Rise & Shine: Closing HS awarded diploma to no-show student
News from New York City:
Remainders: No retirement incentive for you
- Summer school started yesterday in blistering heat but mostly with air conditioning. (NY1, Times)
- Investigators found that the principal of PS 50 in the Bronx helped himself with contracts. (Daily News)
- Through credit recovery, closing Lafayette HS graduated an overage student who rarely attended. (Post)
- A city schools superintendent, Cami Anderson, is applying to open three charter schools. (Post)
- City schools are suspending students 40 percent more than they did four years ago. (Daily News)
- School construction workers held a boozy end-of-year party on a high school campus. (Post)
- Nicole Suriel’s drowning death is a lot like another field trip downing that happened in 1994. (Post)
- Fearing repercussions, Suriel’s Harlem school, is rallying to keep its administrators. (Times)
- Economics is a central part of the curriculum at MS 223 in the South Bronx. (Wall Street Journal)
- More on the city’s controversial move to consolidate two programs for students on Rikers Island. (Times)
- Queens high schools make up a large proportion of those on the city’s restructuring list. (Daily News)
- The New Teacher Project’s head says Randi Weingarten deserves credit for backing reform. (Daily News)
- Mayor Bloomberg said the UFT is like a bad lawyer because it defended weak schools. (Daily News)
- But recent history suggests that teachers unions are even less popular than lawyers. (NY Magazine)
- A Democracy Prep charter school teacher says he prefers his 403B to his old pension plan. (Daily News)
- Suburban Princeton, N.J., is grappling with the charter school question. (Wall Street Journal)
- The rigorous International Baccalaureate program is a growing alternative for advanced students. (Times)
- Fearing heckling, the Obama administration is staying away from teachers union conventions. (Times)
- More parents are trying to avoid vaccinating their children. (Wall Street Journal)
- A bid for mayoral control in Rochester is on the rocks without Albany’s support. (Democrat and Chronicle)
- Kansas City schools are set to start arranging classes by ability instead of age. (AP)
- A D.C. principal who has boosted performance has also made some enemies. (Washington Post)
- A Los Angeles school opened yesterday under the mostly-new-staff turnaround model. (L.A. Times)
Remainders: No retirement incentive for you
- Mayor Bloomberg said he’s not going to offer senior teachers a retirement incentive. (Daily Politics)
- He also said it’s likely the city will have to make more cuts. (State of Politics)
- A Department of Education official is leaving to kick anti-gay marriage legislators out of office. (Times)
- Bloomberg get a “D” for letting Albany compromise Klein’s charter authorizing power. (City Hall)
- President Obama is relying on the Senate to save Race to the Top from millions in cuts. (WaPo)
- Thirteen senators have written a letter in opposition to the cuts. (Edweek)
- Jonathan Alter says cuts had to be made, but Obey pulled from the wrong places. (Newsweek)
- There could be a silver lining to cutting funding from RttT: more qualified winners. (Flypaper)
- A parent says her school is squeezed but the city says it can enroll more students. (NYC Parent blog)
- A teacher wonders what Bill Gates will say to a teachers union convention. (NYC Educator)
- In time for CA’s upcoming budget fight, a report says its schools are underfunded. (Educated Guess)
- And Stephen Sawchuk promises coverage of the new teachers union conventions. (Edweek)
- Finally, we’re extending our long weekend through Tuesday. Enjoy the break and see you next week!