Thursday, September 17, 2020
What Does a “Safe Return” to School Look Like? Ask Teacher Unions. - In These Times
Online Charter Schools No Solution in a Pandemic - LA Progressive
NYC Public School Parents: Today's "Talk out of School" on PreK reopening and how to improve online learning
NANCY BAILEY: Betsy DeVos and the Separation of Church and State During Covid-19
All the Options for Schooling Are Bad—But We Have to Choose Safety - In These Times
Principals, I Am Not Your Magical Negro - Philly's 7th Ward
Mozert v. Hawkins County Public Schools (The Tale of the Troubling Textbook) - Part One | Blue Cereal Education
It's An Elephant, Dammit!
New CDC Guidance for Reopening Schools Creates Color-Coded Risk Scale | US News -
New CDC Guidance for Reopening Schools Creates Color-Coded Risk Scale | US News
New CDC Guidance for Reopening Schools Creates Color-Coded Risk Scale
One early analysis of the CDC guidance suggests nearly 90% of people in the U.S. live in counties that fall into the two highest of five risk categories for reopening schools.
THE CENTERS FOR DISEASE Control and Prevention issued new guidance Wednesday for schools seeking to open for in-person learning, using various community infection rates and school safety thresholds to create a five-tiered color-coded risk scale.
The guidance, which state education chiefs, school district superintendents, principals, teachers and others have been clamoring for since the spring, comes more than a month after millions of children, mostly across the South, returned to schools – some in districts with positive rates upward of 20% and without requirements for students and staff to wear masks.
According to at least one early analysis of the CDC guidance, nearly 90% of people in the U.S. live in counties that fall into the two highest risk categories for reopening schools. The release of the guidance, which recommends aggressive thresholds, reignited a wave of criticism over the lack of federal guidance and left many wondering how many schools would have decided not to reopen for in-person learning if officials had this guidance earlier
"There is no easy answer or single indicator," the CDC guidance states. "Many variables must be considered."
CDC recommends the use of three indicators, including two measures of community burden – the number of new cases per 100,000 persons within the last 14 days and the percentage of tests that are positive during the last 14 days – as well as one self-assessed measure of schools' ability to adhere to various mitigation strategies.
Those strategies could be things like the correct use of masks, social distancing, hand hygiene, cleaning and disinfection and contact tracing in collaboration with local health departments.
"These key mitigation strategies should be implemented to the largest extent possible," the CDC guidance states. "When mitigation strategies are consistently and correctly used, the risk of spread within the school environment and the surrounding community is decreased."
The guidance also emphasizes that local officials take additional factors into consideration, such as the extent to which mitigation strategies are adhered to in the broader community.
If a school districts falls into the "medium," "higher" or "highest" risk of transmission categories, it CONTINUE READING: New CDC Guidance for Reopening Schools Creates Color-Coded Risk Scale | US News
Private and Charter Schools Received Six Times as Much COVID Funding As Public Schools | Diane Ravitch's blog
Teacher Tom: What Are We Going to Do?
Teacher Tom: What Are We Going to Do?
What Are We Going to Do?
CURMUDGUCATION: Is Betsy DeVos Flip-Flopping?
But with the advent of the pandemic, DeVos seemingly shifted gears, going so far as to threaten public schools with funding loss if they don't open up right away. And here she was in Grand Rapids, praising a private school that opened up and sadly castigating public schools that haven't.
Florida Teacher: The State Lied to Me | Diane Ravitch's blog
How Centrist Democrats Paved the Way for Betsy DeVos – Have You Heard
How Centrist Democrats Paved the Way for Betsy DeVos – Have You Heard
How Centrist Democrats Paved the Way for Betsy DeVos
A consensus between Republicans and centrist Democrats around charter schools has been at the very center of education policy for the past three decades. Guest David Menefee-Libey joins us to talk about the formation of the charter school “treaty,” why it unraveled and what happens next.
Complete transcript of the episode is here. The financial support of listeners like you keeps this podcast going. Subscribe on Patreon or donate on PayPal.
Jennifer and Jack’s forthcoming book A Wolf at the Schoolhouse Door: The Dismantling of Public Education and the Future of School, is now available for preorder!
How Centrist Democrats Paved the Way for Betsy DeVos – Have You Heard
NYC Educator: Day One
Day One
I've spent hours, days, weeks and months dreading September. There were so many issues. As chapter leader, I don't feel like I've had a day off since June. How in the hell were we going to open the schools?
No one really knew. De Blasio's ridiculous plan fell apart, as anyone who gave it a cursory examination could have predicted. I remain amazed that he and Carranza could have stood behind such a senseless plan for a moment, let alone many months.
We have to be really careful selecting the next mayor. Full disclosure--I worked for and contributed to Bill de Blasio. I attended his inauguration. We're gonna need a mayor who will rid Tweed of Bloomberg's ghost. We're gonna need a mayor who will not continue to ignore the miserable state of our school facilities.
We can't go through this again. Once is more than enough.
Then there's COVID, of course. My school is on the list of the dreaded 55. As far as I, or anyone in my school administration can tell, the only reported COVID case comes from a person who self-reported before the 8th and hasn't been in the building since March. It's entirely believable to me that the DOE could screw up something like that, because incompetence is their CONTINUE READING: NYC Educator: Day One
Education Matters: Set up to fail
In the last few days, I have read about on Facebook or heard from several how they too felt set up to fail.
No books or the right materials.
No access to a printer, or a working one anyways.
12 hours of work over the weekend and still not caught up.
They spent their planning calling parents of students who hadn't shown up or shown much interest if they did.
Crazy big Duval homeroom classes.
Crazy big brick and mortar ones too.
Way too much to do, and not nearly enough time to do. No slack is given, expectations higher than ever.
Then there is that pesky pandemic too. It's almost like the district office is unaware. You would think they CONTINUE READING: Education Matters: Set up to fail