You Are Here Columbus

The blog of the social collective of Arawak City, Ohio.

12 May 2009

I FOUND THE PANOPTICON

Schoenbaum Family Center at Weinland Park

Schoenbaum Family Center

Innovation in learning and living

At the Schoenbaum Family Center at Weinland Park, the education of young children is based on a combination of caring relationships and the best in early childhood research. Located in Columbus' Weinland Park neighborhood, the center opened to families in autumn 2007.

The Ohio State University collaborates with Columbus City Schools and with the Child Development Council of Franklin County Headstart/Early Head Start to serve a culturally and economically diverse community of children ages birth to five and their families. The unique A. Sophie Rogers Laboratory School, which is within the Schoenbaum Center, overlooks the park and is co-located with the Weinland Park Elementary School, providing opportunities for collaboration across programs as well as sites for teacher training and research.

children playing in the Elmer's Art Studio

Among the first in the nation

In 1924, Ohio State was one of the first universities in the country to establish an early childhood laboratory school. Now we're among the first again, perhaps the first to collaborate with public and private partners to build our university child development laboratory in a neighborhood of documented need. Through research, innovative approaches, and best practices, we address the special issues facing families in this and similar neighborhoods worldwide.

Our cutting-edge facility draws enthusiastic partners, faculty, and students

Everyone wins when involved with the best. The Schoenbaum Family Center is a magnet attracting high-achieving students, community professionals eager to learn, and distinguished faculty to our college. Scholars consider our child population of mixed socioeconomic and cultural backgrounds, ideal for child development and education as well as for research.

Partners like you made it possible

Today, the 47,840 square foot, cutting-edge center serves 88 children and their families. The center is the cornerstone of the college's partnership with the neighborhood. Our goal is to enhance early childhood education and family well-being as a stimulant to community success. We're improving a community starting with the children.

The partnership approach has yielded many benefits, including a shared site with Columbus City Schools' Weinland Park Elementary School to ensure children's success from birth through grade five. More than 20 partners -- agencies and other Ohio State colleges -- provide support services for families.

In 2007, the university won the Magrath/Kellogg Foundation Award for Best Outreach Project in the North Central Region. The award recognizes the new model of public and private partners who are making rapid change to improve the lives of children and youth. The combined Weinland Park effort continues to gain national recognition.

Unique features of the innovative center

teacher and children in the courtyard
  • 7 Multi-age classrooms, which include:
    • 3 infant/toddler rooms - each with 8 children ages 6 weeks to 3 years old
    • 4 preschool rooms - each with 16 children ages 3 to 5 years old
  • All classrooms have 2 co-lead teachers and an assistant teacher
  • Full-day, year round program open Monday through Friday 7 am to 6 pm
  • Graduate and undergraduate Ohio State students gaining experience in child development and education in the classrooms under the mentorship of the expert lead teachers
  • A nature courtyard at the heart of the center links to the outside via side courtyards that form a ribbon of green space through the building. The space allows children to interact and stay in touch with the natural environment and the community.
  • The Proctor and Gamble Town Square for school and community gatherings.
  • The Columbus Foundation Observation Gallery overlooks all classrooms and studio spaces so parents, university students, researchers, and visitors can unobtrusively view teachers and children engaged in model practices in early childhood education and care.
  • The Elmer's Art Studio offers opportunities for children to explore and represent their many ideas and thoughts using an array of materials, from art supplies to natural and recycled materials.
  • A commercial quality kitchen includes educational space where children and families are learning about healthy nutrition, food safety, and the health effects of nutritional choices. The kitchen staff prepares a fresh morning breakfast, lunch and afternoon snack each day.
  • Large spaces dedicated to OSU faculty pursuing research in early childhood education and related fields.
  • Family advocacy office providing assistance to families
  • The JP Morgan Chase library and part-time librarian from Columbus Metropolitan Libraries providing story times and book collections for the classrooms and teachers.
  • A registered nurse provided through Columbus City Schools and wellness suite on site.

Our Staff

The A. Sophie Rogers Laboratory for Child and Family Studies at the Schoenbaum Family Center staff is made up of highly trained personnel with graduate degrees in human development and family science and early childhood education. The Director of the program as well as several of the teachers have Master's degrees in early childhood education. In addition to daily curriculum planning and implementation plus child assessment and documentation, the teachers at the Schoenbaum Family Center provide trainings and presentations to other professionals and families in Ohio and across the country.

Howard Goldstein, Ph.D.
The Ohio State University
Research Director

Michele Sanderson, M.S.
The Ohio State University
Program Director

Anneliese Johnson, M.S.
The Ohio State University
Preschool Program Coordinator

For enrollment information, please contact our Family Advocate at 614-247-7007.

Licensing

The A. Sophie Rogers Laboratory for Child and Family Studies is licensed by the State of Ohio's Child Day Care Licensing Department. A copy of the licensing guidelines are available for your review.

General Contact Information

The Schoenbaum Family Center at Weinland Park
175 E. 7th Avenue
Columbus, Ohio 43201
614-247-7488

CALL NOW!

WHAT: Call OUAB (Ohio Union Activities Board)
HOW: 292-3117

WHAT: Call the President's Office
HOW: 292-2424

The Message;
Why is there money to bring a speaker who celebrates and encourages sexual violence but not any money for sexual assault survivors?

Other action suggestions listed at bottom.

***INFORMATION***
Yesterday OUAB (Ohio Union Activities Board) sponsored a speaker, Tucker Max. Mr. Max has built his career on representing himself as a non-conformist - he not to practice law despite having a law degree from Duke because he has published a successful book. His writing career is just a celebration of male privilege and sexual violence, the 'usual college stories' of sex and drinking, but with enough hyperbole and exaggeration it's packaged as humor. Most of his stories use sex and sexuality to humiliate women and pushes the bounds on what might be considered consent - at the very least it promotes a culture of sexual violence. Why OUAB is convinced that being a misogynist is non-conformist is perplexing to me.

There was a sizable protest yesterday and it appears that OUAB didn't know how to adequately respond. There's been a lot of administrative backpedaling and some luke-warm attempts at inclusivism. [http://media.www.thelantern.com/media/storage/paper333/news/2009/05/12/Campus/Dozens.Of.Students.Protest.Tucker.Max-3740222.shtml]

Strangely enough, Mr Max's visit was advertised right after some feminists kicked off a campaign for OSU to establish a sexual violence victims fund.

Meg Zakany, an affiliate of Women and Allies Rising in Resistance, was featured in a recent OSU issue of the Lantern describing the fund. [http://www.thelantern.com/home/index.cfm?event=displayArticle&ustory_id=e4440492-955a-4a78-813c-436bdb654520]

The article states:"A group of Ohio State students is campaigning against the university and OSU Medical Center, asking OSU to pay for the medical bills of students who have been sexually assaulted on campus and who seek help from the medical center."

Zakany is quotes, saying "We know this type of fund can work because it's already had eight years of success at another Big Ten university, Penn State.""It's actually needs-based so there's no cap on the amount of funding. We're hoping we can do something similar to that here."

******
Other ideas:
1) Show up to Take Back the Night on Thursday! 5pm Wexner Center Plaza

2) Set up a meeting with OUAB. Find out how they work, how they represent different interests, and how they spend the student activity fee.

3) Propose an alternative event to OUAB. My idea is a sex fair (run by feminists, of course).

4) Start a feminist action group of your own. Look more into what you and your friends are good at and how to intervene within the patriarchal society we live in.

Shut it Down - No Rapist in Our Town

NBC

The Lantern

ABC/FOX

Some Bro's Low-Quality Video on Youtube

It could have gone better. It could have gone worse. But we think OUAB got the message. Keep a lookout for anti-misogynist superstars Joseph Shaw, Stephanie Diebold, Brett Zehner, Martin Kellogg, Mary Griffith, and Aaron Rothey. The spectacularist media loves them. Nice work, y'all.

About

This blog serves as a transparent point of discourse for You Are Here--a Columbus collective that grew out of the Comparative Studies Undergraduate Group at the Ohio State University. It consists of people from all academic and social backgrounds with an emphasis on social theory. Most succinctly put, it is creative scholarship in affect--whether it be from academia, popular culture, art, language, or personal observation. The ideas expressed in this blog are by no means reached by consensus and do not necessarily reflect those of other members. The comments doubly so. Feel free to critique, question, or agree with any views expressed. You don't have to reside in or be familiar with the city of Columbus. As far as we're concerned, you are here.