsite and next to the ocean!
1:00pm - 2:10pm — Breakouts: Session I
Stop, Drop and Roll: Extinguish the Behavior Fires in Your Classroom
STOP writing referrals, DROP bad behavior, and ROLL on with instruction! In one hour you will learn four simple diffusers as well as other research based techniques & strategies that will douse small behavior sparks so they don't escalate into "five alarm fires." We didn't start the fires — but you CAN put them out!
Behavior can be changed, but not with punishment; that is only a temporary fix. Good behavior must be taught. By implementing a combination of research based strategies that change student behaviors such as diffusers, self-control, prompting techniques, Teach To's and REFOCUS teachers can...
- Recover an additional 7-9 hours of instruction time per week.
- Eliminate 80%-90% of low-level classroom behavior problems
- Observe a significant rise in test score
- Decrease office referrals by 50%
- Acquire better connectivity with students
- Reclaim your classroom integrity
All Grade Levels
Fran Mishler-Schneider, Pembroke Pines FL
Sing Me a Story, Tell Me a Song: The Universal Language of Music and At-Risk Youth (with David Dall, Recording Artist)
Music is important to our youth, often more important to them than the content our schools insist upon — yet we continue to ignore this fact rather than learn to incorporate it into our schools. With four albums to his credit, singer, composer, and recording artist David Dall has taught Kindergarten for almost 25 years in Rhinelander, Wisconsin. He has played the guitar a lot longer than that. He will share "Incorporating life's lessons and using music to manifest healthy functioning in children from dysfunctional families, I teach them much more with music and laughter. It turns some of the tedium of learning into candy," David states.
All Grade Levels
David Dall, Rhinelander WI
Great Kids Come Back — Re-Connecting Dropout Youth
Learn how a large urban district reached out to students who had dropped out of school and re-connected them to school.
Senior High
Bianca Pilewski, Baltimore MD
2:15pm - 3:25pm — Breakouts: Session II
3:30pm - 4:40pm — Breakouts: Session III
Curricular Practices from Hamilton Alternative High School
Hamilton Alternative High School created an innovative program combining academics, adventure education, and advisory assisted students who were failing and truant from their traditional schools. Brain-based instruction, multiple intelligences, social skills training and a sense of community through service together provided the support students "at promise" needed to thrive.
Middle/Junior High & Senior High
Meryl Domina, DeKalb IL
Get it? Got it! Good! — The 3Gs Comprehension Model
Synonymous with understanding, comprehension is usually associated with reading, but in reality comprehension is connected with every subject and every activity. YALP's 3Gs is a systematic comprehension model applicable to any context in the classroom and beyond. This demonstration shows how the 3Gs can be easily integrated into every teacher's classroom routine.
All Grade Levels
Judy Yaron, Melbourne Australia
Forget the Rainforest — SAVE THE CLASSROOM!!!
Educators lose 5-9 precious instructional hours a week on lower-level misbehaviors. You can be the best content instructor, but without the ability to control the classroom, the best lessons remain undelivered. Learn how to avoid the "debate bait;" to eliminate warnings and multiple requests; increase academics, decrease discipline challenges, gain parent support and empower all educators.
Classroom management was rated as the most important variable to building and sustaining a high achieving classroom. "Time To Teach" provides techniques and strategies for success!
All Grade Levels
Ayala Linder Baum, Miami FL
Register now for the 2010 Conference, Pre-Conference and Post-Conference!
Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Dr. Stephen Sroka |
8:15am - 9:00am — Continental Breakfast will be provided. We start later on Wednesday and Thursday with announcements at 9:00, first sessions beginning at 9:15am.
9:00am - 9:15am — Morning Greeting & Announcements
9:15am - 10:15am — KEYNOTE: Dr. Stephen Sroka will present Getting to the Heart of Education-Listening to the Whole Child
Many students in schools are crying for help with their real life issues, such as sex, drugs and violence and yet many educators respond with an emphasis on academic proficiency skills. Many educators and researchers believe that listening to the whole child, not just the academic child, is the most effective way to reach and teach all students, especially reluctant learners who at risk for dropping out or who need alternative approaches to help them learn more and live better. With No Child Left Behind and its stress on academic achievement at all costs with little regard for the mental, social, physical, emotional or spiritual aspects of the whole child, many teachers teach tests and not students. Many students react and vote with their feet as nearly 1 out 3 students drop out of school because they are not motivated and are bored with the "drill and kill" approach of many educators. If kids are not learning the way we are teaching them, we must change the way we are teaching them. It is a time for a change.
This is a high-energy, motivational, multimedia, prevention education presentation that is research-driven and reality-based. It integrates cutting-edge research (including social and emotional learning, social intelligence, stress management, communication strategies, motivational interviewing, brain based learning, media and cultural literacy, character education, connective factors, protective factors, resiliency, and youth and asset development programs) and humor and inspiring real-life stories to facilitate learning about the whole child and the students' mental, emotional, social, spiritual, and physical health needs and their relationship to academic and life success. The program is filled with real life strategies and "tips from the trenches" for everyone who works with youth.
10:15am - 10:30am — Break
10:30am - 11:45am — Workshop (Whole Assembly): Dr. Stephen Sroka will present Keeping Youth Safe and Healthy in a Toxic Society: Using Brain Based Learning to Reach and Teach the Whole Child — 25 Free Strategies to Help You Today.
This workshop will offer the opportunity to "share and care" with a conversation to discuss the ideas addressed in the keynote. "Tips from the trenches" will include 25 free brain based learning strategies to help reach, teach and protect the whole child- socially, physically, mentally, emotionally and spiritually. This workshop will deal with the barriers that hamper safe and effective education, and offer suggestions, based on research and reality, to help you make your schools, homes and communities safe and healthy where students can learn more and live better.
11:45am - 1:15pm — Lunch provided by NAREN onsite with entertainment by David Dall, recording artist!
1:15pm - 2:25pm — Breakouts: Session IV
Social Emotional Learning: Neuroscience & At Risk Students
The brain is plastic and educators and others can positively change it and reshape it using social emotional learning (SEL). SEL is proven to increase self-awareness, self-regulation, and self-motivation. Join us to discover ways to integrate social emotional learning into all classroom activities to enrich learning and invite relationships that promise success.
All Grade Levels
Patty O'Grady, Tampa FL
Developing a Successful At-Risk Program
A successful at-risk learning environment is an environment where learning takes place for everyone. This session will present strategies to assist you in offering students opportunities to explore the world beyond school, investigate pre and post high school opportunities, careers, and community involvement that will foster developmental habits and values that enhance the quality of their lives.
The curriculum component of the session includes opportunities for students to develop in-depth skills in reading, writing, mathematics, social studies, science, the fine and applied arts and other areas of interest. Innovation and creativity are at the core of the learning. Using the thematic approach you will be given the strategies to offer students the opportunity to learn for the sake of application which enables them to apply meaning.
All Grade Levels
Alyce Sherman & Glenna Lurten, Blue Springs MO
Stay in School: Reclaiming and Reconnecting
Using a self-directed study approach, the stay-in-school program offers at-risk students the opportunity to re-enter the high school environment. By incorporating effective schools research, the bar for both attendance and academic rigor is raised. Students determine their own timeline for module completion. This session offers participants a "no-fail" option.
Middle/Junior High & Senior High
Sharlene McGowan, Regina Saskatchewan
2:25pm - 2:40pm — Break
2:40pm - 3:50pm — Breakouts: Session V
Child Abuse and the Brain: How Trauma in Childhood Shows-Up in the Classroom
Key discoveries in neuroscience have revealed a more comprehensive and sophisticated understanding of the impact of child abuse on the developing brain. With incredible specificity, scientists have mapped how the experience of abuse in childhood changes the growing brain and predisposes it to cognitive, behavioral and psychiatric disorders. In particular, childhood trauma can greatly influence a child's learning and behavior in the classroom resulting in a student who appears unmotivated, disinterested, hostile or aggressive. Understanding the specific consequences of abuse on the growing brain can significantly inform teacher interventions and instructional techniques.
Elementary/Middle/Junior High & Senior High
Frank J. Kros, MSW, JD — President, The Upside Down Organization (Baltimore, MD)
Acting Out, or Just Acting Up? Understanding and Managing Youth Misbehavior
WEducators and youth workers are often called upon to manage immature problem behaviors, issues which distract or disrupt others in a classroom or office setting. Handling these youth can be extremely challenging, especially when the adult isn't clear about the source of the problem. This workshop explores two psychological sources of problem behaviors, one deliberate and the other emotional, then offers strategies for both preventing and managing each.
All Grade Levels
Steve Parese, Danbury NC
Using Pure/Complete Phonics (P/C-Phs) to Obviate Total Illiteracy in the United States
The Pure/Complete - Phonics - Literacy remediation program is guaranteed to be effective with all illiterate children and adults, including at-risk students. This program teaches the use of 100 phonemes without any reference to traditional reading and spelling rules.
Teaching P/C-Phs is both inexpensive and effective in teaching children and adults to read and spell words.
All Grade Levels
Robert T. Nash, Ed.D., Pueblo West CO
4:00pm - 6:00pm — Those interested in being part of ICARE International Council of At-Risk Education meet in the main room.
This the second meeting of this committee. The first ICARE International Conference will be in Singapore on November 15-17, 2010, and is being coordinated by Adelyn Poh. The second ICARE conference will be in the Panama Canal Zone, and is being coordinated by Dr. Alyce Sherman. A fall date in November, 2011, is anticipated. ICARE is the ninth and final goal of NAREN to be accomplished. We are so proud of all that have helped make this happen. A huge debt of thanks goes out to Adelyn Poh for just grabbing hold of this first conference and making great leaps of progress for us all!
Register now for the 2010 Conference, Pre-Conference and Post-Conference!
Thursday, February 18, 2010
8:15am - 9:00am — Continental Breakfast will be provided. We start later on Wednesday and Thursday with announcements at 9:00, first sessions beginning at 9:15am.
9:15am - 10:25am — Breakouts: Session VI
10:25am - 10:35am — Break
10:35am - 11:45am — Breakouts: Session VII
11:45am - 12:00pm — Conference Closing
Register now for the 2010 Conference, Pre-Conference and Post-Conference!

Cost: $150 per person ($120 for NAREN Associates)
Register now for the 2010 Post-Conference Seminar!

Frank Kros |
Friday, February 19, 2010
9:00am - 4:00pm (lunch on your own) — Giving a Fish a Bath: The Untold Story of the Adolescent Mind, with Frank Kros, President of the Upside Down Organization.
I. Description of Course
Recent discoveries in neuroscience offer exciting insights into how the brains of our teens really work and the special "brain-based" challenges facing adolescents as they mature. This workshop reveals why teens are especially vulnerable to drug use, high-risk peer influences and depression as well as the proactive measures adults can take to minimize a teen's exposure to these dangers. This seminar also addresses the often mystifying role of hormones on adolescent development and focuses on the key roles that stress and sleep have on teen learning processes. In addition, the workshop offers strategies compatible with the many strengths and opportunities available during this miraculous developmental period, including helping teens to develop positive character traits. If you've ever thought that the adolescent mind could not be understood, this workshop will arm you with the latest insights and information on knowing and empowering the teenage brain.
II. Course Objectives
- To introduce participants to the rapidly emerging research on how the adolescent brain is built and how it works. Participants will identify how the adolescent brain is significantly different than the adult brain and the child brain.
- To acquaint participants with the practical application of this research to behavioral and emotional interventions provided to teens by caretakers and educators, with specific focus on helping adolescents avoid high risk activities such as drug use, alcohol abuse and sexual activity. Participants will learn and practice 6 techniques for helping teens avoid high risk behavior.
- To illustrate for participants the key brain areas involved in forming character traits and how education, experiences and reflection can be integrated to create effective character development programs.
- To expose participants to the growing body of resources on brain-compatible counseling, guidance, mentoring and parenting techniques including books, newsletters, websites, conferences and workshops. Participants will be able to locate brain-based resources in their community and via the web.
- To share with caretakers and educators tools to help their teens overcome adversity, depression, anxiety and stress and to expose participants to the scientific research on happiness and how they can nurture the childhood roots of adult happiness in their foster homes, group homes and schools. Participants will be able to articulate the five most important parenting/relationship characteristics that are predictive of happiness and identify specific practices for nurturing these characteristics.
III. Teaching Methods
"Giving a Fish a Bath" is an interactive, hands-on workshop that will engage participants in a variety of activities designed to enhance the learning experience. Some of these activities include: 1) building an anatomically-correct brain; 2) viewing and diagnosing brain scans; 3) changing brain chemistry through movement; and 4) creating an individualized brain improvement plan. This multimedia presentation will incorporate the modalities of music, video, small and large manipulatives, PowerPoint, drama, and movement to fully involve participants in learning.
Register now for the 2010 Post-Conference Seminar!

The 2010 NAREN National Conference is brought to you with the financial support of...

Differentiated Instruction: Online, Accredited Master's Degree in Five Semesters

Online Curriculum and Learning Management System for Grades 5‑12
On behalf of all conference attendees, we deeply thank our sponsors! If you would like to become a sponsor for our 2010 conference, please see our Sponsor & Exhibitor Opportunities page for more info.

|