Latest News and Comment from Education

Saturday, September 4, 2010

New Arizona law: Future 3rd-graders to have to read to pass grade EducationNews.org

EducationNews.org

New Arizona law: Future 3rd-graders to have to read to pass grade
9.4.10 - All third-graders must prove they are reading proficiently by the end of the 2013-14 school year or they will be held back and not allowed to move to fourth grade under a new state law.

The decade's best education books?
9.4.10 - The magazine Education Next's poll of best education books of the past decade is showing some ironic results. ...

A fairer deal for college students
9.4.10 - Senator Tom Harkin - One of the more dramatic developments in higher education in recent years is the explosive growth of for-profit colleges. The largest for-profit institution, the University of Phoenix, has a student body of more than 440,000, far larger than all the universities in the Big Ten combined. ...

Texas schools in limbo over $830 million in federal funds
9.4.10 - Perry signs off on application, but no guarantees. A fight between Gov. Rick Perry and Washington has left local school leaders wondering whether they will see $830 million in federal funds to help plug budget holes. ...

Commentaries

Take Back the Classroom from PowerPoint
9.4.10 - Jason Fertig - Restrict PowerPoint use in teaching to pictures and videos, writes Jason Fertig. Too much PowerPoint usurps professors' authority and


Nationwide school tests coming to your local school!
Through a federal grant, California will join 43 other states in replacing oft-maligned standardized exams.

Compare and contrast: Can Detroit schools learn from Baltimore's turnaround
9.4.10 - Robert Guttersohn - When asked to compare his school district with Detroit's, Baltimore City Public Schools CEO Andrés Alonso lets loose a little laugh and tries to step around the question.

Credit Where Credit Is Due: the L.A. Times Gets It Right about Teachers' Unions
9.4.10 - Terry Cowgill - The unshackling of the MSM - and, to a lesser extent, their erstwhile brethren in the Democratic Party - from the clutches of the nation's teachers' unions continues apace.