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Barbara Pearl graduated with honors from LaSalle University with a Masters in Education where she received the 2003 Excellence in Academic Achievement and Leadership Award. Ms. Pearl is President of Pi Lambda Theta, the International Honor Society and Professional Association in Education for the Philadelphia Area Chapter. Nominated Second Vice President and Regional Director for the National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics, Ms. Pearl has been featured on national TV and in Creative Classroom and has been distinguished as an "excellent instructor with a true love of her subject and a gift for knowing her audience." The author of Math in Motion: Origami in the Classroom and Whale of a Tale, Barbara is recognized around the country for her inspiring and motivational programs that promote a "positive message" about mathematics. As an international speaker Ms. Pearl has traveled extensively throughout the United States, Europe and Asia including Japan, China, Russia and the Gobi Desert. She developed Math in Motion in 1979 while working as a classroom teacher. Her background in mathematics and education inspired her to explore strategies that get students excited about mathematics and learning.
Ms. Pearl has received numerous awards and grants and is the recipient of the 1997 "Ezra Jack Keats" Award from the Los Angeles County Public Libraries for the multicultural Program of the Year, Bucks County Libraries as the National Library Week Travel Program, and installed the first "Origami & Mathematics" exhibits at The Franklin Institute Science Museum, the Philadelphia International Airport, "Origami: The Universal Fold," and The Free Library of Philadelphia, "Peace of Paper." The Spanish translation of Math in Motion is now available and Ms. Pearl is working on Book II. A percentage of sales is donated to children's and humanitarian organizations that support global education.
"I will write 'peace' on your wings and
you will fly all over the world." According to Japanese legend, if you fold one thousand cranes they will bring you good-luck and long life. It is based on a children's story, Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes by Eleanor Coerr. Throughout history, the crane has gained recognition as an international symbol of peace and happiness.
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