星期二, 4月 24, 2018

中美教育領袖論壇強調學生國際觀探討交流

           (Boston Orange)美國青少年數學與科學學會(MSSY)與哈佛大學中國教育論壇合作,423日在哈佛大學法學院Austin East,舉辦中美教育領袖論壇,邀來近20名教育界的中美高管,就教育趨勢,國際交流互相切磋。
               美國青少年數學與科學學會會長陳力超博士在開幕詞中表示,該會願意為中美兩國的學校、機構提供平台,協助他們分享經驗,互助合作。
               這場論壇安排有兩場主題演講,四場座談。
美國青少年數學與科學學會(MSSY)主席陳力超博士。(周菊子攝)
               德州科技大學工程學院院長,曾是宇航員的Al Sacco Jr.,以該學院的發展過程為例,侃談打造一個全球化的未來。他強調未來是個全球化世界,學校應該和其他國家學校建立合作關係,為學生提供交換學習機會,及早培養世界觀。
               紐約時報暢銷書作家Alan November則以學習是誰的事為主題,闡述學校、家長應該如何誘導學生自主學習,科技可以如何作為輔助學習的工具。
美國青少年數學與科學學會(MSSY)副主席廖平,美國博睿聯合創辦人
尹湘輝,MSSY主席陳力超博士,美國博睿聯合費瑜。(周菊子攝)
               四場座談中,高校學術和科研的合作交流,由麻州醫藥大學(MCPHS)前任副校長George Humphrey主持,劍橋學院本科部院長James LeeMCPHS國際學生中心總監Kathleen Head,河北工業大學國際交流處處長劉伯穎,河北科技大學處長徐永贊,德州科技大學工程院院長Al Sacco Jr.與談。
               劉伯穎和徐永贊都強調,他們非常希望能和美國的大學院校建立夥伴關係,為學生們提供更多元的學習經驗。
               “基礎教育國際合作的實踐和挑戰",則由波士頓國際學校前校長Richard Blumenthal主持,有諾頓學區校監Joseph Baeta,威爾漢姆功力學區國際教育總監Maureen Manning,廣州亞加達國際預科執行董事曹旭東,金陵中學高薪分校AP校長陳實與談。
               “中美職業教育的現狀與展望由屋本(Woburn)公校學區前校監Mark Donovan主持,有Diman地區執業高中校長Elvio Ferreira,波士頓大學高級講師Stacy Scott,哥倫比亞州立大學副教授Houbin Fang,美國博睿公司職業發展部門總監祁健與談。
 德州科技大學工程學院院長,曾是宇航員的Al Sacco Jr.。(周菊子攝)
               “教育科技公司如何促進學校發展STEM教育,由MSSY董事,IBIS資本合夥人馮志良主持,Cuethink創始人暨執行長Sheela SethuramanIntelitek創始人暨執行總監Ido YerushalmiMIT多媒體實驗室Scrath 團隊的Tracy Tang,腦控公司(BrainCo.)科研者Max Newlon,社區划船(Community Boating)執行總監Charle Zechel與談。                                 惠頓(Wheaton)學院校長Dennis Hanno為論壇做了閉幕講話。
麻州醫藥大學(MCPHS)前任副校長George Humphrey(右三)主持,劍橋
學院本科部院長
James Lee(左二)MCPHS國際學生中心總監Kathleen Head(左一),河北工業大學國際交流處處長劉伯穎(右一),
河北科技大學處長徐永贊(右二),德州科技大學工程院院長
Al Sacco Jr.
(左三)
與談。(周菊子攝)
              


河北工業大學國際交流處處長劉伯穎(左),河北科技大學處長徐永贊(右)
都希望和美國學校建立交流關係。(周菊子攝)
 教育科技公司如何促進學校發展STEM教育,由MSSY董事,IBIS資本合夥人馮志良(右三)主持,Cuethink創始人暨執行長Sheela
 Sethuraman(右二)
Intelitek創始人暨執行總監Ido Yerushalmi(右一)MIT多媒體實驗室Scrath 團隊的Tracy Tang(前左三),腦控公司(BrainCo.)科研者Max Newlon(前左二),社區划船(Community Boating)執行總監Charle Zechel(前左一)與談。(周菊子攝)


 教育科技公司如何促進學校發展STEM教育,由MSSY董事,IBIS資本合夥人馮志良(中)主持。(周菊子攝)




惠頓(Wheaton)學院校長Dennis Hanno為論壇做閉幕講話。(周菊子攝)




臺灣同學會長傳薪迎新 鄭舜允接掌學聯新會長


臺灣同學會長傳薪迎新 學聯新會長鄭舜允接掌

第二排:陳銘俊副處長(左四)、教育組陳幗珍組長(左三)、趙昌倫副組長(左二)與全體同學合影。

  (Boston Orange) 又將是驪歌聲起的季節,駐波士頓教育組打鐵趁熱,在新英格蘭地區各中華民國(臺灣)同學會會長、副會長熱情交接之際,特別舉行春季工作餐會及協助新英格蘭地區臺灣同學會聯合會(簡稱新英格蘭學聯)會長改選,使臺灣同學會在延續傳統活動和更新計畫方面,有更多的交流和互動。
陳幗珍組長頒發感謝狀予全體學聯幹部。
  421日中午,在春風送暖、萬象復甦的時節,計有來自哈佛大學等21所學校、41位代表參加。除了新、舊任會長彼此認識、忙著建立畢業後聯繫網路外,在眾望所歸的擁戴中,高票選出麻州大學醫學院鄭舜允出任下一學年新英格蘭學聯會長。
  會議一開始,由駐波士頓辦事處陳銘俊副處長開場致詞歡迎在場的同學們,他以人生的成長經歷和一些小故事,鼓勵波士頓的菁英學子攜手同心,與地球另一端的臺灣年輕學子有志一同,共建美好家園的願景。接著,會長們一一自我介紹,偶有幾位同學語出驚人,迎來不少笑聲。
  自我介紹後,辦事處趙昌倫副組長建議同學們,利用課餘時間與波士頓地區的僑胞連結,積極參與雙十國慶遊行等慶祝活動;並邀請全體同學前往中華公所觀賞當日下午放映的臺灣電影──「戀戀風塵」。與同學們關係密切的領務組洪麗玲副組長,更是殷殷提醒同學有關畢業證書和成績單認證、護照、結緍證書,兒女出生證明、臺麻駕照互換手續及如何防範電話詐騙,巨細靡遺,讓同學們倍感溫馨。
  會中同時舉行新英格蘭學聯會長選舉。教育組陳幗珍組長在選舉前,代表教育部勉勵我留學生注意健康和安全,分送教育部玉山學者計畫的資料及加入海外人才庫資料外,並提醒同學會舉辦活動應注意事項。關懷助協會王志維會長也趕緊在選舉空檔為該會活動宣傳,邀請我留學生參加5月份的心理講座及體育休閒活動。
  會議的亮點開始,學聯會長候選人鄭舜允發表政見。目前,她擔任學聯公關及麻大吾斯特校區會長,所提出的政見包括:1. 增進學聯與各校學生會的聯絡—資源共享,與多校學生會一起舉辦台灣文化與美食的交流活動等。2. 增進與波士頓其他臺灣社團組織的合作交流—希望藉由合作關係,建立臺灣人與留學生平臺,互相關懷。3. 創辦臺灣留學生校園徵才博覽會—舉辦留學生未來生涯規畫活動,如:寫履歷表、模擬面試、未來出路講座、申請繼續深造及研究的準備及徵才面試、簽證以及相關法律講座。
  在歡喜盼望的氛圍下,鄭舜允同學得到全體同學默契和友情支持,全數通過,成為新一任的領導人。前會長黃勛說,他擔任同學會副會長、會長多年,很感謝有機會跟這麼多好朋友一起共事,他鼓勵會長們踴躍出列,擔任學聯幹部,當然也提醒大家學業和學聯並重,不要忘了讀書。陳組長也在一片交棒聲中,謝謝學聯對我留學生的服務和聯繫,並頒感謝狀給前任會長、副會長及幹部14人,讚許他們為同學們服務的熱情。
  會後,大家都還意猶未盡地繼續交談和交換心得,直到曲終人漸散,才依依不捨地互道珍重再見。懷著建立新團隊、求新求變的期許和暑期的舒解,新會長們盼望臺灣的留學生不斷為波士頓注入年輕活力和動力,藉著彼此的關心和連結,讓留學生涯成為人生旅程重要的轉捩點。(圖與文:駐波士頓教育組 2017-04-21)

New Ballot Committee Created to Oppose Sales Tax Cut Ballot Question

New Ballot Committee Created to Oppose Sales Tax Cut Ballot Question

“Save Our Public Services” to Educate Public on Severe Cuts to Critical Local Services that Would Occur if Ballot Question Passes

BOSTON – Organizations representing working families, local communities, business leaders, religious congregations, and advocates from across Massachusetts today announced the formation of a new ballot committee to oppose the sales tax cut ballot question. The proposed initiative petition would reduce state revenues by about $1.25 billion annually, necessitating severe cuts to local schools, public safety, roads, transit, health programs, and other vital services.

“If the sales tax cut passes, communities will be forced to lay off teachers, police officers, and firefighters. Mental health and addiction treatment programs will close, spending on parks and environmental protection will be cut, and important road and transit construction projects will be delayed for years,” said Deb Fastino, Executive Director of the Coalition for Social Justice. “Voters want Massachusetts to have great public schools, safe and strong communities, and a reliable and modern transportation system.  We are committed to opposing this sales tax cut at the ballot. Massachusetts just can’t afford the enormous cuts to public services that it would cause.”

Save Our Public Services registered today with the Massachusetts Office of Campaign and Political Finance. Members of the ballot committee are committed to opposing the sales tax cut ballot question and protecting the critical local services funded by the sales tax.

“Two years ago the voters overwhelmingly rejected the charter school expansion ballot question that would have led to billions of dollars in cuts to local public schools,” said Barbara Madeloni, President of the Massachusetts Teachers Association. “This sales tax cut ballot question would create the same havoc in our local schools, but even faster. When the voters of Massachusetts learn about the damaging impact this question would have on schools and other public services, they will reject it too.”

“Massachusetts businesses of all sizes count on safe and reliable public transit systems, roads, and bridges, and the sales tax is a linchpin of our state’s transportation investment strategy,” said Richard A. Dimino, President and CEO of A Better City. “The MBTA spurs $11.4 billion in economic benefits each year, linking employers to talent, sparking new development throughout the region, and reducing commuter congestion on our roadways. Reducing the sales tax means putting our continued economic growth and job creation at risk.”

“This ballot question is a threat to public safety in every city and town in Massachusetts,” said Rich MacKinnon Jr., President of the Professional Fire Fighters of Massachusetts. “Local communities depend on the sales tax to fund first responders. It's not an exaggeration to say that a cut of this size will cost people their lives.”

Founding members of the Save Our Public Services coalition are:

1199SEIU
A Better City
AFSCME Council 93
American Federation of Teachers-Massachusetts
Boston Teachers Union
Coalition for Social Justice
Jewish Alliance for Law and Social Action
Massachusetts AFL-CIO
Massachusetts Communities Action Network
Massachusetts Teachers Association
Professional Fire Fighters of Massachusetts
Transportation for Massachusetts
SEIU Local 509
United Food and Commercial Workers Local 1445

“The best way to spark more economic growth throughout the state is by investing in public services, from education and affordable housing to job training programs and transportation infrastructure,” said Steven A. Tolman, President of the Massachusetts AFL–CIO. “Reducing the sales tax will drain funding away from these critical priorities right when we should be increasing our investment, not cutting back.”

“Reducing the sales tax would take tens of millions of dollars out of our transportation system at a time when it is in desperate need of repairs and upgrades statewide,” said Chris Dempsey, Director of Transportation for Massachusetts. “The T and commuter rail systems are struggling from years of under-investment, and regional transit authorities across the state are already being forced to hike fares and cut service because of lack of state support. This ballot question will lead to more potholes on Main Street, fewer buses and trains serving our communities and businesses, and more traffic congestion statewide.”

The sales tax cut ballot question proposed for the 2018 ballot would reduce the Massachusetts sales tax from 6.25% to 5%. This cut would reduce state revenues by about $1.25 billion, necessitating severe cuts to state programs, including important social services and local aid that funds schools, public safety, and roads. This $1.25 billion cut is more than the state provides annually in local aid to cities and towns ($1.1 billion). It’s also more than the state spends annually to support higher education ($1.2 billion). And since by law, the state’s budget must be balanced, the impact would be immediate, triggering mid-year spending cuts.

“Cutting the sales tax and the programs that it pays for is the opposite of progressive policy,” said Jessica Tang, President of the Boston Teachers Union. “This ballot question would directly harm Boston students and their families by taking money from our already under-funded schools, wreaking havoc in our classrooms, and draining opportunity from our communities. This is real threat and we're ready to fight it.”

“A cut in the sales tax would prevent people from receiving a quality public education, finding affordable housing, and accessing transportation,” said Cindy Rowe, Executive Director of the Jewish Alliance for Law and Social Action. “Our faith-based values call on us to respect the dignity of all individuals, and make sure that they have equitable opportunities to succeed.   We need to sustain our investments in these public services as a way of fulfilling our moral obligation, making sure that all people can achieve their goals and take care of their families.”

This extreme proposal would cut the state’s second largest source of revenue by 20 percent. The last attempt to cut the sales tax at the ballot, Question 3 in 2010, was rejected by voters 57% to 43% despite the Tea Party surge in that year’s election.
 
“We’re in the middle of an opioid crisis, but this dangerous ballot question would divert millions of dollars away from critical social services like addiction treatment, homelessness prevention, and mental health counseling,” said Peter MacKinnon, President of SEIU Local 509. “As social workers and clinicians, we know first-hand that Massachusetts can’t afford such severe budget cuts when we’re trying to fight this public health emergency.”

“Every year we work for adequate state funding for youth programs, for adult job training and ESL programs, and for ex-prisoner reentry programs. All these are already starving for funds,” said Lew Finfer, Co-Director of the Massachusetts Communities Action Network. “If this sales tax cut is passed, these programs will take a hit. That means less opportunity and less hope for too many people and too many communities across our state.”

“Communities across Massachusetts are already underfunded. Our classrooms are full, our schools are aging, and our budgets are stretched thin,” said Tom Gosnell, President of the American Federation of Teachers-Massachusetts. “We should be investing in early education, fully funding school transportation and special education, and rebuilding crumbling schools, but this ballot question would send us backwards. It would hurt our students, our communities, and our economy, and we're determined to fight it.”

AG’S OFFICE, GE FOUNDATION SEEK APPLICATIONS FROM PUBLIC MIDDLE SCHOOLS FOR SUBSTANCE USE PREVENTION GRANTS

AG’S OFFICE, GE FOUNDATION SEEK APPLICATIONS FROM PUBLIC MIDDLE SCHOOLS FOR SUBSTANCE USE PREVENTION GRANTS
Funding to Come from Project Here, a Collaboration Between AG’s Office and GE Foundation

BOSTON – As part of her office’s ongoing efforts to combat the opioid crisis, Attorney General Maura Healey announced today that Project Here has opened the application period for a new grant program to fund evidence-based substance use prevention curricula to public middle schools in Massachusetts.

The Project Here Substance Use Prevention Curriculum Grant program is open to public middle schools across the state and is part of Project Herea public-private partnership launched by the AG’s Office, the GE Foundation, The Herren Project, Health Resources in Action, and Epicenter Experience to empower students to make healthy decisions.

“We are giving grants directly to local schools to fund the prevention education our students need,” said AG Healey. “There’s a huge unmet need for this programming and we need to stop substance use before it starts.”

“With partners like AG Healey, we’re making real progress in the fight against substance use and the opioid crisis across Boston and Massachusetts,” said Ann R. Klee, President, GE Foundation. “Project Here resources are already helping educate our youth today. These grants provide critical funding to prevent our kids from falling into the vicious cycle of the opioid epidemic.”

Announced in May 2017, Project Here is a $2 million project dedicated to promoting healthy decision-making by making educational resources available to public middle schools at no cost.

To date, more than 200 middle schools across the state have registered to participate in Project Here. All registered schools receive access to an educational toolkit, which includes teacher guides, lesson plans, posters, videos, and other educational resources. The toolkit also provides students with the opportunity to connect to a support network of licensed social workers at The Herren Project.

The Project Here Substance Use Prevention Curriculum Grant will provide selected middle schools funding to implement one of three evidence-based prevention curricula: Botvin LifeSkills Training, Michigan Model for Health, or Positive Action. These options were selected to provide schools with curricula that are proven to positively impact students’ behavior, while allowing them flexibility to choose a program that will best meet their school and community needs. Recognizing that some schools may already have an evidence-based program that they wish to supplement, the grant program allows schools to apply for a supplemental evidence-based curriculum of their choice.

The AG’s Office and the GE Foundation anticipate awarding multiple grants to applicants across the state for up to two years of curriculum implementation. Applicants must register with Project Here, if they have not already done so, and are encouraged to collaborate with community prevention partners, such as community coalitions or regional prevention collaboratives.

Schools that participate in Project Here will also have access to a digital app that will serve as a fun educational vehicle for students to learn about substance use and practice healthy decision-making skills. The app will be available to registered schools in the coming months. 

The Project Here initiative is the latest effort by AG Healey to address the unmet need for youth prevention and education services to combat the opioid epidemic, a key priority of her administration. In May, the AG’s Office distributed $700,000 in settlement funding directly to school districts, nonprofits and community organizations to fund prevention programming through its Youth Opioid Prevention Grant Program
Young people are particularly vulnerable to the risks of substance use. Ninety percent of all adults struggling with addiction started using when they were under the age of 18, and 50 percent were under the age of 15. Studies have shown that effective substance use education and prevention programming can significantly decrease the risk of substance use among young people.
Questions regarding the RFP may be submitted to info@here.world by email until 4 PM on June 1, 2018. Full proposals must be submitted online at www.here.world/grant by 4 PM on June 15, 2018.  

Boston Playwrights’ Theatre presents Boston Theater Marathon XX 5/6

Boston Playwrights’ Theatre presents

Boston Theater Marathon XX 
May 6
Stanford Calderwood Pavilion 
at the Boston Center for the Arts
527 Tremont Street, Boston


BOSTON, MA – Boston Playwrights’ Theatre (BPT) presents Boston Theater Marathon XX, featuring 50 ten-minute plays, written by 51 New England playwrights, and produced by 50 New England theatres in ten hours.

For two decades, the Boston Theater Marathon—to be held on Sunday, May 6—has brought together playwrights, directors and theatres in an effort to foster collaboration between artists and producers. Many playwrights have enjoyed full-length productions with collaborating theatres because of relationships forged during the Boston Theater Marathon.

This year’s Marathon is dedicated to Jack Welch, a champion and friend of Boston theater who died last year. Welch was a founder of StageSource, the arts service organization for the New England theater community, and was managing director and editor at Baker’s Plays from 1976 to 2002.   

The event will also commemorate its twentieth anniversary with revivals of several plays from past BTMs, including Game On (from BTM XIII) by Gary Garrison, sponsored by SpeakEasy Stage Company; Annie Desmond Gets A Tattoo (from BTM XI) by Kirsten Greenidge, sponsored by Company One; What the Market Will Bear (from BTM II) by Melinda Lopez, sponsored by Huntington Theatre Company; Oral Report (from BTM I) by Jack Neary, sponsored by Acting Out Productions; and The Mutton Bandit Molloy (from BTM IV) by Ronan Noone, sponsored by Imaginary Beasts.

Net proceeds from ticket sales to the Boston Theater Marathon will benefit the Theatre Community Benevolent Fund, which provides financial support to theatres and theatre artists in times of need.

The Boston Theater Marathon is supported in part by the Boston University Center for the Humanities.
THE PLAYWRIGHTS, PLAYS, AND THEATRE COMPANIES OF BOSTON THEATER MARATHON XX
Still by Miranda Adekoje/Our Place Theatre Project
Not A Playground by Rosanna Alfaro/The Umbrella
Ocean View by Raymond Arsenault/Liars and Believers
Elephant by Brysen Boyd/Moonbox Productions
Like it Is by Alan Brody/Underground Railway TheaterDescription: https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/Q6H0xguks_y6WYCmLqH9pcGcywZo3DhRlsKvWPFzPjKzL3kmSY5WfNjpsFR3eybbO_1WUd1FQr3kJhCnS6PbZzaVrGUnwWWPSBSme4nzPvdcvLLuhUioA8rwwwHaK6c6gWQg8IfG
Roxy Rhodes and the Lost Temple by Meg Brown/Theatre on Fire
Automated Auto by Robert Brustein/Suffolk University Theatre Department
The Mother Lovin' Train by Cynthia Chapman/Israeli Stage
After Class by Andrea Fleck Clardy/Fort Point Theatre Channel
Churchill on the Beach by Andrew Clarke/Centastage
Birdhouses by Sean Crawford/Cohasset Drama Club
Swimming in Captivity by Brandon M. Crose/Hub Theatre Company
Last Christmas by William Donnelly/Battleground State
Data Driven by Owen Doyle/Pilgrim Theatre
Nevertheless She Persisted by Richard Dresser/American Repertory Theater
On the Beach by L.H. Finigan/Boston College Theatre Department
The Complaint Department by Peter M. Floyd/Greater Boston Stage Company
Camouflage by Brenda Foley/Wilbury Theatre Group
Second Look (from BTM XIV) by Patrick Gabridge/Firehouse Center for the Arts
Game On (from BTM XIII) by Gary Garrison/SpeakEasy Stage Company
Virtuous Reality by Hortense Gerardo/Gloucester Stage Company
Turk, Turk, Turk by Deirdre Girard/Wheelock Family Theatre
Annie Desmond Gets A Tattoo (from BTM XI) by Kirsten Greenidge/Company One
Burning by Jayne Hannah/Gamm Theatre
Questions You Never Thought You'd Ask by Marc Harpin/Target Stage Company
Play Title by Duke Harten/Northeastern University Theatre Department
The Whole Shaker of Salt by Charles Hertz/Actors’ Shakespeare Project
Will of Men by Terrence Kidd/Hovey Players
A Conversation by Susan Kosoff/Cape Cod Theatre Company
Off the Rails by Bill Lattanzi/New Repertory Theatre
What the Market Will Bear (from BTM II) by Melinda Lopez/Huntington Theatre Company
My Husband's Keeper by Anne Marilyn Lucas/Marblehead Little Theatre
Running in Circles Screaming by Jeni Mahoney/Titanic Theatre Company
Second Look by Nicholas Malakhow/Open Theatre Project
Set in Stone by K. Alexa Mavromatis/Wellesley Repertory Theatre
Parents Weekend by Michael McClung/Playwrights’ Platform
Dying Backwards by Scott McCrea/Tide Take Productions
This is Marriage: Part III by Charlotte Meehan/Sleeping Weazel
Oral Report (from BTM I) by Jack Neary/Acting Out Productions
We the Sisters by Laura Neill/Fresh Ink Theatre Company
The Mutton Bandit Molloy (from BTM IV) by Ronan Noone/Imaginary Beasts
El Oso by Alexis Scheer/Off the Grid Theatre Company
Duet for Shy People (from BTM I) by Richard Schotter (Michael Kosarin, composer)/Boston Children’s Theatre
A Little Night Stand Music by Cassie M. Seinuk/Lyric Stage Company of Boston
Brickwork by Kate Snodgrass/Boston Playwrights’ Theatre
Great Escapes by David Susman/Actors Studio of Newburyport
Tea by Lisa Taddeo/Happy Medium Theatre
Hatched by Michael Towers/Emerson Stage
Personal Demons by Maryanne Truax/Boston Theater Company
Despite Everything by Madison Wiser/Nora Theatre Company

ABOUT THE BOSTON THEATER MARATHON
The Boston Theater Marathon (BTM) is an award-winning all-day marathon of new ten-minute plays. The plays are chosen from close to 400 entries from New England playwrights, and the selected plays are produced by New England theatre companies that donate their time to this event. Generously supported over the years by the Boston University Center for the Humanities  and by individual donations, the BTM gives net proceeds to the Theatre Community Benevolent Fund, an organization helping area theatre artists and companies in crisis.
Thanks to a generous gift of space from the Huntington Theatre Company, the Boston Theater Marathon is held each spring at the Stanford Calderwood Pavilion at the BCA in Boston's South End.
In 2000, the BTM received a special Elliot Norton Award from the Boston Theatre Critics Association for “Enlivening Local Theatre.”
ABOUT THE THEATRE COMMUNITY BENEVOLENT FUND
The Theatre Community Benevolent Fund (TCBF) is a non-profit theatre community organization administered by StageSource for the benefit of its individual and organizational members and the theatre artists who are or have been employed by those organizations who face dire need and require financial assistance. TCBF provides financial relief in a confidential, respectful manner to individual and organizations facing extreme illness, catastrophic acts of nature, and other events such as vandalism/theft, and who have limited or no resources with which to handle such occurrences.
ABOUT BOSTON PLAYWRIGHTS’ THEATRE
Founded in 1981 at Boston University by Nobel Laureate Derek Walcott, Boston Playwrights’ Theatre (BPT) is an award-winning professional theatre dedicated to new works. At the heart of BPT’s mission is the production of new plays by alumni of its MFA Playwriting Program, the latter in collaboration with Boston University’s renowned School of Theatre. The program’s award-winning alumni have been produced in regional and New York houses, as well as in London’s West End. BPT’s productions have been honored with numerous regional and Boston awards, including 12 IRNE Awards for Best New Script and five Boston Critics’ Association Elliot Norton Awards.

BOSTON THEATER MARATHON XX AT A GLANCE
WHAT:  Boston Theater Marathon XX
presented by Boston Playwrights’ Theatre
featuring 50 plays written by 51 playwrights, produced by 50 theatre companies
WHERE: 
Stanford Calderwood Pavilion
at the Boston Center for the Arts
527 Tremont Street, Boston
WHEN: 
May 6 from 12 p.m. to 10 p.m.
TICKETS:  $25 tickets in advance and $35 tickets at the door. The all-day pass allows patrons to come and go as they please. Purchase by calling 617-933-8600 or visit www.bostontheatrescene.com or www.bostonplaywrights.org.

MAYOR WALSH SIGNS ORDINANCE TO INCREASE RESIDENTS' ACCESS TO VOTE


MAYOR WALSH SIGNS ORDINANCE TO INCREASE RESIDENTS' ACCESS TO VOTE
New legislation aims to provide voter registration opportunities during routine City interactions


BOSTON - Monday, April 23, 2018 - Mayor Martin J. Walsh today joined City Councilor Josh Zakim and city officials to sign an ordinance increasing access to voter registration. The new legislation aims to provide more opportunities for residents to submit voter registration forms when routinely interacting with City departments and agencies such as the Boston Public Library, the Boston Transportation Department, Boston Public Schools, and the Boston Centers for Youth & Families. The ordinance passed the Boston City Council unanimously earlier this month.

"Voting is an important right and pillar of our democracy," said Mayor Walsh. "Boston is leading the way on reducing barriers to voter registration that disproportionately impact some communities over others. From signing up for a residential parking sticker to enrolling a child in Boston Public Schools, we will provide new opportunities to residents to complete this important step in getting their voice heard in Boston, in the Commonwealth, and in this country."

"I'm thrilled that Mayor Walsh agrees with me on the importance of reducing barriers to voter registration, and that the city is doing all that we can to encourage more people to register and to vote," said City Councilor Josh Zakim. "Soon, it will be much easier for all eligible Bostonians to have their voices heard by exercising one of their most sacred civil rights -- the right to vote."

The Boston Public Library and the Boston Center for Youth & Families will ensure that voter registration forms are available in easy to access locations at all branches and centers. When applying for a library card, residents will also receive a voter registration form.

All Boston Public Schools Welcome Centers and high schools will provide pre-registration information and forms to all students eligible to pre-register to vote, and will also be provided to parents or legal guardians when registering children for school. Boston Public Schools will also develop a policy to ensure that as many eligible students as possible have the opportunity to vote on Election Day.

The Boston Transportation Department will provide registration materials to individuals applying for or renewing resident parking permits.

City departments and agencies will deliver any completed voter registration forms to the Boston's Elections Department to be added to the voter registration system.

For more information on voting and elections in the city of Boston, please visit the City of Boston's Elections Department.