Monday, September 14, 2020
Diane Ravitch in Conversation with Derek Black - Network For Public Education
NYC Public School Parents: Bobson Wong, HS teacher, on why before reopening schools, NYC needs time and resources to get it right.
Teacher Deaths Raise Alarms at Start of New School Year
Audrey Watters: Hack Education: 'Luddite Sensibilities' and the Future of Education | National Education Policy Center
LAUSD to offer online coronavirus school infection information - Los Angeles Times
China Crushes Freedom to Teach in Hong Kong | Diane Ravitch's blog
Ohio: Charters and Vouchers Sucked Half a Billion from Public Schools Last Year | Diane Ravitch's blog
Wrangling Kids' Distance Learning While Working From Home Is A Hellscape | HuffPost
A Love Letter to Black Parents in American Schools - Philly's 7th Ward
The Fourteenth: We all do better when we all do better. | Live Long and Prosper
American Plutocracy and The So-Called Objective Media | janresseger
The Everyday Exhaustion of Teaching During a Global Pandemic | gadflyonthewallblog
The Everyday Exhaustion of Teaching During a Global Pandemic | gadflyonthewallblog
The Everyday Exhaustion of Teaching During a Global Pandemic
Teaching is one of the few things in life that is not concerned with now.
It is essentially about the future.
We put all this time and energy into helping kids learn. Why?
Not so that they’ll be able to do anything today. But so that they’ll be able to do things tomorrow.
Sure they may be able to read better or solve math problems, but the reason we want them to know that isn’t so much about what they’ll do with it as adolescents. It’s how those skills will shape the people they grow up to be.
It’s an investment in their future and ours.
We take a bit of today and invest it in tomorrow.
And during a global pandemic that can be especially hard.
The west is on fire. Storms are threatening our southern coasts. Police brutality is out of control and bands of neofascist thugs are given free rein to beat and murder protesters. We’ve separated immigrant families and put their kids in cages. The President has lied to us, disparaged our troops, bragged about breaking countless laws and the government is powerless to stop him. Our political system and social fabric is coming apart at the seams. And everyone from the average Joe to the CONTINUE READING: The Everyday Exhaustion of Teaching During a Global Pandemic | gadflyonthewallblog
No Way To Treat A Scholar | Gary Rubinstein's Blog
No Way To Treat A Scholar | Gary Rubinstein's Blog
No Way To Treat A Scholar
Success Academy is the largest and most controversial charter network in New York City. With over 15,000 students, Success Academy is known for their high state test scores.
Though Success Academy has been in existence for about 14 years already, it has only been the last few years that people have begun to question whether the strategies that Success Academy uses to achieve these test results are immoral if not illegal.
Public data shows that very few students who begin at Success Academy actually graduate from Success Academy. The class of 2018 started with 72 students and only 16 graduated. The class of 2019 started with 80 students and only 27 graduated. The class of 2020 started with 350 students and only 98 graduated. Success Academy argues that this is normal attrition over 12 years, but one of the most jarring statistics I have ever seen about Success Academy is the attrition rate from students who are in the school at the beginning of their senior year but who do not graduate with their class 10 months later.
For the recent class of 2020 there were 114 seniors in the school in November 2019. But by graduation time in June there were only 98 graduating seniors.
In June I blogged about an interview I saw with Eva Moskowitz where she explained that some students need five years to graduate high school for various reasons. Success CONTINUE READING: No Way To Treat A Scholar | Gary Rubinstein's Blog
Teachers are Cautious, Fearful and Anxious to Teach in a Safe Environment: Will NYC Schools Open on September 21st? | Ed In The Apple
Teachers are Cautious, Fearful and Anxious to Teach in a Safe Environment: Will NYC Schools Open on September 21st?
You toss and turn, can’t fall asleep, why is the clock moving so slowly, tomorrow is the first day of school.
No matter whether you’re a first year, a fifth year, tenth year or a seasoned veteran that first day brings apprehension.
You go over classroom procedures, be welcoming, get those routines in place, make lists, say something nice to the principal, and on and on.
This year is one like no other. In a flash you moved from an ordinary day to remote instruction. From checking Facebook every few days, to texting friends to mastering Google Classroom and Zoom, from preparing for the State Standardized Tests to figuring out how the engage kids from afar, how to make sure they log on each and every day, online grade meetings; Town Halls with parents, and worrying, really worrying about yourself and your family.
Members of your church have lost parents and friends, you see too many people without masks, you miss the kids, and you worry about returning to school.
Will my school be “safe?” Will my kids come to school “healthy?” Can I catch COVID from my kids? from other adults in the school? Do I qualify for a medical accommodation?
I love my kids; I watched them fall further and further behind as the year CONTINUE READING: Teachers are Cautious, Fearful and Anxious to Teach in a Safe Environment: Will NYC Schools Open on September 21st? | Ed In The Apple