“How Haiti Saved America”
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Fired college counselors, teacher rating gimmicks, rebuked sexting prosecutors, and more in this weekly roundup of magazines and websites: "College coach" canned after bummer SATs Salon: Parents in an affluent Boston suburb are furious as rejections from top-notch universities roll in. Magazine" style="text-decoration: none; color: rgb(51, 153, 204); ">RateMyProfessors.com NYT: How to make it to the top of the engrossing professor-ranking site, RateMyProfessors.com.Court rebukes DA sexting crackdown Slate: Skumanick didn't try to determine whether the girls had been harmed by the sexts.The dilemma of suicidal college students. Slate: A rash of
Near my desk at work, I like to post important quotations keep me reflective and inspired. One of these quotations is from an English educator and writer named Sybil Marshall:
“Education must have an end in view, for it is not an end in itself.”
In the current education climate, that strikes me as an important idea to bear in mind. We’re all about student learning and measurable outcomes these days, and sometimes, I think we forget why. The adults can come up with a quick enough answer if we remind them to: our students need critical thinking skills, they need to compete in a global economy, we need to prepare them for jobs that don’t even exist yet, and so on.
The problem is that those reasons don’t resonate with students so much, at least not when presented that way.
So the first sin of omission is that sometimes we are so caught up in helping students develop skills, that we neglect to talk to them about why they need those skills. Or if we do talk about it,
BY MICHAEL MARTINEZ • MMARTINEZ@RGJ.COM • MARCH 20, 2010
Parent engagement and customizing learning to meet specific needs are key elements required to foster true education reform, a high-ranking member of the National Education Association said in Reno on Friday.
Lily Eskelsen, a Utah teacher and vice president of the association, spoke to about 600 educators at the NEA's Pacific Region Leadership Conference at the Peppermill, where she detailed successful efforts to bring improvement to what the association calls "priority schools," those institutions that chronically underperform.
Before her address, she talked about the need to empower teachers so they might be integral in school districts' reform efforts and the NEA's campaign to bring real change to the reauthorization of the No Child Left Behind Act, for which a blueprint has been drafted.
"Too many of our kids are dropping out of school, and too many things that were working just fine 20 or 30 years ago aren't working with a new batch of kids," Eskelsen said. "We've got to do things better, we've got to do things in a different way.
"We've all been working under what we all think is total disaster, which is 'No Child Left Untested' and we can't find anybody that says, 'Yeah this works, it's just exactly what we wanted,'" she said.
She said there are enough teachers that have experienced success in various parts of the country.
"All of these folks are here to hear their peers talk about what's working and to take these ideas back
At the School Board meeting last night (3/18/10), the SCUSD Adult Education Teacher of the Year was recognized and in her acceptance speech she shared that she received a pink slip. Congratulations Marge Matoba! Marge spoke out passionately about the value of adult education, and how cuts in SCUSD are decimating not only adult education, but other programs that help students reach their full potential. We are losing good teachers. Those who have received some form of recognition and also superstar instructors who fly below the radar. School cuts hurt and the pain is felt by those whose charge will be to make a better tommorrow: our students.