Archive for the ‘paragon furniture’ Category

Paragon Top Picks: School Furniture Resources Online

05//31//2011 //Mark Hubbard

Top School Furniture Resources OnlineSeems like the “smartest” folks we often know are the same folks who have the greatest internal and external resources.  Only a couple decades ago, only the hives with the largest stockpiles of honey could afford access.  But now, with all these incredible advancements in technology, the honeycomb has been leveled to such a degree that virtually all of us have an unfettered flight path directly to some of the richest information resources imaginable. At Paragon, we RELY on the ability to mine the very best ideas available…many of which bubble up from within our talent pool…and many of which come from customers, suppliers, competitors, product testers, industry reporters, and many more.  For those you who honor us with your patronage, we thought you might like to see some of the resources we consider most useful in our day-in/day-out activities here at Paragon.  Check these links out and we’re sure you’ll find the nectar just as sweet (alright…alright…I’m done with the whole honeybee metaphor…I only did it to show my retired teacher mother that I paid attention in her class…once).  Beezout!

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Paragon Supports Heart of America… READ-IT and you can too!

04//18//2011 //Steve Pryor

Heart of America - READesignFounded in 1997, The Heart of America Foundation (HOA) began with one mission. To “teach the values at the heart of America and help people, particularly children, learn that they help themselves when they help others.”

Combining volunteerism and literacy, the focus of HOA is to provide children in need everywhere with the tools to read, succeed and make a difference.

Just walk into the library of a school that has benefitted from a READesign from Heart of America. The READesign® Library Makeover program engages volunteers, especially local youth, as well as corporate team members and other members of the community, in service and community involvement through library beautification and improvement activities, book distributions and one-on-one reading activities with children. The project provides tangible results in the form of a revitalized library, as well as the intangible results of engaging people in caring, compassionate community service to children in need.

Paragon has been a proud supporter of the READesign and is taking the commitment one step further. Now you contribute to Heart Of America every time you buy a READ-IT table. The generational friendly reading table that is part of our acclaimed Intuitive line, will be our flagship for promoting literacy.

Now, every time you buy a READ-IT table, Paragon will donate $5 from each sale towards the tireless efforts of Heart of America.

We can’t think of a better organization to support.

For more information on Heart of America and the work they do, please visit http://www.heartofamerica.org/

Heart of America - READ-IT table

Below the Surface

04//01//2011 //Steve Pryor

BELOW THE SURFACE.  STORAGE AT STUDENT LEVEL

LEARN-IT bookboxSnacks, turtles, hamsters and love notes.  These are just a few of the things that have spent time inside a school book box.  We all know that the work surface of a desk is the place for brilliance to be explored, but what are we to make of the space that sits below it? 

From the archaic lift top desks of the 50’s… or the guillotine for the modern teen as some have called it… to the cavernous dark black spaces that collect dirt from generation to generation, the bookbox has seen very little change in the classroom.  Like a student with 3 hours sleep, it just sits there.

Classrooms are rapidly changing.  Technology is taking over, yet there is often still the need for flexibility in storage solutions contained within the student space.  Books are still here, not everyone has a laptop or “pad” to work with, and teachers have to maintain classroom management with a minimum of disruption.  Students can’t keep getting up to get the tools needed to work on the next part of the lesson.

Paragon’s Intuitive line has a creative perforated bookbox that is student safe, yet allows for the future ability to let charging cords enter the compartment.  The perforations allow not only for great design, but give electronics the much-needed ventilation they need.  For now, it might just be for books, but when technology comes to your classroom, you are already prepared! There is no need to reinvent what you are doing with each student’s space and you are not spending additional funds.

But maybe you want to live outside the box?  Paragon offers the option of a backpack hook that keeps bags off the floor yet still gives you room to store. Oh, Who could want more?  (Perhaps, I need to lay off the Cat in the Hat …how about that?)

So, what have we learned this time?  (besides the bad rhyme)

Paragon is dedicated to helping you with your storage solutions in the classroom space.  To us it is not just a box or a hook.  It is another tool that holds the information that students use to enlighten and mold their future.

Ok…it is just a box and a hook… but they really do their job! :)

What is Information Commons? To us, it is Intuitive.

03//22//2011 //Steve Pryor

Intuitive-IC shelvingParagon’s Intuitive-IC is the system designed to help you prepare for the move from a traditional Library and Media Center to the technology driven environment of the Information Commons.

Taking its roots from simpler times when communities shared communal land, the Information Commons is the modern academic equivalent of a common space used for the processes of information gathering and social collaboration.  It is where enlightenment meets interaction.  Knowledge fosters education.

Intuitive-IC let’s you address your current storage and display needs while offering collaborative working spaces, technology hubs and seating solutions.  You have the tools for practical transformation of your space in the digital age.

Let Paragon move you furniture forward with the planning of your new library or media center, as you make what has been uncommon become Information Commons.  That’s the Intuitive-IC way. For tomorrow and today.

 

Intuitive-IC shelving

5…4…3…2…1…Impact!

03//18//2011 //Mark Hubbard

Impact On Learning

This week, the Peter Li Education Group, publishers of educational industry-focused magazines School Panning & Management and College Planning & Management, released a special multimedia program entitled “Impact On Learning.”

To kick off the program, Editor, Deb Moore and her team of researchers, inculcate their findings in a thirty-one page examination of various case studies surrounding the impact of the physical environment on a student’s ability to learn and (equally important) an instructor’s ability to teach.

The publication’s first real-world look at how the physical properties of a school are planned, manufactured and delivered features the winning (and not in the Charlie Sheen kind of way!) combination of Paragon Furniture and Contrax Furnishings on the Cedar Creek High School project in Cedar Creek, TX (part of the Bastrop ISD).

The key takeaways from the project snapshot are:
• Open environments where learning can break out in any and all spaces.
• Student collaboration requires flexible furniture that can reconfigure on the fly.
• A clear Supplier-Project Manager-End user communication channel greatly increases a project’s success rate.
To read more about the Cedar Creek High School project, check out www.planning4education.com, keyword “Impact on Learning.”

Color Me Paragon!

03//09//2011 //Mark Hubbard

 

Color Me Paragon!At Paragon, we’re known for being a little “off-color” (which we blame squarely on our parents).  But, that’s changing starting today, folks! Introducing four new vibrant paint colors Orangesicle, Bluescape, Fire Truck Red, and Green Bean.  These colors are so tempting you want to lick ‘em.

Educators and interior designers alike are specifying vibrant colors now more than ever.  Neuroscience research supports the claim that the brain increases its capacity when subject to certain wavelengths of color.  A little known point of interest is that colors actually emit tiny vibrations that can activate certain nerves, and even molecules, when taken in through our eyes.  The influence of color on our physiology and our psychology (ie mood) is, therefore, widely accepted as fact.  The following colors are believed to:

• Green = calms the nervous system
• Orange = promotes spontaneity
• Red = kicks the doldrums to the curb
• Blue = decreases anxiety

With all the positive influences of color at our disposal, why not use it to improve our learning spaces?  Let Paragon help you broaden the color pallette from which you paint.  We’ll thrown in the colorful language for free!

Paragon Furniture’s Hubbard Announces The Company Is Taking Over!

10//10//2010 //Mark Hubbard

THIS JUST IN… BREAKING NEWS!!!  LOOK OUT EDUCATIONAL FURNITURE WORLD!!!

Paragon's Hubbard takes overARLINGTON, TX (aka the Philtrum of DFW) – In a statement issued at 3:50pm CST, Wednesday, Oct 6th, Paragon Furniture President, Mark Hubbard, announced the company is going to become the leading supplier of furniture built for education and training environments.  Curiously, the statement was issued only moments after right handed flame-throwing Texas Ranger pitcher, Neftali Feliz, recorded the final out in game 1 of the Rangers 5-1 American League Division Series win over the Tampa Bay Devil Rays.

Clearly buoyed by only the 2nd playoff victory in Texas Rangers’ history, Hubbard said, “Ya man, we’re just going to lace ‘em up, go out there and play our game to the bestus of our ability.”  In describing Paragon’s strategy for what would be unprecedented growth in a mature industry, Hubbard answered with a question of his own: “We finally figured out that we can only grow if we sell more than we used to.  So, we’ve decided we’re going to do more selling and take over the world, like Hans Gruber commanded the feathered hairstyle in ‘Die Hard’, you know what I’m sayin’?” 

Misquoting President John F. Kennedy, Hubbard attempted to rally Paragon employees, while speaking in Irish accent: “Ask not what Paragon can do for you – ask everybody you know to do more buying from Paragon.”  Undeterred by the audible and collective groan from the audience, Hubbard went on to parody Lee Greenwood’s song “God Bless the USA,” by substituting “Please Buy From Us Today.” 

Asked about Paragon’s unsurpassed reputation for making quality computer lab tables, school desks, workstations, library shelving, and media cabinets, Hubbard credited the hard work of all Paragon employees (excluding himself), double rainbows, and pine tar. 

For more about Paragon Furniture and its world domination plan, please visit www.paragoninc.com.

Paragon Supports Groundwork Music Project

10//08//2010 //Ricky Kassanoff

Groundwork Music Project LogoFor four years, Paragon has been contributing to the Groundwork Music Project, an organization that provides free music classes to preschool aged children. The organization recently released a new recording for children in the classroom and for families to enjoy together.

CLICK HERE to enjoy their songs for young children free of charge!

Groundwork Music Orchestra

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Early childhood music education offers tremendous benefits and we hope you will enjoy the music. We also urge you to consider donating to this worthy cause just as we have.

 

Tweetings From Planet Paragon

08//31//2010 //Liz Ensign

Tweetings From Planet Paragon

Attention Paragon fans:  your favorite school furniture manufacturer is now on Twitter!

Check us out at @planetparagon!

How to Face Books in My Space – Making Libraries Inviting

07//08//2010 //Steve Pryor

How to Face Books in My Space – Making Libraries InvitingOk. We have all done it. We go to one of the big bookstores and we start walking around. It has an instant familiarity to us. There are sounds, smells and lots of visuals that give comfort to the experience. We are a consumer society and admittedly, we find ourselves at home in the retail environment.

Now. Let’s look back to most of our memories in traditional library environments. First of all, next to going to the dentist, we were forced to go to the library in our youth. It was a place of “Shhhh, don’t act out of order,” and unless you found a place to fall asleep, it was usually not a place of comfort. And, the smell! I bet you can probably remember the musty smell of the library of the past.

Our old images not only conjure up the bad smell, there is an institutional deafening silence. Lighting was an afterthought. The lighting was usually the only sound coming from the ceiling. Music? Forget it. Layout? Once the furniture was in place, that placement would forever be the traffic pattern of the space.

Now the classic case of East meets West….the modern library.

The library of today is the gathering place. It is the “information commons” hub and lifeblood of a school or community. Like the retail location, displays and presentation are critical to the experience. Visual cues that are welcoming are key to making the environment work. It is not just about stacking books in an organized manner.

Lighting is not just for reading, it is for display. People will look at an illuminated display twice as long as a non-illuminated display.

Putting a face to a book? The personality of the staff has a direct impact on the experience of the user. When the staff recommend a book, people are 3 times more likely to read it. That is a retail trick we have all seen when we buy our double skim caramel latte, and they have proven that it works in libraries and bookstores.

The furniture on which these books are displayed also has to be inviting. Colors, design, style…. Retail-looking furniture is becoming the norm for the non-retail library location.

Ah…but finally that smell and the music. While we all might not have the opportunity to hear our favorite tunes at the local library (without a headset), the sense of smell has made its way to many of today’s newer media centers. The café has arrived…and so have the smells.

So, have we sold out? Have we made the traditional library just a giant version of a bookstore? I beg to differ. It has merely evolved with who we are and with the years of sensory training we have from living outside of our homes. Now, the library has become something we can all say is My Space….a place to “face the books” in order to expand our view of the world and learn. It has become a welcoming place that makes us feel at home.