Latest News and Comment from Education

Friday, September 24, 2010

Parallel worlds: Two schools a short journey apart | Philadelphia Public School Notebook

Parallel worlds: Two schools a short journey apart | Philadelphia Public School Notebook

Parallel worlds: Two schools a short journey apart

At Lower Merion, students have steady support. That's hard to sustain at Overbrook.

by Bill Hangley, Jr.
Photo: Harvey Finkle

It's just a few miles from Overbrook High School (left) at 59th Street and Lancaster Avenue across City Avenue to the new building that houses Lower Merion High School.

The two schools are less than four miles apart. But what separates Lower Merion High from Overbrook High is more than distance.

On a balmy night in early September, the parents of new freshmen are streaming through Lower Merion’s gleaming glass doors. They file down the halls into a soaring auditorium that smells like a new car. There, Principal Sean Hughes welcomes them to a brand new building and a world of high expectations.

Introducing City School Stories

Evaluating the success of America’s public schools has become a national focus. Elected officials, business leaders, wealthy philanthropists, and a host of educational entrepreneurs are typically the individuals who have been most active in characterizing the performance of today’s public schools for the American media. These non-educators generally do not speak well of the effectiveness of our public schools and systems.

In August of this year I launched my own blog cityschoolstories.com

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The Answer Sheet - Texas education board: Textbooks favor Islam over Christianity

The Answer Sheet - Texas education board: Textbooks favor Islam over Christianity

Texas education board: Textbooks favor Islam over Christianity

The Texas Board of Education adopted a controversial resolution today that accuses textbook publishers of favoring Islam over Christianity and tells them to stop it. Never mind that the books the board has cited as examples of bias were phased out of the Texas public school system a long time ago, according to the Texas Education Agency. The board isn’t letting facts get in the way, because this whole exercise really isn’t about balance in textbooks, something that not even a halfwit would argue against. The one-page resolution, approved 7-6, was put on the board's agenda not long after the panel finalized new social studies standards and right at the time when a charged national debate erupted over a proposed Muslim community center and mosque near Ground Zero in New York, and about a Florida pastor who was threatening to burn the Koran.

Citizenship and Pathways for a Green Economy – ED.gov Blog

Citizenship and Pathways for a Green Economy – ED.gov Blog

Citizenship and Pathways for a Green Economy

On Monday and Tuesday, September 20-21, the Department of Education held the national Sustainability Education Summit: Citizenship and Pathways for a Green Economy at the Washington Plaza Hotel in Washington, D.C. Approximately 300 participants spent two days discussing ideas and proposals for a national agenda to advance a sustainable economy through education. Participants came from federal agencies, higher education, career and technical education, community colleges, K-12 education, business, and environmental organizations. Congress requested that the Department organize the summit in the Higher Education Opportunity Act of 2008.

On Tuesday, the conferees were addressed by US Secretary of Education Arne Duncan who stated that the Department of Education had “been mostly absent from the movement to educate our children to be stewards of our environment” and had not “been doing enough in the sustainability movement.” But the Secretary further stated, “I promise you that we will be a committed partner in the national effort to build a more environmentally literate and responsible society.” The Secretary went on to speak to the issue of the central role educators must play in promoting a culture of change in our schools and in our communities. “President Obama has made clean, renewable energy a priority because, as he says, it’s the best way to ‘truly transform our economy, to protect our security, and save our planet.’”

The Secretary pointed to the efforts being made across federal government agencies to link education and sustainability. “The National Science Foundation has created a network of projects that are advancing programs that teach about the impact of climate change. The Environmental Protection Agency makes grants to support environmental literacy through its own grant program. The Department of Labor has awarded $490 million to support job training in skills needed in green jobs. All of this money comes from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.” Through the administration’s Blueprint for Reform, the department will support local efforts to teach environmental education as part of a well-rounded education.

On Monday, Under Secretary Martha Kanter reinforced the Department of Education’s commitment to “focus on policies and strategies to educate our citizenry and to support clearly articulated education pathways toward a sustainable future.” The Under Secretary spoke to the role of teachers as agents of change toward empowering our youth to make better choices. “Quite simply, the daily choices our young people make will shape the future of our planet – and America’s teachers are the gateway to giving every student a ‘green’ education.”

As the chancellor of Foothill-De Anza Community College District, the Under Secretary led the colleges’ sustainability initiatives and served on the Steering Committee of the President’s Climate Commitment. As chancellor, the Under Secretary saw that her institution “partnered closely with area K-12 schools and universities with the understanding that stakeholder engagement is a powerful catalyst at all levels of our education system and communities.” This reinforces the department’s underlying support of higher education as “transformational leaders and role models for the nation’s green revolution.”

The Under Secretary also emphasized that the “effort to define pathways to green, clean-technology careers, and to build a competent 21st century green workforce, is in the field of career and technical education.” Established programs of study “combine rigorous academic and technical content with employer validated ‘green technology’ standards to prepare secondary and post-secondary students for high-skill, high-wage, high-demand employment in ‘green-focused’ fields including the President’s priority areas of energy, transportation, housing, and construction.” The Obama administration is committed to the creation of a world-class workforce, including “a special emphasis on promoting student achievement and careers in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) fields.”

The design of the Green Summit allowed broad sector participation in a conversation with experts in the field of sustainability. Panelists from institutions across the country gave brief presentations, followed by discussion among panelists, and with the participants at large. Participants then moved into small group discussion to discuss actionable steps that can be taken toward the goals of the mandate.

Join the conversation:

How is your school involved with promoting sustainability either through curriculum or practice?

How much community involvement is there with promoting sustainability at your school?

What specific sustainability projects are you promoting within your organization or institution?

CHARTER SCHOOL SCANDALS: Buffalo United Charter School

CHARTER SCHOOL SCANDALS: Buffalo United Charter School
Buffalo United Charter School A $2 BILLION DECISION: THE CASE FOR REFORMING NEW YORK’S CHARTER SCHOOL LAW,April 2010, New York State United Teachers …National Heritage Academy and the Buffalo United Charter School teaching staff are embroiled in a legal dispute that stems from ...

Arianna Huffington: Troubled Times: When Mark Zuckerberg's Inspiring, Courageous Generosity Is Not Good Enough

Arianna Huffington: Troubled Times: When Mark Zuckerberg's Inspiring, Courageous Generosity Is Not Good Enough

Sign of the Times, Part One:

No sooner did word leak out that Mark Zuckerberg will appear on Oprah today to announce a donation of $100 million to the Newark public school system than the media long knives were unsheathed.

According to the naysayers, the Facebook CEO was making the donation to counteract the negative depiction of him in The Social Network as, in the words of the New York Post, "a conniving backstabber who may have stolen the idea for his social networking site."

Or he was making it "as a way to ward off any negative stigma" arising from his new standing on the Forbes 400 as America's 35th wealthiest person. New York magazine called it "the PR move of the

Dad at the Chalkboard: One Hundred Word Challenge - Greater

Dad at the Chalkboard: One Hundred Word Challenge - Greater

One Hundred Word Challenge - Greater

The prompt for this week's flash fiction over at Velvet Verbosity is greater. The task was to write one hundred words inspired by that word. Here's my go...


A Choice

He stands at the edge of the cliff, the exposed toes of his bare feet hanging out over the edge.

He visualizes the jump, feels the rush of the wind, hears its roar as he gives himself fully to the thrill of gravity’s