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CONTINUING
EDUCATION CREDITS
Please read the following
information regarding CE requirements:
Certificates of attendance
are suitable for use to meet professional development requirements for
educators and clinicians. Attendees can earn 17 contact hours of credit
by attending the three-day conference. An additional 4 hours of credit
are available for educators and some clinicians for attending
pre-conference workshops for a total of 21 hours. The conference is 17
contact hours = 1.7 CEU or 17 PDPs and CEs. Speech-language credits
(1.7 CEUs) are available only for the conference and not for
pre-conference workshops. Speech-language professionals must sign in
and out each day, and must pick up an ASHA participation form at the
conference Help/Information Desk.
In order to receive any
professional development credits, you must do three things at the
conference:
1) Sign in on your first day of the conference when you
do check-in registration,
2) Sign out on the last day of the conference,
3) Fill out the evaluation/learning outcomes
questionnaire in your program book and leave the form at the conference
registration desk on your last day at the conference. Certificates will
be emailed to you four weeks after the conference.
Psychologists and School
Psychologists must complete the evaluation form in their program book.
You can also receive
additional credits by writing a paper on how you applied what you
learned. For more details and questions, contact the CE Director, Mr. Kelly Williams,
at (781) 449-4010 ext. 105.
CE Available
Credits:
Credits for Speech/Language
Pathologists:
This program is offered for 1.7 CEUs (Intermediate
level; Professional area).
SLP participants will be able to:
• Explain how the brain learns and processes reading and language
• Apply strategies to enhance student learning, reading and math
skills
• Explore how stress, sleep and obesity affect learning, language
and testing
• Examine how neuroscience findings can assist in learning
disorder treatment
• Discover new insights into interventions for attention, reading
and math disorders
• Identify the role of neuroscience in education and policy, and
some neuromyths
• Strategies to improve executive function and learning
environments
• Discuss ways to improve testing/assessment in children and teens

Credits for Psychologists
and School Psychologists:
Public Information
Resources, Inc. (PIRI) is approved by the American Psychological
Association to offer continuing education for psychologists. PIRI
maintains responsibility for the program. Psychologists and school
psychologists must complete the evaluation form in their program book
in order to receive credit.
Credits for Certified
Counselors:
PIRI has been approved by
the National Board of Certified Counselors (NBCC) to award CEU credits
for certified counselors. (Provider #5947)
Credits for Educators:State
Department of Education:
PIRI is able to provide
credits that qualify for the education departments in most states and
are accepted by most districts. You may wish to check whether your
state’s Department of Education requires special approved
provider status. PIRI is a specifically approved provider in the
Departments of Education in the states of PA, IL, GA, TX, NJ, CT, and
MA. It has also applied for credits through MN.
Credits for Connecticut Educators:
Public Information
Resources (PIRI) is an Approved CEU Provider with the State of
Connecticut Department of Education (Provider #230). For five hours of
additional credits, you can write a 4-5-page paper on how you applied
what you learned at the conference to your classroom, school or
clinical work. For more information, call CE coordinator Kelly Williams
at 781-449-4010 ext. 105.
Credits for CA
Social Workers/Marriage and Family Therapists/Educational
Psychologists:
PIRI is approved by the
California Board of Behavioral Sciences to offer CE credits to Marriage
and Family Therapists (MFT); Licensed Clinical Social Workers (LCSW);
Licensed Educational Psychologists (LEP); MFT Interns; and Associate
Clinical Social Workers (ASW) in the State of California. (PCE#2072)
Credits for School Social
Workers:
Public Information
Resources, Inc., has been approved to provide up to 20 Category I
credits to social workers through the National Association of
Social Workers (NASW) collaborative through Boston College and
Simmons College Schools of Social Work.
Educational Incentive
Program:
Rockefeller College,
University of Albany, State University of New York Scholarship funding
to participate in this training may be available through the
Educational Incentive Program (EIP). For more information or to apply
for a scholarship, visit www.ecetp.pdp.albany.edu. You may also contact EIP
at eip@pdp.albany.edu or
800-295-9616.
Apply to Your Own
Professional Organization/District for Credits (CE credits):
Public Information
Resources, Inc. (PIRI) may not be approved by your professional
organization to offer continuing education credits. However, you can
submit your own request to your organization for approval to receive
credits at the conference. Simply submit the following documents to
your organization to request CE approval. Print the Conference Program
and Schedule, Conference Brochure, and the Evaluation Form sample
documents and submit them to you organization or district for approval.
If you would like us to
apply for credits with a specific organization, please contact Kelly Williams
at 781-449-4010 ext. 105.
Continue Your
Education: Earn Additional Credit by Writing a Paper
Write a 3-5-page
paper on how you applied what you've learned and have your paper
published on our website and earn 5 additional credit hours.
As an Attendee, you are
invited to submit an original 3-5 page paper describing how you have
applied information or skills learned at the Learning & the Brain
Conference to your classroom or work with children. Your paper will be
considered for publication on the Learning & the Brain Conference
society website, and, you will earn five (5) extra hours of
professional development credit-time.
By submitting a paper, you
are agreeing to have your paper posted in whole or in part on our web
site for others to learn from your experiences.
The paper must be submitted
in electronic form either as an attached Word 6.0/2000 document or
within the body of an email. It must be sent no later than six months
after completion of the Conference to be considered for credit.
Email your paper to Mr.
Kelly Williams, Learning & the Brain Conference, at: kelly.williams@learningandthebrain.com.
Public Information
Resources, Inc. reserves the right to not use your paper or to edit it
if accepted for publication on the web site. Your name as author, your
school or organization, and your email address will be published on the
web site and/or poster session along with your paper. This is an
opportunity to profile ideas and earn professional development credit.
Acceptance does not include complimentary registration to the
Conference. If you are interested in this, please contact Kelly
Williams at: kelly.williams@learningandthebrain.com.
Your paper must be
500-750 words and answer some of the following questions.
• What insights or knowledge did you gain as a
result of attending the conference?
• What changes to teaching methods, curriculum, instruction,
treatment, etc., did you make based on the ideas, strategies, skills,
or research you learned at the conference?
• Describe how you went about making those changes to your
curriculum, teaching methodology, student assignments, class
management, instructional methods, intervention, or class structure
based on what you learned at the conference. What process did you use?
• Describe the reaction of students, teachers, administrators,
parents, peers, or others to any changes you made, and if there was any
resistance that prevented you from implementing those changes.
• Describe the results of your changes, such as improved student
achievement or scores, improvements in teaching, learning, or behavior,
and any negative results.
• Did the conference cause you to change the way you deal with
students who have learning differences, disabilities, or are gifted? If
so, how?
• Did it change the way you teach or deal with students? Did it
change the way students learn?
• Did you share what you learned with teachers, administrators,
colleagues, or parents? What was their reaction?
• Are you better able to identify, help, treat, or assess students
with learning disabilities or emotional or social problems as a result
of the conference?
• Share any ideas for applying brain science to learning,
behavior, emotions or motivation.
.
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