Friday, June 25, 2010
Hebrew Is the Focus of a Brooklyn Charter School - NYTimes.com
Schools Matter: New KIPP Study Flawed
New KIPP Study Flawed
. . .the black-white test score gap in math is typically estimated as approximately onestandard deviation at fourth grade and eighth grade (Bloom et al. 2008). Half of these KIPP schools are producing impacts large enough to cut that gap in half within three years (p. xv).
School-eye views of the city’s new draft discipline standards | GothamSchools
School-eye views of the city’s new draft discipline standards
But the central changes have nothing to do with text messages. They represent a win by civil rights groups who have been calling on the city to make sure that schools use more counseling and less punishment and suspension to resolve problems.
At a hearing on the proposed changes Wednesday, one middle school principal described a program that she piloted and is now part of the new code. In some schools the program, which is known as PBIS and is designed
Two different goodbyes to a phase-out school’s seniors | GothamSchools
Two different goodbyes to a phase-out school’s seniors
As students shimmied and wobbled on perilously high heels across the stage at Bayard Rustin High School’s graduation today, teachers commented on what a difficult year it had been.
The Chelsea high school began phasing out last fall when it opened without a new ninth grade, and it will close for good in 2012. In October four Bayard Rustin students attended a Harvard Black Alumni Society panel on the dropout crisis and confronted Chancellor Joel Klein about his decision to close their school.
At the time, Klein made the students a bet: if they graduated, and would like him to, he would speak at their
Teacher Appreciation Song: A Song for Teachers - You Have Made A Difference
A Song for Teachers - You Have Made A Difference
School Food Reform, One No-Bake Tart at a Time - Food - The Atlantic
School Food Reform, One No-Bake Tart at a Time
To try the recipe for the raw fruit tart that Food Is Elementary educators use to teach kids about cooking and healthy eating, click here.
Catherine Dixon wheels a dilapidated, squeaky cart into a crowded classroom, where 25 eighth graders are waiting. "Today, we are making pasta primavera, a dish from Italy," she announces as she unloads boxes of pasta, fresh vegetables, and a mismatched assortment of kitchenware. As Dixon goes over the recipe, she asks the students to identify each vegetable that will be used. They instantly recognize tomatoes and bell peppers, but one vegetable—white asparagus—eludes them. "It looks like wood," one student remarks.
Dixon teaches a nutrition program called Food Is Elementary at Baltimore's Stadium School, a predominantly minority charter school. As food education has entered the national debate and gained the attention of powerful allies such as Michelle Obama, Dixon, too, has been disturbed by what she has seen: staggering obesity rates fueled by destructive, unhealthy diets.
Although Michelle Obama and her Let's Move Campaign call for major top-down food policy reform, Dixon takes a different approach. While reforming food policy is of course a long-term goal, Food Is Elementary has a more immediate priority: educating kids about healthy eating by
The Educated Reporter: Radio silence on special ed.
Radio silence on special ed.
TER goes the the movies: “Waiting for Superman.”
Democurmudgeon: Pro School Privatization Candidates Ownership of Taxpayer funded Voucher and Charter Schools gets Media Yawn.
Pro School Privatization Candidates Ownership of Taxpayer funded Voucher and Charter Schools gets Media Yawn.
Neumann Wants To Get Rid Of Teacher Certification: Republican gubernatorial
candidate Mark Neumann is proposing to get rid of state certification for teachers … also isproposing a series of incentives that will encourage private schools and public charter schools to compete with and replace failing public schools. "(I want ) representatives from all
Will Districts Spend Stimulus Bucks Before Deadline? - Politics K-12 - Education Week
Will Districts Spend Stimulus Bucks Before Deadline?
During a recent U.S Department of Education webinar geared toward districts, 48 percent of those who participated said they were somewhat concerned about spending their money before the clock strikes midnight on Sept. 30, 2011. That's the deadline for spending $10 billion in Title I and $12 billion in special education dollars.
Of that money, districts have $6 billion in Title I funds (not counting school improvement grants) waiting to be
All America High School Service Team – ED.gov Blog
All America High School Service Team
Vice President Biden spoke at the event about the importance of community involvement and public service. See video of his remarks.
This Week In Education: On The Hill: Actress Slams Politicos For Not Doing Right By Kids
On The Hill: Actress Slams Politicos For Not Doing Right By Kids
Here she is milling about in between photo ops and her remarks, which included the crack that parents "expect politicians to do the right thing...but that isn’t happening." For more go here.
Hill: Senate Jobs / Economic Relief Bill Fails
AM News: Turnaround Fever In The Golden State
The 21st Century Principal
US Department of Education Claims That Vouchers Improve Graduation Rates: Junk Science at Its Best
I recently began reading Dan Agin’s book Junk Science: An Overdue Indictment of Government, Industry, and Faith Groups That Twist Science for Their Own Gain. In that book, Agin goes to great lengths to point out how special interests in government, commerce, and the “faith” industry are using “junk” science to change or sway public opinion toward their own biased positions. Yesterday, the US Department of Education released their report entitled “Evaluation of the DC Opportunity Scholarship Program.” The results of that report include the following:
- There is no conclusive evidence that the Opportunity Scholarship Program affected student achievement. “On average, after at least four years students who were offered (or used) scholarships had reading and math scores that were statistically similar to those who were not offered scholarships.”
- The program significantly improved students’ chances of graduating from high school. “The offer of an Opportunity Scholarship Program Scholarship raised students’ probability of completing high school by 12 percentage points overall. The graduation rate based on parent-provided information was 82 percent for the treatment group compared to 70 percent for the control group.
- The Opportunity Scholarship Program raised parents’, but
Democurmudgeon: Charter School Owner, State Senator and Possible Candidate for Govenor Wants more Failing Schools Like His Own.
Charter School Owner, State Senator and Possible Candidate for Govenor Wants more Failing Schools Like His Own.
In his quest to be the Democrats' nominee for governor, State Sen. Anthony Williams is calling for expanding educational choice and targeting taxpayer funds to charters and other schools that produce results.While never answering the question as to why people hate spending money on public schools but love sending it to private hucksters, see if you can see a shocking conflict of interest in the following paragraph:
But the Southwest Philadelphia charter school he founded as Renaissance Advantage in 1999 and oversaw as board chairman for a decade has experienced rocky times. The school, which Williams renamed Hardy Williams Academy in 2009 for his late father, was nearly closed in 2003 because of academic and management problems.A state senator and possible Democratic nominee for governor, Williams has a vested interest in seeing taxpayer dollars going to charter schools. Well what do you know. And it's not doing well, surprise,
Statement by the Press Secretary on Republican Obstruction of Jobless Benefits and State Aid | The White House
Statement by the Press Secretary on Republican Obstruction of Jobless Benefits and State Aid
Conference Call with Education Grantmakers – ED.gov Blog
Conference Call with Education Grantmakers
He provided an update on recently released information about the Investing in Innovation Fund (i3) and other grant programs such as Race to the Top and Promise Neighborhoods. He then answered questions from some of the 230 participants about the role for education funders as states and districts implement reforms in a difficult fiscal environment.
Listen to the the call, or read the transcript.
Central Falls High School: What It Takes, a 4-part series | projo.com | The Providence Journal
For four Sundays in May, The Providence Journal explores the challenges facing dropouts, parents, students and teachers at Central Falls High School.
Part 4: Video: A teacher's biggest challenge: Getting students to take a risk to be successful
Read the stories: Portrait of 3 teachers, Two ways of looking at poverty | Gallery
Interactive Timeline: Events leading up to the firing of Central Falls High School's teachers
Your Turn: Talk about how you think a successful urban school in an impoverished setting would work, in the Central Falls hot topics forum
The latest education news, from projo.com blogs
Carcieri signs 'historic' R.I. education formula bill Wed 1:58 pm
Hope High students file legal challenge to keep schedule Wed 12:25 pm
RI Health Dept. wants new Puerto Rico birth certificates Tue 11:47 am
Education stories, from The Journal
Providence Career and Technical Academy marks its first year
EdWatch by Julia Steiny
A consultant and a former member of the Providence School Board, Julia Steiny welcomes questions and comments. She can be reached atjuliasteiny@cox.net or c/o EdWatch, Education and Employment, Providence Journal, 75 Fountain St., Providence, R.I. 02902.
Politics swirl around efforts to revise charter law | Philadelphia Public School Notebook
Notes from the news, June 25
Ackerman will give the school "lots of attention" moving forward.
Rendell Challenged On Education Spending The Bulletin
House Minority Leader Samuel Smith says "money is not the answer" to education. Rendell's proposed $355 million increase in education funding is expected to be a sticking point in negotiations on the budget again this year.
Hamels donó más de $90 mil a Distrito Escolar Al Día
Cole and Heidi Hamels donated to Wilson and Taylor schools.
Judge rules Lower Merion redistricting broke no law The Inquirer
The redistricting case in Lower Merion was found to be similar to a case from Seattle that went to the Supreme Court. The Court found that the Seattle school district had violated the rights of students when it used race as a factor in reassigning students.
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Notes from the news
Politics swirl around efforts to revise charter law
Preventing financial abuses is one obvious priority. Rendell wants a more comprehensive overhaul.
by Sarah Peterson
Theme articles
- Charter boom – no end in sight by Dale Mezzacappa
- Charter school data spread
- Showing students a world of opportunitiesby Sarah Burgess
- The ultimate challenge: serving every student by Bill Hangley Jr.
- Politics swirl around efforts to revise charter law by Sarah Peterson
- Alliance seeks to unionize Philly chartersby Ron Whitehorne
- Viewing board members' disclosure forms isn't always easy by Paul Jablow
- Parents have praise for charters but want better oversight by Daniel Denvir
- Quicktakes: What's it like going to a charter school? by Benjamin Herold