Monday, February 27, 2012
NEA Read Across America promotional videos Dr. Seuss' The Lorax movie ...
My Friends, The Cops | The Jose Vilson
My Friends, The Cops
Before the turn of the century, my friends and I took spring walks from school to home, following the route of the M14D, which runs all the way down 14th Street from West to East and back again. Along the way, there was a little deli / convenience store along the way with the usual characters, including an dark-skinned man stocking up groceries in the back. While I searched for a Snapple and a pack of Oreos, the man just gave me the usual “What are you looking at?” New York before East Village gentrification lived up to its truculent reputation. Once the man realized I was a kid, his face softened, and he continued stocking up drinks.
My boys and I walked home with few things on our mind, least of which the small encounters we had with store
State board re-examines statewide rights for charters | California Watch #soschat
State board re-examines statewide rights for charters
The State Board of Education will hold a public hearing today to discuss what has become a thorny question: Under what circumstances should a charter school company be allowed to bypass local district control and operate statewide?
The board has granted statewide status to three charter school organizations since 2006: High Tech High, Pacific Technology School and Aspire Public Schools.
The privilege is a boon to charters. It allows the organizations to start schools wherever they see fit in California, without the risk of being rejected by local school authorities. Some charters see state oversight as better for them financially. Aspire, for example, has been able to pass millions in bonds to build their own buildings since acquiring statewide operating status – something that would be nearly impossible to do under the control of a school district.
Under the law, charters can be granted statewide privileges only after proving their services are a "statewide
Enforcement Chief at Postsecondary Bureau to Resign - The Bay Citizen
Enforcement Chief at Postsecondary Bureau to Resign
Resignation comes after The Bay Citizen revealed the bureau failed to properly oversee state's for-profit schools
The administrator in charge of policing the state’s for-profit schools at the California Bureau for Private Postsecondary Education is stepping down next month.
Karen Newquist, the bureau’s chief of enforcement since November 2010, intends to leave her post in March. Her replacement has not been named.
Newquist's departure comes after The Bay Citizen revealed that the bureau had not fulfilled many of its fundamental oversight responsibilities, including aggressively investigating complaints, monitoring the quality of educational programs and rooting out unlicensed schools and diploma mills.
The bureau was established by the state Legislature two years ago to strengthen protections for the approximately 400,000 students who attend private vocational schools across the state.
The Bay Citizen reported in December that the bureau had a backlog of about 200
Source: The Bay Citizen (http://s.tt/15SvY)
Schools in the U.S Teaching Spanish With New Method - Hispanically Speaking News
Schools in the U.S Teaching Spanish With New Method
Learning Spanish is becoming more important for Americans every day, so the pilot launch of an interactive learning program in schools is being carried out to create a new model for introducing the United States’ second-most-spoken language into the country’s educational system.
E.L. Haynes Public Charter School in Washington has been the first to employ the new program that enables students to study Spanish on their own computers using specialized software.
The fact is that Washington’s large Hispanic presence makes it increasingly necessary to adjust public-school education to the needs of each student.
“We have students who are ethnically Latinos but know nothing of Spanish, or they can speak it but not write it, and there are others who speak no English at all,” the school’s founder and head, Jennie Nyles, told Efe.
Teacher Teresa Danskey said that this software provides ninth-grade students with Spanish classes that