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Tuesday, September 15, 2015

Children need teachers to teach them - not computers, says the OECD | ZDNet

Children need teachers to teach them - not computers, says the OECD | ZDNet:

Children need teachers to teach them - not computers, says the OECD

An over-reliance on computers will damage a child's education, not improve it.



OECD education director Andreas Schleicher says: "The socio-economic divide between students is not narrowed by technology." Image: OECD
Walk into any school in term time and you will likely see the kids hard at work on their computers, chatting online, or texting their friends but, according to the OECD, all this technology is not making our kids any smarter. In fact, it says, the evidence suggests it is having the opposite effect.

As the OECD's education director, Andreas Schleicher, points out in his report, Students, Computers and Learning: Making The Connection, published today, although students who use computers "moderately" at school tend to have somewhat better learning outcomes than students who use computers rarely, "students who use computers very frequently at school do a lot worse in most learning outcomes, even after accounting for social background and student demographics".
It gets worse.

AFTER OLPC, DOES IT IN EDUCATION HAVE A FUTURE?

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"The results also show no appreciable improvements in student achievement in reading, mathematics or science in the countries that had invested heavily in information and communication technology (ICT) for education," said Schleicher. "And perhaps the most disappointing finding is that technology seems of little help in bridging the skills divide between advantaged and disadvantaged students."
Other findings of the report included:
  • Students get worse results the more frequently they use computers
  • A little use is a good thing as students who use computers once or twice a week, rather than every day, get better outcomes that those who use them rarely.
  • The countries that have invested the most in technology show "no appreciable improvements" in reading, mathematics or science, the report says.
  • High-achieving school systems such as South Korea and Shanghai in China have lower levels of computer use in school.
According to Schleicher, one of the "most disappointing findings" of the report was that "the socio-economic divide between students is not narrowed by technology, perhaps even amplified".
Schleicher's department has undertaken a full analysis into the role that education plays in developing a population with the right skills, and has come up with results that overturn the prevailing wisdom on education.
Computers, he believes, are not much help. "Put simply," he says, "ensuring that every child attains a baseline level of proficiency in reading and mathematics seems to do more to create equal opportunities in a digital world than expanding or subsidising access to high-tech devices and services."
But he also believes that "most parents and teachers" will not be surprised by the finding that students "who spend more than six hours online per weekday outside of school are particularly at risk of reporting that they feel lonely at school".
One interpretation, said Schleicher, is that "building deep, conceptual understanding and higher-order thinking requires intensive teacher-student interactions, and technology sometimes distracts from this valuable human engagement".
You can find the full report here.
Further Reading:

Sacramento steps toward a better ethics policy | The Sacramento Bee

Sacramento steps toward a better ethics policy | The Sacramento Bee:

Sacramento steps toward a better ethics policy




The Sacramento City Council will vote Tuesday night on a plan to direct its staff to create a detailed ethics package, a step that is worthy of encouragement and support.
The goal would be for the components to come back to the council in three to six months for votes.
Mayor Kevin Johnson appointed the committee that came up with the broad recommendations. Councilwoman Angelique Ashby, Councilman Jay Schenirer, and representatives of Common Cause of California and the League of Women Voters, among others, put the proposal together.
The committee is urging an ethics overhaul that would include revisions of the city’s campaign finance ordinance, and its gift, nepotism and revolving-door policies. Newly elected council members would need to complete ethics training within 60 days of taking office, and undergo anti-sexual harassment training every two years.
The city would seek to enhance transparency by placing an array of public records in a central location on a searchable city-run website. Campaign finance, lobbying reports and other related information would become more readily available.
If, as expected, the council approves the package, City Clerk Shirley Concolino would develop a plan to create an office of ethics compliance and a five-member ethics commission that would investigate and adjudicate complaints about campaign finances, lobbying and conflicts of interest. The mayor would appoint the commissioners, subject to council confirmation.
An important component would include a 2018 ballot measure for an independent redistricting commission. The 13-member commission would draw council boundaries after the 2020 census, when boundaries normally are redrawn. To guard against self-serving lines, members would be barred from running for a council seat for 10 years.
Johnson had included good-government provisions in his strong-mayor proposal last year. Even though voters rejected the strong-mayor proposal, Johnson pressed ahead with the ethics package.
The measure took on greater urgency when members of advocacy group Eye on Sacramentosuggested they place their own ethics proposal on the 2016 ballot. Whether or not there is a competing measure on some future ballot, the Johnson-appointed committee’s plan could be far-reaching.
An improved ethics policy, greater transparency and a strong ethics commission all are important. However, much of an ethics commission’s job entails cleaning messes after bad acts occur.
The hope would be that council members conduct themselves properly to begin with. That’s where voters come in. The first line of defense against self-serving politicians always is an informed and engaged electorate.Sacramento steps toward a better ethics policy | The Sacramento Bee:








Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/opinion/editorials/article35262837.html#storylink=cpy

Carl Cohn to oversee California’s school district spending

Carl Cohn to oversee California’s school district spending:

Carl Cohn to oversee California’s school district spending





CLAREMONT >> Carl Cohn’s the man who’s going to give report cards to California’s public school districts and charter schools.
In 2013, Gov. Jerry Brown announced a sweeping change to how California’s public K-12 schools are funded.
The Local Control Funding Formula replaces the countless narrowly tailored categorical funds that provided money to districts for highly specific needs with a single lump sum that factors in how many poor, foster and English language-learning students the district teaches.
To keep the districts on track with serving those students, districts had to come up with a Local Control Accountability Plan to map out how the district would improve outcomes for all students and specific benchmarks to measure their progress.
And Cohn, a Claremont Graduate University professor and the former superintendent of Long Beach Unified, is in charge of helping districts stay on track. On Sept. 1, he begins his new job as the head of the newly created California Collaborative on Educational Excellence, a state agency that oversees the implementation of the LCFF and districts’ LCAPs.
“This was a part of the original historic legislation,” he said. “It’s the final piece, and I think everybody got caught up with the initial aspects, but now the new, collaborative board has been in place since January.”
The Palm Springs resident took his place at the head of the organization on Sept. 1. The new laws give local districts more control over how they spend their educational fund. But Cohn and his colleagues are in charge of making sure districts keep to the commitments they made to their residents as part of their LCAPs.
“We’ve got to make sure that districts are following what’s in the statute for LCFF and LCAP,” Cohn said. “You can’t just trust that everyone is going to do the right thing.”
The collaborative isn’t a police agency so much as it is an advisory one, providing assistance to districts, charter schools and county departments of education. The organization isn’t big enough to do much more, even if members wanted to.
“Flat, agile, nimble. I’m not building a new bureaucracy or duplicating a new bureaucracy -- the idea, the goal is to just help people without a lot of politics,” Cohn said. “The ideal is really a new kind of a state agency that isn’t so much about policing as it is about getting help to places, becoming a repository for best practices.”
He “can’t imagine more than a dozen or so” CCEE employees ultimately. But, he thinks, that should be enough:
“I’m a huge fan of local control. I actually believe that when people own something at the local level, it’ll stand the test of time.”
Cohn has reason to believe in local school districts: He served as Long Beach Unified’s superintendent for 10 years in the 1990s and early 21st century.
“I became superintendent in Long Beach two months after the Rodney King riots,” he said. “I’m bullish on local control.”
Cohn intends to spend the first month listening to local officials on how the LCFF and LCAP are going so far. He already has some cause for concern:
“I spent a week at Stanford with superintendents from around the state,” he said. “What it seemed they were saying that the LCAP, even though it was well-intentioned, has become a huge compliance concern.”
The intention of the law was that the LCAP was for local community members to set local priorities, not that it would become a new bureaucratic nightmare.
“If a mid-course correction is needed, we need to get to that,” he said. “You’re not supposed to bog Carl Cohn to oversee California’s school district spending:

Monday, September 14, 2015

The Elephant in the Classroom - Decoding Dyslexia Arizona

The Elephant in the Classroom - Decoding Dyslexia Arizona:



The Elephant in the Classroom

Picture


Responding to the concerns of parents from across the United States that the word "dyslexia" is not being allowed into the IEP process, a coalition of disability groups recently sent a request to the U.S. Department of Education asking for guidance to be issued on the subject.  Several members of Congress sent a similar request. In response, educator and school groups followed up with a letter expressing concerns about use of the word "dyslexia."

As parents, we believe use of the word "dyslexia" in public schools helps steer discussions toward timely identification of our children, as well as toward appropriate interventions and accommodations.  For those reasons, Decoding Dyslexia groups in every state in the country recently sent a joint letter asking the U.S. Department of Education to clarify that the word "dyslexia" may be used in IEP meetings and related documents.

The following is an excerpt from the parent letter:


Our concerns

As parents, we are often told that dyslexia is “not recognized by school districts,” “is just an umbrella term,” “does not exist,"  "is a medical issue,” or “is not something schools are required to diagnose or address."  We are also told in IEP meetings that schools are "not required to put the term dyslexia in IEPs.”  In many cases, we are even told after years of failed efforts at reading instruction, that we may not discuss or include “specific methodologies" in an IEP to address our children's reading struggles.

Rather, more often than not, our children receive only the broad classification of "Specific Learning Disability" or, at best, “Specific Learning Disability in Reading” and are placed in general resource rooms with students who have different issues and needs.  Some of these students with different needs may even fall under the same Specific Learning Disability “umbrella,” while others may have disabilities that fall within entirely different IDEA disability categories.   Our children with dyslexia then receive interventions that are neither peer-reviewed nor targeted to their specific, individual challenges.

For example, a student with good word decoding skills who struggles to comprehend the meaning of print material may have markedly different learning needs from a student who struggles to comprehend print material because of a weakness in decoding.  Both may have the same "Specific Learning Disability" or even "Specific Learning Disability - Reading" label, but their needs are entirely different.  The result is an unnecessary and often indefinite delay in the identification and use of effective "specially designed instruction" and interventions students need and to which they are entitled as part of an appropriate education.

Use of the term “dyslexia” is consistent with the language and intent of the IDEA

The term “dyslexia” is explicitly included in the IDEA as an example of a “specific learning 
The Elephant in the Classroom - Decoding Dyslexia Arizona:


CURMUDGUCATION: Forgetting History

CURMUDGUCATION: Forgetting History:

Forgetting History






So it's not 9/14, a date that carries no particular power. And after sitting in the cultural silence that follows any powerful observance, I'm reflecting again on 9/11.

Friday was a day not much different from many others. The social studies teacher whose classroom shares a door with mine was playing a documentary stitched together from footage of That Day. But teachers are already aware of what civilians are slowly realizing-- students in school, right now, have no memory of that day. My juniors were two years old. Some of my freshmen hadn't been born yet. To my students, who think of me as a thousand years old and their own elementary school years as eons ago, the September 11 attacks are as distant to most of them as the Vietnam War or World War II.

And I can't decide if that's a good thing or not.

I am seriously attached to the study of history. My student teaching kept me from minoring; the state of Pennsylvania's elevation of "social studies" over history kept me from adding it to my teaching certification. My class is shot full of it. I think human beings are absolutely hardwired to do history, to try to draw a consensus on what happened, why it happened, what it means. We do it for 9/11, for Vietnam, for the Great European War, and for the fight between Ethel and Mia last night at the restaurant.

My students deride history as the most worthless class they take, a class that has nothing to do with their present or their future. My students also like to drag out and rehearse their favorite stories of Things That Happened in Grade School.

We are hardwired to do history, and yet we also seem hardwired to forget it, if we even grasp it in the first place. I've watched my students for over three decades, certain that the world sprang into existence when they were born, unable to imagine what it will do when they die, and absolutely rocked to their core when someone does die.

We're a small place, but it happens. Accident. Disease. Suicide. The school is an entirely different 
CURMUDGUCATION: Forgetting History:

Special Nite Cap: Catch Up on Today's Post 9/14/15 #FightForDyett


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