Latest News and Comment from Education

Friday, September 4, 2009

School Choice: To Air Obama Talk or Not? - WSJ.com




School Choice: To Air Obama Talk or Not? - WSJ.com:

"Mr. Obama plans to encourage children to achieve their educational goals in a televised speech from a Virginia high school at noon Tuesday, according to the White House. Lesson suggestions to accompany the speech at first encouraged students to write letters to themselves about ways in which they could 'help the president,' stirring an outcry among some conservatives, who said the assignment was an effort to politicize children.

The materials were quickly revised, to encourage students to 'write letters to themselves about how they can achieve their short-term and long-term education goals.' But the flap has persisted, drawing many phone calls to schools by parents and casting an unusual cloud of controversy in school districts over the annual ritual of launching the new school year"

Some Parents Oppose Obama Speech to Students - NYTimes.com


Some Parents Oppose Obama Speech to Students - NYTimes.com:

"The uproar over the speech, in which Mr. Obama intends to urge students to work hard and stay in school, has been particularly acute in Texas, where several major school districts, under pressure from parents, have laid plans to let children opt out of lending the president an ear.

Some parents said they were concerned because the speech had not been screened for political content. Nor, they said, had it been reviewed by the State Board of Education and local school boards, which, under state law, must approve the curriculum."

Obama's speech not on some schools' lesson plans -- latimes.com


Obama's speech not on some schools' lesson plans -- latimes.com:

"President Obama's speech to students next week may be a 'teachable moment,' as some educators see it, but it will not be a command performance. A combination of scheduling, academic priorities and sheer bandwidth will keep the president out of many Southern California classrooms when he goes on the air Tuesday.

'We're an academic institution, and our responsibility is to cover specific content standards,' said James Stratton, superintendent of schools for La Cañada Unified School District, where the school year got off to a late and rocky start because of the nearby wildfires. In his district, he said, the speech will be shown only in those classes where it 'has any relation to the California content standards for that particular class.'"

Sacramento Press / Charter Committee in favor of mayor appointing manager


Sacramento Press / Charter Committee in favor of mayor appointing manager:

"Most of the members of a city committee examining the “strong mayor” issue are in favor of revising the city’s charter to allow the mayor to appoint the city manager. However, three of the 11 members of the city’s Charter Committee voted against the idea Thursday.

The committee’s early vote in support of the mayor’s ability to appoint the city manager means that most of the committee members think the mayor should have more power in this area. Right now, the City Council appoints the city manager."

Mom.me: Flu shots for kids now available, swine flu vaccine likely coming in fall


Mom.me: Flu shots for kids now available, swine flu vaccine likely coming in fall

Flu shots for kids now available, swine flu vaccine likely coming in fall

Seasonal flu shots are making an early appearance in pediatric offices this year thanks to the H1N1 virus and vaccine.

The seasonal flu vaccines are available now - which is slightly earlier than usual - because the H1N1 vaccine likely will be available as early as mid-October, said Dr. Ken Ashley, a pediatrician and medical director of Sutter Medical Group, "We would like to separate these slightly to allow the (H1N1) vaccine to provide better protection from the virus," Ashley said in an e-mail.Seasonal flu vaccines are recommended for children ages 6 months to 18 years old.

Doctors also recommend that children ages 6 months and older be given the H1N1 vaccine, which is a two-part vaccination given one month apart, he said.Pregnant women, parents of children less than 6 months old and children will be among those first in line to receive the H1N1 vaccine. Other target groups include healthcare and emergency medical workers, people between 6 months and 24 years old and people between 25 and 64 who are at higher risk due to chronic health disorders or compromised immune systems, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Big Education APE Editorial: The President's talk with Students


President Obama’s Address to Students Across America September 8, 2009:

"President Obama’s Address to Students Across America September 8, 2009"

Read the "nattering nabobs of negativity" reviews of the document "President Obama’s Address to Students Across America September 8, 2009" posted on docstoc.com by The Big Education APE. This brand of rhetoric is shrill and aggressive, it questions the patriotism of any who supports the Obama administration.

The "reviews" constantly and consistently portray the president's speech with words such as "socialist", "brainwashing"and "Hitler"; rhetoric that seems to have permeated all things conservative. This rhetoric is bitter, fantastic, and divisive.

DonorsChoose.org: Sacramento City Educational Foundation's Giving Page


DonorsChoose.org: Sacramento City Educational Foundation's Giving Page:


"You can bring these projects to life at half the cost, thanks to the Sacramento City Educational Foundation (SCEF). SCEF will fund 50% of these projects if someone like you provides the remainder. By completing a project, you will double the impact of your donation. The Sacramento City Educational Foundation provides financial and other resources to benefit students and classrooms in the Sacramento City Unified School District. The Foundation is dedicated to enhancing student achievement and educational opportunities in innovative ways."

Early Education Key To Closing the Achievement Gap - California Progress Report


This month, as millions of children across California begin their first days of school, some children will start the year more prepared than others. Although each child is born learning, too few have the opportunity to attend high-quality early childhood education programs, which build a solid foundation in the social, early reading and math skills they need to succeed in school.

Unfortunately, it is often those kids who need it most that do not have access to attend such programs and research shows children who start behind too often stay behind throughout their school careers.
State Superintendent Jack O’Connell recently reiterated the importance of high-quality early learning when he released the Standardized Testing and Reporting (STAR) Program results. O’Connell noted that while California’s students continue to make academic progress, a significant achievement gap remains, partly because many children start kindergarten without the advantage of a high-quality preschool program.


Right wing’s schoolyard taunt: Obama’s a socialist and so's your mama | Top of the Ticket | Los Angeles Times


Just when you thought the culture wars were ancient history comes this news bulletin: Conservatives are up in arms over President Obama’s planned speech to schoolchildren Tuesday, the day millions of Americans return to work and school after the Labor Day holiday, touting the value of education.

After a summer of stoking controversy over nonexistent death panels in healthcare plans, critics on the right are now charging that the White House -- which plans to broadcast the speech live on the White House website and over C-SPAN -- is trying to indoctrinate their innocents on issues like healthcare reform and federal spending. Thanks to conservative talk radio and the right-wing blogosphere, Obama’s speech to children has been turned into a lighting rod for socialism.

“As far as I am concerned, this is not civics education -- it gives the appearance of creating a cult of personality,” said Oklahoma state Sen. Steve Russell. “This is something you’d expect to see in North Korea or Saddam Hussein’s Iraq.”

Even the chairman of a state Republican Party, Jim Greer in Florida, has joined the fray, warning that Obama is trying to "indoctrinate America's children to his socialist agenda."

With rumors spreading faster than a California wildfire, school districts in six states -- Illinois, Minnesota, Missouri, Texas, Virginia and Wisconsin -- have opted out and will not show the speech. Others are mulling it over.


Quick: Name the 4 States That Haven't Spent an Ed Stimulus Dime



Quick: Name the 4 States That Haven't Spent an Ed Stimulus Dime

Alaska, Louisiana, New Hampshire, New Mexico.


These four haven't drawn down any of the money that's been made available to them via state stimulus grants, according to the latest spending report from the U.S. Department of Education. (You can check out edweek.org's nifty interactive follow-the-money map here.) This means these states haven't spent any of their special education, Title I, stabilization fund, education technology, or other smaller grants, such as vocational rehabilitation. Note the zeros in the "outlay" category in the department's report.


You'll note on the Education Department's spending report that, within these states, a portion of grants to other entities, such as higher education institutions and local school districts, have been spent.


What's interesting is that even South Carolina, where Gov. Mark Sanford unsuccessfully tried to refuse stimulus money, has spent some of its share.

http://www.docstoc.com/docs/10800261/Ed-Stimulus--latest-spending-report-from-the-US-Department-of-Education
http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/campaign-k-12/2009/09/quick_name_the_4_states_that_h.html


Inside School Research: Where's the Research in 'Race to the Top'?


Inside School Research: Where's the Research in 'Race to the Top'?:

"'Neither research evidence related to growth models nor best practice related to assessment supports the proposed requirement that assessment of teachers and principals be based centrally on student achievement'"

Education Week: Why Not Count Them All?


Education Week: Why Not Count Them All?:

"Before leaving office, U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings issued last October new regulations for how states should calculate high school graduation rates under the federal No Child Left Behind Act. The regulations seemed simple: Take the number of students who graduated, then divide by the number of students who entered high school four years earlier. But what about those students who take longer than four years to graduate? How would they be counted? The short answer is, they wouldn’t."

Education Week: Officials Move to Quell Furor Over Obama Speech


Education Week: Officials Move to Quell Furor Over Obama Speech:


"The White House and federal education officials scrambled Thursday to reassure school leaders that President Barack Obama’s national speech to schoolchildren next week will touch on important educational goals, despite criticism from some conservatives that the president is planning to use the speech to “indoctrinate” children with his political views.

“The president will challenge students to work hard, set educational goals, and take responsibility for their learning,” the U.S. Department of Education said in an e-mail urging schools to participate in what it called a “historic moment,” to be broadcast live Sept. 8 on C-SPAN and the White House’s Web site."

A national movement of foodies, farmers, parents and educators is pushing for better school food - San Jose Mercury News


A national movement of foodies, farmers, parents and educators is pushing for better school food - San Jose Mercury News:


"Schools like ACE Charter are contracting with companies that provide organic lunches. 'Farm to School' programs that connect schools with local farms — like the relationship between Full Circle Farm in Sunnyvale and Santa Clara Unified School District — are popping up nationwide. And Slow Food USA is organizing 'Time for Lunch,' a campaign designed to 'get real food in schools.' The effort kicks off on Labor Day with more than 300 'Eat-ins,' or community pot lucks, planned across the nation."

Advocates hope the momentum will lead to an overhaul of the Child Nutrition Act, the bill that governs the National School Lunch Program and is up for reauthorization in Congress this fall.

"It's the right time for this campaign," said Gordon Jenkins of Slow Food USA. "People are more food conscious overall. We have Michelle Obama planting a garden in the White House lawn. Now the burden is on us to show that there's a political will for this."

Most local school districts contract with large food service companies that prepare food off-site, often in other states, then freeze it and ship it to school districts. The food is then heated in microwaves or warmers. Corn dogs, pizza, and nachos — meals that are high in fats and cholesterol — are standard fare.

"Schools don't have kitchens anymore," Jenkins said. "If we really want healthy food, the food needs to be prepared at the schools."
But cost is an enormous barrier. Advocates such as Slow Food, which was founded in opposition to fast food and emphasizes eating locally grown food, are urging Congress to raise the reimbursement rate so schools can buy fresher ingredients.

Schools to focus on kids most likely to get shot :: CHICAGO SUN-TIMES :: Education


Schools to focus on kids most likely to get shot :: CHICAGO SUN-TIMES :: Education:

"Using a newfangled probability model, Chicago Public School officials have identified the 1,200 Chicago public high school students most likely to be gunshot victims -- and will direct millions in resources to help them this school year, Schools CEO Ron Huberman revealed Thursday.

'These kids are in trouble, and we need to help them,'' Huberman said as he unveiled a $30 million plan to stem the student shooting deaths that have traumatized the nation's third-largest school system for several years."

Special education: Public schools pressed to pay for private schooling -- chicagotribune.com


Special education: Public schools pressed to pay for private schooling -- chicagotribune.com:

"Parents of students with special needs have the right to seek reimbursement from their districts for private school tuition, even if they did not first try their public school's special education programs, according to the recent ruling.

'This is an extremely important decision,' said Matthew Cohen, a Chicago attorney who specializes in disability law. 'It makes it clear that school districts ... may be held legally liable for placements that the parents make on their own.'

The practical effect on districts is unclear. Some educators fear the ruling will strain already cash-strapped districts and pit parents against one another as they clash over scarce resources. But it's unlikely parents will flock to private schools because they have to pay the cost, then seek reimbursement."

Kent teachers' union to consider defying court order - Covington Reporter


Kent teachers' union to consider defying court order - Covington Reporter:

"The Kent Education Association Thursday afternoon announced it was giving the district 'one more opportunity to do the right thing' before making a decision whether or not to defy a court order to end their strike and return to school.

'We as educators know that students or school boards or districts need extra time to get it right,' KEA President Lisa Brackin Johnson.

The union called a membership meeting at Green River Community College Thursday in response to King County Superior Court Judge Andrea Darvas's decision that their week-long strike was illegal under washington law.

Darvas ordered the union to law down their picket signs and go back to their classrooms beginning Tuesday, with students expected to arrive Wednesday."

Obama Plays Bait-and-Switch on "No Child Left Behind"


Obama Plays Bait-and-Switch on "No Child Left Behind":

"On the campaign trail, candidate Obama orated repeatedly, '... don't tell us that the only way to teach a child is to spend too much of the year preparing him to fill in a few bubbles on a standardized test,' and 'Tests should not be designed as punishment for teachers and students... Tests should support learning, not just accounting.'

Yet, Education Secretary Arne Duncan, an Obama basketball buddy from Chicago, recently announced the department's first big initiative: the 'Race to the Top' initiative, which will award $4.3 billion in federal grants 'to open the door to more charter schools and expand the use of student test scores for judging teachers,' per the New York Times."

Will California Use Student Test Scores to Evaluate Teachers?.


Will California Use Student Test Scores to Evaluate Teachers?. Category: News from The Berkeley Daily Planet - Thursday September 03, 2009

“It takes more than the ability to fill in bubbles to be considered an educated person,” says Marty Hittleman from the California Federation of Teachers. He testified at the hearing that the test regimen in schools is not helpful to most students. “We believe that the emphasis on standardized tests is misplaced and destructive. Multiple-choice tests in math and reading do not address the real goals of education. Teaching to the test not only narrows the curriculum but attempts to destroy any love of learning. When tests drive the curriculum, instruction suffers.”

Hittleman acknowledges that the existing ways of evaluating teacher performance, including classroom visits and peer counseling and review, can stand improvement, but he believes that they are working pretty effectively. What needs much more attention, he argued before the committee, is the social context of education: “Any effort to close the achievement gap in our schools that does not address the conditions children grow up in is doomed to failure.… Until this country and this state close the gap in job opportunities at a livable wage, healthcare, and affordable housing, efforts for improvement in the schools will have limited success.”

Secretary of Education Duncan has stated that he wants to preserve only the positive contributions of “No Child Left Behind” to education. But witnesses before Senator Romero’s committee, including Patty Scripter and Debbie Look representing the California PTA, spoke of their concern about a possible continuation of policies that were so harmful to education during the Bush years. Just prior to the hearing, Scripter expressed her view that “Evaluation of teachers and students should be done at the local level and should be based on multiple criteria.” She and Look are skeptical about the use of test scores to get rid of incompetent teachers.

Senator Romero’s hearing has been only a first step in addressing the requirements being imposed on California schools by the Obama administration. Legislators in Sacramento will have to craft a federal grant application that reconciles—if that is possible—these new requirements with the critique being voiced by many California teachers and their allies.



Sacramento Press / U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan hosts town hall forum


Sacramento Press / U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan hosts town hall forum:

"Duncan also addressed a question on how to engage parents to be a part of the learning process. 'Parents are always going to be kids' first teachers, and they're always going to be their most important teachers,' he said. 'When parent's aren't engaged or they're fighting the teachers, they're part of the problem.'

'We need to do as much as we can to challenge parents to meet us more than halfway,' he added."

US education chief urges Calif. to enact reforms - San Jose Mercury News


US education chief urges Calif. to enact reforms - San Jose Mercury News:

"U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan on Thursday urged California lawmakers to make education reforms or risk falling further behind the rest of the nation and losing out on a slice of $4.3 billion in federal stimulus money.

Duncan met with lawmakers from both parties at the state Capitol as they prepare to debate potential changes to California law. If enacted, some of the reforms would allow the state to compete for federal money under the Obama administration's $787 billion economic recovery plan.

The Race to the Top competition will reward states that are focused on education reforms. States that agree to expand public charter schools will be first in line for the money, along with those that allow performance pay for teachers based on student achievement, which is currently prohibited in California."

State urged to revamp evaluations - Sacramento Politics - California Politics | Sacramento Bee



U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan's message was clear during his Thursday visit to Sacramento: California can either get on board or be left behind.
Duncan spoke about federal stimulus funds and education reform during stops at the state Capitol, a youth rally in Oak Park and a meeting of school officials and a public town hall meeting at the downtown library as part of the Sacramento Education Summit.

"Popular Comment
Yesterday's article described Hiram Johnson West's success with 100% passing the Cahsee. Part of their success stems from having a more rigorous admission process than other high schools. St. Hope didn't have that type of success even though it also is selective in who it keeps as a student. There is nothing magical about charter schools. Instead we should move to encourage more flexibility into the public school bureaucracy. Student test scores are impacted by too many factors out of the class room teacher's control to be used as an evaluation tool. Evaluate a teacher for things they control, are they prepared and do they establish a learning environment in their classroom, are they an active member of their school community, do they prepare and present good lessons, and opportunities for students to grow. You can't blame the teacher if the kids cut school, joined a gang or chose this year to use drugs. Who will teach inner city middle school if the tests impact salary?

-- JoeBarnett"

Sacramento City Unified's new chief is everywhere - Sacramento News - Local and Breaking Sacramento News | Sacramento Bee


Sacramento City Unified's new chief is everywhere - Sacramento News - Local and Breaking Sacramento News Sacramento Bee:

"Nine days into the job, Raymond has raised school flags, cleaned up the grounds of a campus and held the first of what he says will be twice-monthly town-hall-style meetings with parents.

They also might see him on the first day of school Tuesday, when Raymond says he'll ride a school bus before and after school.
And he expects to see a lot more of parents, too."

As flu spreads, 13% of students out sick at Grass Valley High - Sacramento News - Local and Breaking Sacramento News | Sacramento Bee


As flu spreads, 13% of students out sick at Grass Valley High - Sacramento News - Local and Breaking Sacramento News Sacramento Bee:


"About 300 students stayed home sick from Nevada Union High School this week, a number startling less for its size than its timing. Widespread illness doesn't usually hit during the first weeks of the school year, but public health officials say this year will probably be different because of the new flu spreading around the globe.

Roughly 13 percent of students at the Grass Valley high school were out sick Wednesday and Thursday. During the winter flu season, schools may see 15 percent of their students out sick, said Karen Milman, Nevada County's public health officer."