Thursday, April 22, 2010
Rotarian At Work Day Benefits Local Elementary School — Citrus Heights Herald
Portland school board members: Don't slash bus passes, school bus routes | OregonLive.com
Portland school board members: Don't slash bus passes, school bus routes
By Betsy Hammond, The Oregonian
April 22, 2010, 6:58PM
Thousands of Portland parents and students would have been shocked to learn that bus passes and bus routes they've come to count on would have been cut next school year under Portland Superintendent Carole Smith's $400 million hold-the-line budget plan for 2010-11.
Those proposed cuts, affecting several thousand students, were buried deep in Smith's budget document and never came to public attention before the school board's budget committee decided this evening to spare families the cuts.
Instead, the board should spend $660,000 from its shrinking savings account to maintain the bus passes and school bus services until the board and families have plenty of time to digest and comment on the potential transportation cuts, probably next year, said David Wynde, chairman of the board's budget committee. Fellow committee members agreed,
Among the cost-saving measures the superintendent and her transportation director had recommended:
- Stop providing a free TriMet bus pass to every Portland Public Schools high school student, something that began this school year. Officials wanted to shave at least $100,000 from the $800,000 the school district spends to provide the passes.
- End yellow school bus service to 2,100 students who attend middle schools. The state doesn't require Portland to bus students to its middle schools, and ending those bus lines would save the district $150,000.
- End free bus rides to and from Outdoor School for 3,300 sixth-graders, saving $20,000.
- Stop bussing students to the Chinese and Japanese immersion programs at Woodstock and Richard elementary schools. No other immersion programs and few other special focus schools provide transportation to their students, and cutting the Richmond and Woodstock bus lines would save $17,000 a year.
Board members said, however, that it may be a good idea to end special optional bus services that are provided to families in certain pockets or
UO reassigns general counsel to law school faculty
Elk Grove Citizen : Teachers try to avoid layoff notices at hearings
Teachers try to avoid layoff notices at hearings
Hundreds crowd weeklong hearings
By Cody Kitaura - Citizen Staff Writer
Employees who attended the four days of hearings hope to keep their jobs because of seniority or additional qualification or certification.
District spokesperson Elizabeth Graswich said 500 people requested hearings to determine if someone else should have been sent a layoff notice before them.
Each person is entitled to an individual hearing, and on April 19 hundreds of teachers crowded into the district’s headquarters for standing-room-only proceedings.
Attendees lined the walls and sat on the floor, and some brought their own chairs. Many quietly read magazines, newspapers and novels while they waited for their names to be called.
Stephen Smith, an administrative law judge with the California Office of Administrative
Mike Klonsky's SmallTalk Blog: My letter to ed--Huntly lied
My letter to ed--Huntly lied
"...study after study shows students escaping failing public schools thanks to vouchers record academic gains."P.S. I haven't been at UIC in years. Don't know where they got that.
Mike Klonsky's SmallTalk Blog: Largest protest rocks the capitol, "Save Our State!" "Save Our Schools!"
Largest protest rocks the capitol, "Save Our State!" "Save Our Schools!"
Today's news coverage of yesterday's 15,000-strong mass protest in Springfield was pathetic. The Tribune's headline screamed, "THRONGS AT RALLY CRY: 'RAISE MY TAXES.'" If you read the online edition of the Trib, even that's story has been pulled by this afternoon. The rally, the largest ever at the capitol, never happened, it seems. My delivered Sun-Times didn't even cover the protest. The online edition? (wait...I'm checking) Nothing.
NorthJersey.com: Education commissioner to town officials: Ask teachers to take one-year wage freeze
LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY APRIL 22, 2010, 8:42 PM
Meanwhile, two days after 58 percent of New Jersey school budgets failed to win voter approval, educators and town officials statewide scrambled to find ways to further trim defeated spending plans. In a conference call with roughly 700 of them, Education Commissioner Bret Schundler encouraged municipal leaders to contact local teachers unions and urge them to take a one-year wage freeze.
Schundler said sometimes a new voice can help facilitate a heated discussion between two counter-parties, just as in a marriage. “There are times when I’m discussing something with my wife and we disagree” and getting another perspective is valuable, he said.
New Jersey Education Association spokeswoman Dawn Hiltner argued against the notion that municipal officials should call on locals directly to give up raises. All the parties “should all sit down together and work collaboratively, instead of automatically looking at working people to take cuts,” she said.
Judging by the vehemence of the teachers marching in Teaneck — which created a massive late-afternoon traffic jam downtown — it seemed many were in no mood to make concessions. Forming a loop, they paraded down blocked-off Cedar Lane for more than an hour, cheering as representatives from the NJEA
Laptops Came Later in Central, Southern Areas of School District voiceofsandiego.org | News. Investigation. Analysis. Conversation. Intelligence.
Home - California Teachers Association
Thousands descend on Capitol to decry cuts to education
Dallas Morning News | News for Dallas, Texas | Texas/Southwest
47% in Colorado Favor New Teacher Tenure Plan, 42% Oppose - Rasmussen Reports™
The Colorado State Board of Education last week voted unanimously in support of a proposed teacher-tenure reform bill now working its way through the state legislature. The bill “would change the way teachers are evaluated and allow teachers to be stripped of their tenure if they fail to meet performance standards heavily weighted by student academic growth data.”
A new Rasmussen Reports telephone survey finds that 47% of likely Colorado voters agree that this is how tenure should be determined. But nearly as many (42%) would prefer to see tenure based on other factors, including principal evaluations.
Governor Bill Ritter and many legislators are pushing their new tenure requirements in a bid for millions of dollars in new federal education money. But the state teachers' union, the Colorado Education Association, opposes it
(Want a free daily e-mail update? If it's in the news, it's in our polls). Rasmussen Reports updates are also available on Twitter or Facebook.
Men are more inclined to base tenure on student academics performance, while women are evenly divided on the question.
Fifty-nine percent (59%) of conservative voters strongly favor the new tenure proposal, while 62% of liberals oppose it.
Sixty-four percent (64%) of Republicans support basing tenure more on student
New Jersey Assesses the School Vote Damage - The Local – Maplewood Blog - NYTimes.com
New Jersey Assesses the School Vote Damage
By LOIS DESOCIO AND JEAN-PIERRE MESTANZARemainders: Planning against the Teacherpocalypse | GothamSchools
Remainders: Planning against the Teacherpocalypse
- Charter school supporters found Sen. Perkins’ hearing gave too much weight to the anti-charter voice.
- NY’s teacher union and school board assoc. are suing Gov. Paterson for withholding school aid (again).
- The mother of an Achievement First Charter School student says the school is not what she signed up for.
- The Learning Environment Surveys are due tomorrow and Miss Eyre isn’t sure if she should fill hers out.
- The questions that a local charter school asks prospective teachers during job interviews.
- The “teacherpocalypse” is upon us, but Reason mag and Russo ask everyone to calm down.
- More than 270,000 teaching jobs could be saved under the proposed Education Jobs Fund.
- A community-college-focused news site by Joanne Jacobs is part of the new Hechinger Report.
- A twin study out of Florida is bolstering the research on differences between teachers.
- Bill Gates has taken the open courses that MIT offers. He might fund open courseware, too!
- The case for teacher-tweeting, by Quick and the Ed.
- And Ruben Brosbe, in his third year, is struggling to figure out why teaching is still hard.
President Obama Announces More Key Administration Posts, 4/22/10 | The White House
President Obama Announces More Key Administration Posts, 4/22/10
- Christopher A. Masingill, Federal Co-Chair, Delta Regional Authority
- Mary Minow, Member, National Museum Library Services Board
- Catherine E. Woteki, Under Secretary for Agriculture for Research, Education and Economics, Department of Agriculture
Catherine E. Wotecki, Nominee for Under Secretary for Agriculture for Research, Education and Economics, Department of Agriculture
Dr. Catherine E. Woteki currently serves as Global Director of Scientific Affairs for Mars, Incorporated, where she manages the company’s scientific policy and research on matters of health, nutrition, and food safety. From 2002-2005, she was Dean of Agriculture and Professor of Human Nutrition at Iowa State University. Dr. Woteki served as the first Under Secretary for Food Safety at the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) from 1997-2001, where she oversaw U.S. Government food safety policy development and USDA’s continuity of operations planning. Dr. Woteki also served as the Deputy Under Secretary for Research, Education and Economics at USDA in 1996. Prior to going to USDA, Dr. Woteki served in the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy as Deputy Associate Director for Science from 1994-1996. Dr. Woteki has also held positions in the National Center for Health Statistics of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (1983-1990), the Human Nutrition Information Service at USDA (1981-1983), and as Director of the Food and Nutrition Board of the Institute of Medicine at the National Academy of Sciences (1990-1993). In 1999, Dr. Woteki was elected to the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences, where she has chaired the Food and Nutrition Board (2003-2005). She received her M.S. and Ph.D. in Human Nutrition from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (1974). Dr. Woteki received her B.S. in Chemistry from Mary Washington College (1969).
President Obama also announced his intent to appoint the following individual to a key administration post:
Renée Mauborgne, Appointee for Member, Presidential Advisory Board on Historically Black Colleges and Universities
Renée Mauborgne is the Co-Director of the INSEAD Blue Ocean Strategy Institute and Affiliate Professor of Strategy at INSEAD, the world's second largest business school located in Fontainebleau, France. Prior to this, she held the title of the INSEAD Distinguished Fellow of Strategy and Management and Senior Research Fellow also at INSEAD. Professor Mauborgne is a Fellow of the World Economic Forum at Davos. She is the recipient of numerous awards including the Nobels Colloquia Prize for Leadership on Business and Economic Thinking 2008 and the Eldridge Haynes Prize, awarded by the Academy of International Business and the Eldridge Haynes Memorial Trust of Business International, for the best original paper in the field of international business. Professor Mauborgne is the co-author of the international bestseller Blue Ocean Strategy (Harvard Business Press), which is being published in 42 languages. She has published numerous articles on strategy and managing the multinational which can be found in: Academy of Management Journal, Management Science, Organization Science, Strategic Management Journal, Administrative Science Quarterly, Journal of International Business Studies, Harvard Business Review, and Sloan Management Review.
Public Voting Begins Monday for Race to the Top High School Commencement Challenge
WASHINGTON – The White House and the Department of Education announced today that voting for the winner of the first annual Race to the Top High School Commencement Challenge will begin Monday, April 26.
From 8 a.m. EDT on Monday, April 26th through 11:59 p.m. EDT on Thursday, April 29, 2010, the public will have an opportunity to review and rate a three-minute video and short essay from each of the six high school finalists at http://www.WhiteHouse.gov/Commencement. President Obama will select the national winner from the three high schools with the highest average ratings. The Commencement Challenge winner will be announced on Tuesday, May 4, 2010 and the President will visit the winning high school to deliver the commencement address later this spring.
Voters are encouraged to rank the finalists based on the criteria of the Commencement Challenge including:
Educational success of the school as an example for other high schools around the country; The ability of the school to engage students in learning and to foster personal responsibility and academic excellence; and The success of the school in preparing students to graduate college and career-ready, to help meet the President’s 2020 goal that America have the highest proportion of college graduates of any nation in the world.
The Commencement Challenge, launched in late February, invited the nation’s public high schools to submit applications showing their dedication to providing students with an excellent education that will prepare them to graduate ready for college and career choices. Applications were judged based on the schools’ performance, four essay questions and supplemental data. The six finalists were selected for their dedication to academic excellence and for showing how they are helping prepare students to graduate college and career ready, and prepared to meet the President’s goal of having the highest proportion of college graduates in the world by 2020.
Finalists:
Blue Valley Northwest High School (Overland Park, Kansas) Clark Montessori Junior High and High School (Cincinnati, Ohio) Denver School of Science and Technology (Denver, Colorado) Environmental Charter High School (Lawndale, California) Kalamazoo Central High School (Kalamazoo, Michigan) MAST Academy (Miami, Florida)
Complete details of the voting and selection process appear below:
Education - San Jose Mercury News
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