1
00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:05,000
Hey y'all, whether it's morning evening or afternoon, I'm just glad that you guys had

2
00:00:05,000 --> 00:00:11,200
decided to vibe with E. Yes, the one and only E. Hey y'all, I hope y'all have an amazing

3
00:00:11,200 --> 00:00:16,160
day feeling amazing and doing amazing things and if not, it's okay. Bad times don't last

4
00:00:16,160 --> 00:00:22,160
forever. This is just for the moment because good times are coming into your favor. So

5
00:00:22,160 --> 00:00:27,920
without further ado, I hope you guys sit back, relax and enjoy hearing my voice. As always,

6
00:00:27,920 --> 00:00:33,520
today's Bible Today is always something special. So without further ado, I want y'all to sit back,

7
00:00:33,520 --> 00:00:38,160
relax, enjoy hearing my voice. If you want to go, hope you all got your AirPods,

8
00:00:38,160 --> 00:00:43,040
beats, whatever the case may be, turn it up between the car wherever. Make sure you got me

9
00:00:43,040 --> 00:00:47,760
on floor blast because as always, like I said, every vibe of the day is something special and

10
00:00:47,760 --> 00:00:54,960
it's very important. Okay, so let's get into it. Today's Bible Today is based on education

11
00:00:54,960 --> 00:01:00,880
and academic achievement. The reason why I wanted to do this same thing like I said,

12
00:01:00,880 --> 00:01:05,840
with last week's Bible Today, by being a summertime, I wanted to focus on more within

13
00:01:05,840 --> 00:01:11,280
children, especially in places with impacts with their education. And also as me working

14
00:01:11,280 --> 00:01:17,360
with a program that is willing to help children within their development, their development,

15
00:01:17,360 --> 00:01:22,960
excuse me, within their education and achievement, as well as letting them see the world within

16
00:01:22,960 --> 00:01:29,760
different many lenses as possible, such as within the business side, their mental health side,

17
00:01:29,760 --> 00:01:34,160
what they want to be in life as well as preparing them for the real world such as preparing them

18
00:01:34,160 --> 00:01:39,600
with soft skills and things of that nature. So I felt as though this Bible Today was very

19
00:01:39,600 --> 00:01:45,600
important to discuss like I mentioned. So y'all could basically basically say that July is dedicated

20
00:01:45,600 --> 00:01:53,200
to educational standpoint because that's what I'm saying that I'm really, really, really in tune

21
00:01:53,200 --> 00:01:58,720
with an education, especially when it comes to children's education, because children needs

22
00:01:58,720 --> 00:02:03,280
their education and they deserve to get the best education regardless of where they're at,

23
00:02:03,280 --> 00:02:11,760
where they're from, who they are, etc, etc. So let's get into the five W's as always.

24
00:02:11,760 --> 00:02:18,400
So the first one is who are the key stakeholders in a child's education and how do their roles

25
00:02:18,400 --> 00:02:23,920
influence academic achievement? So this basically saying who is in their corner and how do they,

26
00:02:24,480 --> 00:02:29,600
who are in the children's corner and how do they impact the children's life when it comes to their

27
00:02:29,600 --> 00:02:37,280
education and academic advances, advancement. So the key stakeholders in a child education

28
00:02:37,280 --> 00:02:44,720
education includes parents slash guardians, teachers, school advisement, a school administration

29
00:02:44,720 --> 00:02:50,000
and policy makers. Parents and guardians provides foundational support and encouraging

30
00:02:50,800 --> 00:02:58,320
encouragement, excuse me, teachers develop instructions and in mentorship, school administrators

31
00:02:58,320 --> 00:03:06,320
ensure that ensures a conductive learning environment and policy stakeholders shapes the

32
00:03:06,320 --> 00:03:15,280
educational firm, firm work and resources management. So there are, so these people are the ones that

33
00:03:15,280 --> 00:03:21,360
are charged within, within our children's education. So you know how to say it starts from at home,

34
00:03:21,360 --> 00:03:25,360
though it starts within the parents and the guardians. The parents are the ones that help,

35
00:03:25,360 --> 00:03:30,000
you know, help them learn the basics. So when they get to school, they'll be already prepared and

36
00:03:30,000 --> 00:03:35,120
ahead and know what's going on. The teachers are the ones that refresh it and teach them new things,

37
00:03:35,120 --> 00:03:44,960
as well as the, excuse me, as well as the school advisors. They are making sure that the children

38
00:03:44,960 --> 00:03:50,400
are in a safe and well conductive environment as well as getting the tools that they need. And

39
00:03:50,400 --> 00:03:55,760
that's when the big people come in, which is the policy makers are making sure that they're shaping

40
00:03:55,760 --> 00:04:01,600
the educational firm and resources management are being conducted. So everybody's working together

41
00:04:01,600 --> 00:04:10,000
and little, little do they know. They come together to influence children's academics achievement by

42
00:04:10,000 --> 00:04:14,800
shaping the quality of their education and the support system into place. For instance,

43
00:04:14,800 --> 00:04:20,240
parents and guardians can provide tutoring assistance. Teachers can provide 101 guidance and

44
00:04:20,240 --> 00:04:27,200
support and school admissions administrators can provide resources and access to additional funding.

45
00:04:27,200 --> 00:04:32,400
However, like I mentioned, you know, when it came to last week's Bible Day within youth

46
00:04:32,400 --> 00:04:38,480
and mentorship, sometimes when it comes to funding within certain schools such as city schools,

47
00:04:38,480 --> 00:04:43,360
counties, charter schools, private schools, things like that, sometimes the funding is hard because

48
00:04:43,360 --> 00:04:49,920
you don't know who is entitled to have what amount of money and how much can you put that money in

49
00:04:49,920 --> 00:04:55,440
within, you know, certain parts of the school when it comes to a child education. However, that's when

50
00:04:55,440 --> 00:05:05,280
the, make sure I don't say it wrong. The school administrators find ways to get these endorsements

51
00:05:05,280 --> 00:05:10,080
as well as the funding, the funding. So hopefully that the policy makers and stuff too will be able

52
00:05:10,080 --> 00:05:14,880
to help them within getting the money that the kids deserve and getting the stuff that they need,

53
00:05:14,880 --> 00:05:18,640
you know, books, pencils, all that, as well as when the teachers as well because they need the

54
00:05:18,640 --> 00:05:27,120
materials to teach the children. So what are children's primary challenge in under-reasonal

55
00:05:27,920 --> 00:05:35,840
schools and what strategies can address these issues? So children in under-resourced schools

56
00:05:35,840 --> 00:05:43,920
often face challenges such as inflation, access to quality learning materials, a lack of faculty,

57
00:05:43,920 --> 00:05:54,320
and high students to teachers' rates. So that being said, like Becca mentioned, the funding is very

58
00:05:54,320 --> 00:06:00,320
involved because some of their facing challenges such as with inflation, they have not been getting

59
00:06:00,320 --> 00:06:05,200
the access to quality learning materials, you know, such as like up and running laptops,

60
00:06:05,200 --> 00:06:15,200
the boards, the smart boards for the teachers, books, and other, and with any other material

61
00:06:15,200 --> 00:06:20,400
that the teachers may need for the children, and as well as a ratio. So it's more children than it

62
00:06:20,400 --> 00:06:25,280
is teachers. And you know, to certain classes, I believe the maximum amount of students that a

63
00:06:25,280 --> 00:06:32,720
teacher can teach, I believe is 30 if I'm not mistaken, allegedly. It's supposed to be 30.

64
00:06:32,720 --> 00:06:38,400
And college is different because you can have a class up to 50 to 100 people

65
00:06:38,400 --> 00:06:43,840
than one professor or doctor can be able to teach. But versus within that elementary through high school

66
00:06:43,840 --> 00:06:51,440
level, I believe allegedly, I would do my research, it has to be I think 30 in under for one teacher.

67
00:06:52,240 --> 00:06:58,560
So that's a problem right there because it should not be a lot of teachers and it's not a lot of,

68
00:06:58,560 --> 00:07:03,680
it should not be a lot of, excuse me, students and it's not a lot of teachers. And that's messing

69
00:07:03,680 --> 00:07:11,280
up the ratio to because that's one of the things that needs to be addressed because it's like,

70
00:07:11,280 --> 00:07:22,160
you know, within certain districts, like I know within where I'm from, teachers are not getting

71
00:07:22,160 --> 00:07:26,080
the resources that they need, and it's making them harder is making it harder for them to

72
00:07:26,080 --> 00:07:31,760
even teach their children as well as making it harder for them to give them the access and tools

73
00:07:31,760 --> 00:07:36,800
that they need to succeed because they're not getting what they're asking for. So they're fighting

74
00:07:36,800 --> 00:07:43,360
as well for the children to have their education and have the that to have like that good academic

75
00:07:44,320 --> 00:07:48,720
advance, but they really can't because it's not they're not getting the funding and stuff. And it's

76
00:07:48,720 --> 00:07:53,920
like, it's what so much of a teacher can handle and can do. And a lot of people be like, Oh,

77
00:07:53,920 --> 00:07:58,560
you're a teacher that's your job. Yeah, but nobody really understands a teacher's point of view,

78
00:07:59,360 --> 00:08:05,520
as well as getting to a deeper understanding of why things happen and how they're trying to

79
00:08:06,640 --> 00:08:12,480
remove or renew for everything while making sure that their students are getting the education

80
00:08:12,480 --> 00:08:19,120
and academic achievement that they're supposed to. So it is very hard. These issues can be addressed

81
00:08:19,120 --> 00:08:25,840
through increasing funding, communication, community partnerships and targeting interventions,

82
00:08:25,840 --> 00:08:32,720
such as after school programs, professional development for teachers, and the integration of

83
00:08:32,720 --> 00:08:38,560
technology to enhance my learning. So by addressing these challenges, such as children, education,

84
00:08:38,560 --> 00:08:44,800
environment and outcomes can be certain can be significant and proof, for instance, a school

85
00:08:44,800 --> 00:08:51,040
may partner with a local organization to provide after school tutoring and some mentor programs

86
00:08:51,040 --> 00:08:58,560
for disadvantaged students or a student may and or school sorry, may invest in a technology program

87
00:08:58,560 --> 00:09:04,560
to provide access to online learning materials. So like I mentioned, when it comes to the materials

88
00:09:04,560 --> 00:09:10,080
that children need and things like that, sometimes it's even the school may cannot afford it. So it's

89
00:09:10,080 --> 00:09:15,920
like they have to find fundings and find people to do it. I want to use an example such as the show.

90
00:09:18,880 --> 00:09:24,720
I don't want to mess up the name. I think it's called Abbing Elementary, if I'm not mistaken.

91
00:09:24,720 --> 00:09:30,640
That's a prime example of displaying how those teachers are willing to do anything and everything

92
00:09:30,640 --> 00:09:37,680
in their power for their students. And it's so hard to get because of funding. Funding is impacted

93
00:09:37,680 --> 00:09:43,360
with everything that you do within your life, especially when it comes to within kids and

94
00:09:43,360 --> 00:09:48,640
you're dealing with like the community with school and stuff like that. It's so hard to find funding

95
00:09:48,640 --> 00:09:53,520
because you know, it's not in the budget. Oh, this was in the budget, like certain stuff has to be

96
00:09:53,520 --> 00:09:57,680
in the budget. And if not, you can't do it. Or you got to find out on your you got to figure it out

97
00:09:57,680 --> 00:10:01,840
on your own like you got to start fund raises or you got to find people that are willing to

98
00:10:01,840 --> 00:10:07,280
sponsor teachers. And I remember that episode they had like they were online, you had to be,

99
00:10:07,280 --> 00:10:12,400
you had to have the best video to get, you know, all this and that and they did it. But it was just

100
00:10:12,400 --> 00:10:23,680
like, it should not be that way. But it is if that makes sense. So it's just so crazy. It's so crazy.

101
00:10:23,680 --> 00:10:35,280
It's just so crazy, guys. It's just so crazy. But that's why I say shout out to everybody who is

102
00:10:35,280 --> 00:10:41,680
an educator or in or who is working within the educational field because it's hard. And it is

103
00:10:42,800 --> 00:10:49,440
our duty, your duty to make sure that our children is getting the best education that they deserve

104
00:10:49,440 --> 00:10:56,880
because they need it. You know, coming into this generation is a must that you have some type of

105
00:10:56,880 --> 00:11:05,280
education. If not, allegedly, they'll say you stupid. You're nothing. And we don't want our

106
00:11:05,280 --> 00:11:09,040
children to grow up in an environment like that because they are something they are the future.

107
00:11:09,600 --> 00:11:14,800
And we need them. They are the people that they're next in line. Those are the ones that are

108
00:11:14,800 --> 00:11:22,400
preparing for what's to come. They are the ones that are thought they are the ones that we need.

109
00:11:22,400 --> 00:11:29,200
They are the ones that we need to, you know, we need to prepare them for what's to come overall.

110
00:11:29,200 --> 00:11:36,000
Basically, we need to get it, you know, we need to get them out there. You know, prepare them for

111
00:11:36,000 --> 00:11:43,280
the ins and outs of good and the bad because they all we have. And we have about us being the new

112
00:11:43,280 --> 00:11:49,600
generation. You know how they joke when I say, excuse me, oh, it went too close. The mic was so

113
00:11:49,600 --> 00:11:56,960
close. How they say that we are the new generation of aunts and uncles and the new generation of

114
00:11:56,960 --> 00:12:04,240
adults period. We're the new generation of adults. So we have to prepare the younger generation, such

115
00:12:04,240 --> 00:12:10,160
as our siblings, nieces and nephews, whatever the case may be, that look, yeah, we played around. But

116
00:12:10,160 --> 00:12:15,520
now it's time to like buckle up because this already get real. It's ready to get real, as well as we

117
00:12:15,520 --> 00:12:20,720
have to make sure that we're doing anything in our power to display positivity because y'all are

118
00:12:20,720 --> 00:12:29,200
watching us. We are y'all new role models now. We have to display nothing but as much positivity,

119
00:12:29,200 --> 00:12:34,320
but also, like I say to within the podcast, this is raw none cut. So you have to sell things raw

120
00:12:34,320 --> 00:12:39,520
none cut out the mug or whatever the case may be because this is a life, especially when it comes

121
00:12:39,520 --> 00:12:44,960
to a children when it comes to a child act education and and impacting their academics and

122
00:12:44,960 --> 00:12:52,400
achievement. That's a big deal. That's a real big deal because like I said, education is needed.

123
00:12:52,400 --> 00:12:58,400
And that's the one thing you can stand on. Nothing I mean, don't get me wrong as a person that is

124
00:12:58,400 --> 00:13:05,120
in college and you know works, you know, jobs on the side. You want your children.

125
00:13:05,120 --> 00:13:12,880
And you want the children to think a little deeper, you know, because at times working those jobs gets

126
00:13:12,880 --> 00:13:18,720
tiring. And you know, you don't want to stay stagnant. You want to have something to say this

127
00:13:18,720 --> 00:13:26,320
is yours. So you know, you go to school, trade school, whatever you got to do to get that career

128
00:13:26,320 --> 00:13:29,600
goal to get whatever you want to do. You know, a lot of children when I speak to a lot of kids,

129
00:13:29,600 --> 00:13:33,440
they like they want to be rich, they want to be building this, you know, they know they want to

130
00:13:33,440 --> 00:13:37,840
be somebody and I applaud them for that. However, I tell you, you got to put that work in and you

131
00:13:37,840 --> 00:13:43,360
got to start now because it's not going to fall in your lap. That's everything. That's every time I

132
00:13:43,360 --> 00:13:47,360
tell people like, you know, when you want something, you got to go get it. It's not going to fall in

133
00:13:47,360 --> 00:13:52,640
your lap. Like you really got to work hard. You got to this hard work dedication is at times where

134
00:13:52,640 --> 00:13:56,480
you are going to fail, but it's okay. You got to you just got to try again. You got to keep on,

135
00:13:56,480 --> 00:14:00,880
keep on until you get the results that you want as well as when it comes to education. I'm not

136
00:14:00,880 --> 00:14:06,240
going to lie to you when it comes to education. It's no such thing as being perfect all the time.

137
00:14:06,240 --> 00:14:10,320
First of all, it's no such thing as being perfect anyway, because if that was the case, we all be

138
00:14:10,320 --> 00:14:17,680
the same. Nobody's per se. However, you know, certain in certain areas within education,

139
00:14:17,680 --> 00:14:22,400
that's people's strong point. And then you have some people in certain places in education,

140
00:14:22,400 --> 00:14:28,160
it's not a strong point for me, English and things like that. English, literature, see

141
00:14:28,160 --> 00:14:32,320
and stuff like that. My strong points. Now my strong points I believe though is anything

142
00:14:32,320 --> 00:14:39,920
involving with science and mathematics because it's not. It took me a minute. It took me a long

143
00:14:39,920 --> 00:14:45,680
time to finally understand like, okay, this is not for me. But as many times because I'm not

144
00:14:45,680 --> 00:14:51,200
going to lie to y'all, when you get older in college, you might have to fail a class or two

145
00:14:51,200 --> 00:14:58,960
to understand, okay, I gotta, I gotta buckle up and get it together. And I tell people all the time,

146
00:14:58,960 --> 00:15:05,120
because at first I used to be ashamed to express my failures within certain obstacles in my life,

147
00:15:05,120 --> 00:15:09,120
especially when it comes to classes, because people always look at me like, oh, you so smart,

148
00:15:09,120 --> 00:15:16,320
you a nerd, you this and that. But nerds have a hard time too. You know, we have our times.

149
00:15:16,320 --> 00:15:21,840
I'm not going to lie to y'all, I failed a class or two when I was a community college because

150
00:15:22,720 --> 00:15:30,480
one, the pandemic, I'm a hands on in person learning. This learning the Zoom wasn't for me,

151
00:15:30,480 --> 00:15:35,840
as well as when it came to my siblings doing Zoom. I was my first like, when the first happened,

152
00:15:35,840 --> 00:15:42,720
I was in my 12th grade year. My brother was in his eighth grade year. And my sister, she was in her,

153
00:15:42,720 --> 00:15:55,120
I want to say, I think she was in the sixth grade. Yeah, she was in the sixth grade. All of us in the

154
00:15:55,120 --> 00:16:03,120
house together, trying to learn on Zoom, it was insane, because we're all hands on learning. Me,

155
00:16:03,120 --> 00:16:10,640
it had me like, oh my God, I'm really got to sit here in front of a screen with my professors and

156
00:16:10,640 --> 00:16:16,240
for teachers. And I'm losing my mind because it's like, I'm used to being in person. This way it gets

157
00:16:16,240 --> 00:16:22,800
me engaged. When I'm online, there's nothing to online people get distracted. Like, it wasn't it.

158
00:16:23,520 --> 00:16:28,560
You know, it's like some people that's their itch and some it's not. That wasn't mine. However,

159
00:16:28,560 --> 00:16:33,680
when the pandemic lift up and everything, and I started going to school, I was like, this is

160
00:16:33,680 --> 00:16:38,640
when to be at this is with okay, I feel better because them classes I failed y'all doing a pandemic,

161
00:16:38,640 --> 00:16:43,280
I was like, look, I got to take these in person once the pandemic lift up because this ain't it.

162
00:16:43,280 --> 00:16:47,440
And once I did it and I understood what was going on and I took notes, I still was just like,

163
00:16:47,440 --> 00:16:52,480
I need to be in person. I need examples boards like right out. I need to imagine, you know,

164
00:16:52,480 --> 00:16:57,920
get a feeling grips of it. After that, y'all, I was able to pass it like, yes, I'm not ashamed to

165
00:16:57,920 --> 00:17:05,280
say I took statistics twice in college because it was hard for me to grasp, especially math. Oh, baby,

166
00:17:05,280 --> 00:17:11,440
I got to be in person. And that's how it is with certain children that doubt with the pandemic,

167
00:17:11,440 --> 00:17:18,880
as well as even in person, a lot of children, a lot of people have different learning styles.

168
00:17:18,880 --> 00:17:22,720
When I heard my little sister and my little brother, their outcome of how it was from the

169
00:17:22,720 --> 00:17:26,800
pandemic versus when they came back to school, as well as with their friends, I was like, look,

170
00:17:26,800 --> 00:17:34,000
look, do you see us as the new adults coming up? We have to be the ones to help the children as well

171
00:17:34,000 --> 00:17:39,200
as navigate them within these things. Because like I said, it's but so much that the teachers can do

172
00:17:39,200 --> 00:17:45,840
and the parents and guardians. So I know like, you know, if you certain children do not have

173
00:17:45,840 --> 00:17:53,920
older siblings, that's okay. That's where also mentioning from last week's episode, mentors

174
00:17:53,920 --> 00:18:00,320
come in. So like, you know, children that don't have siblings, that's where the mentors come in to

175
00:18:00,320 --> 00:18:05,920
help them, you know, we on the team within their parents and the teachers can teachers and guardians

176
00:18:05,920 --> 00:18:09,680
to help them. So you know, like I said, that's where also like I felt that okay,

177
00:18:10,960 --> 00:18:16,640
I'm working for a program that's willing to navigate children in the right place when it

178
00:18:16,640 --> 00:18:20,400
comes to learning soft skills and learning the environment mental health and everything like

179
00:18:20,400 --> 00:18:27,840
that. It starts from home first. And I thank God that I was able to install that with them,

180
00:18:28,800 --> 00:18:33,440
siblings, because it's like, I'm not like I said, nobody's perfect. I'm not perfect.

181
00:18:33,440 --> 00:18:40,960
But I'm glad I was able to display to them how serious education is and how necessary it is

182
00:18:40,960 --> 00:18:50,720
to have an education because if not, if not, allegedly quote unquote, you're nothing. You know,

183
00:18:50,720 --> 00:18:57,440
when like you got to think to like, kids are real big on music, kids can be learning education can be

184
00:18:57,440 --> 00:19:02,320
through music as well. Certain learn learn lyrics that their favorite artists, rappers or whatever

185
00:19:02,320 --> 00:19:09,040
say, educate them as well. And it holds power to them. Like, you know, certain like even big artists,

186
00:19:09,040 --> 00:19:14,880
some of them don't even some of them didn't even go finish school or have a GED, but they're able

187
00:19:14,880 --> 00:19:22,560
to have something to spend on. But I feel as though as a right now, within the society that we're

188
00:19:22,560 --> 00:19:28,000
brought up in and living in and going through, we need education, we need to fall back on it

189
00:19:28,000 --> 00:19:34,160
because there's so much stuff changing. As like, you know, within like, for example, project,

190
00:19:34,160 --> 00:19:41,280
the project 25 stuff like that stuff is changing, we have to be able to we got to be able to do

191
00:19:41,280 --> 00:19:52,080
something. And we got to be able to mold our children into the right direction. No matter how

192
00:19:52,080 --> 00:19:57,520
many times, you know, maybe if it failed, we got to keep going because education,

193
00:19:57,520 --> 00:20:08,400
it academic advice, academic achievement is important. And they need it. Okay.

194
00:20:09,840 --> 00:20:15,840
So if you have children, siblings, nieces, nephews, you know, or foster parents or guardians,

195
00:20:15,840 --> 00:20:19,920
grandma or grandpa, cousin, uncle, whatever the case may be, you taking care of a child,

196
00:20:19,920 --> 00:20:26,000
teacher, whatever the case may be, it is keep in mind that you have to mold your children.

197
00:20:26,000 --> 00:20:32,560
You have to keep in mind that they're the future. They're the ones that need this.

198
00:20:32,560 --> 00:20:37,440
Those are the ones that we're putting all these jewels into knowledge and everything too, because

199
00:20:38,320 --> 00:20:43,840
they need it. They need it. If anything else, if you know, people can say any,

200
00:20:43,840 --> 00:20:48,320
any and anything about them, but they cannot say they're not educated. There's one thing

201
00:20:48,320 --> 00:20:52,320
they cannot take away from them. Can't take away from them getting a middle school, you know,

202
00:20:52,320 --> 00:21:00,320
diploma, a high school diploma, college degree or certification. They can't take that away from you.

203
00:21:00,320 --> 00:21:04,480
That's one thing a person cannot and will not take away from you for you having

204
00:21:05,360 --> 00:21:11,840
education, play-blank period. And if somebody try, it's because they're mad because they can't do it.

205
00:21:11,840 --> 00:21:16,960
But I say everybody can get it. It takes time. Yes, it takes time. You know, people, some people

206
00:21:16,960 --> 00:21:23,040
be like, I can't do it right now. Okay, cool. It's not too late, but don't wait too long because,

207
00:21:23,040 --> 00:21:28,400
you know, certain people can't do it for so long. But one thing we also are not going to do is tear

208
00:21:28,400 --> 00:21:32,960
down another person for getting education that they're getting, you know. Some people say it's

209
00:21:32,960 --> 00:21:40,000
born going back to school and doing that stuff. But hey, it may be born to you, but to them it's

210
00:21:40,000 --> 00:21:44,080
not. This is what they, this is what they dream for. They ask for a reason over the case, maybe,

211
00:21:44,080 --> 00:21:49,200
or they realize, hey, you know, I can't keep doing this. Y'all can't be stagnant in this one position.

212
00:21:49,200 --> 00:21:54,080
So if I have to get to a higher position that I want to get to and make this amount of money,

213
00:21:54,080 --> 00:21:59,200
I got to go to school. Play-blank period. And in certain jobs too, they want you to go to school

214
00:21:59,200 --> 00:22:03,040
to have at least a master's degree, depending on what field you're going to, because that's

215
00:22:03,040 --> 00:22:07,760
where what, that's where the money is and have some credentials such as certifications and stuff

216
00:22:07,760 --> 00:22:13,680
like that. So that's why us adults that are going to school or have been in school and everything

217
00:22:13,680 --> 00:22:18,640
like that, we need to mold this into our children because they're the future and they need role

218
00:22:18,640 --> 00:22:24,800
models to see how it is. For example, you know, when we were younger, you know, when we were in

219
00:22:24,800 --> 00:22:30,880
middle school elementary, we've seen high school, had high school fairs, went to college trips and

220
00:22:30,880 --> 00:22:36,720
stuff. And here these people, real-life people, people look like us, people look like you,

221
00:22:36,720 --> 00:22:44,640
well the case may be telling their story to you because this is what they wanted. This is all

222
00:22:44,640 --> 00:22:49,680
they ever wanted. Or they realize, hey, if I got a, if I, if I want to be this person and be in this

223
00:22:49,680 --> 00:22:56,960
field, I got to do this. I got to do this. And I'm telling you, it's not easy. I scratched this

224
00:22:56,960 --> 00:23:03,920
enough. It's not easy. But when you put your best foot forward and keep going and keep going and

225
00:23:03,920 --> 00:23:10,160
keep going, hey, you're going to stop a bull. Yes, you're going to make, yes, you're going to fail.

226
00:23:10,720 --> 00:23:16,480
Yes, you're going to fail. But that's why it's always good to go back or do it all over.

227
00:23:17,360 --> 00:23:25,680
Take it from a person that failed statistics one semester and failed environmental science

228
00:23:25,680 --> 00:23:35,120
another semester during the pandemic and was able to take both of those classes,

229
00:23:35,120 --> 00:23:42,160
two of the most hardest classes I've ever thought as being an undergrad to take at the same time

230
00:23:42,160 --> 00:23:48,400
before graduating and was able to pass it. I'm telling y'all, it all it takes is just, you know,

231
00:23:48,400 --> 00:23:52,000
keep going, keep it going and motivate yourself. Study, study, study, study, study, study, y'all.

232
00:23:52,000 --> 00:23:58,080
When I tell y'all, when I like first times I ever seen bees, every the first time I ever seen a bee

233
00:23:58,080 --> 00:24:06,080
on a test that I took and math statistic and as a college student y'all, I flipped. I think I went,

234
00:24:06,080 --> 00:24:12,800
I think I bought me a nice, a nice lunch that day because like you got to reward yourself. You know,

235
00:24:12,800 --> 00:24:16,800
at times when I say you got to treat yourself, treat yourself once to the, even the little

236
00:24:16,800 --> 00:24:21,440
accomplishment you got to give as well as when it comes to our children, we got to

237
00:24:21,440 --> 00:24:27,040
give them their flowers, give them their praise too because it's hard. Education is hard. Anything

238
00:24:27,040 --> 00:24:32,880
involving you know, getting you into a predicament in your life to be great or to be that person you

239
00:24:32,880 --> 00:24:39,840
see yourself as, you got to give yourself some praise. Yes, it's going to be hard. Yes, in the

240
00:24:40,800 --> 00:24:46,800
midst of getting this education on owners' roles to succeed, to be successful, you're gonna have

241
00:24:46,800 --> 00:24:54,000
some bumps and bruises because I tell y'all, looking back when I did fail those classes, I was like,

242
00:24:54,000 --> 00:25:01,600
man, mind y'all, come in to college. I'm like, man, I don't know what I'm gonna do. And then my mind

243
00:25:01,600 --> 00:25:07,200
of like, I'm hoping the pandemic will lift because I'm not an online learner. This is not for me.

244
00:25:07,200 --> 00:25:13,040
I'm hands on. I like to be in person. I like to, when you're in person, I like to suck up the energy,

245
00:25:13,040 --> 00:25:19,280
the vibe. I like to get it. And that's what makes me keep talking, you know, understand. And then by

246
00:25:19,280 --> 00:25:24,720
me seeing them on the board and stuff like that, hearing the professor lay it out, because I know

247
00:25:24,720 --> 00:25:31,920
too for professors, teachers, doctors, it wasn't it. Everybody was messed up. And bus by able, you

248
00:25:31,920 --> 00:25:37,520
know, now in college, it's flexible. You could do Zoom in person or hybrid is in person or Zoom.

249
00:25:37,520 --> 00:25:44,640
I'm not a hybrid person when it comes to school. Work life, love it. School, no.

250
00:25:46,240 --> 00:25:51,840
But y'all, this is, you know, everything I'm saying is raw and uncut. And it's true from experience,

251
00:25:51,840 --> 00:25:58,880
because you never know who better needs predicaments before. And it's okay to fail. It's a part of life

252
00:25:58,880 --> 00:26:03,440
and it's a part of education. But one thing I will say, keep going. Don't stop, keep going.

253
00:26:03,440 --> 00:26:11,200
So next, we're going to jump into when is the most crucial period for

254
00:26:11,200 --> 00:26:18,560
intubations to intervating in a child's education development to the maximum academic achievement.

255
00:26:18,560 --> 00:26:25,520
So this is where we're taught by what period in a child's life should we install the educational

256
00:26:25,520 --> 00:26:34,080
of development. So a child's education development is the most crucial time to develop the most

257
00:26:34,080 --> 00:26:41,120
crucial sorry period for getting education developed into a child is during their early

258
00:26:41,120 --> 00:26:47,440
childhood years, particularly from birth to eight years old. So you know, when people

259
00:26:47,440 --> 00:26:54,880
have children, when when they start talking, that's where it gets you okay, you need to learn your ABCs,

260
00:26:54,880 --> 00:26:59,040
what's your name, how to spell your name, when your birthday, how older you was your mom's name,

261
00:26:59,680 --> 00:27:05,440
your dad's name, guardian, that's where it gets the nitty-gritty up until the age of eight. That's

262
00:27:05,440 --> 00:27:10,880
when they get to the second grade. That's when they that's when they get to is even the second or

263
00:27:10,880 --> 00:27:17,840
the third grade. Let me think first grade I was six. Yeah, third grade. So when they started talking,

264
00:27:17,840 --> 00:27:24,080
so like a couple months old up until like the third grade, that's where the parents and guardians

265
00:27:24,640 --> 00:27:32,800
get involved deeply into like starting the children off within their child's educational

266
00:27:32,800 --> 00:27:38,720
development to maximize their academic achievement. So during this time, children development

267
00:27:38,720 --> 00:27:48,240
develops foundational literacy, numerous and social emotions, such as like within learning skills,

268
00:27:48,240 --> 00:27:52,320
such as within the movie inside out, you know, that's a good movie to take your children to go

269
00:27:52,320 --> 00:27:59,040
see because it helps a lot with their social emotions, learning skills, you know, you have

270
00:27:59,040 --> 00:28:06,720
anger, sad, joy, fear, a discuss all that, take your kids to go see it. But first I will say before

271
00:28:06,720 --> 00:28:14,880
you go see inside out to you have to watch inside out the first one to understand how it is when a

272
00:28:14,880 --> 00:28:20,800
child develops, such as within education points and also within general as them growing up to be,

273
00:28:20,800 --> 00:28:27,520
you know, from being a little kid, you know, from a toddler infant, infant, toddler,

274
00:28:30,400 --> 00:28:36,480
preschool level, elementary level, middle school, and a lesson high school, young adult,

275
00:28:36,480 --> 00:28:41,520
everything in that nature. Because it's really, I was really intrigued, really, really intrigued,

276
00:28:41,520 --> 00:28:47,840
and it's like, hey, this is crazy. But it's worth watching because it will help the children

277
00:28:47,840 --> 00:28:53,200
understand okay. It's how they feel it. And it also help a child to understand why they feel the way

278
00:28:53,200 --> 00:29:02,720
they feel. So the early interventions such as high quality preschool programs and early literacy

279
00:29:02,720 --> 00:29:09,280
activities are essential for setting the stage for long term academic success. For instance,

280
00:29:09,280 --> 00:29:14,400
a high quality preschool program can help children learn the skills they need for kindergarten,

281
00:29:14,400 --> 00:29:19,520
such as counting, matching and realizing letters, which are essential for future,

282
00:29:20,320 --> 00:29:28,640
for future, for academic success. So with this being said, as though, as soon as like I said,

283
00:29:28,640 --> 00:29:33,680
as soon as children start to talk, that's when I feel as though that's when the parents, the guardians

284
00:29:34,800 --> 00:29:41,760
are able to install like the basic skills they need to know what's their name, how to spell their name,

285
00:29:42,640 --> 00:29:48,000
birthdays, colors, shapes, stuff like that. Some kids are taught at home because you know,

286
00:29:48,000 --> 00:29:52,720
they have homeschool too. That's why people also fail to realize too, you know, even though

287
00:29:52,720 --> 00:29:59,920
most parents and guardians don't have their children within like the public or private

288
00:29:59,920 --> 00:30:04,640
eye, they also have them in the comfort of their own home because some children, you know,

289
00:30:06,400 --> 00:30:10,800
are best to be at home or the parents feel those okay. For safety reasons,

290
00:30:11,840 --> 00:30:16,320
my child is going to work from home. I'm not really a lot of times people too when I was

291
00:30:16,320 --> 00:30:23,360
on the reason the research too, they say allegedly students that are from low income communities

292
00:30:23,360 --> 00:30:29,520
will not be as smart, you know, or not be into education like that. But I feel as though that's

293
00:30:29,520 --> 00:30:36,720
a legally so that's like opinion because as a person that grew up in a community that's like

294
00:30:38,080 --> 00:30:44,560
it is urban, mixed with different cultures, but in a middle class, the middle class,

295
00:30:44,560 --> 00:30:50,080
the little class community who didn't go to a private school but experienced going to a city

296
00:30:50,080 --> 00:30:59,920
school, a county school, I was able to be up there with so they say the children that have a higher

297
00:31:01,040 --> 00:31:08,640
educational standpoint. And I didn't go to preschool. I learned if I'm at home,

298
00:31:08,640 --> 00:31:15,040
then when pre K and pre KK, I was on it and that's the same way from me and my siblings as well.

299
00:31:15,600 --> 00:31:19,920
So that's another thing. So I wanted to dig deep on to but we're almost there. So I gave

300
00:31:19,920 --> 00:31:28,080
a little teaser but we're almost there. So where are the disappointaries and educational resources

301
00:31:28,080 --> 00:31:36,000
and opportunities that most invest in? How can they be monetized? So this party's in the educational

302
00:31:36,000 --> 00:31:43,200
resources and opportunities are more invested in low income and rural areas where schools often

303
00:31:43,200 --> 00:31:50,960
lack necessary funding, qualified teachers and essential faculties. This, this parties can be

304
00:31:50,960 --> 00:31:57,840
monetized through equipment funding models, target support programs and policies that offers

305
00:31:57,840 --> 00:32:03,760
additional resources to unserved communities, enhancing access to technology professionals

306
00:32:03,760 --> 00:32:11,520
development for educationers, for education and educationers and community engagement activities

307
00:32:11,520 --> 00:32:17,360
can also help bridge this gap. So for example, providing additional funds and resources to

308
00:32:17,360 --> 00:32:22,160
schools located in low income communities can help ensure that students have the same access to

309
00:32:22,160 --> 00:32:27,520
technology as peers in the high income community. So as I mentioned, like I just said, a lot of

310
00:32:27,520 --> 00:32:33,120
people always be like a lot of people always be like, Oh, yeah, my child or I know a child

311
00:32:33,120 --> 00:32:37,280
or whatever case may be that goes to a school that's a private school that's impacted with the

312
00:32:37,280 --> 00:32:45,600
high income low income would be third would be allegedly certified as city schools. For example,

313
00:32:45,600 --> 00:32:50,640
I'm from Baltimore City. If you're new here, I'm from Baltimore. I went to school in the city

314
00:32:51,760 --> 00:32:56,880
and then half of my high school year, literally the peak of my freshman year I went to a county

315
00:32:56,880 --> 00:33:06,000
school, then transferred back to the city. I will say it's like pros and cons allegedly within this

316
00:33:06,000 --> 00:33:11,360
gas from city schools. The school I went to elementary school, I went there from elementary

317
00:33:11,360 --> 00:33:16,320
all the way up to middle school. Good from the time being, you know, you're gonna have some

318
00:33:16,320 --> 00:33:23,360
bumps and bruises as well. But as I prepared for high school, I was good because in the

319
00:33:23,360 --> 00:33:27,760
way I'm from the city, I don't know if every other school does every other like state does it for

320
00:33:27,760 --> 00:33:34,880
their district. We take it's somewhat like a placement test to see where will you go for

321
00:33:34,880 --> 00:33:40,880
high school and it's considered composite scores and those scores impact with okay, if you're able

322
00:33:40,880 --> 00:33:46,720
to if you get a good school period, you're going to a real good school. If you get like the middle

323
00:33:46,720 --> 00:33:50,720
class, okay, you'll go to middle class school. If you don't score good, you're going to the

324
00:33:50,720 --> 00:33:56,640
very other bear the middle the bear minimum school, which is considered in my city. And

325
00:33:57,760 --> 00:34:02,800
I always would used to say like as I got older, I see my brothers and sisters do it. I'll be like

326
00:34:04,160 --> 00:34:07,840
sometimes the test I feel is always like, first of all, I don't even remember the test.

327
00:34:09,440 --> 00:34:13,520
I don't remember because I feel like a middle school, we took so many tests and you didn't

328
00:34:13,520 --> 00:34:21,280
know what was what, especially for the compile school. Mind y'all, that was years ago. So I have

329
00:34:21,280 --> 00:34:26,160
no clue. But when I see my brothers and sisters take it and I see their letters, I was like,

330
00:34:29,120 --> 00:34:36,960
wow, you know, taking the test, determine on what school to go to. So it's like, as well as a

331
00:34:36,960 --> 00:34:41,760
parent for college, you got, you know, you got to take SAT scores and all that you have to your

332
00:34:41,760 --> 00:34:46,320
SAT scores have to be this good. And you have to have a certain GPA to go to this school.

333
00:34:47,520 --> 00:34:50,800
With preparing for high school, you would think they would do the same thing for GPA,

334
00:34:50,800 --> 00:34:56,640
but it was basically compared on to the composite score. And that triggered a lot of children because

335
00:34:56,640 --> 00:35:02,480
a lot of children always wants to go. Most of the children allegedly that I went to school with.

336
00:35:02,480 --> 00:35:10,240
And then as my sister brothers got older, want to go to the real as in our city, the real popular

337
00:35:10,240 --> 00:35:18,240
schools such as because such as the schools that were known for their education, but also known as

338
00:35:18,240 --> 00:35:28,880
within the sports. So for low income schools, that's in low com, low com communities, they're willing to

339
00:35:29,600 --> 00:35:36,960
do the fundings. However, I feel though they're not doing it fast enough. Because these children

340
00:35:36,960 --> 00:35:43,840
deserve education. No matter where you from, who you are, like I mentioned, the color, skin, whatever,

341
00:35:43,840 --> 00:35:48,640
you, your child deserves the best education because they need that as they get older.

342
00:35:49,440 --> 00:35:55,120
They need that for just to have a representation of them. And one thing, like I said, once they have

343
00:35:55,120 --> 00:35:59,600
education, they can that cannot be taken away from them. As well as, you know, even if they go

344
00:35:59,600 --> 00:36:06,720
higher, they get their social degree, bachelor's degree, master's, doctor's, PhD, whatever, they

345
00:36:06,720 --> 00:36:11,920
cannot nobody can take that away from them. That's one thing. Nobody can take that away from them.

346
00:36:11,920 --> 00:36:15,760
They could try to do anything and everything else. But that's one thing you cannot take away from a

347
00:36:15,760 --> 00:36:24,000
child is their is their education. And I feel as though no matter where you from, that should not

348
00:36:24,000 --> 00:36:30,000
identify how smart you are. Because like I said, it's a lot of people that's famous that came from

349
00:36:30,000 --> 00:36:38,080
the slums that smart is ever. And that's like, that's why I'm real big on education. And I

350
00:36:38,080 --> 00:36:47,440
somewhat decided to dedicate the month of July to the first part of the July to education standpoint,

351
00:36:47,440 --> 00:36:54,240
because we need to let this be known. You don't hear enough about education. And when you do,

352
00:36:54,240 --> 00:37:00,800
it's not somewhat I feel like allegedly is somewhat not what I want to hear. It's not really what I

353
00:37:00,800 --> 00:37:05,600
want to hear. Because it's like, they're not digging a little deeper. And I feel as though we need to

354
00:37:05,600 --> 00:37:10,400
dig deeper because our children is the next month up from elementary school all the way up to high

355
00:37:10,400 --> 00:37:17,280
school. Like I said, it's going to be some bups in a row, you know, where human is okay, you fail,

356
00:37:17,280 --> 00:37:22,960
you don't do it over. So you make sure you get it right. And you master it. Because I had to

357
00:37:22,960 --> 00:37:27,520
realize that to you like you can't rush everything in order for you to get it done. To make sure you

358
00:37:27,520 --> 00:37:32,560
understand and comprehend, you got to get it right. You got to study study study study crazy.

359
00:37:32,560 --> 00:37:36,640
You got five study habits. And asking for help is one of the many things to when it comes to

360
00:37:36,640 --> 00:37:41,440
education that I feel as though within my generation and generations to come, we have a problem

361
00:37:41,440 --> 00:37:47,280
with doing because we feel inverse. And I'm gonna say this on person that finally is able to express

362
00:37:47,280 --> 00:37:53,920
herself more stuff. It's okay to ask for help. It's okay because you're also not you know, I know

363
00:37:54,800 --> 00:38:00,640
that this stuck with me a long time as I got older. You know, if you don't ask a question in the

364
00:38:00,640 --> 00:38:05,680
class, somebody may have the same question as you and is afraid to ask it too. So you never know,

365
00:38:05,680 --> 00:38:10,640
use your voice. Your voice is powerful, especially when it comes to education, any other source of

366
00:38:10,640 --> 00:38:15,040
aspect and your life that you want to use for your voice is a gift. That's why God will ever

367
00:38:15,040 --> 00:38:20,640
you believe in give it to you because you're entitled to use it. It's a must. It's a gift.

368
00:38:21,280 --> 00:38:27,200
No matter how big or small your opinion is, it matters. This is just as well as how they say

369
00:38:27,200 --> 00:38:32,480
your vote matters. No matter what you do or say, everything you do matters. And if you think it

370
00:38:32,480 --> 00:38:38,560
might not be as big, it don't matter. You're still in that quartile. You're still in that percentile

371
00:38:38,560 --> 00:38:42,880
because you matter. So for children that are listening to this parents guardians, older

372
00:38:42,880 --> 00:38:47,200
siblings, aunties, uncles, cousins, grandfathers, whoever listened to this, install this, enhance

373
00:38:47,200 --> 00:38:52,240
this in your children in whatever your case may be because they need it and they need us.

374
00:38:53,440 --> 00:38:58,720
Okay, they need us and they need it. So lastly,

375
00:39:00,720 --> 00:39:07,120
why do some children perform better academically than others and which factors contribute to these

376
00:39:07,120 --> 00:39:13,120
differences? So some children perform better academically than others due to combinations

377
00:39:13,120 --> 00:39:21,280
of factors, including social economic statuses, access to quality education, parental involvement

378
00:39:21,280 --> 00:39:27,680
and individual learning differences. Children from well off backgrounds often, allegedly,

379
00:39:27,680 --> 00:39:35,120
have more educational resources and support while those disadvantages backgrounds, allegedly,

380
00:39:35,120 --> 00:39:41,680
may face obstacles such as limited access to learning materials and support provided. Additionally,

381
00:39:41,680 --> 00:39:49,280
factors such as early childhood education, early childhood education, children's teacher's quality

382
00:39:50,000 --> 00:39:55,600
and a child's health and well being plays a crucial role in academic performance. For instance,

383
00:39:55,600 --> 00:40:02,560
students with access to quality childcare are more likely to attend and complete school as well as

384
00:40:02,560 --> 00:40:09,200
higher academic performing levels, at performing levels. So with this case is saying like,

385
00:40:10,560 --> 00:40:15,760
why do some children perform better academically than others? Like I said, allegedly, I kept saying

386
00:40:15,760 --> 00:40:21,120
allegedly because like I said, I went to school with some people that came up in the same community

387
00:40:21,120 --> 00:40:27,360
as I am and were advanced a little bit more than I was. Let alone, like I said, and also people

388
00:40:27,360 --> 00:40:35,520
fell a real I sue a start from at home. The parents and guardians, whoever's taken care of a children,

389
00:40:35,520 --> 00:40:42,560
children or a child, we y'all us have to really, really, really, really, really be on top of our

390
00:40:42,560 --> 00:40:48,720
children when it comes to giving them the jewels and knowledge that they need to know because

391
00:40:49,760 --> 00:40:54,880
especially if they're in our care, we're responsible for them to get the type of education

392
00:40:54,880 --> 00:41:00,880
and everything that they deserve because they need it. It's a must that they get all the educational

393
00:41:00,880 --> 00:41:10,400
tools that we're guiding them to this train to success. Because if not, what then it's like

394
00:41:11,280 --> 00:41:21,200
there is is going to be no turning unless I'll say this at times. Yes, most parents and guardians

395
00:41:21,200 --> 00:41:25,840
cannot be there. However, that's like I said, if there's more people living in the household

396
00:41:25,840 --> 00:41:32,000
and they only education, siblings can help as well. If other people live in there too, cousins,

397
00:41:32,000 --> 00:41:37,360
aunties and stuff, they want education as well. It starts from at home point blank period. We have

398
00:41:37,360 --> 00:41:41,520
to help the children sometime with shape or form because they're the future and they need this.

399
00:41:41,520 --> 00:41:45,280
They have to go to school. They have to go to elementary and elementary to high school. That's

400
00:41:45,280 --> 00:41:50,800
required. It's required straight off the bat. Hey, your child has to be an elementary middle

401
00:41:50,800 --> 00:41:55,840
school and high school college or anything at the high school. That's up to them. But they have to go

402
00:41:55,840 --> 00:42:01,600
to they have to go to elementary through high school elementary middle school high school.

403
00:42:01,600 --> 00:42:08,960
That's required. It's there. They have to but I will say this. The allegedly they say,

404
00:42:09,840 --> 00:42:15,040
you know, some kids that you know, their parents involved helped them. Like I said, again,

405
00:42:15,040 --> 00:42:23,040
most of your favorite rappers are artists, whoever the case may be half of them didn't have allegedly

406
00:42:23,040 --> 00:42:29,280
didn't have their parents helping them. They taught theirself at a young age. Certain stuff,

407
00:42:29,280 --> 00:42:34,400
you teach yourself. And that's how we am as I got older, certain stuff my parents didn't teach me,

408
00:42:34,400 --> 00:42:38,960
I taught myself as well as for my parents, certain stuff that their parents and teach them, they

409
00:42:38,960 --> 00:42:46,640
taught theirself because they were eager to know and grow and develop in this type whatever educational

410
00:42:46,640 --> 00:42:51,840
standpoint or area it is they wanted to grow, elevate and blossom in it. And that rubbed off on

411
00:42:51,840 --> 00:42:58,320
me because certain stuff that I want to know, such as within my history, I learned that myself. I

412
00:42:58,320 --> 00:43:07,360
dig into myself and I never forget. I believe it was last semester. No, my first semester as

413
00:43:07,360 --> 00:43:14,080
a officially a social work student, that one of my classmates they was like, when it comes to

414
00:43:14,080 --> 00:43:23,040
education, she's we meant we had mentioned, well, she had mentioned that she feel like she's not

415
00:43:23,040 --> 00:43:30,880
learning a lot from her parents and teachers. And that was a debate long story show. I agreed with

416
00:43:30,880 --> 00:43:36,880
her and also the professor because yes, the professors are encountered to but it also starts

417
00:43:36,880 --> 00:43:44,880
from at home as well as if you're intrigued on one to listen, we have the internet. Our generation

418
00:43:44,880 --> 00:43:51,040
has more resources than our parents, grandparents, great grandparents of happy because we're able to

419
00:43:51,040 --> 00:43:56,000
type it, say it in the search bar, they couldn't they had to go to the libraries, you know, they had

420
00:43:56,000 --> 00:44:02,720
to sit and really look for until they were like certain points in their life and okay, this one

421
00:44:02,720 --> 00:44:11,200
internet came into play. But times has changed now. So I was like, hey, everything is there for us.

422
00:44:11,200 --> 00:44:20,320
We have it here in hand, phones, tablets, computers, we have it. So we got to use what we have to get

423
00:44:20,320 --> 00:44:26,000
what we want. That makes sense. It's actually when it comes to the educational x back for our

424
00:44:26,000 --> 00:44:30,320
children, we have to make sure they're getting the access that they need as well as the nutrients

425
00:44:30,320 --> 00:44:37,600
that they need because they blossom every day, as well as making sure they understand what they're

426
00:44:37,600 --> 00:44:42,560
doing. Yes, they might understand it might slip. But it's okay, you got to keep on we got to keep

427
00:44:42,560 --> 00:44:49,920
on motivating and we got to mold them to understand that this is important. And this is what you need.

428
00:44:49,920 --> 00:44:55,680
So people would not ever play with you or try to play you. One thing a person cannot take

429
00:44:55,680 --> 00:44:59,040
home is your education. They could try anything and everything else but education is something

430
00:44:59,040 --> 00:45:05,680
they cannot take from you. And I say this too, for the children as well as for us adults,

431
00:45:07,120 --> 00:45:12,240
embrace the little things that they do, especially if they were struggling with something,

432
00:45:12,240 --> 00:45:16,800
and they were finally able to overcome it, celebrate them. You know, we always celebrate

433
00:45:16,800 --> 00:45:21,360
stuff as our birthdays, graduations, wedding stuff like that. But we really don't celebrate the

434
00:45:21,360 --> 00:45:27,280
little obstacles in our life, especially if we struggled within it. Like, y'all are

435
00:45:27,280 --> 00:45:34,160
glad to see y'all not when I passed that class first ever test back in person taking this class

436
00:45:34,160 --> 00:45:40,080
for the second time. And I was studying so hard had tutors I was using every voice resource that I

437
00:45:40,080 --> 00:45:46,400
wasn't using at first, finally took that risk and used them resources. And I got to be on my math

438
00:45:46,400 --> 00:45:52,640
exam, my first math exam. I was at the shop, I take some of them fall out, take them like look,

439
00:45:52,640 --> 00:46:01,920
look, because it was so unbelievable. So we had to celebrate the little achievements that come

440
00:46:01,920 --> 00:46:08,880
their way, especially when it comes to education because it's hard. Your child say look, I need help.

441
00:46:10,320 --> 00:46:14,080
Internet is there. We're going to learn this together. Because I'm telling y'all,

442
00:46:14,640 --> 00:46:19,920
if y'all don't have children now like me when we get older, my fear is the math. I'm sorry.

443
00:46:19,920 --> 00:46:26,080
I still fear for math. Because you know, they know a little jokey joke that they be saying,

444
00:46:26,080 --> 00:46:31,360
oh, that's that new math. And I'd be like, yeah, I think this is that new math because I'd be like,

445
00:46:31,360 --> 00:46:38,720
what is that? Because I'd be like, what is that? I said math is not my strong points.

446
00:46:40,160 --> 00:46:47,360
But I was able to get it done. Because it was a must that I challenged myself to be like, all

447
00:46:47,360 --> 00:46:50,320
right, this is my second time. Look, we're going to do this right. And we're going to do it the

448
00:46:50,320 --> 00:46:54,480
right way. We're going to use all the sources x, y, and z. And we did that and we passed.

449
00:46:54,480 --> 00:47:02,560
And look where we are now on the road to the green number two. Okay, I use my story to help

450
00:47:02,560 --> 00:47:08,400
anybody when it comes to having a testament for anybody. You never know who is going to do the

451
00:47:08,400 --> 00:47:13,280
same boat as you. This is why we have this is why I have what this is why I have Bob and with

452
00:47:13,280 --> 00:47:20,880
E. Because it's a stepping stone for me to help people if I don't help a lot of people long

453
00:47:20,880 --> 00:47:29,280
because I help somebody that's all that matters. Okay. So just to sum up today's vibe of the day,

454
00:47:29,840 --> 00:47:36,640
you know, it's based on education and academic advancement for children are influenced by a

455
00:47:36,640 --> 00:47:43,280
range of factors including stakeholders, investments, resources, availability and timely

456
00:47:43,280 --> 00:47:49,840
intervening key stakeholders such as parents guardians, parents, large guardians, teachers,

457
00:47:49,840 --> 00:47:56,560
and policy policy makers play a crucial role in shaping a child's educational experience.

458
00:47:56,560 --> 00:48:02,400
This parties and educational resources, particularly in low income and rural areas can

459
00:48:02,400 --> 00:48:14,080
inhabit can inhabit, sorry, can improve academic success but can be maximized minimized through

460
00:48:14,080 --> 00:48:20,160
equal bill is he funding and targeting support. Early childhood is a crucial period for

461
00:48:20,160 --> 00:48:28,480
intervening in factoring such as social economic statistics is access to quality education and

462
00:48:28,480 --> 00:48:38,320
parental involvement, scientifically surf side. The mic is just keep coming closer and closer.

463
00:48:38,320 --> 00:48:46,480
So we got to fix it significantly. Sorry guys impacting a child's academics outstanding.

464
00:48:47,680 --> 00:48:52,640
So the questions we always have questions I want you guys to think about as we leave.

465
00:48:52,640 --> 00:48:59,600
One, how do you believe community involvement and support can improve children's outcome for

466
00:48:59,600 --> 00:49:06,880
children in under resourced schools and what strategies or programs can have have you found

467
00:49:06,880 --> 00:49:13,440
most effective in addressing this parties and educational opportunities and academic advancement

468
00:49:13,440 --> 00:49:22,960
achievements amongst children from different social socioeconomics background. So as always,

469
00:49:22,960 --> 00:49:28,240
I hope you guys had enjoyed today's vibe of the day. I hope you guys have learned a few things

470
00:49:28,240 --> 00:49:35,360
or two and I hope this will also help you with your children or this children period that you

471
00:49:35,360 --> 00:49:40,320
involved in with your biological not biological children children if you're a teacher with anything

472
00:49:40,320 --> 00:49:46,240
involving with helping with children. I hope this helps you and mold you as well because

473
00:49:46,240 --> 00:49:54,480
like I said we are the new adults, what a new aunties, uncles and things like that. So we have

474
00:49:54,480 --> 00:50:00,000
to motivate our children and we have to display the blueprint to them and give them the ins and

475
00:50:00,000 --> 00:50:05,600
outs of what's to come and to also motivate them and tell them you know at times you're going to

476
00:50:05,600 --> 00:50:10,080
fail but that's a part of life and it happens is okay. But one thing is for certain two things

477
00:50:10,080 --> 00:50:16,160
for sure you're going to be smarter than what so once I'm done with you okay. So without further

478
00:50:16,160 --> 00:50:23,520
ado I wish you guys off with the best. Please enjoy yourself on this lovely Wednesday. Peace and

479
00:50:23,520 --> 00:50:28,160
blesses to you all please be safe out here because it is summer time and it's like the weather is

480
00:50:28,160 --> 00:50:34,960
giving like warm one day hot another day and you just don't know what to expect the next day.

481
00:50:34,960 --> 00:50:42,080
So please stay hydrated please stay safe and please also display nothing but positivity

482
00:50:43,040 --> 00:50:50,800
and as always if you guys have any questions or concerns you can text my dm at vibing.dot.with

483
00:50:50,800 --> 00:51:02,240
e-b-i-b-i-n-g-w-i-t-h.e okay. I wish you all the best peace love and hair grease you guys will

484
00:51:02,240 --> 00:51:07,280
hear from me next Wednesday. Bye!

