Latest News and Comment from Education

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Almost 3,000 N.J. students are not allowed to graduate after failing alternate exit exam Education - NJ.com

Education - NJ.com


Almost 3,000 N.J. students are not allowed to graduate after failing alternate exit exam

Published: Wednesday, July 07, 2010, 8:50 AM Updated: Wednesday, July 07, 2010, 8:58 AM
EnlargeAngela Martinez smiles as she walks with her classmates to the school football field to begin the Pleasantville High School Graduation commencement. Martinez is not eligible to graduate until she passes the state's high school exit exam. (Tony Kurdzuk/The Star-Ledger)N.J. students not allowed to graduate after failing alternate exit exam gallery (7 photos)
  •  Pleasantville High School senior Angela Martinez donned her cap and gown, hugged her family and marched in her graduation ceremony. Like most seniors, she has plans for the future, including college and a career as a nurse.
What Martinez does not have, however, is a diploma.
Though she was allowed to participate in the ceremony, Martinez is one of about 2,900 New Jersey high school seniors who did not graduate last month because they did not pass the state’s alternate high school exit exam, known as the Alternate High School Assessment.
The state Department of Education changed the exam this year and what was once a test nearly everyone passed became a high hurdle to graduation for many. Students in about 65 districts were affected, including Paterson, Jersey City, New Brunswick, East Orange, Newark and Union City, according to the education department.
The changes sent high schools scrambling to help high school seniors find other ways to prove they are worthy of a diploma, and it touched off renewed debate about high-stakes tests.
"It’s so complicated. I passed all of my classes. I want to graduate," said Martinez, 18. "I would like to go on."
The Department of Education retooled the alternate exit exam this year, changing how it is given

N.J. audit finds Lakewood school district kept poor records, routinely overspent

lakewood-nj.jpg

By The Star-Ledger Continuous News Desk

July 06, 2010, 10:15AM
LAKEWOOD — A state audit found that the Lakewood school district kept poor records between 2006 and 2008 and had shoddy oversight of officials, resulting in routine overspending of accounts, under-budgeting, and other examples of wasted spending, a report on APP.com said. The audit found that the district spent $2.5 million more on salaries than what was budgeted, and... Full story »

N.J. school districts avoid cuts in special education in budget crisis

nj-school-budget.JPG

By Dan Goldberg/For The Star-Ledger

July 06, 2010, 6:02AM
Officials say growing demands of programs force slicing into general education Full story »

Diminishing state aid prompts Glen Ridge officials to consider converting schools to private, charter

schundler-charter-schools.JPG

By Philip Read/The Star-Ledger

July 04, 2010, 8:30AM
GLEN RIDGE — Faced with burdensome mandates and diminishing returns from Trenton, one of the state’s top public school districts is considering a path that could make it the first to effectively secede from New Jersey’s public education system. The Glen Ridge school board will enter largely uncharted waters when it gathers at a retreat this month to discuss... Full story »