World Math Day – 3rd March – participate now

World Math Day  — 3rd March

Free to join

World Maths Day was designed to encourage  student participation in a fun and engaging online maths event.

It involves games of live mental arithmetic that students around the world play against each other.

Each game lasts for 60 seconds and students can play up to 500 games during the official event which has already begun, earning points for each correct question.

Students who answer the most questions appear in the Hall of Fame. Would be great to see some Home Educators  in the Hall of Fame.  (There are no New Zealanders or Home Educators on the top 50 at this stage – lets change that)

Sound fun? Why not head over and take a look?

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World Maths Day 2010 Johannesburg Host City
See the new World Maths Day 2010 video with students from host city Johannesburg, South Africa inviting the world to participate in 2010!

Registration:  WorldMathDay.com

Also take a look at: http://www.mathletics.co.nz/

National Schools Challenge – Planet 2010

Greetings all

I have just received this email below saying that home educators can enter this competition:

The National Schools Challenge is part of the Planet 2010 event and school students can compete in online challenges using a wide range of technologies including computers, online design software, YouTube, digital cameras and phones.

Blessings  Barbara

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Hi Barbara,

Thanks for your email.

Yes, we will allow home schooled students to enter the National Schools Challenge.  The only competition where this is an issue is the ‘Story’ Challenge – as the prizes are ‘telescopes for your school’.  If the winner is a homeschooled student then they will need to nominate a school to gift the telescope to.  (From Barbara – perhaps we could try nominating a support group in this competition.)

When registering, please specify ‘home schooled’ as your School Name.  If you wish to enter the Photography Challenge, it is ok for students to take photos around the home (or their learning environment).

We hope you enjoy the competitions!

Regards

Anna Hadfield

Telecommunications Industry Group

M +64 27 3050311  | P +64 9 475 0208 | E anna.hadfield@tig.org.nz | W www.tig.org.nz

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National Schools Challenge

The Telecommunications Industry Group (TIG) is running the Planet 2010: Visit the Future conference at SkyCity Convention Centre on 12-13 March this year.

The National Schools Challenge is part of the Planet 2010 event and school students can compete in online challenges using a wide range of technologies including computers, online design software, YouTube, digital cameras and phones.

Students Login

Registrations for the National Schools Challenge open on 1 February 2010. Click here to register.

We have 5 cool challenges: Start Date

Design

Win some great prizes by doing your own 3D design using awesome design software. Read more.

Sponsored by Nextspace


8th Feb 2010

Music

Make a video of your own song, post it on YouTube and start recording hits! Read more.
8th Feb 2010

Story

Write your own short story on a given topic.Read more.
10th Feb 2010

Photography

Take photos around your school relating to the Key Competencies. Read more.
22nd Feb 2010

Maths


If you are one of the winners on Mathletics World Maths Day on 3rd March (register free at www.worldmathsday.com) you’ll be able to compete live in online realtime maths challenges at the Planet 2010 conference on 13th March 2010. Bring all your friends to cheer you on!!

Sponsored by Mathletics

13th Mar 2010

Win Stuff!!!!!

Win awesome prizes, including Sony Ericsson W705 Walkman phones, Casio watches, Digital Cameras, Calculators
Mobile Phones, HP Netbooks and for your school, Telescopes!

Awesome prizes to be won, including walkman phones, cameras, calculators and more!

Sponsored by:

Casio HP Mathletics Motorola Nextspace Sony Telecom TIG


Please contact us if you have any queries regarding the National Schools Challenge. Email: info@tig.org.nz
For more information on the Planet 2010 event visit the Planet website.

http://www.tig.org.nz/content/a17e9d79-b387-4ce1-8eae-4acca744a6ee.html

Time Magazine covers the Romeike story: How German Homeschoolers Won Asylum in the U.S.

How German Homeschoolers Won Asylum in the U.S.

By Tristana Moore / Berlin Monday, Feb. 01, 2010

Uwe Romeike and his wife Hannelore work with their children at home in Morristown, Tenn.

Wade Payne / AP

Uwe and Hannelore Romeike are not like other asylum seekers, people fleeing war or torture in places like Afghanistan, Iraq or Somalia. They’re music teachers from a village in southern Germany. And yet, in what appears to be the first case of its kind, the couple and their five children were granted asylum in the U.S. last week by an immigration judge who ruled that they had a “well-founded fear of persecution” in their home country for engaging in what has become a popular albeit somewhat controversial American practice — homeschooling their children.

The Romeikes, who are Evangelical Christians, took their three eldest children out of school in the town of Bissingen in 2006 because they were concerned about the impact the government-approved curriculum and the public-school environment would have on their social development. “Over the past 10 to 20 years, the curriculum in public schools in Germany has been more and more against Christian values, and my eldest children were having problems with violence, bullying and peer pressure. It’s important for parents to have the freedom to choose the way their children can be taught,” Uwe Romeike said in a statement provided by the couple’s attorney, Michael Donnelly of the Virginia-based Home School Legal Defense Association (HSLDA).

But here’s the problem: in Germany it’s compulsory for children to attend school, and the Romeikes soon found themselves on the wrong side of the law. Local authorities slapped the couple with a $10,000 fine, and police even took their children to school when the Romeikes refused to send them. Fearing that they could lose custody of their kids or even be put in jail, the Romeikes fled to the U.S. in 2008, looking for a community where they could educate their kids as they saw fit.

That’s exactly what they found in Morristown, Tenn., a town of about 27,000 deep in the Bible Belt. Donnelly says the Romeikes flourished in the environment, becoming “very disciplined” teachers tackling subjects like math, history and social science with the help of textbooks and other teaching materials, all in accordance with state law. The couple also joined a local group that organizes activities and field trips for homeschooled children in the area. Once they were settled in their new community, they applied for asylum in the U.S., claiming they’d be persecuted if they were sent back to Germany…

Read the rest of the article here:

http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1958059,00.html

Wellington ‘not back to school picnic’ Monday 8 February

Wellington ‘not back to school picnic’ Monday 8 February

To kick the year off, the ‘not back to school picnic’ will be held on Monday 8 February, at Khandallah Park on Woodmancote Road from 10am. This is a native forest reserve with plenty of space, walking tracks, and an outdoor summer pool. The play area includes a flying fox, new junior play area and a giant rock climbing structure. There is also a cafe next to the pool.

If the weather isn’t nice on the day, the picnic will be postponed.

Here’s hoping many can make it.