Your Child is Not Going to Be a Professional Athlete.

Another summer.

Another year of watching parents put unrealistic expectations on their child.

Here are the facts.

Most kids wont play sports in high school.

Almost every kid wont play sports in college.

Theres almost no chance you will know anyone who plays professional sports.

Your child has a better chance of being a brain surgeon than playing baseball for the Cardinals, basketball for the Lakers, or football for the Cowboys.

If you werent a great athlete, the odds of your child being one are slim to none.

Theres no amount of practice, coaching, or throwing money at the situation that will improve your sons or daughters enough if they arent born with special athetic abilities.

Also, screaming at the umpire or referee wont help.  They really arent there to keep your child from being successful (note to self).

The truth is if you were an average athlete, your child will likely be an average athlete.

Parents who are 5 foot 8, seldom have children who are 6 foot 7.  If you were slow, guess what.

If you got cut from your junior high team, dont plan on your son or daughter participating in the Olympics.

This doesnt mean kids shouldnt participate in sports.

It doesnt mean they have to be great to play.

It just means parents need to be realistic.

The truth is, when your child is 40 no one cares if they hit the ball, scored a basket, or even played when they were 7.

Sit in your lawn chair and enjoy it.

Thats it.  Thats all there is.

Theres no college scholarship or huge contract coming your way.

Just ice cream after the game.  And thats good enough.

Manipulating molecules in the heart may treat obesity, affects metabolism

DALLAS – April 26, 2012 – UT Southwestern Medical Center researchers have demonstrated for the first time that the heart can regulate energy balance throughout the body, a finding that may point to more effective treatments for obesity, diabetes, and heart disease.

Scientists led by Dr. Eric Olson (right) and including Dr. Chad Grueter have shown that the heart can regulate energy balance throughout the body. Their discovery eventually could lead to effective treatments for obesity, diabetes, and heart disease.

Obesity, cardiovascular disease, and diabetes affect tens of millions of people in the U.S., according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Using mice fed a high-fat diet, researchers found that manipulating a heart-specific genetic pathway prevents obesity and protects against harmful blood-sugar changes associated with type 2 diabetes. The scientists’ findings appear in the April 27 issue of Cell.

“Obesity, diabetes, and coronary artery disease are major causes of human death and disability, and they are all connected to metabolism. This is the first demonstration that the heart can regulate systemic metabolism, which we think opens up a whole new area of investigation,” said Dr. Eric Olson, chairman of molecular biology at UT Southwestern and senior author of the study. Lead author of the Cell paper is Dr. Chad Grueter, a postdoctoral researcher in molecular biology.

Their study used genetically altered mice and an experimental drug to manipulate levels of two regulatory molecules in the heart. The scientists found that MED13, a crucial part of a gene pathway in the heart, controls whole-body metabolism while miRNA-208a, a heart-specific microRNA, inhibits the action of MED13.

Mice with MED13 levels that were increased either genetically or by a drug were lean and showed an increase in energy expenditure, the researchers said. In contrast, mice genetically engineered to lack MED13 in the heart showed increased susceptibility to diet-induced obesity. These mice also had aberrant blood-sugar metabolism and other changes similar to those of a group of conditions called metabolic syndrome, which is linked to the development of coronary artery disease, stroke, and type 2 diabetes.

MicroRNAs are small snippets of genetic material once considered of little interest because they do not code for the proteins used in body processes the way larger strands of genetic material do. In recent years, these molecules have emerged as key regulators of disease and stress responses in various tissues. At least 500 microRNAs have been identified.

“Several years ago, our lab focused on this heart-specific microRNA, miR-208a, and then worked with a biotechnology company to develop a drug to inhibit miR-208a. While studying the effects of that drug, we observed that animals treated with the inhibitor seemed to be resistant to high-fat diets but were otherwise healthy,” Dr. Olson said. He is one of five co-founders of the biotechnology company, the Colorado-based miRagen Therapeutics Inc., in which UT Southwestern has an equity stake.

The current study builds on that original observation by identifying the role of miR-208a and its target MED13 in regulating systemic metabolism. How this heart-specific microRNA communicates with cells throughout the body will be the subject of future studies, Dr. Grueter said.

This work was supported, in part, by grants from the National Institutes of Health, the Donald W. Reynolds Center for Clinical Cardiovascular Research, the Robert A. Welch Foundation, the Fondation Leducq-Transatlantic of Excellence in Cardiovascular Research Program, and the American Heart Association-Jon Holden DeHaan Foundation. Dr. Grueter received fellowship support from the American Diabetes Association.

Other investigators involved were Brett A. Johnson, a doctoral candidate of molecular biology; Susan DeLeon, graduate student; Lillian Sutherland, senior research scientist; Xiaoxia Qi, research scientist; Dr. Laurent Gautron, instructor of internal medicine; Dr. Joel Elmquist, professor of internal medicine, psychiatry, and pharmacology; Dr. Rhonda Bassel-Duby, professor of molecular biology; and Dr. Eva van Rooij of miRagen Therapeutics.

FCAT writing scores needs review, says Gov. Scott and superintendents

Gov. Rick Scott tonight weighed in on the FCAT writing issue, saying the significant contrast  between this years and last years scores is an obvious indication that the FL DOE needs to review the issue.

His statement also included his often-repeated support for measurement as it applies to education.

Our students must know how to read and write, and our education system must be able to measure and benchmark their progress so we can set clear education goals, Scott said.

Floridas superintendents also want a review of what happened. A statement from the Florida Association of District School Superintendents executive director called the results statistically questionable and asked for a thorough analysis.

The statement listed a series of questions that superintendents think should be answered. They are:

*        When was the new scoring mechanism communicated to school district personnel?

*        What information was communicated to school district personnel regarding the new scoring mechanism and to what specificity?  Were there examples for district personnel to use in informing teachers and principals?

*        Was there sufficient time for professional development of principals and teachers in order to modify curriculum or teaching strategies?

*        Did the Department of Education provide any professional development, curriculum modification, additional teaching strategies for use by school districts?

*        Was there sufficient time to incorporate these modifications and inform students of the changes?

*        Was the testing company (Pearson) provided the same guidelines as school districts?  Were their scorers retrained based on the new scoring mechanism?

Prevent Summer Learning Loss with Summer Bridge Activities™ Series

Hats off to everyone for making the 2010/2011 school year a great one! Now lets help our kids retain what they have learned! Here is something you may have not known:

Research spanning 100 years shows that students typically score lower on standardized tests at the end of summer vacation than they do on the same tests at the beginning of the summer The National Summer Learning Association

What is our recommendation to prevent summer learning loss? The award winning Summer Bridge Activities™ series! These workbooks have been embraced by parents and educators alike and are continually updated to provide the best in supplemental education.

Parents and teachers have trusted these books for over 10 years books because they work. Students really do retain their classroom skills over the summer when using these. The Summer Bridge Activities™ was created by classroom teachers and is based on national and state standards.

Summer Bridge activity books by Carson Dellosa consists of daily activities in reading, writing, mathematics, and language arts with bonus activities in science and geography. Full-color Summer Bridge activities make summer learning fun and easy.

There is a new section, Building Better Bodies and Behavior, which contains interactive prompts and activities on character and fitness. 160 pages. Summer is also a great time to prepare your students for the standarized tests that they will take in the spring. We offer a complete line of test prep workbooks for various states and grade levels.

Chancellor Timothy White on Acting Decisively in Reforming College Athletics

UC Riverside Chancellor Timothy P. White in a video sponsored by the NCAA

RIVERSIDE, Calif. () — University of California, Riverside Chancellor Tim White joined fellow board members of the NCAA Division I Board of Directors to discuss the decisive action necessary to change college athletics.

Joining White in the video are Cornell University President David Skorton and University of South Florida President Judy Genshaft.

View the video on YouTube.

 

Cambodian garage rock meets
neo-surf music

Man arrested in SAU rodeo horse death; four other stolen horses were found in Oklahoma

Police had been looking for Billy Hamilton since January, when he was named a person of interest. Pike County Sheriff Preston Glenn tells a local newspaper that Hamilton was arrested Monday in Sebring, Fla.

Five horses were stolen from the SAU stables in November. Four were found malnourished but alive in McCurtain County, Okla. A fifth horse, named Credit Card, was shot to death and had its throat slashed.

The sheriff says Hamilton is considered a fugitive because he failed to pay restitution in an unrelated cattle theft conviction. Authorities did not know if he had an attorney.

An SAU rodeo team member is charged with animal cruelty in the case.

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