Contents
News Bulletins:

2010

April:

March:

February:

January:

2009

December:

November:

October:

September:

July:

Articles & Links:

 

Pictures of Events:
- Senator Iris Martinez Wellness Fair
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- ASPIRA Goes to Springfield - June 23, 2009:



- Governor Quinn Community Meeting - June 22, 2009:

School Event Pictures:


Haiti Fundraiser by ASPIRA Early College, Antonia Pantoja High School and the ASPIRA Clubs.

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The 2010 Census: Vital to Your Future

In March 2010, more than 130 million addresses across the nation will receive a census questionnaire. One of the shortest census forms in history, the 2010 Census questionnaire asks 10 questions and takes about 10 minutes to complete. Completing your census questionnaire is easy, important and safe, and your participation is essential to ensuring a brighter tomorrow for our community.

Required once every 10 years by the U.S. Constitution, the census will count every person living in the United States, both citizens and noncitizens. Census data are used to reapportion the U.S. House of Representatives, re-district each state and determine the distribution of the Electoral College. Census data also directly affect how more than $400 billion per year in federal funding is distributed to state, local and tribal governments. Most importantly, census data is critical in determining locations for new hospitals, improving schools, building new roads, expanding public transportation options and creating new maps for emergency responders.

By participating in the census, you can help create a better future for you and those important to you. Complete and return your form when it arrives. To learn more, visit http://www.2010census.gov.
 

9th Annual American Association of Physics Teachers – American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAPT-AAAS):

KristineandShafer  ElectronicCars

Event Document: Download

On Sunday, February 15, 2009 Kristine Kurpiewski and Paul Shafer presented a paper at the 9th annual American Association of Physics Teachers – American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAPT-AAAS) meeting held at the Hyatt Hotel on Michigan Avenue, Chicago. They presented a paper entitled “Project‐Based Freshman Physics at Small Inner City High Schools” as part of an AAPT Symposium – “Early High School Physics‐Building a Foundation for Understanding the Sciences” led by Nobel-Prize winner, Dr. Leon Lederman. Their presentation was well received by those present. Many positive comments were received about how project‐based freshman physics at Aspira High Schools started and has changed in 5 years. People were impressed how inexpensive projects built by 9th graders out of scrap wood, pop bottles, old radiators, mouse traps and other “junk” materials could lead to very rich experiments and experiential engaged learning for students. Paul Shafer was asked to come back on Monday to work with an AAPT panel on discussing how freshman physics could be improved, enriched and project ideas shared. People were very interested in how we are planning to incorporate Earth Space Dynamics into the freshman physics curriculum, so that formulas that students have previously learned in conceptual and applied physics could be used in the last quarter of the freshman year to help students understand the real power of earthquakes, tornados, hurricanes, tsunamis, meteor impacts and gravitational attraction between planets and moons. Diamond Montana & Monica Gomez contributed to this paper.

 



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