For Weingarten, New York’s Common Core fight hits home
Randi Weingarten has been a national union boss for over three years, but her heart remains in the state that groomed her as a labor leader. So when California recently became the latest state to alter its testing policies amid reforms to learning standards and teacher evaluations, Weingarten said her thoughts turned to New York.
“I get embarrassed when a state like California is figuring it out more than my beloved Empire State,” Weingarten said Wednesday in a speech in midtown Manhattan, where she accepted an education award from the education nonprofit Teaching Matters.
Weingarten twice referred to California, which moved a step closer to eliminating high-stakes tests for a year, while making her latest case for why New York should strip high stakes from state tests for teachers and students in order to focus on adopting Common Core learning standards. She also appeared on a panel
Remainders: A father calls late-enrollment woes all-too-common
A study backs a father’s experience of finding few good school options for a late-enroller. (InsideSchools) A Mass. high school student was charged Wednesday in the murder of a math teacher. (Reuters) A new MIT study found that NYC small-school students were more likely to attend college. (GS in Brief) Taking away recess is a common but unhealthy punishment, according to researchers. (Atlantic) A