A grant to create community schools makes strange bedfellows
The last time he led a New York City project, Geoffrey Canada, the founder of Harlem Children’s Zone, had the teachers union as his opponent. Now the two are partnering on a grant proposal that would take struggling elementary schools and surround them with the support services that barely exist outside their doors.
Naturally, the two have a buffer: Good Shepherd Services and the Children’s Aid Society, which is the lead applicant for an Investing in Innovation Fund (i3) grant — money that was set aside as part of the federal stimulus package. The grant proposal calls for $30 million to be used over four years to reduce absenteeism in nine schools in low-income neighborhoods like Harlem, the South Bronx, and Central Brooklyn.
All of the schools that are eventually chosen for the grant will have low-performing students, but they must also have a large number of students who don’t attend class. At least 30 percent of their students must be chronically absent, meaning they miss a month or more of school, hence the grant’s name: “Attend, Achieve, Attain,” or “a3.”
The idea is to keep more children in school for longer by lengthening the school day, adding after-school and
Remainders: Rhee doubling senior staff to raise school standards
- After a rough year, things are looking up for one of Miss Eyre’s students.
- A group of Bloomberg allies asked lawmakers to lift the charter cap and change tenure law.
- Colorado’s tenure-busting legislation moved forward very late last night.
- Diane Ravitch and James Merriman squared off on charter schools on Inside City Hall last night…
- …While UFT President Michael Mulgrew will appear on that program tonight. (No link)
- Civil rights groups are asking NYC teachers and school staff members to answer a survey about bullying.
- The Dallas teacher who campaigned to bring back “paddling” just got fired.
- Miss Brave profiles the 25 percent of her students who cause 90 percent of the problems.
- Michelle Rhee is doubling her senior staff in an effort to raise school standards.
- An argument that the education sector should take a lesson from the military.
- A South Bronx teacher gives some tips for boosting first-period attendance.
- A Duke professor who let her students grade themselves gives the experiment an A+.
- And happy Mother’s Day! A 12-year-old with Asperger’s interviewed his mom on StoryCorp today.
Joel Klein heading to Jerusalem to tout school reforms
If the past is any guide, Israel could be the next foreign country to import New York City-style school reforms.
Chancellor Joel Klein is leaving Saturday night for a two-day trip to Israel, during which he will argue that education reform is both possible and necessary at a day-long education conference hosted by Jerusalem mayor Nir Barkat.
The last country Klein visited in his capacity as chancellor, Australia in 2008, adopted a New York City-style school grading system shortly afterward. Klein also visited the United Kingdom shortly before its education minister announced plans to adopt a similar school grading system, according to Department of Education spokeswoman Ann Forte.
Chancellor Joel Klein is leaving Saturday night for a two-day trip to Israel, during which he will argue that education reform is both possible and necessary at a day-long education conference hosted by Jerusalem mayor Nir Barkat.
The last country Klein visited in his capacity as chancellor, Australia in 2008, adopted a New York City-style school grading system shortly afterward. Klein also visited the United Kingdom shortly before its education minister announced plans to adopt a similar school grading system, according to Department of Education spokeswoman Ann Forte.