February 16, 2009

Remote Airline Check-In Service

We’re pleased to partner with Bags, Inc. to make it possible for you to check-in for your return flight home at the San Diego Convention Center. This unique onsite check-in service allows you to check your luggage and obtain an airline issued boarding pass before you leave for the airport—leaving you more time to participate in the NASSP Convention.

That’s right!  You can now check-in for your flight at the San Diego Convention Center and bypass airport lines. It’s the first TSA-approved remote skycap service manned by highly trained agents who are credentialed to issue boarding passes and print bag tags on demand.  Proprietary sophisticated technology is used to ensure accurate, safe and secure multi-airline baggage check-in and transport to the airport.

Visit the NASSP Convention Web site for complete details on rates, hours of operation and to learn how to pre-enroll.

February 10, 2009

Program Book Available Online

Upon arriving in San Diego, the last thing a Convention attendee wants to do is spend the day planning their convention agenda. So we've made it a bit easier by making the official 2009 Convention Program Book available online, in advance of the Convention. In addition to carrying detailed information on all of the programming offered, the program book provides valuable information every attendee needs to get the most out of their Convention experience.

February 05, 2009

Creating a School for EACH Student (Part II)

Guest Blogger: Nelson Beaudoin

To paraphrase Margaret Wheatley, “People tend to support what they help to create."  School leaders in search for answers as to why students appear apathetic about learning or are disenfranchised from their school need to take note of Wheatley’s assertion.  People are quick to brand our student’s lack of caring about education as a form of rebellion or as a result of societal corrosion, when, in fact, there are many avenues open to schools to bolster student engagement.

One way to get student buy-in is to involve them in the process of school improvement.  The NASSP and the National Associations of Student Councils endorses a program called RSVP (Raising Student Voice and Participation), which outlines a protocol for increasing student involvement.

As a long time school leader who has thrived by promoting student voice I have come to believe that involving students is the missing ingredient in school redesign.  Beyond school improvement, there are numerous reasons for supporting student voice… here is a “top ten” listing:

10.  Schools should be about students.
 9.  Student participation should be non-negotiable.
 8.  Their involvement leads to more success.
 7.  Involvement in decision-making creates ownership.
 6.  Students feel like volunteers, not prisoners.
 5.  Teens should not be hidden away until they reach adulthood.
 4.  Students may have some of the answers we seek.
 3.  Caring creates good citizenship.
 2.  It shows that adults believe in their abilities.
 1.  “A silent school is not a school at all”. – D. Litkey

When each student is empowered to take responsibility for what happens to them academically and socially, a culture of caring ensues.  Students learn to speak out on matters of importance, learn self-advocacy skills and are provided opportunities to practice civic skills.  Join me in San Diego to explore other ways to make our work about what matters most- each student.

The session “Creating a School for Each Student” will be held on Saturday, February 28 from 11:30 a.m.–1:00 p.m.