Saturday, July 10, 2010

Duncan: Congress needs to act now on school money - Boston.com

Duncan: Congress needs to act now on school money - Boston.com

Duncan: Congress needs to act now on school money

By Donna Gordon Blankinship
Associated Press Writer / July 10, 2010
Text size +
DES MOINES, Wash.—U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan urged Congress on Friday to act soon to increase education funding because cash-strapped states can't wait until the fall to determine if they must lay off thousands of teachers.
Duncan made his remarks at a forum on innovation in education at Aviation High School in Des Moines, a small college prep school that focuses on science, technology and mathematics.
At the forum, U.S. Sen. Patty Murray said she hopes fellow lawmakers spent their Fourth of July break hearing from parents and teachers, like she did. Murray said if they got the message about how urgent the school budget crisis is, they will return to Washington, D.C., with the drive to find more money for schools.
A proposal to send billions more to the states has hit a number of roadblocks.
The U.S. House has proposed cutting money from Race to the Top and other Duncan initiatives in order to send $10 billion to the states to keep 140,000 teachers in the classroom, and about $5 billion to shore up the Pell Grant

What’s in a name? Plenty, say backers of renaming state colleges

Ryan Chamberlaind, a Salem State College senior, said he always felt a little out of place at national college conferences like Model United Nations. (By Sydney Lupkin, Globe Correspondent)

Private colleges vastly outspent public peers

Private research universities spent twice as much as their public counterparts to teach each student in the 2007-08 school year, widening a cost gap that can make private colleges unaffordable to students, without the help of financial aid. (Bloomberg News)

A lesson they learned

Marzuq Muhammad left the James P. Timilty Middle School in Roxbury 13 years ago and kept on going. (By Meghan E. Irons, Globe Staff)

Student fluency woes rising

The number of Boston school students identified as lacking fluency in English surged dramatically over the past school year, presenting further challenges for a school district already under federal investigation for failing to provide adequate programs for students trying to learn the language. (By James Vaznis, Globe Staff)

Elise Boulding; sociologist studied peace, conflict; at 89

Dr. Elise Boulding, an international peace activist, saw life as an unpredictable adventure. “We never know what’s going to happen next,’’ Dr. Boulding said in a 1990 interview with Alan AtKisson called “Concentrating on Essence: An interview with Elise Boulding.’’ (By Jeffrey Fish, Globe Correspondent)

LATEST EDUCATION NEWS WIRE UPDATES

LATEST K-12 EDUCATION NEWS

LATEST HIGHER EDUCATION NEWS