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Monday, February 13, 2012

Opening the Door to a Private Education with Public Money | Uppity Wisconsin

Opening the Door to a Private Education with Public Money | Uppity Wisconsin:

Opening the Door to a Private Education with Public Money



VOUCHSAFED: State's private school voucher program doesn't deliver the goods yet gets bigger

Cory Booker and Chris Christie: Teachers Should Live in Downtown Newark | The Nation

Cory Booker and Chris Christie: Teachers Should Live in Downtown Newark | The Nation:

Cory Booker and Chris Christie: Teachers Should Live in Downtown Newark

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Future site of the Teachers’ Village development in downtown Newark, New Jersey

Yesterday Newark Mayor Cory Booker, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, and several private developers and investors—including Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein—converged on a vacant lot in Newark’s historic downtown for the groundbreaking of Teachers’ Village.

The mixed-use development, a project six years in the making, will include expanded space for three existing public charter schools and a private pre-school; 200 moderately priced apartments reserved for Newark public, charter, and private school educators; and space for retail establishments, including restaurants and possibly a supermarket. The project’s designer is the Newark-born architect Richard Meier,

When Educators Reflect as Parents… | Connected Principals

When Educators Reflect as Parents… | Connected Principals:

When Educators Reflect as Parents…



As a principal, one of my favorite things to do is listen to success stories shared by the teachers. As a father, one of my favorite things to do is listen to success stories shared by other parents. When the two worlds collide, the moment is even more special.

One of our brilliant educators recently shared the following (names have been changed):

Last night, Tommy was excited to share something with me. He began to explain how he recognized that his weakness is forgetting to write things in his agenda and acknowledged that he needs to be better organized.

solidaridad: ALL OUT: Tuesday, February 14 Rally “Stop the Insanity”! 1-5pm at LAUSD (Beaudry)

solidaridad: ALL OUT: Tuesday, February 14 Rally “Stop the Insanity”! 1-5pm at LAUSD (Beaudry):

ALL OUT: Tuesday, February 14 Rally “Stop the Insanity”! 1-5pm at LAUSD (Beaudry)

ALL OUT: Tuesday, February 14 Rally “Stop the Insanity”! 1-5pm at LAUSD (Beaudry)

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2013 Education Budget: What it Means For You | ED.gov Blog

2013 Education Budget: What it Means For You | ED.gov Blog:

2013 Education Budget: What it Means For You

Continuing its commitment to education and an America built to last, the Obama Administration released its 2013 budget proposal to Congress today. It includes new education investments that will give U.S. students and workers the education and training they need for the jobs of today and tomorrow.
Budget ImageThe Department of Education is requesting $69.8 billion in discretionary funding for Fiscal Year 2013, an increase of $1.7 billion, or 2.5 percent, from 2012. The critical investments in education are part of an overall federal budget that abides by very tight spending caps that reduce discretionary spending by $1 trillion over 10 years and, including that amount, has more than $4 trillion of balanced deficit reduction.
But what, exactly, does this mean for you?
Job Training to Meet the Demands of the Workforce
Helping students, employers and communities.
Two million jobs are waiting to be filled in the United States, yet many Americans seeking work don’t have the necessary skills to fill those jobs. To close that skills gap and deliver employers the kinds of workers they want to hire, the Administration is proposing $8 billion for a new Community College to Career Fund.
These funds would help community colleges become community career centers where individuals can learn the skills that local businesses need. Additionally, employers would offer paid internships for low-income students to help them learn skills on the job and gain experience.
ED is also proposing to invest $1.1 billion to support the reauthorization and reform of the Career and Technical Education program to ensure that the training and education our students receive are in line with the demands of the workforce.
Boosting the Teaching Profession
Giving teachers the respect and support they deserve.
ED is proposing $5 billion in competitive funding to support states and districts as they pursue bold reforms that can help better prepare, support and compensate America’s teachers.
The Department would also invest $190 million for a new Presidential Teaching Fellows program that would provide scholarships to talented students who attend top-tier teacher prep programs and commit to working in high-need schools.
The budget also creates $620 million in new grants for states that would reward and support highly effective teacher preparation programs, help decrease STEM teacher shortages, and invest in efforts to enhance the teaching profession.
Making College Affordable
Ensuring that everyone gets a shot at higher education.
The 2013 budget seeks to make college more affordable and to help achieve President Obama’s goal of the U.S. leading the world in college graduates by 2020. The budget proposes to sustain the maximum Pell Grant and increase the maximum award amount to $5,635, supporting nearly 10 million students across the country.
The Department is proposing to freeze the interest rate on subsidized student loans at 3.4 percent. Currently the rate is scheduled to double to 6.8 percent this summer if Congress doesn’t act.
The budget seeks to tackle college costs and quality by encouraging shared responsibility among states, colleges, families and the federal government. ED would invest $1 billion for a new Race to the Top focusing on college affordability and completion to drive reform at the state level and help students finish faster. This new Race to the Top would provide incentives for colleges to keep costs under control, it would double the number of work-study jobs, and it would increase by nearly $7.5 billion the amount available for Perkins loans.
Additional Budget Information:

This entry was posted in Community Colleges, Headlines, News, Race to the Top, Teachers, Teaching Profession and tagged , , . Bookmark the permalink.

President's Budget Proposal Fails to Fund D.C. Voucher Program - MarketWatch

President's Budget Proposal Fails to Fund D.C. Voucher Program - MarketWatch:

President's Budget Proposal Fails to Fund D.C. Voucher Program

WASHINGTON, February 13, 2012 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- Despite reauthorization agreement, Obama aims to halt highly-successful Opportunity Scholarship Program

President Barack Obama's newly-released federal budget would not provide funding to the highly-successful D.C. voucher program, despite an agreement signed by the president last year that reauthorized the program.

The American Federation --the nation's voice for school choice--strongly decries the president's failure to provide funding to the D.C. Opportunity Scholarship Program (OSP), which currently provides scholarships to more than 1,600 children from low-income families across the nation's capital to attend the private schools of their parents' choice.

Though the OSP is in little danger of going unfunded--Congress is charged with appropriating funds, and House Speaker John Boehner is an ardent defender of the program--the move by President Obama is effectively a reneging on the promise he made last April in a budget agreement he signed that helped avert a government shutdown.

"The president says he's for education reform, but his actions continually aim to send

BIG SHOES: The "de facto national model of the digital school" - THE DAILY RIFF - Be Smarter. About Education.

BIG SHOES: The "de facto national model of the digital school" - THE DAILY RIFF - Be Smarter. About Education.:

BIG SHOES: The "de facto national model of the digital school"

the genuine heartfelt desire of young people to be in the company of adults who are doing adult work, and the way our institutions and adult lives are structured more and more to keep us at a distance. - Diane Meier, "In Schools We Trust"
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City’s top TFA official says he’s resigning to return to teaching | GothamSchools

City’s top TFA official says he’s resigning to return to teaching | GothamSchools:

City’s top TFA official says he’s resigning to return to teaching

TFA New York Executive Director Jeff Li, who is leaving TFA to return to the classroom

New York’s Teach for America executive director has taken the term “lead by example” very literally.

Jeff Li announced last week that he is resigning from his top post at Teach For America after less than two years on the job and returning to the classroom as a teacher. The announcement comes just days before his organization is set to announce a campaign meant to encourage alumni to stay in the teaching profession, rather