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Thursday, September 2, 2010

Mass. school districts reap benefits of federal funding, but some feel short-changed - The Boston Globe

Mass. school districts reap benefits of federal funding, but some feel short-changed - The Boston Globe

School aid called uneven

11 districts shut out of federal job funds

By John Laidler
Globe Correspondent / September 2, 2010

While some local school officials are welcoming a pair of recent federal funding awards, several are contending that their districts were shortchanged.

The state announced funding allocations from the $250 million that Massachusetts is receiving as one of 10 grant recipients in the second round of the federal Race to the Top competition. The local grants will go to communities that agreed to participate in the program and to spend the funds on school reforms.

Separately, the state announced funding from $204 million Massachusetts was allotted through a new $10 billion federal Education Jobs Fund program, created


GLOBE EDUCATION NEWS

Mass. school districts reap benefits of federal funding, but some feel short-changed

While some local school officials are welcoming a pair of recent federal funding awards, several are contending that their districts were shortchanged. (By John Laidler, Globe Correspondent)

Magazine ranks Westwood High School 11th best in state

Westwood High School, Dedham High School, and 10 other public high schools in the suburbs south of Boston have made Boston Magazine’s list of the 50 best public high schools. (By Michele Morgan Bolton, Globe Correspondent)

Advocacy group rallies for changes to Boston teachers’ contract

A coalition of students, parents, and advocates rallied on the steps of Boston School Department headquarters yesterday, calling for extended school days, more rigorous teacher evaluations, and a stronger voice for students and parents in school decisions as the city negotiates a new contract with teachers. (By James Vaznis, Globe Staff)

Citing misconduct inquiry, Harvard professor cancels classes

Harvard psychology professor Marc Hauser canceled a Harvard Extension School class on cognitive evolution that he was scheduled to start teaching yesterday and dropped plans to offer a spring class called “The Moral Sense: From Genes to Law.’’ (By Carolyn Y. Johnson, Globe Staff)

$197m later, Newton North opens

NEWTON — It began as a simple renovation project. It ended up the most expensive public school ever built in Massachusetts. (By Erica Noonan, Globe Staff)

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