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Showing posts with label SURVEY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SURVEY. Show all posts

Monday, May 24, 2021

Seattle Schools Community Forum: SPS Continues Its Long History of Rushed Surveys; Is OSPI Getting the Real Story?

Seattle Schools Community Forum: SPS Continues Its Long History of Rushed Surveys; Is OSPI Getting the Real Story?
SPS Continues Its Long History of Rushed Surveys; Is OSPI Getting the Real Story?


 Seattle Schools, like all school districts in Washington State, are required to submit a reopening plan to OSPI (Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction). 

In the Board agenda for the May 19th, we see SPS’ plan. 

There is a survey attached for parents; I have no idea how many parents know about it and are weighing in but considering the district gave it about a week, I feel confident in saying they are not particularly interested in parental input.  You have until Tuesday noon to give input. I can say it’s quite the word salad and it’s complete bullshit to submit it to OSPI and say “yes, we asked for input.” 

SPS Academic and Student Well-Being Recovery Plan

Wednesday, May 26, 2021 4:30 PM-6:00 PM

Meeting to be held remotely

By SPSTV Broadcast and YouTube Streaming (See details below) By Teleconference: 206-800-4125 (Conference ID: 279 213 332#)

What does this Reopening Plan say?

- It’s a “model of Listen, Act, Deliver.” Sure.

- It’s “a comprehensive plan for the well-being of students” in a “Culture of CONTINUE READING: Seattle Schools Community Forum: SPS Continues Its Long History of Rushed Surveys; Is OSPI Getting the Real Story?

Sunday, May 16, 2021

Grumpy Old Teacher – Generations of public investment in a quality public education system should not be thrown away

Grumpy Old Teacher – Generations of public investment in a quality public education system should not be thrown away
Decisions, Decisions–What’s a School District to Do?


disney peter pan Disneyedit indianajones •
Let’s survey the audience.

Even as we close out the Covid school year, districts are wrestling with deciding how to open schools in August. What mitigation measures should they keep in place? What should they drop? What does the community want? Parents? Students? Teachers and staff?

Grumpy Old Teacher’s (GOT) district has put a survey online to gather stakeholder input. (Stakeholder is a fancy word that means anyone whose life is affected by what takes place in the city’s schools. Employees, parents, students, obviously. But it also includes community organizations, local businesses who depend upon the school for customers, people who live around a school, etc.) You can find the survey here.

If you’re expecting a bash post, you will be disappointed. GOT is going to CONTINUE READING: Grumpy Old Teacher – Generations of public investment in a quality public education system should not be thrown away

Wednesday, March 31, 2021

Please Complete This Survey on Opting Out of Standardized Testing | Diane Ravitch's blog

Please Complete This Survey on Opting Out of Standardized Testing | Diane Ravitch's blog
Please Complete This Survey on Opting Out of Standardized Testing



Researchers at Teachers College, Columbia University, are conducting a survey on opting out of standardized tests. You can help them by completing their survey.

I am writing to ask for your help in promoting the 2021 National Survey on Opting Out. Thanks again for all your feedback and help with our research project.

Over the past five years, our research team at Teachers College, Columbia University has conducted a series of studies of the Opt Out movement. Our studies are not associated with any grant or other funding from either public or private sources. Therefore, our analysis is completely independent.

Our main project is the National Survey on Opting Out, which we conducted twice in 2016 and 2018. The purpose of the Survey is to understand who is involved in the Opt Out movement and why. We define involvement in broad terms to include parents who opt their children out of standardized testing and others who sympathize with the Opt Out movement. The survey is informed by interviews and conversations we had with activists around the country (e.g., Colorado, Florida, Indiana, Massachusetts, Texas, and Washington). For New York, we relied on extensive interviews conducted by David Hursh and Bob Lingard; among others they interviewed Jeanette Deutermann and Lisa Rudley.

We would appreciate your help in promoting the 2021 National Survey on Opting Out. Feel free to share the link with your contacts and on social media. We are active on social media, with updates about the study:  
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/OptOutNtlSurvey
Twitter: @OptOutNtlSurvey

The survey is anonymous and responses are confidential. The survey is shorter than last time and should take you approximately 15 minutes to complete.

Link: https://tccolumbia.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_6i2cmIQ2O3L9ggu

Thank you in advance for your support!

Oren Pizmony-Levy & Nancy Green Saraisky

—-
Oren Pizmony-Levy, PhD
Associate Professor & Program Director 
International & Comparative Education Program
Department of International and Transcultural Studies
Teachers College, Columbia University
525 West 120th Street
370 Grace Dodge Hall
Box 55
New York, NY 10027

Tel (office): 212-678-3180

Email: pizmony-levy@tc.columbia.edu
Website: http://orenpizmonylevy.com/



Thursday, March 25, 2021

Tim Slekar: A Survey of Teachers | Diane Ravitch's blog

Tim Slekar: A Survey of Teachers | Diane Ravitch's blog
Tim Slekar: A Survey of Teachers




If you are a teacher, you are invited to participate in a survey.

Tim Slekar is writing a book about teachers and their working conditions. He would be grateful to teachers who agree to take the attached survey and return it to him. His email is Timslekar@gmail.com



Friday, March 5, 2021

NYC Public School Parents: NYC DOE releases unreliable class size data three months late; please take our survey today!!

NYC Public School Parents: NYC DOE releases unreliable class size data three months late; please take our survey today!!
NYC DOE releases unreliable class size data three months late; please take our survey today!!



NYC parents, teachers and administrators please take our five-minute class size survey here. I'll explain why:

By law, the DOE is supposed to report on class sizes twice a year, the first time on Nov. 15 and then again on Feb. 15. We had heard from parents of egregiously large classes sizes this fall for many students engaged in remote learning of sixty students or even more, either full-time or part-time. See articles in NY PostWSJ and Gothamist about this issue. 

So we realized it would be important for the DOE to report on disaggregated class sizes, i.e. in-person, vs. full-time remote, vs. part-time remote for blended learning students. On Oct. 28, Council Member Mark Treyger, chair of the Education Committee sent a letter to DOE, urging them to make the legal deadline of Nov. 15 and provide the disaggregated data. His letter is here which a Chalkbeat article reported on. 

At a press conference on Oct. 26, Chancellor Carranza said that schools had been reporting attendance to DOE in "literally three buckets of attendance every single day": in-person classes, remote blended learning classes, and full-time remote classes. So reporting the class size data in these three separate categories should not have been difficult CONTINUE READING: NYC Public School Parents: NYC DOE releases unreliable class size data three months late; please take our survey today!!

Friday, February 12, 2021

Biden School Reopening Plan Now Has a Survey | deutsch29: Mercedes Schneider's Blog

Biden School Reopening Plan Now Has a Survey | deutsch29: Mercedes Schneider's Blog
Biden School Reopening Plan Now Has a Survey



In December 2020, President Biden pledged to reopen most schools in his first 100 days in office– dependent upon sufficient resources to protect students and staff during the Coronavirus pandemic.

Months later, in February 2021, the Biden administration is catching flack for a seriously modified version of that pledge– 51 percent of K-8 schools open at least one day per week– which just goes to show that opening schools is complicated. 

Before making promises about opening schools ASAP, it is best to first find out the status of in-person learning nationwide and from that construct an informed plan for moving forward.

To that end, it seems that the US Dept of Ed (USDOE) does (now) have a plan to begin informing its plan, so to speak, which it announced in this February 05, 2021, press release:

ED Announces National Survey to Gather Critical Data on School Reopening

To help safely reopen America’s schools and promote educational equity, the Institute of Education Sciences (IES) at the U.S. Department of Education today announced the largest representative and highest-quality effort yet to gather vital data on the impact of COVID-19 on students and the status of in-person learning.

Currently, there is not enough data to understand the status of school re-opening and how students are learning nationwide. This project, known as the “NAEP 2021 School Survey,” will collect high-quality data from a nationally and state-representative sample.

Today’s announcement follows President Biden’s Jan. 21 Executive Order to ensure CONTINUE READING: Biden School Reopening Plan Now Has a Survey | deutsch29: Mercedes Schneider's Blog


Friday, January 29, 2021

For Data Privacy Day — take our Survey: online apps used by districts and their privacy provisions | Parent Coalition for Student Privacy

For Data Privacy Day — take our Survey: online apps used by districts and their privacy provisions | Parent Coalition for Student Privacy
FOR DATA PRIVACY DAY — TAKE OUR SURVEY: ONLINE APPS USED BY DISTRICTS AND THEIR PRIVACY PROVISIONS



Today, January 28th is Data Privacy Day, the international annual day of action and awareness to promote the privacy of our personal data.

The Parent Coalition for Student Privacy is researching which ed tech apps schools are asking students to use and whether they are sufficiently protective of children’s privacy.

Since the pandemic hit, school districts across the nation have purchased many commercially-produced online apps and programs to implement remote learning. Even before last spring, districts had been using a large number of programs, many of which have access to personal student information. Many of these apps collect and use personal student data in ways that are not transparent and we do not understand.

More recently, this past December, the FBI, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), and the Multi-State Information Sharing and Analysis Center (MS-ISAC) warned about “malicious cyber actors … targeting kindergarten through twelfth grade (K-12) educational institutions, leading to ransomware attacks, the theft of data, and the disruption of distance learning services.” This follows another warning the FBI put out in 2018 that the use of ed tech apps in schools posed a serious threat to children’s privacy and safety.

Please let us know what online apps and programs your district or school is using, and check to see if they have been transparent about their privacy policies. Your name and district will be kept confidential.

Click here to take the survey.

On Data Privacy Day and every day, it is important to protect children’s information. Below are a few resources to help.

The 2019 State Student Privacy Report Card lists and rates state laws based on Transparency, Parental and Student Rights; Limitations on Commercial Use of Data; Data Security Requirements; and Oversight, Enforcement, and Penalties for Violations. https://studentprivacymatters.org/map/map.html

Federal Laws enabling parents to protect their Children’s Privacy: FERPA, PPRA and COPPA https://studentprivacymatters.org/ferpa_ppra_coppa/ . Read how FERPA was weakened here and how to request to inspect your child’s education record maintained by your school or the state here.

Parent Toolkit for Student Privacy https://www.studentprivacymatters.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/Parent-Toolkit-for-Student-Privacy.pdf

Top 10 back to school privacy tips and resources https://studentprivacymatters.org/top-10-back-to-school-student-privacy-tips-and-resources-for-parents/

Saturday, December 26, 2020

SURVEY: BRUCE LESLEY WANTS TO KNOW What's your priority for children for 2021? - First Focus Campaign for Children

Children's Action Network - First Focus Campaign for Children
SURVEY: BRUCE LESLEY WANTS TO KNOW
What's your priority for children for 2021?



Ensuring all children have health coverage

Increasing access to quality child care and early childhood programs

Designating a White House Office of Children to oversee children’s issues

Ending the school-to-prison pipeline and placing more counselors in schools

Providing greater budget transparency on children’s issues

Cutting child poverty rates in half within the decade

Ensuring racial equity for children’s outcomes

Prioritizing well-being and legal protections for immigrant youth


Tuesday, December 22, 2020

Survey: Oklahoma educators 'overwhelmed' and 'scared' - NONDOC

Survey: Oklahoma educators 'overwhelmed' and 'scared'
Survey: Oklahoma educators ‘overwhelmed’ and ‘scared’




In a recent survey, the Oklahoma Education Association asked more than 3,100 teachers, support professionals and administrators to use one word to describe their current feelings about their job. Words like “stressed,” “overwhelmed,” and “scared” landed in the top 10.

The survey (embedded below) was conducted online Dec. 1 through Dec. 14, and it asked respondents to express their feelings on issues like the pandemic in general, school safety, student learning and how school employees are doing. A total of 3,580 Oklahoma educators completed the survey, with 3,147 responses deemed to be valid. The survey took about 30 minutes to complete and had a 54 percent completion rate, with responses coming from 230 communities.

“As you’ll see in the survey, the number one concern of our members has been the educational progress of our students,” OEA President Alicia Priest said during a Monday press conference announcing the survey results. “However, when the governor released a video last week where blame was placed on OEA and educators for the current state of fear regarding COVID-19 in Oklahoma, or when he declared that all schools must return CONTINUE READING: Survey: Oklahoma educators 'overwhelmed' and 'scared'

Saturday, December 19, 2020

2017–19 Biennial CA Healthy Kids Survey Results - Year 2020 (CA Dept of Education)

2017–19 Biennial CA Healthy Kids Survey Results - Year 2020 (CA Dept of Education)
State Superintendent Tony Thurmond Announces Results of
2017–19 Biennial Statewide California Healthy Kids Survey



Big Education Ape: SSPI TONY THURMOND: STUFF THIS WEEK FROM THE CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION - http://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2020/12/sspi-tony-thurmond-stuff-this-week-from.html

SACRAMENTO—State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond announced results today from the 2017–19 Biennial California Healthy Kids Survey (CHKS), one of the largest statewide surveys in the country. Covering a period prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, the survey reflects student attitudes regarding social-emotional wellness, health risk behaviors, and overall connectedness to school that can impact school climate, pupil engagement, and academic achievement.

Although the data does not reflect student attitudes since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, the results spotlight trends school leaders can use to direct resources to support student wellness.

“This survey gives educational leaders valuable insight about critical issues students were facing before the COVID-19 public health crisis exacerbated impacts on student wellness,” said Thurmond. “School leaders can compare these findings with the most current, real-time data they gather at the local level to identify important trends that have emerged since the onset of the coronavirus. Knowing if students are being bullied, struggling with depression, participating in high-risk behaviors, or feeling unsafe is vital information that can help school leaders make decisions and implement strategies that will facilitate improvement for not only students but the entire school community.”

The CHKS has been conducted every two years since 1985. The California Department of Education (CDE) and the California Department of Health Care Services (DHCS) coordinated the survey of a representative, random sample of seventh, ninth, and eleventh graders throughout the state, and approximately 70 percent of school districts conducted the survey in their local schools.

Among the most positive findings: Alcohol use and cigarette smoking have been steadily declining since 2011–13. Binge drinking is now only reported by 4% of ninth graders and 9% of eleventh graders—less than half the level six years ago. Cigarette smoking is down to 2% in high school.

There were declines in other areas that signal additional supports are needed; perceived school safety dropped markedly in all grades to the lowest rates in the last six years. Only 54% felt safe or very safe at school, compared to 61% in 2015–17. The findings also showed reports of experiencing chronic sadness or hopelessness rose in all three grades, to 30% in seventh grade, 33% in ninth, and 37% in eleventh, the highest levels reported in the past six years—and before the pandemic.

“The students who reported feeling hopeless or sad when they participated in the survey may be grappling with those issues at more intense levels now due to the disruption caused by the coronavirus, social and racial unrest, and increased trauma,” Thurmond said. “Even though some schools are physically closed, it is imperative that students have access to school-based mental health services and support and that school staff do what they can to maintain connections with students during this challenging time.”

The State Superintendent and the CDE have made addressing social emotional health and student mental health an urgent priority in recent months. School districts are encouraged to use the remaining $2.1 billion in CARES Act funding available to schools to prioritize social emotional learning and mental health programs for students.

On Monday, the CDE hosted its latest interactive professional development webinar for educatorsExternal link opens in new window or tab., designed to provide resources and strategies for building supportive connections with students in the virtual world across K–12 grade levels.

In June, the State Superintendent began convening leaders from the California Association of School Counselors, the California Association of School Psychologists, the California Association of School Social Workers, and the California Alliance of Child and Family Services to begin identifying additional supports and resources for students in need.

The CDE also has numerous resources for educators, families, and students, including resources for students in crisisstudents experiencing homelessness, and foster youth. CDE’s guidance for the safe reopening of schools also addresses ways to support the mental health and well-being of all.

Additionally, the CDE and DHCS are collaborating under Project Cal-Well, a federally funded mental health project, to increase mental health awareness and expand access to student mental health services. Project Cal-Well provides free Youth Mental Health First Aid (YMHFA) trainings to school and district staff at no cost. More information about Project Cal-Well and the YMHFA trainings is available on the CDE Project Cal-Well web page.

The full 2017–19 Biennial State CHKS reportExternal link opens in new window or tab. (PDF) is available on the CalSCHLS websiteExternal link opens in new window or tab., along with individual school district reports. The CalSCHLS Data DashboardExternal link opens in new window or tab. also provides online graphical access to the results for the state as a whole and for 10 demographic subgroups of students.

# # # #

Tony Thurmond — State Superintendent of Public Instruction
Communications Division, Room 5602, 916-319-0818, Fax 916-319-0100


Tuesday, November 3, 2020

NANCY BAILEY: PDK Gallup Polls and The Election: The Nation Needs Great Teachers!

PDK Gallup Polls and The Election: The Nation Needs Great Teachers!
PDK Gallup Polls and The Election: The Nation Needs Great Teachers!




If V.P. Joe Biden is elected, there will be a chance for public education to survive and teachers to get the support they need to serve America’s children. Reelect President Trump, and chances are public schools may end. Teachers who have been prepared to teach may leave the field for good.

Gallup Polls show how American’s attitudes have changed and remained the same when it comes to public schools over the years. Saving education in America depends on creating a professional teaching workforce.

The pandemic has made it clear that the country relies on its teachers to help students learn. Even before Covid-19 parents from both parties realized this. Teachers have risen to the occasion during the pandemic with little help from Education Secretary Betsy DeVos or President Trump.

President Trump and his followers are hostile towards public schooling, teachers, and the teacher’s union. I cannot remember President Trump ever visiting a public school. He has been to a private religious school. 

They call public schools “government schools,” but the public owns their schools, or CONTINUE READING: PDK Gallup Polls and The Election: The Nation Needs Great Teachers!



CURMUDGUCATION: Survey: Pandemic Effects on Early Childhood Education

CURMUDGUCATION: Survey: Pandemic Effects on Early Childhood Education
Survey: Pandemic Effects on Early Childhood Education




Defending the Early Years is an organization whose stated mission “is to work for a just, equitable, and quality early childhood education for every young child, by informing educators, administrators, and parents about how children develop and learn best and advocating for the active, playful, experiential approaches to learning informed by child development theory and evidence-based research.” 

DEY has done some valuable advocacy work around the issues of too-early academic instruction and the introduction of on-line pre-school (yes, that’s really a thing). This summer they conducted a survey looking at the effects of pandemic education, and they’ve just released the results.

Links to the survey were sent out through the organization’s social media accounts, so there is some self-selected tilt to the respondents, but since that tilt is likely to be toward people who care about early childhood education (and who have an internet connection), these results are still worth looking at.

The respondents are pretty evenly split between parents and teachers of children between 0 and 8 years. with a smaller group who are both.

A third of both parents and teachers were not working, with more than a third working full time CONTINUE READING: 
CURMUDGUCATION: Survey: Pandemic Effects on Early Childhood Education

Saturday, October 24, 2020

NYC Public School Parents: Do you know where your child's personal data is? Please fill out our survey on your school's use of digital apps -

NYC Public School Parents: Do you know where your child's personal data is? Please fill out our survey on your school's use of digital apps -
Do you know where your child's personal data is?
Please fill out our survey on your school's use of digital apps



Class Size Matters, NY Allies for Public Education, and the Parent Coalition for Student Privacy would like to know which online apps or programs are being employed by schools throughout New York state, and whether they are sufficiently protective of children's privacy. We are asking parents and teachers to take our survey here, to let us know what apps or programs your schools are using.

Since the pandemic hit, districts across New York State have purchased many commercially-produced online apps and digital programs to implement remote learning. Even before last spring, schools had been using a large number of programs, many of which collect and use personal student information. In NYC alone, more than 75 commercially available online programs have been acquired for teachers to assign to their students, and "The DOE has informed schools that for SY 2020-21, they must have a shared, inclusive and digital curriculum in all core subject areas," according to the UFT.

Many of these digital apps collect and use personal student data in ways we do not understand. In some cases, the publicly available privacy policies of these vendors are NOT sufficiently protective and do not comply with the NY state student privacy law, Education Law 2D, which was passed in 2014.  

Among other things, this law and its regulations adopted in Jan. 2020 require that every contract with a vendor with access to personal student data must have a separate Parent Bill of Rights [PBOR], which specifies how the data will be protected and how parents can access the data and challenge it if necessary.

Each of these separate Parent Bill of Rights are supposed to be posted on the district website, along with other important information, including your district’s overall data privacy protection policy, and how you can contact the district data privacy officer in charge of ensuring these protections. Links to the Education Law 2D, the regulations, and a summary of some of the other most important provisions are here.

Please take a few minutes to fill out our online survey to let us know what online apps and/or digital programs are being used in your schools, and whether the district has provided the necessary information about the ways in which that data is being protected from breach and abuse.

Thanks!

Leonie Haimson, Class Size Matters and Parent Coalition for Student Privacy

Lisa Rudley and Jeanette Deutermann, NY State Allies for Public Education


Friday, September 18, 2020

Civics knowledge among American adults jumps in new survey -- but hold your applause - The Washington Post

Civics knowledge among American adults jumps in new survey -- but hold your applause - The Washington Post

Civics knowledge among American adults jumps in new survey — but hold your applause



A new survey on U.S. civics knowledge shows a marked jump in the number of American adults who answered questions properly about their constitutional rights and the basic structure of the federal government.
But even with the increase, almost half still can’t name the three branches of the government (executive, legislative and judicial), according to the 2020 Annenberg Constitution Day Civics Survey. In addition:
  • Only 51 percent of respondents correctly said the Supreme Court has the final responsibility for deciding whether an action taken by the president is constitutional, lower than the 61 percent in 2019.
  • And when asked what a 5-to-4 Supreme Court ruling means, only 54 percent correctly knew that the decision is the law and needs to be followed — a drop from 59 percent in 2019.
The survey, taken annually by the Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania, found significant jumps in civics understanding on specific issues, and Kathleen Hall Jamieson, director of the center, said that could be a result of events during the Trump administration.
“Divided government, the impeachment process, and the number of times political leaders have turned to the courts probably deserve credit for increasing awareness of the three branches, while controversies over the right to peaceably assemble, freedom of religion, and freedom of speech may have done the same for the First Amendment,” she said in a statement.
Asked to name individual rights guaranteed to Americans under the First Amendment:
  • 73 percent correctly named freedom of speech, up from 48 percent in 2017
  • 47 percent named freedom of religion, up from 15 percent in 2017
  • 42 percent named freedom of the press, up from 14 percent in 2017
  • 34 percent named the right of assembly, up from 10 percent in 2017
  • 14 percent named the right to petition the government, up from 3 percent in 2017
  • The percentage of Americans who could not name any First Amendment rights fell from 37 in 2017 to 19 percent in 2020.
Fifty-one percent named all three branches of the federal government, up from CONTINUE READING: Civics knowledge among American adults jumps in new survey -- but hold your applause - The Washington Post

Thursday, July 16, 2020

My School District’s 2020-21 Planning, Including Surveying Employees and Parents | deutsch29

My School District’s 2020-21 Planning, Including Surveying Employees and Parents | deutsch29

My School District’s 2020-21 Planning, Including Surveying Employees and Parents




In this post, I offer info on what my school district is doing in its efforts to plan for the 2020-21 school year, with the goals of informing individuals in my district as well as offering ideas to other schools and districts.
A critical point is that my school district did what I see parents and teachers from other districts and states asking for: input into the decision making process.
I teach in southern Louisiana for St. Tammany Parish Public Schools. The day my district emailed its survey to teachers and staff (July 06, 2020), it also informed us via robocall to help ensure participation.
My sister told me of the parent survey, which touches on issues of transportation, mask-wearing, and need for access to school meals, among other issues.
The district reminded employees of the survey opportunity in this July 08, 2020, email:
Dear STPPS Employees,
I know that many of you have questions about the 2020-2021 school year, and I appreciate your patience during this time as we continuously work together to develop plans for the upcoming school year.
We are receiving good feedback from employees and parents from the CONTINUE READING: My School District’s 2020-21 Planning, Including Surveying Employees and Parents | deutsch29