Wednesday, January 5, 2011
NYC Educator: No Food, No Poor Kids, No Problem
NYC Public School Parents: Who's striking out and who's sliding home?
Who's striking out and who's sliding home?
School Tech Connect: Our Schools Are Basketcases of Anxiety
Our Schools Are Basketcases of Anxiety
Illinois is in the middle of some high opera. The combination of teacher-loathing and public employee bashing and pension busting has created the perfect storm, so that outside groups promoting education "reform" are being given a loud microphone. Apparently we're not going to get the votes to raise the income tax in this state unless some teachers are punished.
Anyway, I clearly don't know her. She lives in one of the communities where schools are likely to be shut down, unlike the person next to her, who knows better. By the way, the person next to her is Robin Steans, who will say this, as you'll see tomorrow:
Studies repeatedly and consistently show that a teacher’s influence is 20 times greater than any
Huckleberry Finn and Why Post-Racialists Get The Race Thing Wrong Again — The Jose Vilson
Huckleberry Finn and Why Post-Racialists Get The Race Thing Wrong Again
“They’re doing that thing again,” racially underrepresented people in this country must have whispered to themselves (and tweeted). When news broke out that the more than 200 instances of the word “nigger” would be substituted by the word “slave” in Huckleberry Finn, most of us said, “Of the 100 things on our list that need improvement in this country for racial relations, you chose THAT?!”
Erasing the n-word from one of the literary canon’s biggest children’s books is akin to erasing the “3/5ths” in the US Constitution as it pertains to slaves. Books, whether biographical or fictional in nature, serve as documentation of a history. Because Mark Twain decided to use that language in the book, he too shone a light to the customs and history of the time, no matter how deplorable we consider it. Once we try and erase a
Diane Ravitch & Parents Across America Education Forum
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Success: More Questions Than Answers | Mr. Teachbad's Blog of Teacher Disgruntlement
Success: More Questions Than Answers
How do I think about what I do? How do I gauge my professional success?
It seems like everything I do disappears…good or bad. I teach a lesson. It sucks. And it’s gone.
I teach a lesson. It’s awesome. And it’s gone.
What is a successful teacher? One who has simply survived 5, 10 or 30 years? One who writes kick-ass lesson plans and turns them in on time, every time? One who has become a principal? One who executes appropriate
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Kenneth Bernstein: Of Generals and School Superintendents
Kenneth Bernstein
The superintendent of the school system in which I teach in Prince George's County, Maryland, according to the 2009 annual report, had a budget of $1.7 billion, serving more than 127,000 students, with roughly 18,300 employees, of whom about 9,000 were teachers.
In the U.S. Army a Major General, with two stars, might well command a division with 10,000 - 15,000 employees. It may consist of two to five Brigades, each of which might be led by a one-star Brigadier General.
Does the span of control of our superintendent and the budget and number of employees for which he is responsible qualify him to lead an Army