Latest News and Comment from Education

Tuesday, October 6, 2020

Carol Burris: Back to School—the Good, the Bad, the Ugly | Diane Ravitch's blog

 Carol Burris: Back to School—the Good, the Bad, the Ugly | Diane Ravitch's blog

Carol Burris: Back to School—the Good, the Bad, the Ugly


Carol Burris interviewed teachers, students and administrators about their experiences returning to school. As you might expect, she encountered a range of reactions.

The Network for Public Education is following 37 districts in New York, Pennsylvania, and Connecticut that reopened — either hybrid or full time. Of the 23 districts that responded to our inquiry regarding remote learners, the average rate of students who opted to not attend in person was 21 percent. Percentages ranged from 6 percent of the school population to 50 percent. Larger percentages of students of color are associated with higher remote rates.




Superintendent Joe Roy said he has been carefully examining patterns among the 25 percent of students whose families chose remote learning in his district in Bethlehem, Pa.
For the most part, they are students from affluent families who have academic supports for learning at home, or conversely, are from the least affluent homes. The families of his district’s students of color, many of whom work in local warehouses, were hit harder by the pandemic and, therefore, are more reticent to send their children back to school.
Roy’s neighboring district, Allentown, where 86 percent of the students are Black or Latinx, decided to go all virtual after a parent survey showed a majority were not ready for in-person learning.

One middle school teacher with whom I spoke, who requested anonymity, said he hopes that the schools open soon. Technology for remote learning has been an issue he told me — from hardware to poor connections.
“We are losing kids,” he said. “Our kindergarten enrollment is much lower than it has been in previous years. Of a class of 19, maybe 17 of my students log on to my early morning class. When I meet them later in the day, 12 or fewer show up. A 6½-hour day on Zoom is brutal. Some are keeping their cameras off, and others don’t respond. Many of my students can’t work independently.”


The challenges of in-person learning


Over half of the 37 districts we are following now bring some or all students back full time. Those schools that are using hybrid typically split students into two small cohorts that share the same teacher. Some bring those cohorts back three days one week and two days the following week. Others bring the cohorts back only two days a week — on consecutive days or staggered days with a fifth day when all stay home.




Although those I spoke with are glad to be back, school is certainly not the same as before the pandemic.

My youngest grandchildren returned to in-person school for only two days last week, and they were ecstatic. The schools did everything that was required—masks, social distancing, hand washing. Who knew that children loved school so much?

 Carol Burris: Back to School—the Good, the Bad, the Ugly | Diane Ravitch's blog

Going back to school: The good, the bad and the ugly - Network For Public Education - https://networkforpubliceducation.org/going-back-to-school-the-good-the-bad-and-the-ugly/ via @Network4pubEd


Going back to school: The good, the bad and the ugly - The Washington Post - https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2020/10/06/going-back-school-good-bad-ugly/

Parenting during the Pandemic | Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice

Parenting during the Pandemic | Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice

Parenting during the Pandemic




With the closure of U.S. schools in March of the infamous year of 2020 and the desperation-driven reform of distance learning, Moms have become teacher-in-charge. The cartoon below offers a glimpse of a traditional and familiar style of parenting. Less than a decade ago, a Yale Law professor categorized the Mom in this cartoon as exhibiting one historical patterns in rearing children.
In 2011, Amy Chua wrote an international best seller about her tough-love parenting of daughters in Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother. She must have laughed all the way to the bank at the fuss she kicked up about her tough-love parenting of daughters.  Time magazine reported that her Wall Street Journal op-ed garnered over a million readers and 5000 comments.
For educated, financially comfortable non-Tiger Moms, however, the thought of giving up “Baby Mozarts,” chants of “well done” to build self- esteem, and, yes, CONTINUE READING: Parenting during the Pandemic | Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice

What It’s Like to Be a Teacher in 2020 America - The New York Times

What It’s Like to Be a Teacher in 2020 America - The New York Times

What It’s Like to Be a Teacher in 2020 America
Teachers find themselves at the heart of the national crisis — responsible not just for children’s education and well-being, but also for essential child care as parents struggle to get back to work.



— A school committee in Littleton, Mass., debating how to source teachers for its classrooms in 1849
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More than 150 years ago, Massachusetts lawmakers came up with a radical idea: All young people should be educated. The commonwealth passed the country’s first law requiring that children go to school, then was left wondering where to find the teachers it needed to educate all those children.
A school committee in Littleton, Mass., came up with a simple solution. “God seems to have made woman peculiarly suited to guide and develop the infant mind,” the committee wrote, in 1849. Why pay men $20 a month when “a female could do the work more successfully at one third of the price.”

Not only did women appear uniquely fitted to the work of teaching; they also didn’t have competing professional opportunities that would drive wages up — or so the logic went. “The argument was, ‘Look, women will learn to be better mothers by practicing on other people’s children,’” said Richard Ingersoll, a sociologist at University of Pennsylvania. “Proponents made the case it was a win-win.”
As other states followed Massachusetts’s lead, and public schools opened across the country, they filled with female teachers. By the late 1880s, women made up 63 percent of the country’s teachers. The profession has remained female dominated ever since.
In 2017, women comprised more than three-quarters of public-school teachers, in a profession that remains stubbornly underpaid and undervalued.
In 2018, the starting salary for a public-school teacher averaged $38,000. In more than 1,000 districts, even the highest paid public-school teachers with advanced degrees and decades of experience earn less than $50,000. A 2010 report from McKinsey looked at the state of teaching in America compared with other developed CONTINUE READING: What It’s Like to Be a Teacher in 2020 America - The New York Times

Teacher Tom: The Proper and Moral Use of Power

Teacher Tom: The Proper and Moral Use of Power

The Proper and Moral Use of Power



Anthropologists tell us that our hunter-gatherer ancestors were not big fans of show-offs, nor did they take well to being bossed around. For 99 percent of our time on the planet, individuals who attempted to place themselves above others, who behaved arrogantly, who hoarded resources, or who attempted to exert control over others, were ridiculed, shamed, and if that didn't humble them, they were ousted from the band, left to fend for themselves in the big bad world. You see, these early humans knew about the dangers of placing undue power or resources into the hands of any one individual.

Today, of course, the opposite is true. In almost every area of life, we elevate the show-offs, believe that their claim to greater wealth than the rest of us is earned, and permit petty dictatorships to flourish from governments and board rooms to the ranks of shopping mall cops and, yes, even classrooms. When we cringe at the excesses of the powerful, we're revealing our hunter-gatherer heritage. When we protest, rebel, and even riot, we are following an urge as old as humanity. When we rail at the unfairness, the cruelty, and the crime of it all, we are "remembering" what we were meant to be and, whether we know it or not, we are mourning the fact that we've lost the thread and have handed the worst of us, the shameless and heartless, power over the best of us.

When I make these assertions, there are always those who will object. Certainly, the powerful aren't all bad. Some of CONTINUE READING: Teacher Tom: The Proper and Moral Use of Power

NYC Educator: The Tech Jaguar Catches Me

NYC Educator: The Tech Jaguar Catches Me

The Tech Jaguar Catches Me



 My last class was the biggest disaster I've experienced in decades. It seemed like anything that could go wrong, did. I wrote a multi-day lesson based on a great video on Apple TV plus. They have a series I've just discovered called Little America, and the second episode is called The Jaguar



The story is about a young woman, undocumented but absolutely fluent in English, who's clearly spent most of her life in the United States. She is fairly lost in the beginning of the show, but finds meaning and future by embracing squash, of all things. She falls into this almost entirely by coincidence. I thought it might be inspiring to my students, and I saw multiple aspects worth writing about. I figured I'd spend a few days working on this and make it into a project I could grade.

The first thing that went wrong was when I went to grab my lesson plan from the printer. I'd printed it out earlier, I thought, but it wasn't there. In fact, not only was it not there, but my printer was not even on. Pushing the power button didn't help at all. I finally figured out that the little Dyson hot/ cool thingie I have in my home classroom had blown the power.

My wife decided to help, and went to play with the circuit breakers. Unfortunately, she played with the wrong one, and my internet simply dropped dead. I lost my entire class for a few minutes until she switched it back on. My printer still wasn't working, though, so I grabbed my second laptop and pulled up the document. My printer was still out for some reason, but at least I'd be able to continue my lesson.

So there I was, ready to begin my first video segment. I had a few issues screen sharing that precluded my getting to Apple TV plus, but I finally figured it out. When I got there, though, it kept directing me to the next entry in Little America. I'd stupidly watched a few more episodes, and it didn't seem to want me to review ones I'd already seen. For CONTINUE READING: NYC Educator: The Tech Jaguar Catches Me




2020 Medley #22 – The Process of Science is Ongoing | Live Long and Prosper

2020 Medley #22 – The Process of Science is Ongoing | Live Long and Prosper 


2020 Medley #22 – The Process of Science is Ongoing

Science is a way of knowing

The National Center for Science Education (NCSE) provides resources for science teachers. A new series of lessons deals with the scientific method — the process of science. The aim is to give students experience in using the scientific method for real-life decision making. The first lesson (see below) deals with helping students overcome misconceptions…

1. MISCONCEPTION: Science is complete, absolute, and unchanging.

2. MISCONCEPTION: Science can answer all questions.

The responses to those misconceptions are 1) as we gather more information, scientific conclusions can change, and 2) there are some things we don’t know.

The value to correcting these misconceptions is obvious to anyone who has been living in the U.S. for the last nine months. The coronavirus pandemic has tested the scientific understanding of the American people — and their leaders — and found them wanting. The misconception that science is complete, absolute, and unchanging, has, for example, allowed millions of people to believe that wearing CONTINUE READING: 2020 Medley #22 – The Process of Science is Ongoing | Live Long and Prosper 

You’re on Your Own (But You Don’t Have to Be) – radical eyes for equity

You’re on Your Own (But You Don’t Have to Be) – radical eyes for equity

You’re on Your Own (But You Don’t Have to Be)




During the recent U.S. Senate debate in South Carolina, Jaime Harrison and Lindsey Graham seemed determined to one-up each other about their overcoming hardships in their lives.
Harrison, as a Black South Carolinian, sounded quite similar, in fact, to Republican senator Tim Scott—both sending strong messages about rugged individualism that can easily be viewed by those denying racism as proof anyone can make it in the U.S. with enough grit and the right mindset.
The U.S. has long loved rags-to-riches stories, ignoring both that these stories are compelling because they are incredibly rare and that these stories are often lies.
Rugged individualism is not just an idealistic mythology, but a deforming lie that helps mask that most success in the U.S. comes from privileges and connections linked to family wealth, race, and gender; wealth begets wealth just as privilege begets privilege.
Bootstrapping myths have existed nearly as long as the U.S., and seem grounded in a belief that without these stories to incentivize people, the country would crumble due to inherent human laziness.
Certainly the real and mythologized stories of the U.S. are mostly about exceptional individuals (almost all white men) and the power of competition CONTINUE READING: You’re on Your Own (But You Don’t Have to Be) – radical eyes for equity

NYC Public School Parents: Hearings tomorrow for Success Academy charter revisions & comments from District 2 CEC members demanding more transparency

NYC Public School Parents: Hearings tomorrow for Success Academy charter revisions & comments from District 2 CEC members demanding more transparency

Hearings tomorrow for Success Academy charter revisions & comments from District 2 CEC members demanding more transparency




Hearings on revisions to the Success Academy charter will be held by the SUNY charter committee tomorrow Tuesday Oct 6, 2020.  The meeting will start at 9 AM and will be webcast here.  The agenda is here and the proposed Success Academy revisions are included in a document entitled SUNY Charter Schools Institute Update.   
For more on these revisions, which include evidence of high attrition rates including elimination of all three originally planned Brooklyn HS , see the analysis by Brooke Parker here.  
Below is testimony submitted by six members of CEC2.
Testimony for the SUNY Charter Institute on 
Charter School Revision Application by Success Academies in 
Community School Districts 2, 3, 14 and 15

September 30, 2020
Thank you for the opportunity to submit this testimony.  We submit the below testimony as individual members of the Community Education Council District 2 (CECD2). Due to the timing of the charter revision notice, which was released after the September monthly meeting, the CECD2 is unable to issue an official statement. Thus while the majority of members signed this testimony it does not represent the official position of the CECD2.  
We are against the proposals for charter school revisions submitted by Success Academies Harlem 1, Bed-Stuy 2, Cobble Hill and Wiliamsbsurg.
  1. Our comments from 2019 are still relevant
In a comment letter submitted by Shino Tanikawa and Ushma Neil on October 3rd, 2019, appended to this comment letter, we listed three reasons for opposing the revision proposal submitted by SA Union Square, Hell’s Kitchen, Harlem I & III and Upper West.  We understand the group of schools included in the current revision proposals are not the same but the substance of the 2019 comments remains very much relevant. 
1.a. Academic year and proposal timeline
Nowhere on the 2-page notice sent by the NYC Department of Education is there indication of the academic year for which the proposal is submitted.  We can only hope that this is for the academic year 2021-2022, since the current year is already underway, even if SA has announced 100% remote learning for all its students. 
Please ensure all future notices clearly state the timeline of the proposal and the academic year for which the proposal is submitted. 
1.b. Organizational & building capacity data
Below is the Enrollment, Capacity and Utilization Report data from December 2019, with grade spans served in each building added (we are making assumptions since grade CONTINUE READING: NYC Public School Parents: Hearings tomorrow for Success Academy charter revisions & comments from District 2 CEC members demanding more transparency

Tuesday @ 2: School Nutrition Town Hall webinar + CNP Operational Guidance FAQs: Nutrition (CA Dept of Education)

September 22, 2020 Tuesday at 2 Webinar - Nutrition (CA Dept of Education)

Tuesday @ 2: School Nutrition Town Hall webinar 




CNP Operational Guidance FAQs - Nutrition (CA Dept of Education) https://www.cde.ca.gov/ls/nu/cnpoperationalguidfaqs.asp

USDA Summer Meal Claiming Flexibility - Nutrition (CA Dept of Education) https://www.cde.ca.gov/ls/nu/usdasummermealclaimflex.asp

The California Department of Education (CDE) Nutrition Services Division (NSD) hosted the tenth Tuesday @ 2: School Nutrition Town Hall webinar on September 22, 2020 for school food service operators, chief business officials, and community partners to listen to a discussion on best practices in meal service as schools start the 2020–21 school year while mitigating COVID-19.
Panelists included speakers from North Monterey County Unified School District (USD), Covina Valley USD, Rocklin USD, and Santa Clarita Valley School Food Service Agency Joint Purchasing Agreement. The panelists discussed strategies for serving meals to reach their distance learning students and rebuild program participation.

The next Tuesday @ 2: School Nutrition Town Hall webinar will be held on Tuesday, October 6, 2020 at 2 p.m. Join the Tuesday @ 2: School Nutrition Town Hall WebinarExternal link opens in new window or tab..
Password: 182792
Contact Information
If you have any questions regarding this subject, please contact Julie BoarerPitchford, Nutrition Education Consultant, by phone at 916-322-1563 or by email at jboarerpitchford@cde.ca.gov.
Questions:   Nutrition Services Division | 800-952-5609

September 22, 2020 Tuesday at 2 Webinar - Nutrition (CA Dept of Education)

NYC Educator: UFT Executive Board October 5, 2020--The Fun Never Stops

NYC Educator: UFT Executive Board October 5, 2020--The Fun Never Stops

UFT Executive Board October 5, 2020--The Fun Never Stops




5:50 Roll Call



Minutes--Approved

UFT Secretary LeRoy Barr--Welcomes us.

UFT President Michael Mulgrew--Asks for moment of silence for Ruth Greenburg, guidance counselor and special ed. pioneer. 

Busy weekend--all schools opened, and now 91 schools and 18 sites going remote. Serious issue. Hoping for fewer last minute dramas. Plan says if zip code goes over 3% they have to do heavy testing, but city was slow to react. Virus emerging in certain communities and cause for concern. There should be quicker testing. After over a week, city tested only 25 schools and not in compliance.

Mayor made right decision. Only one of those schools was in quarantine. Doctors said it was only a matter of time before these schools tested positive. Mayor made right call. Asking state for permission was rather odd, but there was a meeting today, governor, mayor and UFT. Decided to start tomorrow.

Looking at other zip codes. City has to increase testing capacity. We need to increase testing when zip hits three, not 7 day average. 

Some schools doing very well. Ready for any emergency. Other places have challenges. We don't have great leadership in every building, but that will always be a problem in a district of our size.

Mandated monitoring--there will be a clarifying document saying if you want to be in a school building, testing is mandated. You will have to sign consent form or go home. Constant problems with city before they get things better. They now understand with testing and PPE. Next challenge, hopefully, won't be so difficult. 

Testing has to happen every day. Randomization will hopefully be easy and clear as possible. With this virus moving, we need to monitor closely, increase testing, and follow protocols.

National--It's all about the election. Our UFT retirees are doing immense work on FL and elsewhere. NYSUT organizing phone banks for PA. We'll see where this thing goes. Election will take twists and turns no one could imagine. Debate, COVID, all crazy and unprecedented. We know how important this election is. Economy completely wrecked. We need help for city and state. Will take years, won't be easy. 

Staffing problems difficult. Had kept SBO programs shut--didn't want them before city admitted how much staff was needed. We have short term agreement for pay increases for subs who stay. People redeployed from central walk into schools and announce they don't teach.

Live instruction problematic because of staffing. Principals ask for live and remote together. Class sizes are too large. Starting to move through operational complaints. Hope there CONTINUE READING: NYC Educator: UFT Executive Board October 5, 2020--The Fun Never Stops

A NEVER ENDING STREAM OF CONFUSION – Dad Gone Wild

A NEVER ENDING STREAM OF CONFUSION – Dad Gone Wild

A NEVER ENDING STREAM OF CONFUSION


“The good news for the Washington Federals is they do not have a quarterback controversy. The bad news is they do not have a quarterback.”― Jeff Pearlman, Football for a Buck: The Crazy Rise and Crazier Demise of the USFL
On Friday, after I first flipped through the recently released CREDO study focusing on learning loss, I fully intended to spend the weekend reading through it and painstakingly taking notes. After all, this is the study that Tennessee’s Commissioner of Education Penny Schwinn had cited as a basis for her dire warnings about a pending crash in proficiency scores.
Luckily, I read teacher Peter Greene’s piece first. Greene reminded me of why the CREDO study is…he says baloney…I say, bullshit. I consider it such because it’s rooted in a made-up measurement that attempts to standardized something that can not be standardized. Per Greene,
Second, you know that this “report” is baloney because it leans on that great imaginary measure, the “days of learning.” Students during the pandemic will “lose” X number of days of learning. “Days of learning” is actually a measure that CREDO made up themselves, based on some “research” in a 2012 paper by Erik Hanushek, Paul Peterson, and Ludger Woessmann. And if “days of learning” seems like a bizarro world way to measure of education (Which days? Days in September? Days in March? Tuesdays? Instructional days, or testing days, or that day we spent the CONTINUE READING: A NEVER ENDING STREAM OF CONFUSION – Dad Gone Wild

A VERY BUSY DAY Larry Ferlazzo's Websites of the Day... The latest news and resources in education since 2007

Larry Ferlazzo's Websites of the Day... | The latest news and resources in education since 2007


A VERY BUSY DAY
Larry Ferlazzo's Websites of the Day...
The latest news and resources in education since 2007
 
 

Big Education Ape: THIS WEEK IN EDUCATION Larry Ferlazzo's Websites of the Day... The latest news and resources in education since 2007 - http://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2020/10/this-week-in-education-larry-ferlazzos.html


Tuesday’s Must-Read Articles & Must-Watch Videos On School Reopening
moritz320 / Pixabay Here are new additions to THE BEST POSTS PREDICTING WHAT SCHOOLS WILL LOOK LIKE IN THE FALL : Now Taking the Stage in the Pandemic: The School Nurse is from The NY Times. N.Y.C. Closes Some Schools … Again is from The NY Times. What It’s Like to Be a Teacher in 2020 America is from The NY Times.
“Strategies for Implementing Online Culturally Responsive Teaching”
Strategies for Implementing Online Culturally Responsive Teaching is the headline of my latest Education Week Teacher column. Four educators offer suggestions on how to provide online culturally responsive teaching, including by providing choice and opportunities for self-reflection. Here are some excerpts:
Five Helpful Resources For Teaching About The Presidential Election
AnnaliseArt / Pixabay Here are new additions to THE BEST RESOURCES FOR TEACHING ABOUT THE 2020 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION : Teaching Resources for the 2020 US Election is from Facing History. The Election Collection is from PBS. Civics Education Resource Site is from Illinois Civics. Is the Election Still a Teachable Moment? is from Ed Week.
Everything You Wanted To Know About Field Trips (Both “Virtual” & “Real”) But Were Afraid To Ask
AzamKamolov / Pixabay I have over 2,100 frequently revised and updated “Best” lists on just about every subject imaginable, and you can find them listed three different ways in three different places (see Three Accessible Ways To Search For & Find My “Best” Lists ). I’m starting to publish a series where each day I will highlight the “Best” lists in a separate category. Today, it’s on Field Trips
Ed Tech Digest
Nine years ago, in another somewhat futile attempt to reduce the backlog of resources I want to share, I began this occasional “” post where I share three or four links I think are particularly useful and related to…ed tech, including some Web 2.0 apps. You might also be interested in THE BEST ED TECH RESOURCES OF 2020 – PART ONE , as well as checking out all my edtech resources . Here are this w
Results Of Weekly “Self-Assessments” Done By Members Of “Leadership Teams” In Each Of My Classes
I’ve previously posted about the important of “Leadership Teams” in each of the five classes I’m teaching this year via full time distance learning, and it’s definitely one of the strategies I’ll be carrying with me whenever we return to the physical classroom (I’ve also previously shared about other surveys I use – see Here Are Student Responses To Surveys I Used One-Month Into Full-Time Virtual
My Latest BAM! Radio Show Is On “Avoiding the Most Common Mistakes When Teaching English Language Learners On-site and Virtually”
My latest ten-minute BAM! Radio Show is on “ Avoiding the Most Common Mistakes When Teaching English Language Learners On-site and Virtually. ” I’m joined in the conversation by Altagracia (Grace) H. Delgado, Dr. Denita Harris, Marina Rodriguez and Sarah Said, who have also all contributed 

Larry Ferlazzo's Websites of the Day... | The latest news and resources in education since 2007