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Teaching Your Child At Home: Expert Advice From USI Faculty Members

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This article was written by Dr. Jill Raisor, Associate Professor of Teacher Education and Chair of the USI Teacher Education Department, Dr. Joy Howard, Assistant Professor of Teacher Education, and Dr. Kelly Sparks, Associate Professor of Teacher Education.

Education has taken a drastic turn as a result of COVID-19! Many parents are facing the real challenge of juggling the tasks of working remotely while also serving as a “substitute” teacher for our own children. Several years ago, many of us laughed at Professor Robert Kelly’s interview on CNN when he tried to maintain focus on a live broadcast while his toddler and wife crept into his international workspace. Now, we suddenly have great empathy for Dr. Kelly because our living rooms, bedrooms, and kitchens have become our offices too.

For a variety of reasons, schools and teachers across the nation are taking different approaches to e-learning, such as Google Classroom or SeeSaw or even worksheet packets. Regardless of your child’s social distancing educational format, parents everywhere are in a new role, even parents who have historically been homeschooling since the schedules and activities have necessarily changed. Below we offer a few tips, ideas, and resources that may help ease the transition for both you and your child(ren).

E-Learning Tips:

  • Set a consistent schedule. Remember children need regular breaks just like adults do. (Video resource)
  • Establish daily and weekly goals for e-learning while considering your children’s emotional and individual needs (Video resource)
  • Stay in communication with your child’s school. Watch for updates. When is teacher available to answer questions? When are due dates?
  • Search for resources to help. The Indiana Department of Education website is continuously updating available resources for educators and families.

Ideas to Conquer Boredom at Home:

Suggestions for Talking with Children about Coronavirus/COVID-19:

USI Juried Student Art Show To Virtually Showcase USI Student Artwork

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The University of Southern Indiana’s 50th annual Juried Student Art Show is on display beginning Monday, April 13. Because the McCutchan Art Center/ Pace Galleries on the USI campus is currently closed due to the COVID-19 outbreak, the exhibition is being displayed online and can be viewed at the McCutchan Art Center/Pace Galleries website.

Ninety students submitted 277 two-dimensional, three-dimensional, graphic design and photographic entries for the exhibition. The show’s juror this year, Jon Goebel ’00, chose 84 pieces by 55 artists to be included in show. Jon is a USI alum and is currently Associate Professor of Art at the University of Hawaii, Hilo. A statement about this selection process accompanies the exhibition and can also be viewed on the USI website listed above.

Awards for the exhibition will be posted to the website on Monday, April 20. Instead of an in-person ceremony, the USI Art and Design Department plans to create a video compilation of faculty announcing the award winners.

Artists selected for inclusion in the exhibition are Baylie Armstrong, Jordan Auker, Megan Baggett, Allie Boyd, Olivia Boze, Meleah Brock, Zachary Brown, Precious Burdette, Courtney Burke, Cole Collier, Emily Davis, Lisa Dayvolt, Austin Delano, Samuel DeVoy, Katherine Drake, Bridget Eckerle, Spence Farmer, Izzy Ferraro, Madison Genet, Emma Goodrich, Alexis Haag, Jonathan Hamilton, Sky Hartig, Jade Hatcher, Jody Henke, Ally Hinton, Cody Hostetler, Juanita Johnson, Hannah Jones, Anna Kauk, Noah Kress-Jones, Casey Lehman, Katie Lewis, Maddyson Lewton, Faith Long, Katherine Mathews, Viktoriia Mayatska, Casey McDaniel, Olivia Miller, Ashly Morris, Kameron Nosko, Kayla Powell, Gabrielle Pyle, Kim Rocca, Lisa Ryan-Howard, Anna Saylor, Justine Schopmeyer, Ashley Seyffarth, Alyssa Smith, ReOnna Smith, Olivia Supper, Ally Thomas, Kayne Witham, Grace Wolfinger and Chris York.

The official ending date of the exhibition is Wednesday, May 6. However, because of the online format, the exhibition will be accessible in perpetuity and will be moved to the past exhibition archives of the gallery’s website once the next exhibition opens.

For more information, contact Brett Anderson, Associate Professor of Art and Director of the McCutchen Art Center/Pace Galleries, at branderson3@usi.edu.

DISASTER PROGRAM GIVES HOOSIERS GREATER ACCESS TO FOOD ASSISTANCE AMID COVID-19 PANDEMIC

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Indiana residents who need help feeding their families during the COVID-19 pandemic will have greater access to assistance from food banks and pantries through a Disaster Household Distribution program approved by the USDA Food and Nutrition Service (FNS).

The disaster distribution program uses commodity foods from The Emergency Food Assistance Program (TEFAP), which is administered by the Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH), and is effective from today through May 14, 2020. The goal is to increase access to food assistance to those in need. Priority will be given to Hoosiers who are suffering significant economic losses.

During the COVID-19 response, food banks and partner agencies have largely shifted to drive-through distributions. Through the DHD program, current TEFAP food banks will use the network of new and existing mobile pantries to distribute food packages to families in need. It is anticipated a total of 250 sites, including mobile pantries, will assist with food distribution throughout the state, primarily in rural areas. Marion County will use Indianapolis Public School buses, community centers and a drive-through location at Gleaners Food Bank to ensure that families have easy access to food resources.

Each household receiving food through this program can receive one prepackaged 25-pound box that includes a variety of foods, including, but not limited to, canned and packaged fruits, vegetables, soups, sauces, noodles, beans, nuts, juices and meats. If frozen and/or refrigerated storage is available at a site, those items also will be distributed.

Individuals should contact their local food bank or pantry to determine whether they are participating in the DHD program. For additional information, please visit wic.in.gov or find a food pantry near you by using Indiana’s food assistance map.

EPD REPORT

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EPD REPORT

“Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jab” APRIL 16, 2020

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“Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jab” APRIL 16, 2020

“Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jab” was created because we have a couple of commenters that post on a daily basis either in our “IS IT TRUE” or “Readers Forum” columns concerning National or International issues.
The majority of our “IS IT TRUE” columns are about local or state issues, so we have decided to give our more opinionated readers exclusive access to our newly created “LEFT JAB and Middle Jab and RIGHT JAB”  column. They now have this post to exclusively discuss national or world issues that they feel passionate about.
We shall be posting the “LEFT JAB” AND “MIDDLE JAB” AND “RIGHT JAB” several times a week.  Oh, “LEFT JAB” is a liberal view, “MIDDLE JAB” is the libertarian view and the “RIGHT JAB is representative of the more conservative views. Also, any reader who would like to react to the written comments in this column is free to do so.

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Gov. Beshear, State Leaders Provide Update on Kentucky’s Fight Against COVID-19

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Gov. Beshear, State Leaders Provide Update on Kentucky’s Fight Against COVID-19

Key updates on interstate collaboration, testing, Team Kentucky Fund, field hospital

FRANKFORT, Ky. (April 15, 2020) –Gov. Beshear announced Wednesday that his administration is deepening ties with neighboring Indiana and Ohio in the fight against the novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).

The Governor said he, Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb and Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine have agreed to continue close discussions on responding to the coronavirus pandemic, with an eye toward eventually coordinating plans to reopen the states’ economies.

“Regionally, it is so critical,” Gov. Beshear said. “If you live in Northern Kentucky and Cincinnati is right across the river, we have to work together to make sure that one area isn’t on top of the virus and another just brings it in, and vice versa.”

The Governor will continue regular calls and planning sessions with neighboring governors and other leaders over the coming weeks. As action is taken, the governors will provide updates.

“These two governors and I have been on a call at least once a week, and let me tell you, they care about their people,” Gov. Beshear said. “There hasn’t been one political moment in it, just three people trying to do the best they can surrounded by teams trying to do the best that they can.”

He said that the collaboration is essential but that each leader ultimately would make his own decisions.

“In the end each state will have to sign off on any of their plans. None of us are going to relinquish our obligation to serve our people,” the Governor said. “But we believe that these three states have been doing a good job in what we face with the coronavirus and that our experience is very similar and so that by doing this we believe we can have a more effective eventual opening of different parts of our economy.”

Comprehensive Testing

Gov. Beshear also announced the first stage of a unique testing regime, starting with frontline health care workers, that is designed to save lives and get people back to work.

The Co-Immunity Project is a collaboration among the State of Kentucky, Louisville Metro Government, the Christina Lee Brown Envirome Institute and several major health care companies through the Louisville Healthcare CEO Council.

The project will focus on comprehensive testing, centered on antibodies and developing donor plasma resources.

“It will test for antibodies for those who have been infected in the past and may have developed immunity,” the Governor said.

Gov. Beshear said we are unleashing the capabilities of a special asset we have in our state, the Louisville Center for Predictive Medicine, which has state-of-the-art facilities for BSL-3 biocontainment research.

The Co-Immunity Project is a collaboration – not only between public and private institutions but also among private health care companies that normally compete against each other. They are banding together, contributing different capabilities to this project with the same goal of delivering a testing regime that can save lives and get a community of people back to work.

“This is a unique opportunity for us to leverage all of the research capabilities of the University of Louisville,” said University of Louisville President Neeli Bendapudi. “We are very eager to try to work with the entire population, first of all, to protect our health care workers and then everyone in the community and hopefully from Louisville we are able to take this and extend it to enhancing the health of the entire commonwealth.”

Team Kentucky Fund

Gov. Beshear announced new fundraising numbers and an oversight panel for the Team Kentucky Fund.

Lt. Gov. Jacqueline Coleman appeared Wednesday remotely via video to announce the five co-chairs.

“I have some great news to share with the state about the Team Kentucky Fund,” Lt. Gov. Coleman said. “First of all, I have recruited five co-chairs to serve as the team that leads the charge here, and it is a bipartisan group of folks that you might recognize because they have all held my position of lieutenant governor in the past.”

Jerry Abramson, Steve Henry, Crit Luallen, Daniel Mongiardo, and Steve Pence will co-chair the Team Kentucky Fund to help Kentuckians whose employment has been affected by COVID-19.

Beshear, along with the Kentucky Public Protection Cabinet, took executive action on March 23 to establish the Team Kentucky Fund, an online platform to provide help to Kentuckians affected financially during the COVID-19 emergency.

This fund will complement other efforts from the state’s unemployment payments to federal stimulus, said Lt. Gov. Coleman, who is also secretary of the Education and Workforce Development Cabinet.

“We are going to be partnering with Community Action of Kentucky. We are going to be partnering with this group because they have a long history of impactful work. This organization is going to serve as the hands and feet of this mission,” Lt. Gov. Coleman said.

Gov. Beshear said that right now there is more than $1.8 million raised or pledged to the Team Kentucky Fund.

“More than 7,000 people have donated. Most of the donations were less than $100,” the Governor said. “We’ve also had some businesses and private donors step up with gifts from $10,000 to the $1 million announcements we had from the Kentucky Colonels just yesterday.”

In addition to the Kentucky Colonels’ unprecedented donation, Gov. Beshear highlighted some of the major gifts, including $125,000 from an anonymous business donor, $100,000 from LG&E, $25,000 from Health Tech Solutions and $65,000 from Bret Walker and Emilee Stites in cooperation with TeeSpring Inc. (Walker and Stites operate BeshearGear.com, with 100% of proceeds going to the Team Kentucky Fund.)

“I want to thank everyone for their generosity in this,” the Governor said. “Nobody’s personal finances are in a positive place as we go through this. Thinking about the fact that people have donated already $1.9 million to help out their fellow human being is once again passing that test of humanity.”

University of Kentucky Football Coach Mark Stoops sent a video promoting the Team Kentucky Fund.

“Any coach will tell you, in order to have success, you have to have to execute a game plan. Our game plan is this: stay healthy and stay home. And keep a safe distance from family and loved ones. That is how you win. That is how you defeat the coronavirus,” Coach Stoops said.

“But much like a team, you also need a strong supporting cast. That is why the Governor and the Team Kentucky Fund has put together an initiative and a fundraiser,” Coach Stoops said. “Some Kentuckians are being hit so much harder than others. And they need our support.”

Donate to the Team Kentucky Fund at www.donate.ky.gov.

Drive-Through Testing Update

Gov. Beshear provided updates and clarification about the state’s partnership with Kroger to provide drive-through testing for the coronavirus in the commonwealth.

A main point of emphasis is that Kroger stores and pharmacies are not testing sites. Please do not call the stores or pharmacies seeking to register for the tests.

For those seeking to register for a test, a new website has been established. For location details or to register for a test, visit KROGERHEALTH.COM/COVIDTESTING.

Those eligible for the tests include people exhibiting symptoms of COVID-19, including fever, shortness of breath and cough; health care workers and first responders who may have been exposed to coronavirus; and anyone with mild symptoms who also may have been exposed to COVID-19.

The testing is done free of charge. The overall goal of the partnership is to conduct 20,000 tests over the next five weeks. Test results are expected within approximately 48 hours.

Census update

Gov. Beshear is continuing to encourage Kentuckians to do their Constitutional duty and fill out the 2020 U.S. Census.

“The Census provides significant dollars,” the Governor said. “When we talk about needing to rebuild our economy, we are leaving dollars on the table unless every Kentucky family completes the Census.”

Newly released numbers show that Kentucky is outpacing the national average 51% to 49.1% in self-response to the Census. However, a regional look at the commonwealth shows far less reporting in the eastern portion of the state.

“This is really important for the months ahead when we can look to not just restarting but reviving our economy,” the Governor said.

Field Hospital Update

Kentucky National Guard Adj. Gen. Hal Lamberton provided an update on the field hospitalat the Kentucky Exposition Center.

“At this moment, it is operational. We currently have 250 beds there. We have the potential of expanding that should the need arise,” Gen. Lamberton said. “The intent of this acute-care facility is if there is a need and an overflow at our local hospitals in the Louisville area, that this is a means to send some of the light-medical-care COVID-19 afflicted patients. We can’t wait till that need is already there, we’ve got to have this prepared in advance of the need, thus the operational date now, well ahead.”

He said the collaborative effort includes the Kentucky National Guard, Kentucky Emergency Management, the Kentucky Department for Public Health, Kentucky Homeland Security and numerous local and state level organizations.

Case Information

As of 5 p.m. April 15, Gov. Beshear said there were at least 2,291 coronavirus cases in Kentucky, 88 of which were newly confirmed.

Unfortunately, Gov. Beshear also reported seven new deaths Tuesday, raising the state’s toll to 122 deaths related to the virus.

“These seven people are a loss to all of us so let’s make sure we light our houses up tonight, and our places of business,” the Governor said.

The newly reported deaths include four women from Jefferson County, ages 88, 89 and two 93-year-olds; a 94-year-old woman from Hopkins County; a 48-year-old man from Simpson County; and a 65-year-old man from an undisclosed county.

At least 862 people have recovered from COVID-19 in Kentucky.

To date, at least 28,324 people have been tested. At least 807 people have ever been hospitalized with 412 currently hospitalized. At least 367 have ever been in the ICU with at least 252 people currently in the ICU.

Gov. Beshear also offered an update on the racial breakdown of COVID-19 patients, which has been the subject of news stories across the country because of the disparity.

The Governor said with about 73% of the known cases accounted for, 80.62% of Kentuckians who tested positive were Caucasian, 11.63% were African-American, 4.93% were multiracial, 2.63% were Asian and 0.07% were Native American, Alaskan Native or Native Hawaiian.

On fatalities attributed to the coronavirus, with about 82% of the known cases accounted for, Kentucky deaths are about 77% Caucasian, 22% African-American and 1% Asian.

“Again, those are concerning numbers,” the Governor said.

More Information

The Governor is asking all Kentuckians to continue to fight the spread of the virus by following his 10-step guidance, which includes practicing social distancing and staying healthy at home. Gov. Beshear says these efforts have the potential to save the lives of as many as 11,000 Kentuckians.

Read about other key updates, actions and information from Gov. Beshear and his administration at governor.ky.gov, kycovid19.ky.gov and the Governor’s official social media accounts Facebook, Twitter and YouTube. Watch the Governor’s social media accounts at 5 p.m. ET each day for his regular briefing.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) encourages people to follow these steps to prevent illness. Kentuckians who want advice can call the state hotline at 800-722-5725 or call their local health care provider.

Kwik Mart Battery

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   The Evansville Police Department is asking for help in identifying the person in these pictures. It is believed he may be involved in a battery that occurred on April 10 at the Kwick Mart, located at 4301 Pollack Ave. 

  The clerk told officers that an unknown male entered the store and after a brief interaction, the suspect threw a condiment jar at the clerk, striking him in the head. The clerk suffered a laceration and also had some swelling to the forehead as well.  

   If anyone recognizes this individual, they are asked to contact the Evansville Police Department’s Detective Office at 812-436-7986.

ISDH ANNOUNCES 49 NEW COVID-19 DEATHS, UPDATES STATEWIDE CASE COUNT

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The Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH) today announced that 440 additional Hoosiers have been diagnosed with COVID-19 through testing at ISDH, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and private laboratories. That brings to 8,955 the total number of Indiana residents known to have the novel coronavirus following corrections to the previous day’s total.

A total of 436 Hoosiers have died to date. Deaths are reported based on when data are received by ISDH and occurred over multiple days.

To date, 48,496 tests have been reported to ISDH, up from 46,017 on Tuesday.

Marion County had the newest cases, at 156. Other counties with more than 10 new cases were Allen (12), Hamilton (15), Hendricks (11), Johnson (18), Lake (55) and St. Joseph (40). The Lake County totals include results from East Chicago and Gary, which have their own health departments.

The complete list of counties with cases is included in the ISDH COVID-19 dashboard at coronavirus.in.gov. Cases are listed by the county of residence. Private lab reporting may be delayed and will be reflected in the map and count when results are received at ISDH. The dashboard will be updated at noon each day.