Two Roads Diverged in a wood, and I–I took the one less traveled by,And that has made all the difference.
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
This-a-way or That: I’m Good. � Chalkdust101
Remainders: NAEP reading scores an “epitaph” for NCLB | GothamSchools
Remainders: NAEP reading scores an “epitaph” for NCLB
- The nation’s reading scores plateaued, but low achieving students did make gains.
- Jay Mathews writes that the flat scores can be read as an “epitaph” for No Child Left Behind.
- The Assembly’s budget plan would restore $193 million to NYC schools.
- UFT president Michael Mulgrew is attending a re-election fundraiser for Charlie Rangel.
- A retired teacher says he’s voting for Mulgrew because he’s a mature leader, unlike the opposition.
- Rick Hess says Arne Duncan’s list of political favors will hurt his credibility and RttT.
- A Florida bill that would pay teachers primarily based on test scores is dangerous, writes Valerie Strauss.
- Center for American Progress calls for teacher effectiveness reforms to have a larger role.
- The UFT chapter leader of Tilden HS asks two tough questions he wants Mulgrew to answer.
- UFT elections are coming soon and in the last few days before break, the campaigning is heating up.
- Staten Island could lose 150 teachers, or 5 percent of its total, if the budget cuts go through.
- Across the city, class sizes could grow by five students as a result of the cuts, Klein warned today.
- Assembly member Deborah Glick argues for smaller class sizes and keeping the charter cap in place.
- Florida aced the NAEP reading test that was released today, writes Jay Greene.
- For a few hundred dollars, principals can find out how their high school grads are doing in college.
- And calling all education reporters — Hechinger is looking for someone to blog about community colleges.
Schools Matter: NAEP Reading 2009: Had Enough Direct Instruction and Testing Yet?
NAEP Reading 2009: Had Enough Direct Instruction and Testing Yet?
After 7 years of the nation's incredibly expensive subscription to the crackpot school of reading instruction, and after 20 years of non-stop testing with increasingly higher stakes, and after tens of millions of children have been abused, labeled failures, and
Fewer than 1,000 teachers now in excess pool, Klein says | GothamSchools
Fewer than 1,000 teachers now in excess pool, Klein says
Investors.com - Arne's List: A World Of Privilege
Arne's List: A World Of Privilege
A beautiful proof without words � Fun Math Blog
Wild About Math!
A beautiful proof without words
March 24th, 2010 | by Sol |While surfing the Web for Math-related stuff I happened upon this wonderful “proof” without words:Can you figure out what the image illustrates? Can you figure out what two facts you need to know to
Klein lays out which teachers would be fired first to cut budget | GothamSchools
Klein lays out which teachers would be fired first to cut budget
It’s still unclear whether state budget cuts to education will necessitate layoffs at the scale Klein described — a total of 8,500 teachers in the most draconian scenario. The state legislature is working towards an April 1 deadline to pass a budget, and while the Senate and governor’s proposed budget would cost the city schools more than $400 million at a minimum, the Assembly is reportedly planning far less severe cuts.
But at the City Council today Klein stuck to his doomsday predictions, outlining how the 8,500 layoffs would hit each school district. Under the state’s current “last in, first out” method of cutting the most recently hired
voiceofsandiego.org | News. Investigation. Analysis. Conversation. Intelligence.
Summer Jobs for Recovery | The White House
The White House Blog
Summer Jobs for Recovery
Posted by Shama Hussain on March 24, 2010 at 04:56 PM EDTToday the White House issued a Statement of Administration Policy (SAP) supporting the inclusion of $600 million for summer employment programs for youth in the House passage of the Disaster Relief and Summer Jobs Act of 2010, saying that in addition to essential help in keeping America prepared for natural disasters, “It also takes another important step forward in the ongoing effort to help put Americans back to work through the expansion of a youth summer jobs program and offers continued support to America’s small businesses, which are the backbone of the American economy.” From the SAP:Summer Employment Programs for YouthThe Administration supports the inclusion of $600 million for the Workforce Investment Act youth program for summer employment opportunities for disadvantaged youth. This funding will create hundreds of thousands of jobs and help young people open the door to future opportunities, while enabling them to generate additional income during these difficult economic times.
The Administration has long recognized the importance of putting youth to work as a way of developing the next generation and strengthening the nation’s economy. The Recovery Act also aimed to create over a hundred thousand summer youth jobs to provide young people with meaningful work experience.
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Of Secret Lists and Special Treatment :: Frederick M. Hess
Of Secret Lists and Special Treatment
Cross-posted from Education Week
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"While many Chicago parents took formal routes to land their children in the best schools, the well-connected also sought help through a shadowy appeals system created in recent years under former schools chief Arne Duncan.
Whispers have long swirled that some children get spots in the city's premier schools based on whom their parents know. But a list maintained over several years in Duncan's office and obtained
Tiny Arcohe school district puts bond measure on ballot - Sacramento News - Local and Breaking Sacramento News | Sacramento Bee
Tiny Arcohe school district puts bond measure on ballot
Read more: http://www.sacbee.com/2010/03/24/2629237/tiny-arcohe-school-district-puts.html#ixzz0j8E1Awnk
When capturing your students’ attention isn’t enough | GothamSchools
When capturing your students’ attention isn’t enough
by Elizabeth GreenDr. Green was a medieval history prof at my undergraduate university. We said that Dr. Green had a sport jacket pocket which knew everything about medieval history because he always spoke into it. He mumbled. “The most important point to remember about the shift of power in the 9th century was (and his head would tilt toward the pocket of his jacket) mmmm hhhmmm hhhmmmm.”
Education Research Report: Focus on Strengths, Not Failures, To Help Teens Succeed in School
Focus on Strengths, Not Failures, To Help Teens Succeed in School
The best way to help teenagers who are struggling in school is put aside their academic problems and focus on what they’re doing right, according to a family research scientist who has put this theory to practice.
Nearly every family with a teen who has problems in school is told what they’re doing wrong. But knowing what’s wrong won’t fix anything, said Stephen Gavazzi, professor of education and human ecology at Ohio State University.
“Your problems won’t solve your problems, but your strengths will. That’s why we focus on assets,” he said.
Gavazzi describes his strength-based approach in a new book "Strong Families, Successful Students: Helping Teenagers Reach Their Full Academic Potential" (BookSurge).
To close achievement gap, US must address major health risks for urban minority youth
Lack of good health care curtails academic performance
"Educationally relevant health disparities" are key drivers of the achievement gap, "but they are largely overlooked," said Charles Basch, the Richard March Hoe Professor of Health Education at Teachers College, Columbia University.
"Over the past several decades, a variety of strategies have been tried to help close the achievement gap – standards, accountability, NCLB, more rigorous teacher certification – and they're all important, but they won't have the desired effect unless students are ready and motivated to learn."
Basch recently released a meta-study, "Healthier Students Are Better Learners," which focuses on seven health risks that disproportionately impair the academic performance of urban minority youth.
NAEP Reading Results - Year 2010 (CA Dept of Education)
Schools Chief Jack O'Connell Comments
on Latest NAEP Reading Results
SACRAMENTO — State Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O'Connell today commented on the release of the 2009 National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) reading results for participating fourth and eighth graders.
The 2009 NAEP results for California show no significant change in overall scores from the 2007 assessment, which was the last time NAEP tested students in the fourth and eighth grades in reading. Nationally, the results are similar, with overall scores holding steady at the fourth grade level and a slight improvement in the eighth grade.
Overall average scores for students at both the state and the national level remain at the NAEP "basic" achievement level, which denotes partial mastery of fundamental skills at each grade. While reading scores for both fourth and eighth grade students remains flat overall, the average reading score for California's grade eight African American students improved slightly, moving the subgroup from "below basic" to the NAEP "basic" achievement level. Unfortunately, the NAEP reading results reveal no narrowing of the achievement gap between students who are white or Asian students and their peers who are African American or Latino.
"While we have seen a slight narrowing of the achievement gap on our state assessments, that trend is absent in these national test results," said O'Connell. "It's critical for the future of our state and nation that we close the achievement gap and prepare all students for successful futures. We must continue to focus our efforts ever more diligently on finding and using effective strategies that help all students learn to their full potential.
"These results also particularly highlight the need to better serve students who are learning the English language. In California, English learners make up a quarter of our student population, yet as a group, this population scores far behind nearly every other subgroup. It is critically important for us to search for the best strategies to assist these students to succeed academically in order for California to thrive and maintain its place as a leading world economy."
The NAEP data also reveal that students with access to books at home and who read for fun scored significantly higher on the reading assessment.
"Reading is fundamental to learning," said O'Connell. "Parents play a crucial role in helping their children build a solid foundation for learning by encouraging them to read every day. It is so important that we support school libraries and public libraries that provide students access to a wealth of reading materials and other literary resources."
NAEP is a national assessment that tests a representative sample of students in grades four, eight, and twelve in various subjects including reading, writing, math, and science. NAEP provides a common yardstick for measuring student achievement nationwide, allowing for state comparisons. NAEP assessments are not aligned to California's content standards, but are based on an assessment framework developed under the direction of the National Assessment Governing Board, which sets policy for NAEP. Results are released for the nation, states, and certain large urban school districts. There are no student- or school-level results. The limited large urban school district results for the 2009 reading assessment are expected to be released in May. National-level grade twelve reading results will be released later this year.
Recently, California joined 47 other states, two territories, and the District of Columbia in signing a compact to explore the development of rigorous common core standards that are designed to ensure that every state prepares students for success in college and the workforce.
"I strongly support the idea of common core standards that prepare all students for success in college and careers," said O'Connell. "When states develop and adopt high-quality common standards, assessments like NAEP will become more meaningful tools for measuring learning and comparing scores nationwide. I look forward to the convening of the Academic Content Standards Commission and its work to help integrate the common core standards here in California."
Complete results for the 2009 NAEP reading assessment are available online at The Nation's Report Card - National Assessment of Educational Progress - NAEP (Outside Source).
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Jack O'Connell — State Superintendent of Public Instruction
Communications Division, Room 5206, 916-319-0818, Fax 916-319-0100
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Reams of Data for a Low, Low Price
Among the pieces of paper [Weast] unloaded during a recent visit was a blue, green, orange and yellow bar graph titled “MCPS Graduates