Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Ending Poverty through Education, By Michelle Rhee, Chancellor, District of Columbia Public Schools - Spotlight On Poverty

Ending Poverty through Education, By Michelle Rhee, Chancellor, District of Columbia Public Schools - Spotlight On Poverty


“I remember in elementary school  did you guys do this?  switching clothes every other morning with my best friends. That way nobody could tell we each only had one pair of jeans and a t-shirt.” Heads nodded in recognition at this meeting of DC public school seniors reflecting on their early years.


Students in our public schools are my best sources on what it is like to strive in a school system that has not given them an equal shot in life. With 70 percent of them receiving a free or reduced-price lunch and with DC’s child poverty rate well above the national average, poverty is a mountain that children in our nation’s capital climb daily.


This particular group of students had beaten the odds, and they were advancing to college. But they worried that they were unprepared. With only 9 percent of our entering high school freshmen graduating from college within 5 years of high school, and an unemployment rate that has more than doubled with the recession, they were right to be concerned.


I believe we can solve the problems of urban education in our lifetimes and actualize education’s power to reverse generational poverty. But I am learning that it is a radical concept to even suggest this. Warren Buffett framed the problem for me once in a way that clarified how basic our most stubborn obstacles are. He said it would be easy to solve today’s problems in urban education.


“Make private schools illegal,” he said, “and assign every child to a public school by random lottery.” Think about what this would mean. CEOs’ children, diplomats’ children, many would be going to schools in Anacostia and east of the river, where most of our schools are. I guarantee we would never see a faster moving of resources from one end of the city to the other. I also guarantee we would soon have a system of high-quality schools.


Read more:

Ending Poverty through Education, By Michelle Rhee, Chancellor, District of Columbia Public Schools

Sacramento Press / Feb. 17 Intro to Journalism workshop

Sacramento Press / Feb. 17 Intro to Journalism workshop:

"It's very exciting to see the number of our community contributors continue to grow. We now have close to 800. With so many new writers, we want to make sure we offer you the tools and resources to improve your writing and help you feel more confident posting on our site.

We've held many journalism-related workshops in 2009 ranging from Interviewing Techniques, Bias in Media, Journalism Ethics, among others.
We're happy to announce another Intro to Journalism workshop this month, scheduled for Wednesday, Feb. 17 6:30 - 8 p.m."


Complimentary E-copy: Teaching as an Act of Love:Thoughts and Recollections of a Former Teacher, Principal and Kid > Richard Lakin's Thanks2Teachers.com - A Wellspring of Teacher Appreciation and Teacher Inspiration > Inspiration for Teachers and Parents

Complimentary E-copy: Teaching as an Act of Love:Thoughts and Recollections of a Former Teacher, Principal and Kid > Richard Lakin's Thanks2Teachers.com - A Wellspring of Teacher Appreciation and Teacher Inspiration > Inspiration for Teachers and Parents



Inspiration for Teachers and Parents
Complimentary E-copy: Teaching as an Act of Love:Thoughts and Recollections of a Former Teacher, Principal and Kid
Here's your complimentary e-copy of my book!
Click on the title below:

Teaching as an Act of Love:
Thoughts and Recollections of a Former Teacher, Principal and Kid 
This is copyrighted material, but you are free to and encouraged to FORWARD it to anyone you wish--teachers, parents, colleagues, students, friends--as long as you don't make any changes or profit from its use.

If you prefer a paperback edition or to give it as a gift to a teacher or a friend, you can purchase it online at:
Amazon Barnes & Noble
Thanks,
Richard

Don't Let Ex-Gay Propaganda in Public Schools | Gay Rights | Change.org

Don't Let Ex-Gay Propaganda in Public Schools | Gay Rights | Change.org


Don't Let Ex-Gay Propaganda in Public Schools


Targeting: Patricia O'Neill (President, Board of Education) and Dr. Jerry Weast (Superintendent of Schools)
Started by: Michael Jones
This past week, hundreds of students in the Montgomery County Public School system were given fliers by an ex-gay organization. That organization - Parents and Friends of Ex-Gays (PFOX) - believes that people choose to be gay and that homosexuality is destructive. They regularly counsel people to convert their sexual orientation from gay to straight, and suggest inaccurately that science supports the notion that homosexuality is not biological.
Why are public school students receiving handouts from an organization like this? The President of the Montgomery County Public School board even went on record to say that the PFOX fliers "are probably counter to what is available in our health curriculum." So why give students information that defy what you teach them in class?
Furthermore, these fliers are intended to tell LGBT people, particularly LGBT youth, that they can change their sexual orientation. That is a damaging message to send to queer youth. Tell the Montgomery County Public School District that fliers like this don't deserve an official endorsement from the school.

Presidential Memorandum -- Establishing a Task Force on Childhood Obesity | The White House

Presidential Memorandum -- Establishing a Task Force on Childhood Obesity | The White House


Establishing a Task Force on Childhood Obesity
 Across our country, childhood obesity has reached epidemic rates and, as a result, our children may live shorter lives than their parents. Obesity has been recognized as a problem for decades, but efforts to address this crisis to date have been insufficient. My Administration is committed to redoubling our efforts to solve the problem of childhood obesity within a generation through a comprehensive approach that builds on effective strategies, engages families and communities, and mobilizes both public and private sector resources.
Nearly one third of children in America are overweight or obese -- a rate that has tripled in adolescents and more than doubled in younger children since 1980.  One third of all individuals born in the year 2000 or later will eventually suffer from diabetes over the course of their lifetime, while too many others will face chronic obesity-related health problems such as heart disease, high blood pressure, cancer, and asthma.  Without effective intervention, many more children will endure serious illnesses that will put a strain on our health-care system. We must act now to improve the health of our Nation's children and avoid spending billions of dollars treating preventable disease.
Therefore, I have set a goal to solve the problem of childhood obesity within a generation so that children born today will reach adulthood at a healthy weight. The First Lady will lead a national public awareness effort to tackle the epidemic of childhood obesity.  She will encourage involvement by actors from every sector -- the public, nonprofit, and private sectors, as well as parents and youth -- to help support and amplify the work of the Federal Government in improving the health of our children.  But to meet our goal, we must accelerate implementation of successful strategies that will prevent and combat obesity. Such strategies include updating child nutrition policies in a way that addresses the best available scientific information, ensuring access to healthy, affordable food in schools and communities, as well as increasing physical activity and empowering parents and caregivers with the information and tools they need to make good choices for themselves and their families. To succeed, these efforts must be strategically targeted, and accountability should be clear. They will help our children develop lifelong healthy habits, ensuring they reach their greatest potential toward building a healthier and more prosperous America.  To these ends, I hereby direct the following:

Schools Matter: Michelle Rhee Is A Liar, Period

Schools Matter: Michelle Rhee Is A Liar, Period:


Michelle Rhee Is A Liar, Period

From today's Bill Turque piece in WaPo:
. . . .Rhee told Fast Company magazine that some of the 266teachers laid off in October's budget crunch were educators "who had hit children, who had had sex with children, who had missed 78 days of school."
The comment alarmed parents and teachers and District officials because of its implication that a significant portion of the instructors had committed such offenses. When Rhee finally offered numbers to support the claim, they were relatively small: Six of the 266 teachers had been suspended for corporal punishment at some point in their careers, she 


Georgia's Private White Academies Now to Be Financed with Tax Dollars

My first year of teaching was 1971 in Sandersville, Georgia, during the second year of school integration in that part of the apartheid South. Those white children whose parents could afford it had been placed in the private academies that had sprung up around the region like mushrooms in a cow pasture after a spring rain. Now almost 40 years later, we can now see the return of segregation and apartheid, this time taking hold at public expense in the corporate charter schools like Pataula Charter Academy that hoped to be the solution to race mixing. From the Journal-Constitution:





9:12 a.m. Monday, February 8, 2010
In fighting approval of a regional charter school, southwest Georgia superintendents allege that the Pataula Charter Academy would signal a return to the era in Georgia when blacks and whites attended different schools.

Teachers Get National Certification - Year 2010 (CA Dept of Education)

Teachers Get National Certification - Year 2010 (CA Dept of Education)

State Schools Chief Jack O'Connell Congratulates California Teachers Who Received Prestigious National Certification

SACRAMENTO — State Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O'Connell today announced 349 California teachers became National Board Certified Teachers (NBCT®s) in November 2009.
The prestigious award of achievement was granted by the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards (NBPTS®).
"Congratulations to these educators who have demonstrated their passion and skill for teaching by earning this prestigious distinction," said O'Connell. "NBCTs are leading the way to prepare students for success in the competitive global economy."
National Board Certification is a voluntary assessment program designed to recognize great teachers, reward them, and increase their skills. While state licensing systems set basic requirements to teach in each state, NBCTs have successfully demonstrated advanced teaching knowledge, skills, and practices. The certification process typically takes between one and three years to complete. As part of the process, teachers build a portfolio that includes student work samples, assignments, videotapes, and a thorough analysis of their classroom teaching, including evidence of fairness, equity, and access in meeting student needs. Teachers are also assessed on their knowledge of the subjects they teach.
In California, 63.7 percent of NBCTs teach in Title I eligible schools. Title I schools mean they receive federal funding to help socioeconomically disadvantaged students. This compares to more than half of NBCTs teaching in Title I schools nationwide.
NBCTs comprise about 3 percent of the national teaching force yet have won more than a fourth of the 2008 and 2009 State Teacher of the Year Awards and a third of the 2008 Presidential Awards for Excellence in Mathematics and Science Teaching. Examples of awards earned by California NBCTs are:
  • Brian Jeffrey, an English teacher at Los Osos High School in Rancho Cucamonga in San Bernardino County, won the 2009 Characters Unite Award from the USA Network.
  • Jose Navarro, a social studies and U.S. history teacher at Sylmar Senior High School in Los Angeles County, was a 2009 California Teacher of the Year.
  • Brooke Nicolls, a writing teacher at Grant High School in Sacramento County, won the 2009 Outstanding Teacher of America Award from the Carlston Family Foundation.
  • Lewis Chappelear, an engineering teacher at James Monroe High School in Los Angeles County, was a 2008 California Teacher of the Year and was nominated to compete for the prestigious National Teacher of the Year honor.
  • Shannon Garrison, a general elementary teacher at Solano Avenue Elementary School in Los Angeles County, was a 2008 Milken Educator Award winner.
  • Three California NBCTs serve on the NBPTS Board of Directors: Liane Cismowski from the Mount Diablo Unified School District, Michael de la Torre from the Los Angeles Unified School District, and Haydee Rodriguez from the Central Union High School District.
California's 349 newly certified teachers bring the statewide total of NBCTs to 4,581. There are more than 82,000 NBCTs nationwide with California ranking fourth in total number of these accomplished teachers. The top five California school districts with newly named NBCTs are:
School District
Number of New NBCTs in 2009
Total NBCTs
Los Angeles Unified
142
1,357
San Diego Unified
20
167
San Francisco Unified
11
163
Long Beach Unified
21
147
Poway Unified
5
116
California's new NBCTs are helping to further the state's education reform efforts under the federal Race to the Top competition that is part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. To help create great teachers and leaders, O'Connell is asking participating local educational agencies to partner with the state to strengthen supports for teachers and school leaders, including deepening teacher and principal evaluations to both strengthen instruction and manage talent.
"We have long known that a key to student success is a great teacher," added O'Connell. "A fundamental step for closing the achievement gap in California is ensuring our most challenged schools are staffed with effective teachers and school leaders. National Board Certified Teachers often serve as leaders and mentors. This program is a great example of effective professional development that will help our teaching force meet and overcome the academic challenges students face in low-achieving schools."
For more information about National Board Certification for Teachers and Principals, please visit National Board for Professional Teaching Standards: National Board for Professional Teaching Standards (Outside Source).
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Education Research Report: New Report Explains that Charter Schools' Political Success is a Civil Rights Failure

Education Research Report: New Report Explains that Charter Schools' Political Success is a Civil Rights Failure

New Report Explains that Charter Schools' Political Success is a Civil Rights Failure

The Civil Rights Project/Proyecto Derechos Civiles at UCLA has issued "Choice Without Equity: Charter School Segregation and the Need for Civil Rights Standards," a nationwide report based on an analysis of Federal government data and an examination of charter schools in 40 states and the District of Columbia, along with several dozen metropolitan areas with large enrollments of charters. The report found that charter schools continue to stratify students by race, class, and possibly language, and are more racially isolated than traditional public schools in virtually every state and large metropolitan area in the country.

The study's key findings suggest that charter schools, particularly those in the western United States are havens for white re-segregation from public schools; requirements for providing essential equity data to the federal government go unmet across the nation; and magnet schools are overlooked, in spite of showing greater levels of integration and academic achievement than charters.

The study offers several recommendations for restoring equity provisions and integration in charter schools, including establishing new guidance and reporting requirements by the Federal government; federal funding opportunities for magnet schools, which have a documented legacy of reducing racial isolation and improving student outcomes; and incorporating some features of magnet schools into charter schools. The report also recommends heightened enforcement of existing state-level legislation with specific provisions regarding diversity in charter schools, and monitoring patterns of charter school enrollment and attrition, focusing particularly on reporting the demographic information of charter school students on low-income and ELL characteristics.

It's Not An Education Problem, Says Rhee THISWEEKINEDUCATION.COM

THISWEEKINEDUCATION.COM

Blogs: It's Not An Education Problem, Says Rhee

Ending Poverty through Education Michelle RheeRosaparks-thumb-440x568
The obstacle is not one of knowledge but of social and political will, with education as the lynchpin.

Struggles at School of the Future Phila Notebook
I think this story has important lessons for “turnaround,” even though SOF is a start-up school. Microsoft is not a “school manager,” but instead a partner in an effort to create an engaging and progressive curriculum that takes advantage of the latest technology.

DPS tackling forced placement of teachers EdNews Colorado
Boasberg, in an email to principals Friday afternoon, said “it is our intention” not to place any unassigned teachers at year’s end into schools now on probation under the district’s school rating system.

More time in school not for all kids Denver Post (editorial)
Many high school students are completing college level classes — AP, IB, and dual-credit — as early as their junior year. These students challenge the need for a longer school day, not to mention the necessity of senior year.
The Little Picture: Rosa Parks via The American Prospect



Break out the hot cocoa. City says tomorrow is a snow day | GothamSchools

Break out the hot cocoa. City says tomorrow is a snow day | GothamSchools


No news travels faster than word of a snow day. It’s on the radio, on teacher blogs, and in a notice sent by the Department of Education this morning: There is no school tomorrow.
The Department of Education sent out a notice at 11:10 am to say that regular school as well as all after school activities and sports are canceled. The Panel for Educational Policy meeting, which was scheduled for tomorrow night, has also been canceled and the proposals moved to the March meeting.
Last March, Chancellor Klein waited until 20 minutes before 6 am to declare a snow day, angering teachers who’d already begun their commutes and parents who had to find childcare.
The chancellor’s notice this year reads:
Due to anticipated inclement weather conditions, all New York City public schools will be closed tomorrow, February 10, 2010. All after-school activities and PSAL events will also be cancelled. While travel conditions to school in the morning may not be difficult, the weather is expected to worsen as the day progresses, complicating dismissal. We are making this decision today to give parents as much time as possible to make alternative plans for tomorrow.

EdWeek Update: States Rethink Policies on National-Board Teachers

EdWeek Update: States Rethink Policies on National-Board Teachers

Both the economy and a push to measure teacher effectiveness in new ways have led states to revamp funding for the certification.

For more stories, visit Education Week's homepage.



CURRICULUM AND LEARNING
A panel led by the National Research Council is trying to identify "core ideas" in each of the major science disciplines.

View more Curriculum and Learning stories from Education Week.


MORE HEADLINES
Private Sector Competes for Share of Stimulus Pie(February 5, 2010, Education Week)
(February 9, 2010, Bridging Differences Blog)
(February 9, 2010, Politics K-12 Blog)
(February 8, 2010, Web Watch Blog)
(February 8, 2010, Politics K-12 Blog)
(February 8, 2010, Teacher Beat Blog)

HOT TOPICS
A collection of the most recent articles on news and issues related to graduation rates, college access, and career training.

Subscribe to the Colleges and Careers RSS Feed  and Widget .

MORE MUST-READS

Education Week Articles Available to Subscribers
An analysis of NAEP scores suggests policymakers should consider the needs of gifted students to address a persistent “excellence gap.”(February 5, 2010)
The Obama administration calls for a shift toward measuring college and career readiness as it prepares proposals for revamping the law.(February 5, 2010)
Commentary
Common standards should not take the joy and power of book reading away from students, Nancie Atwell writes. (February 8, 2010)

When Policy Becomes Ideology � The Quick and the Ed

When Policy Becomes Ideology � The Quick and the Ed

When Policy Becomes Ideology

February 9th, 2010 | Category: Uncategorized

Last week Andy and I offered some ideas on the best way to characterize the theoretical and ideological divisions in education policy. Justin Cohen followed up:
I like Andy’s “Choice/Accountability” matrix, it’s far superior to the dichotomy that both of their posts reject. I worry, though, that it conflates “choice” and school-based “autonomy.” Right now, most state laws are structured such that charter schools – which are almost always schools of choice – have more autonomy than other actors in the public system. This doesn’t have to be the case. There’s no theoretical fiat preventing all other public schools from having higher levels of school-based autonomy, it’s just that the bureaucratic, policy, and collectively-bargained constraints of most traditional systems create (surmountable!) obstacles to school-based autonomy…Kevin’s point – that KIPP’s existence is a more powerful reason for chartering than any pure market teleology – illustrates a pretty important, yet nascent, debate: is choice in public education a means or an end? If choice is an end, the pure market version of ed reform settles for a reality wherein there are winners and losers when scarce resources are allocated – that’s literally what markets do. If choice is a means, it is one part of a substantial toolkit for ensuring a higher quality education for all children. It’s a really important distinction that doesn’t get talked about enough.
I think that’s right. For example, I know a woman who founded a charter school here in DC. She has a graduate degree in management from an Ivy League university, which she could have used for all manner of self-enriching purposes. Instead, she decided to devote every waking hour to education. But going to work for the DC Public Schools wasn’t a viable option. Educating disadvantaged urban schoolchildren is difficult in the best of circumstances and DC’s circumstances were, at the time, among the worst: dysfunctional and fractured governance, crumbling facilities, a broken special education system, a bloated and 

The Educated Reporter: Charters: open to whom?

The Educated Reporter: Charters: open to whom?

Charters: open to whom?


new study from the Civil Rights Project has gotten people talking—or should I say snickering? At National Journal, the analysts pile on, criticizing (fairly so) that the report’s main point is a heaping helping of No Duh: Schools designed as alternatives for children in overwhelmingly minority areas have student populations that are—get this!—overwhelmingly minority. How much you care depends, as Mass Insight’s Justin Cohenpoints out, on what you see as a more important end: better student outcomes or integration.

I think integration is a worthy goal in and of itself. But the resegregation the Civil Rights Project has for years been so effective in illuminating is a problem more than anything because minority children have been isolated in bad schools. Is it a problem if a good school is all-black or all-Hispanic? Interesting question—but not what concerns me the most about charter populations. I am more concerned about how many of the best charters have disproportionately low numbers of special education students and English language learners. This has been analyzed a small bit but not much, and it is not enough to say this happens; journalists need to figure out to what degree, why and so what?

Are parents of special needs children not choosing charters because they don’t offer the kind of services traditional schools do? Do charters have any incentive to take special 

Pa. bill would expand overhaul of schools | Philadelphia Inquirer | 02/08/2010

Pa. bill would expand overhaul of schools | Philadelphia Inquirer | 02/08/2010:



Low-achieving schools could be turned into charter schools or handed over to outside management. Underperforming charters could be closed. Elected boards would be replaced by appointed ones in failing districts.


Hundreds of Pennsylvania's public schools could be affected by these measures if legislation introduced last month by State Sen. Jeffrey E. Piccola (R., Dauphin) is enacted.


Piccola's Education Empowerment Act is the latest legislative attempt to improve low-scoring schools. It would replace a more limited law of the same name that expires in June.
The legislation is part of new efforts to recalibrate how states and districts overhaul struggling schools. It would not apply to the Philadelphia district or its charter schools because a 2001 state-takeover law gave the city's School Reform Commission similar powers.


The current empowerment act, an early effort at identifying the most academically and financially distressed schools and putting the worst under state control, provides extra funding to the most troubled districts. Piccola's proposal would not do that, but would focus on giving local boards more power to change how schools operate.


"We have assessments and curriculum and data systems in place. Now we need to apply these new tools to districts that are struggling," said Piccola, chairman of the Senate Education Committee. "The opportunity to get something significant accomplished is at hand."
There's no timetable for when his proposal might get to a vote, but hearings in the Republican-controlled state Senate are already under way. While the bill has drawn criticism from the state school boards association and the largest teachers union, all sides say they are hopeful an accommodation can be reached. James Roebuck (D., Phila.), chairman of the House Education Committee, said he might introduce his own version of the bill.


Piccola said much of his proposal builds on academic gains in Philadelphia during the last decade, which he attributed to opening dozens of charters and turning schools over to education-management organizations.


But Timothy Allwein, assistant executive director of the Pennsylvania School Boards Association, said, "I don't think you will find a whole lot of research that turning a school into a charter or turning it over to a management company has led to a lot of progress."


Several studies say children in Philadelphia charters and schools run by management groups scored no better on tests than those in district-run schools. Supporters contend that charters and management companies often work with the lowest-performing children and have helped them make big gains.


Jim Testerman, president of the Pennsylvania State Education Association, the state's largest teachers union, also has problems with Piccola's proposal.

On the agenda: Charters, protests and Tilden | The Education Report

On the agenda: Charters, protests and Tilden | The Education Report
On the agenda: Charters, protests and Tilden
By Katy Murphy
Monday, February 8th, 2010 at 5:58 pm in 
School board newscharter schools,union contract.
Oakland Unified’s hard-line charter schools office says the district should renew its contracts with two schools: Oakland School for the Arts, a middle and high school located in the renovated Fox Theater building downtown, and Berkley Maynard, one of six charters in Oakland that are run by Aspire Public Schools, a management organization.
image by Nick Bygon, flickr.com/creativecommons
image by Nick Bygon, flickr.com/creativecommons
Also on Wednesday’s school board agenda is a “conditional endorsement” of the March 4 Statewide Day to Defend Public Education, which will include public schools, colleges and universities.
Translation: The district will support a “teach-in” and demonstrations before and after school — as long as the actions don’t “impede student learning,” according to OUSD Spokesman Troy Flint.
Betty Olson-Jones, the teachers union president, says there is not a strike planned for March 4, but that some teachers and students plan to be out of school that day. Others, she said, will picket before school starts or, possibly, take their children on a “walking field trip” to demonstrate.
“What we’re trying to do is make it a very educational event,” she said.
Olson-Jones said the union sees the purpose of March 4 activities as twofold: to bring attention to the reduced education funding in the state, and to rally support for the Oakland teachers union, which is in the final stage of contract negotiations with the school district. (Status update: A fact-finding panel is scheduled to hold a hearing the week of Feb. 22 and could come out with a report in early March.)
The relocation of Tilden School is also on the agenda. The district 

Is Stimulus Money Being Spent Equitably? - Politics K-12 - Education Week

Is Stimulus Money Being Spent Equitably? - Politics K-12 - Education Week


I'm at a two-day symposium in New York City put on by the Campaign for Educational Equity that's examining whether the stimulus funds have been spent and used equitably to help improve achievement, especially among at-risk students.
Sam Dillon did a piece previewing the papers being presented, in which he focused on the funding cliff that the stimulus is creating. Since we've already written a lot about the funding cliff, I thought the more interesting part of these papers, and the symposium itself, was the warning flags being raised about some of the long-term consequences of the stimulus package.
Although I'll have a more complete story soon, here's what I'm talking about:
  • Since the stimulus law required roughly $48 billion in State Fiscal Stabilization Funds to be distributed through a state's primary funding formula, the "maintenance of effort" provision that required a state to maintain its own funding only applied to this formula. But this ignores the fact that in many states, there are smaller categorical funds that make up total state aid, but aren't given out to school districts by a formula. This paper, by David Sciarra 

Sacramento Press / Strong Mayor: Johnson to pitch new ballot measure

Sacramento Press / Strong Mayor: Johnson to pitch new ballot measure

Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson has not been deterred by two court rulings that prevent his strong mayor initiative from being placed on the June ballot. His latest strategy is to ask the City Council to place a new strong mayor proposal on the ballot.
But Johnson’s new plan, which he announced on his blog Monday afternoon, cannot include the existing strong mayor initiative. That's because Sacramento Superior Court Judge Loren McMaster struck down the initiative last month, saying it broke state law.
Johnson's blog entry does not explain the components of his new proposal. He described his new plan as a "collaborative executive mayor reform package." Joaquin McPeek, Johnson's spokesman, declined to specify details Monday night. McPeek said Johnson will take questions from reporters on the proposal Tuesday.
Johnson said in his blog that he would ask the City Council on Tuesday to consider his new plan.
"The time has come to spell out in simple language a handful of points necessary to make executive mayor reform work in Sacramento," Johnson wrote.
If the City Council decides to vote on a new measure, it will need to create a new proposal in 15 days. The City Council has a Feb. 23 deadline to prepare a measure for the June ballot.
“The City Council has the ability to put their own measure on the ballot,” city spokeswoman Amy Williams said. “They are barred by Judge McMaster’s order from placing the strong mayor initiative on the ballot.”
Johnson's strong mayor goals have been stymied by two courts.
Plaintiff Bill Camp sued the city of Sacramento, the Sacramento City Council and Thomas Hiltachk, the attorney who wrote the strong mayor initiative. Making major changes to a city charter through an initiative conflicts with state law, Camp argued.

Philadelphia Public School Notebook

Philadelphia Public School Notebook


Notes from the news, Feb. 9

Submitted by Erika Owens on Tue, 02/09/2010 - 09:37 Posted in Notes from the news | Permalink
Phila. schools open [today]; make up days aheadThe Inquirer
Schools are open today, but the make up days have not yet been scheduled.
Renaissance community meetings postponed The Notebook blog
With more snow forecasted for today, some and perhaps all of this week's meetings will be rescheduled.
Letters: For schools, new teacher contract is just the start Daily News
Letter from Education Voters PA Director Susan Gobreski.
Late education professor leaves long legacy The Temple News
Dr. Snelbecker will be honored with a scholarship in his name.
Please email us if we missed anything today or if you have any suggestions of publications, email lists, or other places for us to check for news.

Education - Everything you need to know about the world of education.

Education- Everything you need to know about the world of education.


Fenty: "Don't get into my mens rea"

Mayor Adrian M.Fenty, hammered by parents and teachers for the abortive decision to open D.C. Schools on a two-hour delay Monday, was as elusive as Chancellor Michelle A. Rhee about exactly how they made the decision. Fenty, a former Howard University law student, even went Latin on my colleague Ann Marimow when she pressed him Monday afternoon.
"You take into account a myriad and a multitude of information. I don't get into my mens rea," said Fenty. "We made the right decision."
For those not up on their lawyer talk, "mens rea" refers to the mental state in which one commits a criminal act.
In any event, there's no school on Tuesday in DCPS.
Continue reading this post »

Four things every student should learn … but not every school is teaching | eSchoolNews.com

Four things every student should learn … but not every school is teaching | eSchoolNews.com

Four things every student should learn … but not every school is teaching

Education technology consultant Alan November reveals key lessons that today’s students must know in order to thrive in the Information Age

By Dennis Pierce, Editor

Schools are missing out on important opportunities if they fail to teach these lessons, says ed-tech consultant Alan November.
Schools are missing out on important opportunities if they fail to teach these lessons, says ed-tech consultant Alan November.
An awareness of the views of those in other countries, an understanding of how Google ranks the results of a web search, a knowledge of the permanence of information posted online: These are some of the lessons that every student should be learning in today’s schools, says education technology consultant Alan November—but not every middle or high school is teaching these lessons.
November was the featured speaker at a Jan. 14luncheon session during the Florida Education Technology Conference (FETC) in Orlando. Although the session focused on how to balance safety and learning in the digital age, during the course of the discussion November also revealed several topics that he said every member of the Net Generation should learn:
1. Global empathy.
November said he was talking with a senior executive at a global investment bank recently, and he asked the executive: What is the most important skill for today’s students to learn so they are prepared to succeed in the new global economy?
“Empathy,” the executive replied—the ability to understand and respect different points of view.
Most of today’s companies do business with customers all over the world, and several also have branches in multiple countries. Chances are good that when students enter the workforce, they’ll be working with—or doing business with—someone from another nation, with its own culture and its own unique perspective, at some point in their career.
It’s not hard to find people who are smart, the executive said. What is hard to find are employees who have to ability to empathize with, and be sensitive to the needs of, people from other countries.

Two businessmen invested big in schools race - Local/State - NewsObserver.com

Two businessmen invested big in schools race - Local/State - NewsObserver.com
RALEIGH -- Conservative businessmen Bob Luddy and Art Pope were the largest contributors in fall's Wake County school board elections, which ushered in a majority pledged to eliminate the district's diversity policy.

Final campaign finance reports show more than $340,000 in hard and soft money was spent during a contentious contest for control of North Carolina's largest school district. The majority - about $190,000 - boosted the fortunes of the four Republican-backed candidates who won.
Combined, Luddy and Pope provided $38,000 either to individual candidates or to the Wake County Republican Party's efforts in one of the most expensive campaigns in school district history. But Pope downplayed the influence he and Luddy had in the newcomers' victories.
"They were not elected by Bob Luddy or by myself," said Pope, a former Republican state legislator and head of a family-owned chain of retail stores. "They were elected by the overwhelming majority of the voters in their districts."
Wake County Republican Party Chairman Claude Pope Jr., a distant cousin of Art Pope, said campaign cash alone didn't guarantee political success in the school board race.
"As much money as you can spend, it won't help unless you have good candidates and a good issue," said Claude Pope, who has vowed to revive Republican fortunes by concentrating on local elections.
Opponents of the new school board majority said the reports show that Luddy and Art Pope, two influential critics of public education policy, are behind the new direction for Wake schools.
"It seems to confirm that Mr. Pope and Mr. Luddy played a really active role in electing the school board, and you'd think that their views would carry a lot of influence," said Chris Fitzsimon, executive director of N.C. Policy Watch, a liberal think tank.
The dividing lines
The nominally nonpartisan school board election broke largely along party lines, with most Republicans backing the four candidates who advocated neighborhood schools while many Democrats backed candidates who supported maintaining the district's diversity policy.
The winners in the four suburban districts on the ballot tapped into parental discontent about a broad range of issues: mandatory year-round schools, busing for diversity and the weekly early dismissals that detractors called "Wacky Wednesdays."
Supporters of the diversity policy didn't have any donors who provided as much money as Luddy and Art Pope.

Post-Gazette NOW - Local News - Education

Post-Gazette NOW - Local News - Education


This Education Planning Guide focuses on how to improve your chance of success in higher education. (Today)
Though he received a MacArthur Foundation "genius" grant for his work in paleontology, Christopher Beard doesn't consider himself a wunderkind or believe he was genetically predestined for success. (Today)

Students applying to college know doing well on the SAT and ACT entrance exams can improve their chances of being accepted at many colleges. (Today)
It used to be that avoiding study distractions was as easy as finding a quiet corner of the library and hunkering down. But in the wireless age, that's no longer a guarantee. (Today)
Phil Pavlik Jr. still remembers his worst grade in graduate school. (Today)











Audit: Merged districts could save Kan. millions - Yahoo! News

Audit: Merged districts could save Kan. millions - Yahoo! News:

"TOPEKA, Kan. – Consolidating public school districts in Kansas could save millions of taxpayer dollars, although not enough to solve the state's budget crisis this year, according to a new report released Monday.

Kansas has 293 school districts and last forced consolidation in the 1960s when the state overhauled education governance. Since then, legislators have relied on districts to decide for themselves when it's time to merge, offering a few financial incentives to ease the process.

In its report, the Legislative Division of Post Audit looked at methods that would reduce the number of districts to either 266 or 152.

The first scenario — in which the state would have 50 fewer public school buildings and 230 fewer teachers and administrators — would save $18 million. Auditors said the consolidation could happen among districts that already split grade levels, such as one that has the elementary school and the other the high school."

Utah Legislature: Testing teachers — Educators could soon receive pay based on student test scores | Deseret News

Utah Legislature: Testing teachers — Educators could soon receive pay based on student test scores | Deseret News:

"SALT LAKE CITY — Whether teachers should earn their paychecks based on student test scores, popularity or their college degree and years of experience is drawing heated debate between lawmakers and educators.

Rep. Marie Poulson, D-Cottonwood Heights, is proposing a resolution that recommends guidelines for teacher performance pay plans.

'I want to ensure a quality teacher in every classroom,' she said.

Currently teachers are paid based on academic degrees, certification and years in the profession. Poulson, a former English teacher, says while experience should be rewarded, performance is also important.

The House Education Committee unanimously approved the resolution, which will now go to the House for debate. HJR3 includes promoting student achievement and making sure the merit pay plan is adequately funded.

Rep. Greg Hughes, R-Draper, said it's important to 'identify and reward people who are going above and beyond.'"

Study shows chances of having child with autism increases as women age - NYPOST.com

Study shows chances of having child with autism increases as women age - NYPOST.com:

"A woman's chance of having a child with autism increases substantially as she ages, but the risk may be less for older dads than previously suggested, according to a new study analyzing more than 5 million births.

'Although fathers' age can contribute risk, the risk is overwhelmed by maternal age,' said University of California at Davis researcher Janie Shelton, the study's lead author.

Mothers older than 40 were about 50 percent likelier to have a child with autism than those in their 20s; the risk for fathers older than 40 was 36 percent higher than for men in their 20s.

Even at that, the study suggests the risk of a woman over 40 having an autistic child was still less than 4 in 1,000.

The new research, released yesterday in the February issue of the journal Autism Research, suggests the father's age makes the most difference with young mothers.

Among children whose mothers were younger than 25, autism was twice as common with fathers older than 40 than with dads in their 20s."

Back to school

Back to school:

"No Child Left Behind has left many American children behind, so the Obama administration has proposed a comprehensive overhaul of the controversial 2002 legislation championed by his predecessor, George W. Bush. Obama's proposal softens some of the hard edges of NCLB, provides plenty of new cash to help states improve schools, and emphasizes student readiness for college and careers over test scores."



These changes will surely mollify some of NCLB's many critics. But will they work? Or do Obama's changes merely water down the best parts of NCLB - the determination to close the achievement gap and to force accountability for schools that consistently fail to make progress - without offering any new returns?
We're still waiting on full details, but we're concerned. It's true that NCLB was far from perfect. Critics were right to attack its hyperfocus on test results, its unfunded mandates, and its loopholes which allowed states to dumb down their standards rather than help students reach higher ones. The original NCLB was all sticks and very few carrots, and that was discouraging to students, teachers and schools.
Obama is right to offer more carrots - his approach rewards schools that make progress, rather than just punishing them if they fail. Mirroring his innovating "Race to the Top" competitions for reform, Obama's budget offers $900 million in competitive "school turnaround" grants and $1.3 billion in competitive funds for recruitment and training of effective teachers. We saw in California this year how the promise of federal education money forced the Legislature to make some long-needed changes - like finally allowing teachers to be held accountable for student progress.

Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/02/07/EDB21BS2HT.DTL#ixzz0f3PL2rY0

S.F. schools consider costly gay support program

S.F. schools consider costly gay support program:

"With everything from art classes, summer school and jobs on the chopping block this year, the San Francisco school board will decide this week whether to greatly expand school services, support and instruction on issues of sexual orientation"



The decision could cost the school district, which is facing a $113 million budget shortfall over the next two years, at least $120,000 a year - enough cash to cover the salaries of two classroom teachers.
The school board is expected to vote Tuesday on the fiscally controversial resolution calling for San Francisco Unified to add a new full-time staffer to manage "lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and questioning" youth issues in the district's Student Support Services Department.
It also would require the district to track harassment and discrimination based on sexual orientation and distribute an educational packet to parents, encouraging them to discuss "the issues of sexuality, gender identity and safety" with their children.
That commitment probably would cost about $90,000 a year for the staffer and maybe another $30,000 for the rest.

Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/02/08/BAF71BT9AP.DTL#ixzz0f3OlXZTz

Elected officials joining UFT lawsuit got campaign contributions from the union - NYPOST.com

Elected officials joining UFT lawsuit got campaign contributions from the union - NYPOST.com:

"Two teachers unions made campaign contributions to nearly all the elected officials who signed on to the UFT's lawsuit challenging the city's plan to close 19 public schools, The Post has learned.

Nine of the 10 state and city politicians who joined the suit -- filed last week in Manhattan Supreme Court -- have received a total of $45,000 from the United Federation of Teachers or New York State United Teachers since 2006.

The contributions ranged from a high of $10,750, for state Sen. Bill Perkins (D-Harlem) since 2006, to a low of $500, for city Councilman Erik Martin Dilan (D-Brooklyn) in 2009.

UFT President Michael Mulgrew denied any link between the funds and the officials' backing, calling a suggestion of undue influence 'ridiculous.'

Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer -- who got nearly $4,000 and major union support in his 2005 election bid -- also called the notion 'complete nonsense.'"

With Doubts on Crime Data, Questions About Bloomberg Policy - NYTimes.com

With Doubts on Crime Data, Questions About Bloomberg Policy - NYTimes.com

Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, an engineering major in college, has never been shy about proclaiming an unerring faith in statistics.



He created 311 as a way to collate data, and improve the lives of New Yorkers. He has whipped out education data to justify extending mayoral control, reward star employees and close laggard schools. Rarely does a month go by without Mr. Bloomberg citing data analysis as the marrow not just of his administration, but also of his private-sector career and his philanthropic foundation.
“I’m a great believer in the wisdom I learned in my first Wall Street job: In God we trust,” he said at a philanthropy conference in Atlanta last May. “Everyone else, bring data.”
But what if the data were somehow skewed?
That question has emerged as one of the by-products of a survey conducted by two criminologists that has raised doubts about the integrity of the New York Police Department’s highly regarded crime tracking program, CompStat. Relying on the anonymous responses of hundreds of retired high-ranking police officials, the survey found that tremendous pressure to reduce crime, year after year, prompted some supervisors and precinct commanders to distort crime statistics.
The survey did not address critical issues, like when the manipulation of the data was supposed to have occurred. So it is impossible to ascertain whether much of the skewing might have happened shortly after CompStat was started in 1995 under Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani, or whether it may have continued or even worsened since Mr. Bloomberg took office in 2002.

The Educated Guess One spot to shop for free digital texts

The Educated Guess

One spot to shop for free digital texts

Posted in Community Colleges
It’s about to get a lot easier for instructors at community colleges to start using free digital textbooks in their courses. And once they do, the rest of the nation will  follow – eventually.
This week, the Open Educational Resources Center for California went online. The web site will act as a clearinghouse for community college faculty interested in free digital textbooks but  unsure how to use them. They’ll find links to the 450 or so texts now available,  and soon they’ll see peer reviews of many of the titles. The course materials and textbooks are openly licensed or available in the public domain.
(Read more and comment on this post)

Board to hear charter school audit report

Board to hear charter school audit report:

"Lompoc Unified School District administrators have the unenviable duty of being responsible for the financial stability of charter schools inside the district — charter schools like Manzanita, which LUSD has very little control over.

Tonight’s meeting of the LUSD Board of Education will include presentation of Manzanita Public Charter School’s inaugural audit report, detailing the 2008-2009 fiscal year.
Another report, Manzanita’s “First Interim Report,” is also to be presented to the public and to the board at the meeting. The interim report reflects the school’s general ledger through Oct. 31, 2009.

Review of both of the charter school’s documents is “the right and responsibility” of the school district, according to district staff."

School staff says no to charter to safeguard state funds - Pasadena Star-News

School staff says no to charter to safeguard state funds - Pasadena Star-News:

"Staff at Pasadena Unified School District will recommend that the district board reject a petition for an Aveson Charter School in Northwest Pasadena, claiming the school could siphon millions of dollars away from the financially strapped district, Chief Academic Officer Alice Petrossian said Monday.

'We're declining in enrollment and while the district recognizes the importance of education options we don't need a charter school for programs the district already offers,' Petrossian said.

The board will consider the request for an Aveson International School for the Arts tonight.

The proposed school would be the third operated by Aveson Charter School in the Pasadena Unified district borders."

Response: Spread the Financial Aid Around >>

Response: Spread the Financial Aid Around >>:

"Recently, the Acting Director of the Office of Financial Aid and Scholarships (OFAS), Christopher Shultz, wrote a piece in the New U to clear up some misconceptions about how UCI apportions financial aid. Although recent studies have found that public research universities are shifting their funding priorities from need-based to merit-based grants that are awarded disproportionately to wealthy students, Mr. Shultz claims that the findings are not true of UCI.

Furthermore, the OFAS is actually in a “partnership” with students and our families to make sure that a university education is affordable without undue burdens of work and debt. To take this claim seriously, I’d like to offer to Mr. Shultz several easy ways that the OFAS can indeed be a “partner” to students.

First, provide students with clear statistics. The Shultz article packed several disjointed figures into one paragraph; a whirling mish-mash of numbers that don’t amount to anything. All that was clear was that about one in twelve need-based grants go to students from families in the top 15 percent of the income population. Why are families who can afford a private school education being given need-based aid? Or, why do one-third of merit-based grants go to those same families?"

In pennies and dollars, South Bay schools raise tens of thousands for Haiti - San Jose Mercury News

In pennies and dollars, South Bay schools raise tens of thousands for Haiti - San Jose Mercury News:

"In pennies and dollars, with a few large bills sprinkled in, Silicon Valley schools are rapidly filling a treasure chest to help quake-stricken Haiti.

Within days of the earthquake that devastated Port-au-Prince, South Bay schools were placing donation boxes in classrooms, collecting shoes and planning bake sales. And despite the tightened grip of a recession at home —and the worst financial crisis to hit California education in decades — the total has reached tens, if not hundreds, of thousands of dollars.

'Haiti was already a suffering country,' said Los Altos High student Diana Chou, 17, who helped start a fundraiser at her school. 'Regardless of the fact that we're in a recession, it just seemed so much more important to get resources there.'"

ACLU Accuses Professor Of Anti-Gay Preaching | On Top Magazine :: Gay & Lesbian News, Entertainment, Commentary & Travel

ACLU Accuses Professor Of Anti-Gay Preaching | On Top Magazine :: Gay & Lesbian News, Entertainment, Commentary & Travel:

"The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has advised a public community college in California it must end improper religious-based anti-gay instruction by a staff science professor.
The civil rights group alleges that Professor Dr. Bradley Lopez's introductory health class is more preaching than teaching.

Lopez, who teaches at Fresno City College (FCC), “presents religiously-based and anti-gay views as 'science' or 'fact',” the ACLU said in a statement.

Lopez is accused of giving lectures where he taught that being gay is a “biological misapplication of human sexuality” and said that the “recommended treatment” is “psychological counseling” or “hormone supplements,” presented gay men and lesbians as a threat to society, used Bible passages as “empirical” evidence that life begins at conception, and asserted that abortion is “the leading cause of death in this country.”"

Former CSU authority writes about the ‘people’s university’�|�Daily Titan

Former CSU authority writes about the ‘people’s university’�|�Daily Titan


Don Gwerth, Ph.D. Photo courtesy of Don Gerth
“I have been calling the Cal State University the ‘people’s university’ of California since the 1960s,” said Don Gerth, former president of Cal State Dominguez Hills and Cal State Sacramento.
Gerth recently published “The People’s University: A History of the California State University,” a book tracing the history of Cal State University after friends and family urged him to do so.
Retiring in 2003, Gerth ended his 45-year career but not his love for CSU.
The book covers the long history of the CSU, which dates as far back as 1857 when the CSU began teaching elementary school teachers in San Francisco.
The school then moved to San Jose, where the comprehensive CSU program was created and formally established in the 1960s – making San Jose State University is the oldest university in California.
The book consists of anecdotes from the system’s early faculty, staff and students.
The text is focused on the “Master Plan,” a plan created in 1960 that under-lied the roles of the University of California (UC), CSU and the California Community Colleges (CCC).
“The CSU system focuses on the needs of California and its citizens for an educated populace and universities, which address the civic and economic development of the state,” Gerth said.
Gerth said the CSU system set the standard for higher education nationally and around the world, and is well-respected and often copied. Gerth said that he, with the help of his wife, researched, interviewed and worked with small focus groups for the purpose of his book.
The “Master Plan” is embraced because it provides students the opportunity to choose what educational path is right for them. Gerth said that in the 1930s, California’s public policy recognized the need for a broader access to higher education. “The system as we know it now was created by the Legislature in the 1960s,” Gerth said. The Master Plan was composed of what were then 10 institutions that were united by the creation of the Board of Trustees.

Open Letter to Officials Concerning ASUC - Daily Nexus

Open Letter to Officials Concerning ASUC - Daily Nexus


To Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, UC President Mark Yudof, California Legislators and Regents of the University of California,

This is a call to regulate closed sessions by legislative bodies of the Associated Students of the University of California.
Various California laws express the clear opinion that open meetings are a vital part of democratic government. The Brown Act ensures local governments conduct their business publicly and has included community colleges by an Attorney General opinion in 1992. The Bagley-Keene Act lays out procedures all state agencies — including the UC Regents — must follow in closing a meeting. The Gloria Romero Open Meetings Act applies to the governing councils of all Cal State schools. The only public higher education legislative council in this state unregulated by an open meeting act is ASUC. While existing laws could have been applicable to ASUC, a 1983 Attorney General opinion exempted bodies with powers delegated by the Regents. As a result of this decision, the letter of the law permits our student representatives to conduct business as secretly as they like.

With representatives elected by the students and multi-million dollar budgets of student fees to spend at their discretion, ASUC cannot be described as anything less than a legitimate government. This alone necessitates transparency, but the need for oversight has been compounded by recent incidents. ASUCSB’s Legislative Council has abused the power to eject the public, holding closed meetings for the second consecutive week without offering sufficient rationale for their closure. Regardless of the subject matter of these closed sessions, it is disturbing that the group entrusted with student money and governance has no legal obligation to conduct business openly.

Further allegations have plagued ASUCSB, including the alleged trashing of a rented villa while on a student fee-funded retreat. While the transparency promised on the campaign trail should compel the responsible individuals to admit their mistakes, the public has instead been kept entirely in the dark as ASUCSB members close ranks in an attempt to protect them behind legal procedure and stonewalling. Student demands for accountability can be heard loud and clear — a Facebook group entitled “Hold Associated Students accountable for their actions” garnered almost 1,400 members one day after its creation. In this current budget crisis, students bristle at the idea of ASUC spending 

State bills reintroduced, aim to make CSU and UC records open to public�|�Daily Titan

State bills reintroduced, aim to make CSU and UC records open to public|Daily Titan:

"State Sen. Leland Yee, (D-San Francisco), reintroduced two bills Jan. 5 that will bring greater transparency to the state of California’s public higher-education institutions, require foundation records to be open to public inspection and will also seek to protect whistleblowers in the Cal State University/University of California systems.
According to a press release on the senator’s Web site, the first bill, SB 330, is a reintroduction of SB 218, and if approved, will require campus auxiliary organizations like Associated Students Inc. to be subject to the California Public Records Act, subsequently allowing for more accountability at UC, CSU and community college campuses.
The second bill, SB 650, is a reintroduction of SB 219, and will provide UC and CSU employees who report waste, fraud and abuse, with the same legal protections as other state employees.
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger vetoed both bills SB 218 and SB 219 in October 2009."

Oakland teachers authorize strike | SocialistWorker.org

Oakland teachers authorize strike | SocialistWorker.org:

"MEMBERS OF the Oakland Education Association (OEA) voted by a 94 percent margin to authorize a one-day strike, and by an 89 percent margin to support the March 4 Day of Action against education budget cuts.


The union is in the stage of bargaining called fact-finding, which comes after the two sides reach an impasse. The move to authorize a strike comes after a year and a half of fruitless negotiations with the Oakland Unified School District (OUSD). In addition to authorizing a strike, members voted unanimously to oppose the district's 'last, best and final offer.'"

The district's offer is based on the logic that there is no money, and only cuts are on the table. However, a document authored by the OEA's bargaining team proves that there is enough money to settle the contract. The problem is that the district's priorities are testing, corporate consultants and administrators, rather than teacher retention and quality education for students.
Here are a couple examples of spending where the money would be better used to reduce class sizes and pay teachers a competitive salary:
-- The OUSD spends $10 million a year for "benchmark testing" and test prep materials.
-- More than $5 million is paid out to consultants to outsource jobs like professional development and curriculum coaching.
-- The district makes annual payments of $6 million toward its debt to the state of California.
-- Perhaps most outrageous, OUSD pays million-dollar fines to the state for exceeding the 8-to-100 administrator-to-teacher ratio mandated by law.
The district's offer has a pay freeze for the 2009-2010 school year, but re-openers in the 

Obama proposal to change NCLB gets thumbs-up from San Gabriel Valley, Whittier educators - Whittier Daily News

Obama proposal to change NCLB gets thumbs-up from San Gabriel Valley, Whittier educators - Whittier Daily News:

"President Barack Obama's proposal to overhaul the No Child Left Behind Act this year is being roundly praised by San Gabriel Valley and Whittier-area educators, who say they'd welcome a new federal accountability system to measure schools that is based on annual progress.

As it stands now, NCLB sets specific testing targets for math and language arts that rise each year, with the overall goal of having 100 percent of students proficient in those two areas by the 2013-14 school year.

But in his budget plan, Obama proposed judging schools differently, by looking instead at student growth and schools' progress from one year to the next."

Michael Rebell: Educational Budget Cuts: Unconscionable -- and Unconstitutional

Michael Rebell: Educational Budget Cuts: Unconscionable -- and Unconstitutional:

"This past fall California laid off 20,000 teachers, resulting in average class sizes in Los Angeles high schools of 42.5. Teachers in Hawaii were 'furloughed' and classes canceled for 17 straight Fridays, In Illinois, 30,000 children lost preschool services, bilingual education was cut 25 percent and teacher recruitment in hard-to-staff schools was substantially reduced.

And there's worse to come. Even after plugging budget holes with American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) funds -- intended to stimulate innovation and create opportunities for low-income students -- 39 states now report midyear shortfalls and project additional large gaps for FY2011. New York Governor David Paterson has proposed cutting the base budget by $1.4 billion next year."

Proposed oil tax divides education leaders - San Jose Mercury News

Proposed oil tax divides education leaders - San Jose Mercury News:

"An East Bay lawmaker wants to tax oil pumped from the California ground and give the proceeds to colleges and universities, but the proposal has run afoul of the very people it was supposed to help.

Assembly Bill 656 initially would have taxed companies 12.5 percent for oil and gas extracted from the state. The money would have been divided among the three public systems: community colleges, California State University and the University of California.

But the bill's other requirements — including an inequitable division of the money and a mandate that it be spent only on classroom instruction — riled some education officials. The lawmaker advocating the tax, Assemblyman Alberto Torrico, D-Newark, has since gutted the bill, but said he plans to bring back the original proposal soon.

'We didn't have the votes in the Assembly,' Torrico said. 'But we've always treated this bill as part of a larger campaign to raise awareness.'
College and university leaders agree that Tor"

RealClearPolitics - Education & the Fallacy of "Fairness"

RealClearPolitics - Education & the Fallacy of "Fairness":

"A recent flap in a Berkeley high school reveals what a farce 'fairness' can be. Because this is ultra-liberal Berkeley, perhaps we should not be surprised that a proposal has been made to eliminate four jobs as science teachers and use the money saved for programs to help low achievers.

In Berkeley, as in many other communities across the country, black and Latino students are not performing as well as Asian and white students. In fact, the racial gap in academic achievement at Berkeley High School is the highest in California-- no doubt a special source of embarrassment in politically correct Berkeley."

11,000 people respond to Sac City schools online surveys - Sacramento News - Local and Breaking Sacramento News | Sacramento Bee

11,000 people respond to Sac City schools online surveys - Sacramento News - Local and Breaking Sacramento News | Sacramento Bee:

"Keeping class sizes small and closing the achievement gap among students seem to be the biggest concerns of parents, students, teachers and community members filling out a pair of surveys about the Sacramento City Unified School District, Superintendent Jonathan Raymond said Monday.

More than 11,000 people had taken the surveys as of last week, including more than 4,200 students. Today is the last day the district will collect answers to the online surveys (available at www.scusd.edu)."

Monday, February 8, 2010

Sacramento Press / Access Sacramento and Sacramento Music Alliance Help Haiti - Concert & Telethon

Sacramento Press / Access Sacramento and Sacramento Music Alliance Help Haiti - Concert & Telethon:

"Access Sacramento is hosting a 3 hour telethon on Friday February 26 in our TV Studio. We will be putting together crews to tape record three, one-hour programs that will then playback from 8:00 PM - 11:00 PM that same night.

Produced in partnership with the 'Buck-up or Shut Up!' event organized by the Sacramento Music Alliance, our combined efforts will ask local viewers to remember Haiti and ocntinue to donate. The devastating earthquake that killed so many and left so many more families homeless, will take many years to rebuild. Let's not forget them - Haitians of all ages still need our help.
Sacramento musicians are joining together with Access Sacramento to bring this appeal to local viewers. There are three ways to help. Attend - Volunteer - Donate"

Sacramento Press / Sacramento Asian Pacific Chamber of Commerce Installation & Awards Dinner

Sacramento Press / Sacramento Asian Pacific Chamber of Commerce Installation & Awards Dinner

The Sacramento Asian Pacific Chamber of Commerce’s 17thAnnual Installation Dinner was held Feb. 4th at the Sheraton in downtown Sacramento. Over 600 guests enjoyed passionate speeches by guest George Takei and 2010 SACC Honoree, West Sacramento Mayor, Christopher Cabaldon who focused on the power of strong leadership.  


The SACC was honored to present the  2010 awardees: Kaiser Permanente (Corporate Steward Award); Fast Signs of Elk Grove (Small Business Award); Asian Resources (Vu Nguyen Heroism Award) and Megan Franks, Rancho Cordova Marriott (Ambassador of the Year).


 The SACC Installation Dinner is held each February and includes the installation of new Board Members of the Sacramento Asian Pacific Chamber of Commerce.”

Hearts for Haiti | The Education Report

Hearts for Haiti | The Education Report


Hearts for Haiti

By Katy Murphy
Monday, February 8th, 2010 at 1:03 pm in high schoolsmiddle schoolsstudents,teensthe arts.
Kids at Oakland’s Bret Harte Middle School are showing their love this month by raising money for victims of the earthquake in Haiti. So far, they have raised more than $700 for Oxfam, according to teachers at the school. Each heart represents a student’s contribution.
At Oakland School for the Arts, Graciela Olguin and her classmates organized an online art sale to raise money for the American Red Cross’s Haiti relief efforts. They set up this Web site, and generated more than $300 as of late last week.
If your school has undertaken a similar project, tell us about it.

Schwarzenegger, Coe to run Vancouver torch relay - Latest News - sacbee.com

Schwarzenegger, Coe to run Vancouver torch relay - Latest News - sacbee.com

Arnold Schwarzenegger will hand the Olympic torch off to Sebastian Coe on Friday morning, the day of the opening ceremony at the Vancouver Games.
The California governor and the two-time Olympic gold medalist runner were revealed Monday as torch relay participants along with several famous Canadians, including the father of hockey great Wayne Gretzky.
"Clearly we want to have a big finish," said John Furlong, the CEO of the Vancouver organizing committee.
Besides Walter Gretzky, other notable relay runners include astronaut Julie Payette, singerJann Arden and former hockey player Richard Brodeur.

Education Week: Dueling Objectives Mark Stimulus at Halfway Point

Education Week: Dueling Objectives Mark Stimulus at Halfway Point


A year ago, the federal floodgates opened for aid to education, releasing a one-time surge of up to $100 billion in economic-stimulus money aimed at both stabilizing and transforming the nation’s public education system.
The results so far have been mixed, as weighed against the Obama administration’s twin goals for its unprecedented infusion of education funding under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.
From the outset, the stimulus program’s education piece—among the largest elements of the $787 billion package intended to jump-start a recession-battered economy—was to serve both an economic and a school improvement purpose.
By pouring money into the coffers of states and districts already suffering from cuts to K-12 schooling, the ARRA aimed to stanch the fiscal bleeding and let them concentrate on the business of educating students. A year later, it’s clear that the stimulus package averted tens of thousands of teacher layoffs nationwide, and mitigated deep cuts to school programs.
Schools and the Stimulus:
A Midterm Report

Overview
Dueling Objectives Mark Stimulus at Halfway Point

The Impact So Far
Multiple Stimulus Aid Streams Flow to Ed Tech
Private Sector Competes for Share of Stimulus Pie
Spec. Ed., Title I Aid Casts Long Stimulus Shadow
Stimulus Reflects Push for Teacher Effectiveness
Schools Stuck at Bottom Target of $3 Billion Push
Aid Lets Hard-Hit State Keep Programs Aloft
Fiscal Stability Allows for Long View on Stimulus

The Road Ahead
As Education's Funding Cliff Nears, Anxieties Rise
Race to Top Sets Stage for ESEA Reauthorization

Web Extras
Live Webinar: Is the Stimulus Metting Its K-12 Goals?
Live Chat: Schools and the Stimulus: A Midterm Report
Interactive Map: Follow the Stimulus Money
Videos on the Stimulus

After parents’ visit, Sen. Perkins calls for charter school hearings | GothamSchools

After parents’ visit, Sen. Perkins calls for charter school hearings | GothamSchools

After parents’ visit, Sen. Perkins calls for charter school hearings

Charter school advocates’ day of political action in Albany last week appears to have had an unintended consequence: State Senator Bill Perkins now wants to hold hearings to expose an alleged lack of oversight and parent voice in the schools.
In a half-hour interview on WWRL’s Working New York radio show this Saturday, Perkins said that a group of charter school parents who have become disenchanted with their childrens’ schools came to see him and left a lasting impression. Those parents belong to the New York Charter Parents Association, a recently-started group that’s supportive of charter schools, but quite critical of their management.
“There’s a parent movement that’s not being paid attention to within the charter schools,” said Perkins, who recently supported a bill backed by the teachers union that would have lifted the charter cap while placing tight restrictions on how and where the schools open.
“A part of their concern is how the money is being spent, and whether as parent leaders they are allowed to have certain types of access to information. They have been threatened with being put out of the schools if they insist on those types of opportunities that normally any parent would get access to,” he said.
The hearings — which aren’t scheduled, but will be “soon” he said — will focus on the city and state’s oversight of charter schools, the rates at which students are expelled or counseled to leave, and the

John Carroll University GLBT Protest

In light of the recent decision by the John Carroll University administration to not specifically include the protection of Lesbians, Gays, Bi-Sexuals, Transgendered, and Questioning students in its Anti-Discrimination Statement, we, the students, faculty, and alumni of John Carroll University choose to voice our support for those the university leaves without protection.

John Carroll's mission is to create people for others. That means support, protection, love, and understanding for all people without regard to color, creed, sexual preference, gender, age, or other personal factors. That's the goal of a Jesuit institution.

By not explicitly voicing its support of LGBTQ students, faculty, and alumni, John Carroll's administration is breaking those unspoken bonds of trust that make JCU a community.

It's time for those who have called Carroll home in some capacity to speak up and demand of the President, Board of Directors, and Administration the words that promise safety and security to those whose rights are so tenuous and often unprotected.

In short, we expect better of John Carroll University. We demand better. We are a gentle, angry people and we are singing, singing for our lives!!!

http://www.jcu.edu/

Gay Students Stage Basketball Sit-In at John Carroll U.
Gay students and supporters at John Carroll University staged a sit-in on the basketball court prior to the start of a game last week to protest the university's refusal to add sexual orientation to the official anti-bias policy at the institution. The protest, filmed and then placed on YouTube, ended when students were escorted -- without arrests -- from the court. University officials noted that draft "community standards" being prepared by the university explicitly protect gay and lesbian students and would bar discrimination against them. Officials said that the employment policy that does not include sexual orientation is based on state and federal statutes, which do not cover sexual orientation. "Rather than rely on the limitations provided under current federal and state law, the university strives to achieve a much higher standard based upon its Jesuit and Catholic mission and teachings," said a statement from the university.
http://www.insidehighered.com/

Sacramento Area Fire Fighters Endorse Patrick Kennedy for City Council

Patrick Kennedy
Sacramento Area Fire Fighters Endorse Patrick Kennedy for City Council
I am proud to announce that the Sacramento Area Fire Fighters Local 522 has endorsed my candidacy for Sacramento City Council.

We all owe a tremendous debt to the men and women of Sacramento's fire fighting ranks.  Every day they protect over 144 square miles with a population of over 450,000.  They are responsible for far more than just protecting life and property from the ravages of fire.  They are often the front line first responders providing emergency medical services, hazardous materials regulation and response, special and technical rescue, fire prevention code enforcement, public education, and disaster preparedness.

In District 5, Section 6 in Oak Park has been one of the busiest stations in the nation.  Section 12, in Hollywood Park, has even answered the call when my own daughter suffered from a diabetes related medical emergency, and I credit them with saving her life. 

Carrying the support of these brave men and women means a lot to our campaign.  But, more importantly, it means a great deal to me personally. 

If you have any questions about my candidacy or want to talk about issues facing our city, I welcome you to call me at 446-4434, or visit my website at www.Patrick-Kennedy.com, where I hope you will sign up as a supporter.  I look forward to hearing from you. 

Sincerely,

Patrick Kennedy



Support Patrick's Campaign
We need supporters like you to help Patrick get elected to the Sacramento City Council - Find out more here.

Planned Parenthood Pushes Intensive Sex Education for Kids as Young as 10 - International News | News of the World | Middle East News | Europe News - FOXNews.com

Planned Parenthood Pushes Intensive Sex Education for Kids as Young as 10 - International News | News of the World | Middle East News | Europe News - FOXNews.com

Planned Parenthood Pushes Intensive Sex Education for Kids as Young as 10

A new report by the International Planned Parenthood Federation is advocating that children as young as 10 be given extensive sex education, including an awareness of sex's pleasures.
The report, "Stand and Deliver," charges that religious groups, specifically Catholics and Muslims, deny their young access to comprehensive sexual programs and education.
"Young people's sexuality is still contentious for many religious institutions. Fundamentalist and other religious groups — the Catholic Church and madrasas (Islamic Schools) for example — have imposed tremendous barriers that prevent young people, particularly, from obtaining information and services related to sex and reproduction. Currently, many religious teachings deny the pleasurable and positive aspects of sex." the report states.
The report demands that children 10 and older be given a "comprehensive sexuality education" by governments, aid organizations and other groups, and that young people should be seen as "sexual beings."
"Young people have the right to be informed about sexuality and to have access to contraceptives and other services," Bert Koenders, the Netherlands Minister for Development Cooperation, wrote in the foreword to the report. It was his organization that helped fund the report.
The report argues that sex education should be "recast" to show sexuality as a "positive force for change and development, as a source of pleasure, an embodiment of human rights and

Education: Race to the Top?: Part II | Psychology Today

Education: Race to the Top?: Part II | Psychology Today


In my recent post, Race to the Top?: Part I, I described the academic achievement rat race in which students near the top of the educational food chain strive maniacally to win (or at least finish). I argued that the emphasis on testing by former President Bush's No Child Left Behind law (NCLB) and continued with President Obama's Race to the Top initiative (RTTT) has only exacerbated the problem better characterized by the title of the powerful new documentary by Vicki Abeles, Race to Nowhere. This post, in contract, explores how RTTT impacts those students and schools at the other end of the educational food chain, those who are just trying to survive in the turbulent sea of American public education.
The first mistake that this administration made was to call education reform a race. Races connote winners and losers. Yet, we need to ensure that all our students and schools are winners. I think a more appropriate name for this initiative is Climb to the Top because the focus should be on how to get to the top.



The administration's second mistake was to continue Bush's initial mistake of focusing on testing; instead of being a tool for education reform, testing has morphed into the end-all, be-all of said reform. Yes, assessment is essential for determining the effectiveness of programs such as RTTT aimed at achieving something as ethereal and elusive as education reform or the more tangible goal of closing the education and economic gaps between the haves and have-nots. At the same time, improved test scores should not be the ultimate objective of education reform.
This notion that test results are the essential goal of education reform has created an environment in which teachers must "teach to the test;" students aren't really educated so much as prepared to pass tests so schools and states can get federal funding. School administrators hate teaching to the test because schools become fact factories instead of houses of learning. Teachers hate it because they are forced into a very small curricular box and are not allowed to do what they love to do, namely, educate young people. And students hate it because rote memorization of facts is neither interesting nor motivating, and they don't get a real education. Perhaps the saddest aspect of NCLB is that it HASN'T WORKED! In the eight plus years in which NCLB has been in place, there have been few appreciable or lasting gains in test scores for which NCLB can take credit. What it has overwhelmingly succeeded 

EducationCEO's Blog

EducationCEO's Blog

Yes, the presidential election is over but people are still using the word change when describing anything from politics to education. I can’t help but wonder: Do most people really want change? I think a lot of people talk a good game, but when it comes to walking the walk, folks start to disappear or get really, really quiet. Yeah, I think I may need to go a little ‘rogue’ in this post because there are some things that need to be said because a lot of people are oblivious to what’s going on in the world, especially as it relates to education.


Barack Obama was elected the first African American President of the United States. He made history. We must move on. I did not hold any unrealistic expectations for this president because I understood (to a certain degree) the mess he inherited: two wars, a crappy economy, a broken-down educational system, and hatred from other countries of the world. As David Letterman would say: I wouldn’t give his problems to a monkey on a rock. Obama definitely has his hands full and he needs our help. First and foremost, we all need to be realistic: He is not going to come close to fixing all of these problems during 

We Draw The Lines We’re giving you 4 extra days! CA Citizens Redistricting apps now due 2/16 at 5 pm! Apply now

We Draw The Lines
We’re giving you 4 extra days! CA Citizens Redistricting apps now due 2/16 at 5 pm! Apply now 


Welcome to We Draw the Lines. The California State Auditor's webpage for information about California's FIRST Citizens Redistricting Commission.
Apply Now Icon

You can apply today!

Apply for the Commission Online—December 15, 2009 through February 16, 2010.Learn about the general application and selection process and timeline. You can apply by clicking on the icon to the right:
If you have questions or comments or need a reasonable accommodation to participate in this process, call us toll free at 1-866-356-5217 or send us an e-mail at votersfirstact@auditor.ca.gov. We'll be happy to answer any of your questions. We encourage as many applicants as possible to apply and take advantage of this exciting, once-in-a-decade opportunity to be on this new Commission!

You can see how many applications are being submitted!

Do you want to know how many applications we're receiving and where they are coming from? We are tracking that information on a daily basis and will be providing weekly updates:
You can also subscribe to this RSS feed to receive notifications of Web site updates.

A Firing Over FERPA? - Inside School Research - Education Week

A Firing Over FERPA? - Inside School Research - Education Week

A Firing Over FERPA?

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The movement to build longitudinal-data systems on student achievement has long butted heads with the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, better known as FERPA, a 1974 law created to protect students' privacy.
The conflicts got to be so frequent that the U.S. Department of Education, under Margaret Spellings, even updated its regulations on the law last year to make it clearer that schools may share student data with outside contractors who perform work that school employees would otherwise do, such as electronic recordkeeping and testing.

This story
 from Inside Higher Ed suggests, however, that the conflicts haven't gone away. In the Feb. 1 article, the Education Department's top FERPA watchdog, Paul Gammill, contends that he was fired because he argued in internal meetings and documents that the agency's approach to spurring states to expand their longitudinal-student-data systems was running into conflict with the privacy law. In the story, department officials made no comments on Gammill's allegation, which they say is a personnel matter.
But there is one congressman who is outraged. U.S. Rep. John Kline of Minnesota, the top Republican on the House Education and Labor Committee, said in a statement issued Friday that "the allegation that the U.S. Department of Education is making an end run around student-privacy laws is a serious 

Charter Schools vs. Traditional Public Schools: Which One is Under-Performing? - Public School Review

Charter Schools vs. Traditional Public Schools: Which One is Under-Performing? - Public School Review

Charter Schools vs. Traditional Public Schools: Which One is Under-Performing?
Published July 10, 2009
Written by Grace Chen

Charter schools have becoming the modern rival of public schools, but does the reality of charter performance match the hype? According to Change.org, "Charter schools get overwhelmingly positive press and make a lot of claims about their success. But actually, numerous studies confirm that their achievement is indistinguishable from that of traditional public schools. Some are very successful, some are troubled and struggling, and the rest are somewhere in between just like traditional public schools."

In a closer examination, charter schools, as the US News and World Report explains, are publicly funded institutions that operate under their own standards of conduct and curriculum. Although these institutions are funded by tax dollars, charter schools are ultimately given the freedom to establish their own methods of operation, similar to how many private schools are able to operate their instructional and social practices.

Yet, despite these freedoms, many experts argue that the charter schools are under-performing in comparison to public schools. On the other hand, supporters of charter programs argue that the data used to draw negative attention to charter school scores is mis-leading, biased, or falsely computed. With staunch supporters on both sides of the debate, charter schools and public schools are continually being thrown into the boxing ring.

Test Scores: Charter Schools vs. Public Schools

In evaluating some of the statistical studies that seek to compare charter vs. public school performance, recent investigations conducted by the Center for Research on Education Outcomes at Stanford University reveal that students' test scores may prove that public schools are now outperforming charter schools. As CREDO, a national organization devoted to charter school research reveals, the Stanford analysts compared reading and math state-based standardized test scores between charter school vs. public school students in 15 states, as well as scores in the District of Columbia. In fact, in further evaluating the data, experts found that 37 percent of charter schools posted improvements in math scores; however, these improvement rates were significantly below the improvement rates of students in the public school classrooms. Furthermore, 46 percent of charter schools experienced math improvements that were "statistically indistinguishable" from the average improvement rates shown by public school students.

Ultimately, this data surmises that in the category of math alone, only 17 percent of charter schools have reported achievement rates that surpass public school performance results. Similarly, charter school students' reading scores improvement rates were also below their public school counterparts.

Looking Between the Numbers

While recent reports seem to support the triumphs of public schools, a deeper assessment of various studies and statistics reveals that students who come from lower-income families and / or students who are English language learners revealed higher success and performance rates in charter schools than their public school counterparts.

Politics K-12 - Education Week

Politics K-12 - Education Week

The Department's Budget 'Plan B'

As we've already reported, the U.S. Department of Education put out a bold new budget proposal last week that includes major program consolidations and sketches out the preliminary details of the administration's plan to renew the Elementary and Secondary Education Act.
That reauthorization would have to pass this year for many of the budget proposals to become reality. Many folks think that's a long shot. And it appears that the department is at least preparing for the possibility that the bill won't make it to prime time this year.
Buried in the mega-thick budget document is the administration's budget contingency plan, in case there's no reauthorization. (For the full proposal gohere, then click on the link that says Fiscal Year 2011 Education Budget Summary and Background Information. The chart is on page 33.)
The headline? The contingency request seeks $900 million for the Teacher Incentive Fund, more than double the $400 million the program received in fiscal year 2010. That's about the same level as the $950 million Teacher and Leader Innovation Fund, which is one of the new funding streams proposed in the department's budget.

HAITI: Schools slow to reopen African Press International (API)

HAITI: Schools slow to reopen African Press International (API):

"PORT-AU-PRINCE, ) – A call by Haiti’s government for schools to reopen in areas spared by the earthquake has gone largely unheeded because of parents’ fears and financial woes.

“I want to send them to school, but how could I pay?” said Sauver Jean-Baptiste, a cobbler by trade who used to keep five children in private education at an annual cost of just over US$800.

“My clients are now either dead, have left the capital for their home villages or have lost all their belongings, including their shoes. Shoes are the last thing on anyone‘s mind,” Jean-Baptiste told IRIN.

Some senators were opposed to the call to reopen some schools, on the grounds it was disrespectful to students and teachers still buried in collapsed buildings.

But Education Minister Joel D. Jean-Pierre told IRIN: “Life continues and schools can be places of healing.”

Healing for people like Jean-Baptiste’s 15-year-old son, Jude, who lost two friends in the earthquake."

Early childhood education: Dumb product division. The Educated Reporter

The Educated Reporter

Early childhood education: Dumb product division.

Does anybody ever read a press release? Is that even a remotely effective way to get your message out to journalists? Do PR people think about whether the recipients of their releases would really, truly be interested in them? Did the person who sent me a release about this have any idea I would only publicize it in order to mock it? (Oh, any press is good press, I know.)
The one lesson I have learned from new motherhood is that 65 percent of the products you think you need are absolutely dispensable, if not totally worthless. From now on I plan to give my newly expecting friends one of those Must Buy Baby checklists, relentlessly annotated: Borrow, Borrow, Don’t Need, Don’t Need, Borrow, See if You Need it Later and Then Borrow, Don’t Need, and so on. A prenatal iPod waistband would go into the Please Don’t Tell Me You Just Bought That category. When you are eight months pregnant, do you really need your belly to be even wider? Can’t you just turn the stereo on?

Here at Educated Reporter we are big on the misuse of research, so the website’s implication (backed with many quotes from experts that may or may not have anything to do with this product) that not buying the Lullabelly shortchanges your child’s 

BallerStatus.com � The Game Slams Education System: ‘School Was a Government Plot To Keep Track of Us’

BallerStatus.com � The Game Slams Education System: ‘School Was a Government Plot To Keep Track of Us’

The Game is not one to bite his tongue, no matter what the topic is. Most recently, the Compton rapper slammed the education system, saying that once you hit a certain grade level, school doesn't help much.

He even adds that school is Uncle Sam's way of keeping tabs on kids on a regular basis.
"After you learned how to read and do addition, what else did we need school for that we use in everyday life as an adult?" Game asked in a tweet (@IHateGame).
"I think school was a government's plot to keep track of us and program our lives. Up at 7, out at 3PM five days a week."

While Game questioned a school's use in life as an adult, he did explain why he thinks it great -- it gives him a break from his kids.

" ... Them two dudes is animals!" he tweeted, regarding his two sons. "I get it, school is a babysitter. Martin Luther King said: 'The reason we in school 13 yrs is because, that's how long it take to DESTROY a child's mind."

Before ended his rant, Game made sure to send a message to the kids following his tweets ... that is to "STAY IN SCHOOL!"

Is Race to Top Fueling Skepticism of Common Standards? - Curriculum Matters - Education Week

Is Race to Top Fueling Skepticism of Common Standards? - Curriculum Matters - Education Week

Is Race to Top Fueling Skepticism of Common Standards?

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I'm not telling you anything new when I mention that many people are less than thrilled when federal officials start exerting a broader influence on local schools. This skepticism has long roots, and has cropped up time and time again in education debates.
As I track the development of the common-standards initiative, it's certainly one of the themes I hear. I saw it again while reading my colleague Lesli Maxwell's new blog on state policy. And the message comes across loud and clear in this story, too.
What does this mean for the common-standards initiative? Skepticism toward a large federal government role in shaping education was one of the factors that helped doom recent previous efforts to create national standards. That's why the organizers of the current initiative bent over backwards to let people know that this effort is completely voluntary and "state-led." They avoided the loaded term "national standards" in favor of "common standards."
So what accounts for the persistence of the notion that common standards are being imposed on states by the feds? One hint came from a remark a state school board member made to me during a break in the NASBE meeting in Las Vegas last week. "Race to the Top has co-opted common standards," she said. She was referring to the ardent support federal officials have expressed for common standards and assessments, and the fact that they dangled Race to the Top money in front of states that would commit to them, too. In a similar vein, I heard folks at this meeting grumble that support of common standards doesn't feel wholly voluntary when your state needs money so badly that it pretty much has to apply for Race to the Top funds and has to commit to them in order to improve its chances of winning a slice.
I keep hearing people joke about the "race to the trough," the idea that states 

Feds Asked to Withhold Race to Top Funds From Boston - Learning the Language - Education Week

Feds Asked to Withhold Race to Top Funds From Boston - Learning the Language - Education Week



Latino advocacy groups asked U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan last week to ensure that the Boston school system doesn't get any Race to the Top funds until it brings its programs for English-language learners into compliance with federal laws. The Boston school district would stand to receive federal stimulus funds if Massachusetts gets its application for such funds approved.
Lawyers from Multicultural Education, Training, and Advocacy, Inc., an advocacy group for ELLs based in Somerville, Mass., sent a letter to Secretary Duncan on Feb. 3 expressing "deep concern with the ongoing history of violations of the basic civil rights of Latino and other English-language-learner students in the Boston Public Schools." The letter was also signed by representatives of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Latino Justice, the League of United Latin American Citizens, and the National Council of La Raza.
The letter asked Secretary Duncan not to transfer Race to the Top money to Boston schools unless it improves its programs for ELLs in several ways, which were spelled out in an attached letter that had been sent to Massachusetts Education Commissioner Mitchell D. Chester on Dec. 30. Among the points for improvement are that the school system would ensure that all ELL students who haven't been receiving special help to learn English would be identified and receive such instruction by a certified English-as-a-second-language teacher by September of this year. Another point is that Boston should hire no fewer than 

California’s Women’s Political Mud Wrestling Squad California Progress Report

California Progress Report


California’s Women’s Political Mud Wrestling Squad


By Peter Schrag
The California Republican Party is still dominated by white males, both in its leadership and in its rank and file. But when it comes to political eye-gouging and no-holds-barred knees-to-the-groin campaign combat, there’s little glass ceiling left. Whatever shards Sarah Palin had missed, Meg Whitman and Carly Fiorina took care of them last week.
Both are also showing that they can be manipulated, suckered and exploited by political consultants as shamefully as the guys. Since both are also multi-millionaires as well as arrogant and eminently pluckable, is it any wonder that voters have nothing but contempt for the people who want to be their leaders?

SB 918 (Pavley) - Safe, Environmentally Sound Water Supply


By Traci Sheehan
Planning and Conservation League
Last Friday, Senator Fran Pavley introduced SB 918 which is currently co-sponsored by the Planning and Conservation League and Water Reuse California . This bill would help improve the availability of safe recycled drinking water by requiring the Department of Public Health to develop and adopt uniform health standards. If passed, the bill will help California develop a new drought-proof source of safe, clean water.