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Sunday, March 14, 2010

Fire The Parents, Not The Teachers: Bill Maher

http://www.sacramentopress.com/headline/23250/What_matters_is_what_parents_do

Dennis Van Roekel Testifies on ESEA Reauthorization

Dennis Van Roekel President, National Education Association Testifies on the Reauthorization of the
Elementary and Secondary Education Act before the U.S. Senate Committee on Health Education Labor and Pensions

Weekly Address: Education for a More Competitive America & Better Future | The White House

Weekly Address: Education for a More Competitive America & Better Future | The White House


The White House Blog

Weekly Address: Education for a More Competitive America & Better Future

The President discusses his blueprint for an updated Elementary and Secondary Education Act to overhaul No Child Left Behind, the latest step from his Administration to encourage change and success in America’s schools at the local level.


Education plan shuffles political deck - Nia-Malika Henderson - POLITICO.com

Education plan shuffles political deck - Nia-Malika Henderson - POLITICO.com

President Barack Obama’s brewing fight with teachers unions over his plans to overhaul education legislation could end up being a political trifecta for liberal Democrats, Republicans and a president eager to demonstrate he can work across party lines.
Obama has signaled that he wants a rewrite of No Child Left Behind on his desk this year—and proposed a $1 billion bonus for education should that happen.
The push to pass the legislation could scramble the political desks, with benefits to all sides.
Progressives could take on Obama and side with the powerful teachers unions, traditionally staunchly aligned with Democrats, who have harshly criticized Obama for what they see as a test-heavy approach to education that puts an undue burden on teachers.
At the same time, those no votes would be unlikely to derail the legislation, since Republicans, eager to shed the “party of no” label, could support Obama and go back to their home districts with a popular domestic issue to run on.
As for Obama, a rewrite of No Child Left Behind on his desk would let him claim a bipartisan legislative win, something that has so far eluded his administration on other domestic issues like health care and climate change legislation.
“Generally speaking, this is something that the majority of everybody would look forward to voting on and immediately send out the press release,” said Rich Galen, a Republican strategist. “For the majority and for most parents, they want more help to get their kids educated, not some theoretical argument.”
Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, who has emerged as one of the few stars in Obama’s cabinet, spent the weekend on a listening tour in Iowa with Tom Harkin (D-Iowa), the Senate leader on education legislation.
Congress will begin hearings this week on Obama’s approach to education, which will officially be submitted Monday as a 41-page “blueprint” on NCLB, the latest version of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), which was originally passed in 1965. In addition to the $1 billion bonus for passage this year, Obama’s budget proposal calls for a $3 billion boost to the education budget, with most of the new money going to competitive grants for states, districts and schools that align themselves with the administration’s new approach.

Read more: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0310/34379.html#ixzz0iBnuh6Bq

Schools Matter: Ravitch on Charter Schools, Today's Ed Reform Snake Oil

Schools Matter: Ravitch on Charter Schools, Today's Ed Reform Snake Oil

Ravitch on Charter Schools, Today's Ed Reform Snake Oil

A clip from the LATimes:
. . . .As an education historian, I have often warned against the seductive lure of grand ideas to reform education. Our national infatuation with education fads and reforms distracts us from the steady work that must be done.

Our era is no different. We now face a wave of education reforms based on the belief that school choice, test-driven accountability and the resulting competition will dramatically improve student achievement.

Once again, I find myself sounding the alarm that the latest vision of education reform is deeply flawed. But this time my warning carries a personal rebuke. For much of the last two decades, I was among those who jumped aboard the choice and accountability bandwagon. Choice and accountability, I believed, would offer a chance for poor children to escape failing schools. Testing and accountability, I thought, would cast sunshine on low-performing schools and lead to improvement. It all seemed to make sense, even if there was little empirical evidence, just promise and hope.

Today there is empirical evidence, and it shows clearly that choice, competition and accountability as education reform levers are not working. But with confidence bordering on recklessness, the Obama administration is plunging ahead,

Happy Pi Day: interview with pi poet � Fun Math Blog

Happy Pi Day: interview with pi poet � Fun Math Blog

Happy Pi Day: interview with pi poet

Happy Pi Day, everyone! Today I have a special treat. I had the opportunity to interview Pi poet, Mike Keith. Mike is into constrained writing and Pi, among other things. Mike recently published a book,Not A Wake, that demonstrates the constrained writing:

A collection of short stories, poetry, plays, puzzles, and other surprises, all constructed according to the rigid rules of “Pilish”, that peculiar variant of English in which the number of letters in successive words is required to follow the digits of the number Ď€ = 3.14159265358979…, in this case for a truly grand total of 10,000 decimals. The perfect book for fans of the number Pi, constrained writing, wordplay, puzzles, or experimental prose and poetry.

Mike sent me a copy of “Not a Wake” to review. In case it’s not obvious, the three words of the title of the book have 3, 1, and 4 letters. And, the pattern continues with the subtitle “A Dream Embodying Pi’s Digits Fully for 10000 Decimals.”

This is a fun book. The challenge in writing such a book is to have the writing be natural in the face of a pretty serious constraint! The book accomplishes that beautifully! Mike is clearly a poet as he is able to pluck the right words out of the ether to make the poetry flow. And, he does it for 10,000 words!

(more…)

Eduflack: Finally, an ESEA Blueprint from the Feds

Eduflack: Finally, an ESEA Blueprint from the Feds

Finally, an ESEA Blueprint from the Feds

After months of anticipation, we finally have the official blueprint for reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act form the Obama Administration. The plan was teased in some news articles yesterday (Saturday) morning and was previewed during President Barack Obama's weekly radio address on Saturday morning. The official plan, found here, was officially released on Saturday evening at 8 p.m.

At first glance, I found the plan to be whelming. On the whole, I thought it was entirely solid and relatively thoughtful. But as I read it (and it shows you what type of life Eduflack lives when he spends his Saturday night reading the Administration's ESEA blueprint, but for what is was worth, I was also watching West Virginia University beat Georgetown), I was surprised by how little I was surprised with. As we used to write about two years ago, this was clearly NCLB 2.0. Much of the last iteration of ESEA remains intact. Some needed improvements are being made. And the priorities emphasized in Race to the Top are being codified, hopefully, into the new law.

The highlights? The plan is grouped under five key principles (not to be confused with ED's four pillars). The principles include: college and career-ready students, great teachers and leaders, raise the bar and reward excellence, equity and opportunity, and promote innovation. These principles break into the following tasks:

  • College and Career-Ready Students — Raising standards for all students, better assessments, a complete education (meaning a well-rounded curriculum beyond the common core standards)
  • Great Teachers and Leaders in Every School — Effective teachers and principals, our best teachers and leaders where they are needed the most, and strengthening teacher and leadership preparation and recruitment.
  • Equity and Opportunity for All Students — Rigorous and fair accountability for all students, meeting the needs of diverse learners, and greater equity.
  • Raise the Bar and Reward Excellence — Fostering a Race to the Top, supporting effective school choice, and promoting a culture of college readiness and success.
  • Promoting Innovation and Continuous Improvement — Fostering innovation and accelerating success, supporting recognizing and rewarding local innovations, and supporting student success.

See, nothing that exactly shakes the K-12 education earth. As I read the blueprint, I am seeing much of the original intent of NCLB, mixed in with the goals of RttT, a heavy, heavy influence of common core

Sacramento Press / What matters is what parents do.

Sacramento Press / What matters is what parents do.


On Friday, March 12, 2010 Bill Maher did one of his signature New Rules bits in the Huffington Post as well as on his weekly show Real Time with Bill Maher on HBO. The title of the piece was New Rule: Let's Not Fire the Teachers When Students Don't Learn -- Let's Fire the Parents which in my mind really nails the essence of the Public School Debate. Mr. Maher said, “According to all the studies, it doesn't matter what teachers do. …. What matters is what parents do. The number one predictor of a child's academic success is parental involvement. It doesn't even matter if your kid goes to private or public school. So save the twenty grand a year and treat yourself to a nice vacation away from the little bastards.”
So my question why isn’t anyone pushing Parent/Family/Community involvement or engagement in public education? Politicians, left and right are all about “charter Schools, failing schools and blaming teachers”. They say that charter schools are part of the solution, yet according to most studies of charter schools they are on average no more effective overall than traditional public schools. You would not know it by what is being said by the education reform advocates. Why would we want to set up a separate charter system that is no better than what we have when there is something else that has proven conclusively to work…parent engagement? Failing schools is the other big lie, yes we have had failing schools both charter and public and we have successful schools both charter and public but once again what works in all schools, failing or successful, charter, public or private…it is parent engagement. Why aren’t the reformers telling us this?. Why do we only hear about the failing public schools?
And then there is “blame the teachers’. Could this be “a little union busting”? If you have a child in our public schools you know that your child’s classroom teacher is your partner and that partnership is the key to your child’s success. Yet the reformers are saying your child’s teacher is bad. I say as a parent if you are engaged in your child’s education there are no bad teachers, your child will learn more from some than others. If you get involved your child will do better no matter the skill of the teacher.
So what does it mean to engage parents, families and the community?
  • Recognize that all parents, regardless of income, education or cultural

Putting My Borrower Hat On � The Quick and the Ed

Putting My Borrower Hat On � The Quick and the Ed

Putting My Borrower Hat On

On Saturday, the Washington Post published a letter to the editor I wrote (The “joy” of student loans) in response to Senator Lamar Alexander’s op-ed from last week. Sen. Alexander’s op-ed threatened that under the administration’s proposal to move to Direct Lending, “getting your student loan will become about as enjoyable as going to the Department of Motor Vehicles”.
In my letter, I disagree with the Senator. But I wasn’t writing from the perspective of Erin Dillon, policy analyst at Education Sector. Instead, I was writing as Erin Dillon who has been repaying student loans for several years, along with my husband.
To add to my description in the letter of the private lender’s terrible “customer service”: 1) they repeatedly provided my husband and I with conflicting and incorrect repayment information and 2) we get four copies of the exact same letter from them approximately once a week. And we all know what happens when we get multiple letters on the same, corporate letterhead–they get put aside or end up in the trash. Not exactly a model of private sector efficiency and customer-oriented behavior.
Putting my policy analyst hat back on, this kind of customer service is not just an inconvenience. As Student Lending Analytics points out, confusion over who, when and how much to pay can lead borrowers to default.
I’m not saying that Direct Lending is guaranteed to be a model of customer service, but I do think there is a chance things could improve under Direct Lending. Right now, lenders don’t make their money by selling students on their great repayment options or easy to use website. Lenders make money by selling their loan product to schools and convincing the federal government to continue providing subsidies. So schools get the customer service and the government gets lobbied.
Private loan companies are not full of bad people who don’t care about students, it’s just that the incentives in the current system don’t reward lenders that put a lot of resources into borrower customer service. Under the proposed 100% Direct Loan system, these loan companies won’t be making loans anymore. Instead, some of these same companies will get a government contract to service student loans during repayment. Assuming the

History Revised, Teachers Sacked: The Book Wars in Texas and Beyond -- Politics Daily

History Revised, Teachers Sacked: The Book Wars in Texas and Beyond -- Politics Daily
History Revised, Teachers Sacked: The Book Wars in Texas and Beyond

It's been a brawl for years, this education culture war that seems to take on a particularly vicious turn in the heart of Texas. The latest and most important round, a drastic revision of the social studies curriculum standards to put a conservative spin on history and economics textbooks, was givenpreliminary approval after a series of heated meetings of the Texas Board of Education that didn't do much to improve the image of the nation's second largest state as a sometimes small-minded political and educational backwater.

In a matter of days last week in Austin, the majority of the 15-member board, insisting they were only trying to offset liberal bias in textbooks, questioned Darwin's theory of evolution and the constitutional principle of separation of church and state; debated hip-hop and genocide in Darfur; deleted Albert Einstein and Thomas Alva Edison from textbooks; emphasized Christian teachings and fundamentalist values; adopted conservative articles of faith like American exceptionalism; promoted right-wing leaders and organizations like Phyllis Schlafly and the National Rifle Association; and refused to give adequate attention to Hispanic and African American contributions to U.S. and Texas history.


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To no one's surprise, on the final round on Friday, the conservatives pulled a decisive victory, 10-5 -- a tally that broke along predictable party lines, Republicans to the right, Democrats to the left. Ethnic minority members stood on the losing side. According to published reports, no experts on the social sciences were consulted. Given the conservative cast of the board, whose members are elected, the changes it has proposed will stand when the final vote is taken in May.

Leaving the meeting, a Democratic board member, Mavis Knight, of Dallas, was fulminating, saying, she could not be a party to "perpetrating this fraud on the students of this state." It was not a pretty sight. The board will surely become, or has already become, the butt of jokes on late-night shows and "Saturday Night Live."

But this is not a local squabble or a local issue. It's not a colorful shoot 'em up in the Texas corral. It so happens that the Texas board is perhaps the most influential in the country. Its guidelines will affect not only the 4.7 million Texas public school students but will likely spread to many other states, from kindergarten to 12th grade for the next 10 years. Texas textbook standards are usually adopted by publishers because the state will buy 48 million of them every year, and many other states -- 47 by some counts -- will follow that model. In light of those figures, publishers will happily take their cue from the Lone Star State.

All in all, it has been a turbulent few weeks for public education in America.

On Saturday, President Obama called for major changes in the Bush-era No Child Left Behind law, proposing to measure students' and schools' progress not on test scores alone but also on such metrics as attendance, graduation rates and learning environment, according to the New York Times. The president's educational blueprint, which he will send to the Congress on Monday, will fulfill a campaign promise to overhaul the federal law, which affects the nation's nearly 100,000 public schools, the Times reported.

Obama's move comes after the National Governors Association last week proposed tougher nationwide school standards with an eye to raising the world standing of the United States in math and science education. The proposals, which emphasize writing and reasoning skills, set out to prepare students to succeed in college. Forty-eight states and the District of Columbia participated in setting the proposed standards, according to published reports. But this proposal is just that, a proposal. It's not a done deal.

In Rhode Island, a school board fired the entire faculty of a school that had not been performing up to par. The dismissal of 93 teachers and staff in Central Falls was shocking enough to the community and the school system. But what brought the firings to national attention was President Obama's support of the board's decision, which he saw as a major step in holding schools and teachers accountable.

A storm of charges and counter-charges followed, pitting the powerful teachers unions against the president whose candidacy the unions supported with sweat and money in 2008. Oddly, conservatives and Obama landed on the same side, with conservatives backing the move for holding a school responsible for failure. Whatever the outcome of the controversy, the Central Falls decision is likely to affect hundreds of school districts which are under

Education - Everything you need to know about the world of education.

Education- Everything you need to know about the world of education.

Obama wants to overhaul No Child Left Behind

President Obama (AP).












Obama and NCLB: The good--and very bad--news

George Bush could have not realized how much of a friend President Obama would be to his No Child Left Behind initiative.
Obama bashed NCLB when he was running for president, saying that obsession with high-stakes standardized tests was no way to run an education system.
But Saturday we learned the vision that Obama and his education secretary, Arne Duncan, have for the post-NCLB era, and, unfortunately, it doesn’t look much different.
Continue reading this post »



Ed Buzz: The Region


EducationNews.org - A Global Leading News Source - EducationNewsToday

EducationNews.org - A Global Leading News Source - EducationNewsToday


EducationNewsToday

Gummy-bear fun offers a taste of science, engineering for girls

The conference at Seattle University encourages middle-school girls to explore science and engineering careers.
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Learning how not to be ‘pushover parents’

The Escondido high school district has launched a series of programs to show parents how to have a powerful role in their child’s education. ...
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Teachers’ pink slips painful but familiar

In her four years as a teacher, Linda Herschmiller has come to rely on the predictability of her profession. October means literacy assessments. December is marked by winter vacation. And March is synonymous with layoff notices. ...
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Astronaut wants more from students

Sam Houston High School alumnus Bernard Harris Jr. remembers the moment when, floating thousands of miles above the earth in a 35-pound space suit and feeling like a tiny spec in a huge universe, he came upon a thought that suddenly made him feel big again. ...
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Teachers, parents concerned as budget cuts lead to larger classes

Parents fear that growing class sizes could mean less attention for their children and more stress on the teachers, making them less effective. Moms and dads already are talking about ways they can volunteer more as the teaching and support staff dwindles. ...
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Recession Endangers Childhood Education Program

The Parents as Teachers program provides free education tips for parents as well as in-home early childhood screening for disabilities and learning delays, and has evolved into an international household brand. ...
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Education and power--National standards for what?

Education in America has long been a local concern, with teachers, instructional methods and schools established and paid for by towns, cities and states in accordance with the demands and preferences of their populations. Now,Washington is pressing to command ...
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Iowa teachers face little testing

Iowa sets a low bar for the tests that new teachers must pass to get a job, while some states have raised standards ...
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Schools focus on teaching quality as they seek funding

With the Obama administration dangling millions of dollars in front of states that show commitment to improving education, Colorado is going to have to craft some fair, workable and effective system for improving education. ...
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Principal signed Filipino teachers to buy, sell makeup

The principal of a Baltimore City high school recruited seven Filipino teachers on her staff to buy and resell thousands of dollars of Mary Kay cosmetics, a business arrangement the teachers entered reluctantly but felt would keep them in good standing with their boss. ...
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Rigorous classes in high school build skills for college

Academic rigor is a crucial component for college admissions and success, and there are several ways for high schools students to achieve it. Honors classes, Advanced Placement classes, International Baccalaureate and dual enrollment are four common programs offered at schools across the Valley. ...
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Obama wants to overhaul No Child Left Behind

President wants to put all children on track for college or careers ...
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Valerie Strauss: Obama and NCLB: The good--and very bad--news

Today we learned the vision that President Obama has for the American public education system in the post-No Child Left Behind era. Unfortunately, it doesn't look different enough. George Bush probably never realized how much of a friend Obama would be to NCLB. ...
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Conservative-backed curriculum OK’d for history classes

3.14.10 - AUSTIN — The State Board of Education tentatively approved new standards for social studies Friday with members divided along party lines — some blasting them as a fraud and conservative whitewash, others praising them as a tribute to the Founding Fathers that rightly portrays America as an exceptional country....
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National School Standards, at Last

States must adopt rigorous standards that lay out clear, ambitious goals for what children across the country should learn year to year....
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Senators critical of salary expenses at Boys & Girls Clubs of America

Several Republican senators are questioning expenses at the Boys & Girls Clubs of America, a national nonprofit organization that receives millions of dollars in federal funding....
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Obama to submit new education initiative

3.13.10 - AFP - US President Barack Obama announced Saturday he will be sending to Congress a new education initiative designed to better prepare high school graduates for college and a professional career....
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Senators Signal Priorities for Renewal of ESEA

Merit pay, class size, testing, and other issues were on lawmakers’ minds at the first Senate hearing on reauthorizing the federal law. ...
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Book Trains Critical Eye on AP Program's Impact

New research probes a broad range of questions about Advanced Placement courses and tests, as expectations for them continue to climb. ...
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Special needs children may lose out due to budget cuts

Proposed cuts in fees for early intervention provided in the home have professionals and parents worried about continuation of services ...
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