Monday, May 10, 2010

Hechinger Report | Informing the Public about Education through Quality Journalism

Hechinger Report | Informing the Public about Education through Quality Journalism
Lafayette lessons: Attacks on Asian students mirror experience at Brooklyn school

Lafayette lessons: Attacks on Asian students mirror experience at Brooklyn school

Attacks against students at a Philadelphia high school echo similar incidents at Brooklyn school, which is now set to close its doors for good.




Q&A: Why are U.S. teachers on the defensive?

Randi Weingarten
By Hechinger Report
Teachers have been having a tough time lately. Their unions are under pressure to accept pay cuts and fewer benefits. States are threatening massive teacher layoffs in response to budget deficits. There’s a major push to make teachers more effective, with how teachers are trained, evaluated, tenured and compensated all on the table. In [...]

Survey: Recession, budget cuts derail Pre-K expansion

By Liz Willen
Early education programs are struggling to serve all the children who qualify for them, as the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression has caused states to slash budgets and reduce spending, according to an annual survey of state-funded programs by the National Institute for Early Education Research at Rutgers University.
Expansion in 2009 was slower [...]

In their own words: Community college coaches talk about educating athletes

Men's basketball head coach Justin Labagh (center) and assistant coach Tom McNichol go over plays during a time out at a game against De Anza College at City College of San Francisco's Wellness Center on Saturday, Dec. 5, 2009. (Photo by Ramsey El-Qare)
U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan is a former basketball player, but it wasn’t the grace of reverse lay-ups and the thrill of slam dunks that captivated him during March Madness. Instead, Duncan tried to focus attention on the poor academic performance and abysmal graduation rates of Division I basketball players. Duncan proposed that teams [...]

Jobless dropouts head back to school for basic skills

Charlene (Sherry) Carr in the computer lab at the Ahrens Learning Center; she's preparing to take the GED.  (Photo by Christopher Connell)
By Christopher Connell
LOUISVILLE — The push to return unemployed workers to the nation’s payrolls is hamstrung by a decades-old legacy of poor schooling that has left tens of millions of Americans without the basic reading or math skills necessary for today’s jobs.

Has Obama’s interest in early education waned?

By Linda Jacobson
A year ago, President Barack Obama’s budget pledge to make early-childhood education one of his top priorities created enormous excitement among advocates who had long pushed for greater federal investment.

How Maryland universities were able to cut costs and keep tuitions down

By Jon Marcus
The members of the board of regents that oversees Maryland’s multibillion-dollar public uni versity system settled in around a whiteboard in a sterile conference room as if preparing for a siege.

Community colleges: Higher education’s Bermuda triangle

Bronx Community College (Photo by Ryan Brenizer)
By Camille Esch
Vast numbers of students enter community college remedial classes every year. Few are ever heard from again.

Lafayette lessons: Attacks on Asian students mirror experience at Brooklyn school

Lafayette High School in Brooklyn is getting "phased out" after many years of service. (Photo courtesy NY Daily News)
By Liz Willen
Attacks against Philadelphia students echo similar incidents at Brooklyn school, now set to close.