Wednesday, June 2, 2010
The Washington Teacher Reactions Vary On Ratification of DC Teachers Union Contract: What's Your Reaction ?
Reactions Vary On Ratification of DC Teachers Union Contract: What's Your Reaction ?
Schools of thought on looming teacher layoffs
Schools of thought on looming teacher layoffs
Wednesday, June 2, 2010
Schools across the country are facing the worst layoffs in half a century. As many as 300,000 school employees are in danger of losing their jobs. If that happens, class sizes will explode and educational opportunities will decline drastically for millions of children. Education will become a "risky" career choice for a generation of potential teachers.
We have two choices: We can sit, frozen in the ice of our own indifference, as Franklin Roosevelt once said, or we can take action to save these jobs.
By arguing that we should "Fail this jobs bill," as the headline on a May 28 editorial put it, The Post has
Free Technology for Teachers: Mathematics Blog Carnival - Call for Submissions
Mathematics Blog Carnival - Call for Submissions
NorthJersey.com: Students protest Christie education cuts outside Bergen courthouse
Members of the Democratic Youth National Organization demanded that the Republican governor consider alternative ways to save the state money, such as cutting administrative costs and regionalizing school districts.
“We want to start a dialogue on real education reform,” said Simon Li, the protest organizer. “We’d like Governor Christie to have a dialogue with the students.”
Li, a finance and policy major at New York University who graduated in 2008 from the Bergen Academies, said administrative positions in many school districts are not needed. Eliminating those jobs and regionalizing districts could help address the financial problems that Christie and the state are now facing, he said.
Li was also critical of Christie’s description of students who have protested on behalf of teachers as “drug mules.”
“I don’t think that’s the way to go,” Li said. “Students don’t have a union to
Free Technology for Teachers: More than 100 Webcam Resources from Simple K12
More than 100 Webcam Resources from Simple K12
Reading Rewards - Track Time Spent Reading
Willie Nelson and What the Web Can Answer Today
Yesterday, as I was listening to Willie Nelson I got the urge to look up some information on the web about the hole that appears in his guitar. This led me to thinking about the number of questions that pop into my head every day and how many of those questions would have either gone unanswered or taken a long time to research before the advent of easy Internet access.
Here's my activity idea:
1. Have a person opposed to open Internet access in schools record the number and type of questions they encounter in a given school day or week.
2. Have that person then record the number of those questions that can be answered by resources located in five
A closer look at the city’s salary freeze savings math | GothamSchools
A closer look at the city’s salary freeze savings math
Now I have the answer.
Each time planned raises were reduced — in January from 4 percent to 2 percent, and today from 2 percent to nothing — the city cut next year’s budget by $150 million, according to Department of Education spokeswoman Ann Forte. Together, the two reductions amount to $300 million in savings.
The extra $100 million is what the city set aside this year in case it reached a contract deal with the teachers union to turn Mayor Bloomberg’s intention to give 2 percent raises each year for two years into reality. But
Remainders: D.C. teachers union approves new contract
- A study reports that teachers with good value-added scores are the ones principals hire anyway.
- The final version of the common core standards for math and reading were released today.
- The D.C. teachers union ratified its new teachers contract, produced after years of negotiations.
- The first research on Denver’s pay-for-performance plan shows reported positive results.
- A new study (pdf) reports that teachers’ effectiveness is unrelated to the colleges they attended.
- The state teachers union posted a long Q & A explaining the new teacher evaluation plan.
- The Hechinger Report has a handy map of which states applied to each round of Race to the Top.
- GOOD magazine’s “guide to education innovation” includes a lot of online learning.
- The city says its push towards virtual education is not a strategy to replace teachers.
- And in honor of today’s start of the National Spelling Bee, here’s the “top ten spelling bee freak-outs.”
Bay Area Cities Take Budget Mess to Voters - WSJ.com
Cities Take Budget Mess to Voters
Measures on June 8 Ballot Seek New Taxes, More Control Over Union Contracts
By ROBERT A. GUTH And BOBBY WHITE
Bay Area cities and counties, their finances hammered by state budget cuts, are turning to voters for help.
A raft of measures on next Tuesday's ballot are aimed at shoring up finances in local communities. Many center on proposed parcel taxes to offset declines in state funds. The city of Vallejo is pushing a measure to stop using outside arbitrators in disputes between the city and its workers, aiming to squeeze more money for its budget by whittling away public employee benefits.
The initiatives are crucial for the municipalities. California is grappling with a $19 billion budget deficit and has slashed services across the state.
In a sign of how hard hit municipal finances have become, school funding in the state—including taxes and state and federal sources—fell to $66.7 billion in the 2009-10 school year from $71.1 billion in the 2007-08 year, according to EdSource, a Mountain View nonprofit group that tracks education issues.
"I expect to see a lot more ballot initiatives over the next few cycles that are focused on finding new revenue or that will give cities more tools to deal with the down economy," said Eric Zeemering, a professor of public administration at San Francisco State University.
Here is a look at some of the June 8 ballot measures.
Bay Area residents will be voting on whether to levy new taxes to help local governments. Students at Skyline College in San Bruno protested funding cuts in March.
Parcel Taxes
Voters in Alameda, Contra Costa, San Francisco, San Mateo and Santa Clara counties will decide on new taxes to help K-12 schools offset declining state funding.
The parcel taxes, which levy a flat tax on landowners, are increasingly common in California communities, which raised $251 million with parcel taxes in the 2008-09 school year, compared with $114 million in the 2003-04 year, according to the Education Data Partnership, a group of education nonprofits and the California Department of Education.
The parcel tax is particularly favored by Bay Area cities. Of the 83 school districts that passed parcel taxes between 2001 and 2009, 66 districts were in the Bay Area, according to EdSource. In the Bay Area, "there is a more liberal attitude towards taxation than you will find in many other areas of California," said Mary Perry, EdSource's deputy director.
In more economically robust times, school districts typically relied on bond issues to pay for programs and services.
But the down economy has pushed districts away from bonds to parcel taxes, said Valory Logsdon, research specialist at California State University, Sacramento's Institute for Social Research.
While no firm figures are available yet for the current election, a preliminary look indicates there
“From Monologic Teaching to Dialogic Learning” | Learn Out Live
“From Monologic Teaching to Dialogic Learning”
Hechinger Report | Common standards debate takes center stage – what will be different this time?
Common standards debate takes center stage – what will be different this time?
After a year of development, the much-anticipated “common core standards” for English and mathematics were unveiled this morning, just a day after states’ second-round applications were due in the federal Race to the Top competition.
Officially named the Common Core State Standards Initiative (CCSSI), the effort was spearheaded by the National Governors Association and the Council of Chief State School Officers, not the federal government. The Obama administration has kept its distance during the development of the common standards because of a general wariness at both the district and state levels of federal involvement in education. And yet, adopting these
How to Deprogram Bullies: Teaching Kindness 101 - TIME
How to Deprogram Bullies: Teaching Kindness 101
- 19diggsdigg
Colbert I. King - A dangerous spiral for Fenty and the District
A dangerous spiral for Fenty and the District
TOOLBOX COMMENT 85 Comments | View All » COMMENTS ARE CLOSED |
Equally ironic, the two team members whom Fenty prizes most -- Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee and Attorney General Peter Nickles -- are regarded as political liabilities in communities he must win over. Rhee and Nickles, in Fenty's eyes, are competent and tough; their detractors see them as disrespectful, heavy-handed officials who have thinly disguised contempt for the people in government with whom they must work.
But in politics, goes the saying, overnight is a lifetime. Fenty may still turn this around, provided he's willing to open up, better explain his style of governing and share his views on how the city should cope with the inevitable demographic and social changes taking place.
There's yet a more serious problem.
Fenty, as mayor, needs to speak candidly about the city's financial future. On this score, both he and the current council deserve a sound beating at the polls.
May 26, 2010, will go down as the most politically craven day in modern D.C. government history. I wouldn't have believed it if I hadn't seen it with my own eyes.
So what did the council do?