Latest News and Comment from Education

Monday, August 31, 2009

Ethics in the Classroom: What You Need to Know


Ethics in the Classroom: What You Need to Know:


Ethics and morals are often associated with religion, but schools can also provide important lessons in ethical thinking and action.

“There’s a big fear out there that somehow teaching ethics in school will seep into students a particular religious viewpoint,” says Dr. Bruce Weinstein, aka The Ethics Guy. “But ethics must be taught and are being taught in school. It’s impossible not to teach ethics in a school.”

Weinstein, who writes a weekly column for BusinessWeek.com and recently released the popular book Is It Still Cheating if I Don’t Get Caught?, says if schools have a code of conduct, they are teaching ethics.

"According to Weinstein, there are five basic principles of ethics that are common to all faiths:
Do no harm
Make things better
Respect others
Be fair
Be loving"

SCUSD Observer: Corporate "School Reform" comes to Sacramento Thursday




Secretary of Education Arne Duncan visits Sacramento this Thursday, September 3 to headline Kevin Johnson's Education Summit.Following last week's release of Johnson's white paper, which supposedly "aligns with Secretary of Education Duncan’s plan for national reform", Duncan will be sharing his plan this Thursday at the Tsakopoulos Library Galleria at 5:00 p.m.

September 3, 2009 Meeting


September 3, 2009 Meeting: "September 3, 2009 Meeting



Regular Meeting

Agenda Now Available
Time: Location:
September 3, 20094:30 Closed session
6:30 Open Session Serna Center Community Rooms
5735 47th Ave.
Meeting Documents:Online meeting Video/Archive
Agenda
Minutes
During a Regular Board of Education meeting, click HERE to watch the meeting live.
PLEASE NOTE: This video service is designed for high speed internet access.

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This meeting of the Sacramento City School Board is being videotaped in its entirety and will be cablecast without interruption on Metro Cable 14, the government affairs channel on the Comcast and SureWest Cable Systems. Today’s meeting will be replayed Sunday, September 6 at 9am & Monday, September 7 at Noon on Channel 14, and will be webcast at www.sacmetrocable.tv. A video copy is also available for check out from any library branch.
Members of the audience wishing to address the Board should fill out a speaker identification form located in the back of community room and give to the Clerk. Please speak into the microphone when addressing the Board, and state your name for the record."

CAForward


CAForward:

"It’s Time to Move California Forward
Californians are fed up — with a broken system of government that caters to the special interests rather than people, with politicians who spend more time fighting than solving problems, and with spending too much on things that don’t work while short-changing real priorities.
California Forward is bringing people together to reclaim our power as citizens to make our government work again. But we need your help today to reform California.
Our goal is simple: government that’s small enough to listen, big enough to tackle real problems, smart enough to spend money wisely in good times and bad, and honest enough to be held accountable for results.
Please stand with us: Sign our online petition to the right, and help us show the politicians in Sacramento that Californians are demanding real change."

Say NO to Censorship - Let's Not Rewrite American History

Say NO to Censorship - Let's Not Rewrite American History (Education - Change.org)
There is an education war going on in Texas that you need to know about and get involved with. The TX State Board of Education is currently preparing to adopt new social studies curriculum standards. These standards have major national implications as Texas is such a major purchaser of textbooks and their state’s required curriculum drives the content of textbooks produced nationwide.

The TX State Board of Education has hired 6 "experts" to determine what will be in the books their schools use. Some of these "experts" are arguing that the state’s social studies and history textbooks are giving "too much attention" to some of the most prominent civil rights leaders in US History, namely Cesar Chavez and Thurgood Marshall.

David Barton, one of these "experts," claimed Cesar Chavez "lacks the stature, impact and overall contributions of so many others." He went on to say Chávez is not a role model who "ought to be held up to our children as someone worthy of emulation."

The same "expert" wants to eliminate Thurgood Marshall, a prominent Civil Rights leader who argued the landmark case that resulted in school desegregation and was the first African-American U.S. Supreme Court justice. He wrote that the late justice is "not a strong enough example" of an important historical figure to be presented to Tex


FLASHBACK: "All you have to do is care"—Kennedy's Final Words on Education #BATsACT #RealEdTalk #EDCHAT #P2 #Cheats4Change

"All you have to do is care"—Kennedy's Final Words on Education 
In one of Ted Kennedy's final interviews, with BigThink, he spoke about his ideals and hopes for the future of the education system, explaining that when he goes to schools and colleges, he's struck by the spirit of young people who want to help solve problems. Kennedy stresses that one of the most important parts of the Education Bill just passed is loan forgiveness for those who want to go on work in the community to help solve problems: whether it's as a teacher, nurse, or on an Indian Reservation. Kennedy is saying: If you can get to college, debt shouldn't be a barrier to allowing you go on to help solve the nation's problems. He expressed confidence that this country will be safe as long as the spirit of kids who want to make a difference endures.

You don't have to be a senator to make a difference, all you have to do is care. —Ted Kennedy


Education Week: Ed. Dept. Seeks Stiff Conditions on Turnaround Aid


Education Week: Ed. Dept. Seeks Stiff Conditions on Turnaround Aid

Title I and Turnarounds

Under proposed Education Department guidelines, school districts, with a few exceptions, would have to adopt one of four “rigorous interventions” to qualify for some of the $3.5 billion in Title I school improvement grants that would be spent over the next three years.

Turnaround Model: This would include among other actions, replacing the principal and at least 50 percent of the school’s staff, adopting a new governance structure and implementing a new or revised instructional program.

Restart Model: School districts would close failing schools and reopen them under the management of a charter school operator, a charter management organization or an educational management organization selected through a rigorous review process.

School Closure: The district would shut down a failing school and enroll its students in high-achieving schools in the district.

Transformational Model: Districts would address four specific areas: 1) developing teacher and school leader effectiveness, which includes replacing the principal and requiring student achievement growth to be used to reward and dismiss teachers, 2) implementing comprehensive instructional reform strategies, 3) extending learning and teacher planning time and creating community-oriented schools, and 4) providing operating flexibility and sustained support.



Education Week: Turnaround Schools That Work


Education Week: Turnaround Schools That Work

The regulations under which the federal government will award $3.5 billion in Title I school improvement money, announced by Secretary Duncan last week, include four turnaround models that allow states and districts some flexibility in how they deal with failing schools. But the rules also contain strong incentives to choose the models that focus on changing staff and governance. ("Turnaround Grants Facing Tight Leash," same issue.)

Changing the principal and teachers in a school isn’t enough, in part because many years of research have confirmed what all parents know: Kids learn from one another as well as from the teacher. In high-poverty schools, a child is surrounded by classmates who are less likely to have big dreams and, accordingly, are less academically engaged and more prone to acting out and cutting class. Classmates in high-poverty schools are more likely to move in the middle of the year, creating disruption in the classroom, and they are less likely to have large vocabularies, which can rub off on peers on the playground and in school.

Parents are also an important part of a school community. Students benefit when parents regularly volunteer in the classroom and know how to hold school officials accountable when things go wrong. Low-income parents, who may be working several jobs, may not own a car, and may have had bad experiences themselves as students, are four times less likely to be members of a PTA, and are only half as likely to volunteer.



Education Week: Rural Areas Perceive Policy Tilt

Education Week: Rural Areas Perceive Policy Tilt
In this rural community where the unemployment rate is nearly 14 percent and there’s no movie theater for miles around, school administrators say money isn’t the recruitment tool it is in the big city.

And when Mr. Duncan talks about states’ needing to embrace charter schools to give parents more educational options, he may not be envisioning places like South Dakota or Montana, where half the school districts have just a few hundred students—and little demand for public school alternatives.

Rural school advocates say the federal priorities emerging under Mr. Duncan—a former chief executive officer of the 408,000-student Chicago public school system—favor education improvement ideas that are best suited to urban settings.

Initiatives such as the Race to the Top Fund competition fail to recognize the distinctive problems facing rural districts, which serve some 13 million students, or about one-quarter of the nation’s public school enrollment, according to the Rural School and Community Trust, based in Arlington, Va


School nurses in short supply


School nurses in short supply Cincinnati.com The Cincinnati Enquirer

Ohio has one nurse for every 2,377 students; Kentucky has one per 1,877, according to a 2007 survey by the National Association of School Nurses. Nationally, each school nurse cares for 1,151 students on average.

Most districts surveyed in Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky have more nurses than the statewide average, but they still are far short of government standards.

Schools should have one nurse for every 750 students, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Nurses will be able to handle a mass immunization effort, if it is mandated, said Kathy Inderbitzin, an executive board member for the Ohio Association of School Nurses. But there's still a critical shortage, she said.

"We're all kind of on pins and needles yet about the flu, to find out how it's going to affect the kids," Inderbitzin said.

Schools hire a wide range of medical workers to handle school health needs, from registered nurses with advanced degrees to nurse's aides. In both Ohio and Kentucky, nurses must complete a licensure program through the state education department to officially use the "school nurse" title.



In new accelerator schools, a diploma after two years


In new accelerator schools, a diploma after two years -- baltimoresun.com

Program designed for kids who fell behind, lowering drop-out risk

Baltimore Community School Principal Brian Jones said the school will concentrate on teaching students skills they need to graduate. So in English, the students will focus on learning to write coherent sentences and paragraphs as much as on the plot of the book they are reading. And in math, teachers will make sure students have basic arithmetic skills before moving to algebra.

Students choose to go to the school and went through a lengthy interview process this summer, Jones said, and he did reject a number of applicants. He wanted to be assured that the students really wanted to graduate from high school and that they are willing to abide by a few strict rules.

Students must wear uniforms and cannot take cell phones to school even if they are riding an hour across town on the bus, and Jones checks every student at the door in the morning to make sure they are carrying a three-ring binder. The binder is supposed to be evidence they are serious about doing their homework, keeping their papers together and taking notes. The halls of the school are spotless, the classes are small (no more than 22 students) and there is none of the chattering common in a large city public high school.

"So far, I really like the teachers. They are very hands-on, and they work with you. They offer e-mail addresses and coach classes," said Parris.



Learning Shouldn't Be Dictated by the School Calendar - washingtonpost.com


Learning Shouldn't Be Dictated by the School Calendar - washingtonpost.com

The academic calendar inspires similarly bad habits in schools. Parents and teachers conspire each spring to clean up weaknesses in the records of some children so they can be promoted to the next grade. Some urban high school teachers have told me of panic attacks every April, when only half of the senior class appears qualified to graduate. Extra-credit projects materialize. Grade book calculations are readjusted. Magically, the graduating class grows to about the same size as last year's.

Educators have been trying for more than a century to make lessons more like what students will find in real life. Philosopher John Dewey started a movement with a concept he called experiential education. His disciples have tried to introduce projects -- putting out a class newspaper has been a favorite -- so students learn by doing. You can find examples of this in many schools, but the old just-get-through- the-year mentality still reigns. It is difficult to cover all that I wanted to learn as a student, and I wanted my children to learn, in a nontraditional, project-driven format. Deborah Meier, Dennis Littky and other free-thinking educators have made headway with impoverished urban teenagers, but they are exceptions.



California School District Closes All 28 Libraries - 8/31/2009 - School Library Journal


California School District Closes All 28 Libraries - 8/31/2009 - School Library Journal:

"Pink slips were mailed in mid-July, and the library closures came three weeks after the start of the school year because the district was required to give its employees 45-days notice of their termination.

This blow to the library program comes six years after the district reassigned middle and high school librarians and halted subscription databases due to a lack of funds.
The district, located 20 miles east of Sacramento, recently invested $100,000 in Follett’s Destiny Textbook Manager program to help librarians automate textbook circulation, but the future of the program is now in doubt.

Linda Rodriguez, a library tech at Folsom High School for the last 18 years, was surprised that the district chose to reinstate freshmen athletics instead of saving the libraries. 'What a nightmare,' she told the local Sacramento Bee. “There is no accountability, and things are going to be cannibalized.'"

5,700 school district contracts in dispute | Education | Wichita Eagle


5,700 school district contracts in dispute Education Wichita Eagle:

"The negotiated base salaries for the 2008-09 school year ranged from $37,998 for a starting salary and bachelor's degree, to $47,603 for midlevel experience and master's degree, to $59,677 for the highest experience level and doctoral degree.

At issue is whether teachers should work fewer professional development hours to offset the loss of additional pay for experience, said Larry Landwehr, president of the United Teachers of Wichita.

'We discussed all the pros and cons, and we saw professional concerns not acted upon,' he said.
In the school board's view, it could have monetary impact, Fuller said. If weekly training time is moved into official school hours, the school district would have to pay more substitutes or other adults to supervise the students, she said"

A parent’s right to choose : thenewdominion.com


A parent’s right to choose : thenewdominion.com:

"“And any way you slice this, the funding for any voucher program ends up in the coffers of primarily private religious schools,” said Barry Lynn, the executive director of the Washington, D.C.,-based Americans United for the Separation of Church and State. “The idea that this is constitutional is that because the parents get the funds, they become kind of a stopgap, and that therefore the money somehow doesn’t benefit religion. But of course since the money goes in the form of a voucher to the parent, the parent essentially cashes in the voucher and the money ends up primarily in religious schools.”

Lynn was alluding there to a controversial 5-4 United States Supreme Court decision in a 2002 case in Ohio that provided a constitutional foot in the door for a voucher program there. The Court was divided along clear ideological lines in the decision, and it isn’t hard to figure that a change in the makeup of the Court in the future could lead to a reversal should another similar case arise down the road."

Parents make the difference in education more than teachers do.


Parents make the difference in education more than teachers do.:


"At the end of the day, the question becomes one of parenting. Are the parents ensuring all homework is complete? Do the parents check their children's grades on-line to impose a reward/consequence system at home? Do the parents make sure schoolwork gets done before soccer practice? Do the parents contact the teachers with concerns? Did the parents raise their children to honor their position and the position of the teachers so that their children do not question directives such as, 'Do your homework?' The answer is good parenting and keeping parents accountable for their children's academic progress"

Nonreligious Private Schools Spend More Per Student Than Others, Study Shows - washingtonpost.com


Nonreligious Private Schools Spend More Per Student Than Others, Study Shows - washingtonpost.com:

"The secular private schools analyzed in the study spent $20,100 on each student in the 2007-08 school year vs. $10,100 in public schools. Nonparochial Catholic schools tended to spend roughly the same as public schools. (Parochial schools were not included in the study because their tax data are not publicly available and because their finances are so tied to those of the Catholic Church.) Members of two of the largest associations of Christian schools spent $7,100 -- several thousand dollars less per student than their public peers.

Per-student spending in the Washington region's public schools ranged from $10,400 to $19,300 that year, according to a Washington Area Boards of Education report, although public schools account for their spending differently from private schools, and numbers are difficult to compare directly."

BeyondChron: San Francisco's Alternative Online Daily News » SF Labor Council Backs UNITE HERE Local 2, Rejects SEIU’s Threats


BeyondChron: San Francisco's Alternative Online Daily News » SF Labor Council Backs UNITE HERE Local 2, Rejects SEIU’s Threats:

"As the epicenter of labor’s internal wars shifts to San Francisco, SEIU now finds itself in deep trouble with the powerful San Francisco Labor Council. Labor officials were angered by SEIU’s threat to withdraw its Council funding, and did not respond well to what Teachers Union President Dennis Kelly described as “the two faced-ness of (Dave) Regan’s presentation and by the threats and bullying.”"

STRIKE UPDATE: Teachers rally at ShoWare and strike continues - Covington Reporter


STRIKE UPDATE: Teachers rally at ShoWare and strike continues - Covington Reporter:

"Kent Education Association President Lisa Brackin-Johnson said after the rally, “The teachers are staying resolute to what they believe and what is good for the students.”
Dale Folkerts, spokesman for the union, said at about 11 a.m. Sunday if an agreement was not reached by noon, there would not be time to get the information out to parents and teachers for school to start Monday.

“We are saddened the district has not taken these issues seriously enough to bring a compromise,” Folkerts said by phone Sunday. “The issues are the classes are too crowded and too many administrative meetings. It robs the teachers’ time with the students.”

Pay has also been an issue, but according to Folkerts it did not spark the strike.

Folkerts said he believes if the other two issues had been dealt with the union and district could have come to an agreement over wages."

LA's charter school giveaway | SocialistWorker.org


LA's charter school giveaway SocialistWorker.org:

"Though the union as a whole did not commit fully to the kind of alliances with parents that we should have in the first round of this fight, the potential to organize around the issue of equal access to excellent education is very strong.

If we attempt to include parents and students in the fight for access for all to quality public schools, we could stop the mayor and his charter school allies from privatizing our schools, and fight to shape those schools according to the visions of parents, teachers and students. We now have to counter their agenda with ours, school by school."

SCHOOL MATTERS: California STAR Results Show Achievement Gap Persists - NAM


SCHOOL MATTERS: California STAR Results Show Achievement Gap Persists - NAM:

"What is clear is the racial and socioeconomic achievement gap hasn’t shrunk substantially.

'The gap is getting bigger and bigger,' said Linda Murray, acting executive director of Ed Trust West and former superintendent of San Jose Unified School District from 1993-2004. 'Poor students and students of color attend schools where teachers are less experienced, classrooms are under-resourced, and academic expectations are lower. These students are taught less, so they under-perform.'

The proportion of white 8th graders who achieved proficiency was 32 percentage points higher than Latino and African American 8th graders, according to a 2009 STAR program report released by Education-Trust West.

With some 1.6 billion proposed budget cuts to California education, high-level academic achievement is only going to become more of a challenge for low-income and minority students who attend under-funded schools.

'The devastation of funding cuts is very real,' said Murray. 'Class sizes are going up, resources are dwindling, teacher quality will suffer; there are kinds of ramifications of the cuts which will hurt kids attending under-resourced schools the most.'"

Parent University: Involving parents in a child's education | NECN


Parent University: Involving parents in a child's education NECN:

"Parent University: Involving parents in a child's education

Play video

(NECN: Michelle Brown, Boston, Mass.) - As a parent and former New York City school teacher, Saralyn Rice knows the importance of a parent's involvement in their child's education.
An enhanced form of communication and involvement is a sentiment shared by Boston school officials. When the new school year gets underway on September 10th, they will be reaching out not just to students, but to their parents, as well.

It is all part of a new program called Parent University.

The first of three all-day learning sessions begin in October at UMass Boston, followed by two more sessions in January and May. The program is free to all Boston public school families.
Boston public schools had a similar program to Parent University in the late 1990's called Parent Leadership Academy. That program fell victim to budget cuts."

California’s Response for Federal Stimulus Funding - California Progress Report


California’s Response for Federal Stimulus Funding - California Progress Report:

"This hearing and The Race to the Top is about understanding Education as a civil rights issue. When the Governor announced the Special Session last week, one of those who stood with him was Alice Huffman, the president of the state NAACP. This is the same NAACP that celebrates its 100th year anniversary this year, and which, half a century ago filed Brown v. Board of Education demanding that America stop school segregation because separate is not equal.

Today, decades after the Brown decision, we still have a form of segregation in our public school system. Nearly 80 percent of students in our lowest performing schools are African American or Latino. Poor students and students of color are four times more likely to have under-prepared teachers. We have an achievement gap for African Americans, Latinos, and English learners that has been both persistent and pernicious – confirmed again with new test scores released just last week.

Over the years, many of us in this Senate and in this room have advanced innovative legislation to find new ways to reform and transform public education. Impressive efforts have happened at the local level—oftentimes in spite of Sacramento or Washington. – use of student data to improve instruction and reward teachers in Long Beach and Fresno; an alternative compensation program in San Francisco that resulted from collaboration with the teachers union; a focus on better, not just more, high-quality charter schools throughout the state; a parents’ revolution that is captivating Los Angeles."

Legislators eye grants for schools - San Bernardino County Sun


Legislators eye grants for schools - San Bernardino County Sun:

"While the state could benefit from the federal dollars given its current fiscal crisis, San Bernardino County Superintendent of Schools Gary Thomas said he believes the teachers association should be involved in the conversation pertaining to data.

'If you're going to move in that direction, you're going to have to sit with the California Teachers Association and have thoughtful conversations and discussion about it,' he said.
'It's going to involve their members and the future of the teaching professions, so I think they're going to need to have a voice in that. And as I understand it, the teachers associations have been involved in those conversations.'"

As schools tighten belts, costs of supplies are passed to parents and teachers - Sacramento Living - Sacramento Food and Wine, Home, Health | Sacramento Bee


As schools tighten belts, costs of supplies are passed to parents and teachers - Sacramento Living - Sacramento Food and Wine, Home, Health Sacramento Bee:

"It takes a lot of supplies to run the average public school classroom, and one might assume that school's budget to cover the costs. But in an era of cost-cutting and economizing, the ex pense is increasingly shouldered by parents and teachers, rather than just taxpayers. Teachers spend an average of $500 of their own money each year on school materials, according to a National Education Association survey, while the typical student-supplies list now includes everything from hand sanitizer to safety pins, sandwich bags to batteries."

Sunday, August 30, 2009

Northwest Voices | Education: merit pay, teachers' strikes, raises and alternative schools | Seattle Times Newspaper


Northwest Voices Education: merit pay, teachers' strikes, raises and alternative schools Seattle Times Newspaper:

"In the so-called failing schools, a teacher using all effort and resources may move a student only one bump on a progress chart. This hardly measurable step represents the best and deserves recognition.

In these poor achieving schools:

Income issues dominate family life, and one parent, grandparent or foster family are all too often the home life of many students. Parent involvement is minimal and adults at home are frequently victims of school failure while serious language and cultural issues run deep.

Class sizes can't be reduced but school aids are. Volunteers are few and far between. Discipline is complicated and daily disruptions rob children of learning."

Joel Klein vs. New York City teachers : The New Yorker


Joel Klein vs. New York City teachers : The New Yorker

The United Federation of Teachers, the U.F.T., was founded in 1960. Before that, teachers endured meagre salaries, tyrannical principals, witch hunts for Communists, and gender discrimination against a mostly female workforce (at one point, there was a rule requiring any woman who got pregnant to take a two-year unpaid leave). Drawing its members from a number of smaller and ineffective teachers’ groups, the U.F.T. coalesced into a tough trade union that used strikes and political organizing to fight back. By the time Bloomberg took office, forty-two years later, many education reformers believed that the U.F.T. and its political allies had gained so much clout that it had become impossible for the city’s Board of Education, which already shared a lot of power with local boards, to maintain effective school oversight. In 2002, with the city’s public schools clearly failing, the State Legislature granted control of a new Department of Education to the new mayor, who had become a billionaire by building an immense media company, Bloomberg L.P., that is renowned for firing employees at will and not giving contracts even to senior executives.



Education News & Comment




Education News & Comment:

"New SCUSD WEB SITE!"

Wash. latest state to be sued for school dollars


Wash. latest state to be sued for school dollars Seattle Times Newspaper

The timing wasn't planned, but that doesn't make it any less auspicious.

Right in the middle of a recession that has created the worst atmosphere for school budgeting in decades, a coalition of Washington school districts, parents, teachers and community groups is going to court Monday to demand that the state start paying the full cost of education.

Attorneys for both sides say the economy will have little or no influence on the outcome of the non-jury trail, scheduled to begin on the first day of the school year for many district and to continue for six weeks of testimony in King County Superior Court before Judge John Erlick.

School districts have been struggling economically for decades, so while the recession makes things worse it doesn't make them different, said Mike Blair, chair of the group calling itself Network for Excellence in Washington Schools.

School funding adequacy has been the subject of lawsuits around the country during the past decade. The Columbia University-based National Access Network, which advocates for school funding fairness and maintains a database of current litigation, reports that 45 of the 50 states have been sued over their methods of paying for public schools.

State and federal dollars pay most, but not all the cost to educate Washington's students. The rest of the money comes from local tax levies, donations and PTA fundraisers. Meanwhile, the Washington Constitution makes education the state's highest priority.



Time for lunch - for kids' health




Time for lunch - for kids' health:


"On Labor Day, Sept. 7, every American is invited to take a stand for kids' health and send the message to Congress that our children deserve real food in their school meals. Slow Food USA has organized 'Time for Lunch,' a nationwide potluck to bring people together to share food and take action in support of better school lunches.

More than 250 potluck Eat Ins have been organized around the country to draw attention to the need for healthier food for the more than 30 million children who participate in the National School Lunch Program. The program is part of the Child Nutrition Act that Congress will reauthorize later this year.
In addition to the shared meal, each Labor Day Eat In will have tables set up for guests to send petitions and postcards to Congress. The goal is to increase funding in the Child Nutrition Act reauthorization so schools can afford to serve fresh local produce, lean meats and whole grains, all of which cost more than current school lunches."




Slow Food CNY
Growing our food economy, one salt potato at a time!




Fight Over Payment for Tutoring Fairfax Special-Ed Student Marks Growing Trend - washingtonpost.com


Fight Over Payment for Tutoring Fairfax Special-Ed Student Marks Growing Trend - washingtonpost.com:

"Schools are required by federal law to provide a free and appropriate education for the country's more than 6 million special education students. But parents are not entitled to 'write a prescription for an ideal education and to have the prescription filled at the public expense,' the Fairfax school system argued in legal documents in 2004.

Fairfax officials said they try to be proactive so they can avoid costly, protracted disputes. The school system reorganized this year to create 25 positions to develop partnerships with parents and build education plans for its 24,000 special education students."

Views: Camps disagree on way to fix public schools


Views: Camps disagree on way to fix public schools

Privatization will help just a few, hurt overall system

True school reform
is based on well-researched and well-organized changes in the classroom that would help all students in all public schools perform better. Instead, America has pursued school-choice reforms that help a few students and ultimately degrade the public system as a whole, those on one side of the argument say.

School choice is a political movement disguised as school reform that gives high-frequency, middle-class voters access to free private-school quality education, said Gene Glass, an Arizona State University
education professor. Glass said the choice movement is spurred by exaggerating the problems within America's schools.

If not stopped, this privatization of the public system will leave behind a generation of Americans to intellectually wither in underfunded neighborhood schools, short on supplies and qualified teachers, said Glass, who examines this debate in his latest book "Fertilizers, Pills and Magnetic Strips: The Fate of Public Education in America."

School choice is cheaper for states than raising the entire public-school system to achieve higher standards, and that appeases a growing number of voters, Glass said. Among them are older voters who are retiring deeply in debt and are less willing to pay the taxes needed to fund true reform, and families who want private-style education but can't afford to pay tuition. School choice allows politicians to promise lower taxes while delivering quality education to the important few. In the competition to keep the best and brightest students in public schools, districts are creating their own elite "boutique" schools for gifted and accelerated students, where students get better technology and teaching and more attention than typical neighborhood schools.



Little Red Schoolhouse: gone, but unforgettable


Little Red Schoolhouse: gone, but unforgettable

School days, school days,

Dear old golden rule days

Readin' and 'ritin' and 'rithmetic

Taught to the tune of the hickory stick

You were my queen in calico

I was your bashful, barefoot beau

And you wrote on my slate, "I love you, Joe"

When we were a couple of kids.



The Future of Reading - ‘Reading Workshop’ Approach Lets Students Pick the Books - Series - NYTimes.com


The Future of Reading - ‘Reading Workshop’ Approach Lets Students Pick the Books - Series - NYTimes.com:

"The approach Ms. McNeill uses, in which students choose their own books, discuss them individually with their teacher and one another, and keep detailed journals about their reading, is part of a movement to revolutionize the way literature is taught in America’s schools. While there is no clear consensus among English teachers, variations on the approach, known as reading workshop, are catching on.

In New York City many public and private elementary schools and some middle schools already employ versions of reading workshop. Starting this fall, the school district in Chappaqua, N.Y., is setting aside 40 minutes every other day for all sixth, seventh and eighth graders to read books of their own choosing."

HISD chief-in-waiting has a reputation of pushing reform | Houston & Texas News | Chron.com - Houston Chronicle


HISD chief-in-waiting has a reputation of pushing reform Houston & Texas News Chron.com - Houston Chronicle:

"The sun was shining on this hot August morning, but Superintendent Terry Grier was talking to his principals about rain.

Inside a large, drab high school auditorium, he recounted the “stormy times” of the last 18 months. California's financial disaster forced Grier to chop $250 million from the San Diego school district's budget. He froze hiring, slashed central-office jobs and cut back on textbooks. But he also launched a virtual high school, ordered campuses to offer more advanced courses and employed graduation coaches to help failing students retake classes online."

How much do teachers make? - Peoria, IL - pjstar.com


How much do teachers make? - Peoria, IL - pjstar.com:

"They immerse themselves in a room full of kids, ensure all the rules are followed, look for signs of abuse or disability, instill proper morals and judgment.

In the middle of it all, their jobs are to educate - to teach reading, math, science history, geography and everything in between.

For nine months out of the year, teachers are expected to do it all - the be-all for many.

So how much should they get paid?"

Innovation proposals aim to transform Michigan education | Detroit Free Press | Freep.com


Innovation proposals aim to transform Michigan education Detroit Free Press Freep.com:

"It's an exciting time because we're breaking traditional wisdom with the approach we're taking. We're investing in our schools,' said Gibbons, president of the Oxford Education Association.

Oxford is among dozens of school districts across Michigan that submitted proposals to the Michigan Department of Education as part of its Project Reimagine, an initiative to get school leaders to rethink the way they educate kids.

The state will sift through the 70 proposals and choose up to 20 that would become what the department is calling demonstration districts -- so called because they will become models for reform in the state. It is crucial to reinvent the way students are taught because on just about every national measure of academic success, Michigan consistently ranks as average at a time when being OK isn't good enough to compete globally, many education experts say"

http://www.michigan.gov/mde/0,1607,7-140-43092_52788---,00.html

Teachers praised for sacrifices - MassLive.com


Teachers praised for sacrifices - MassLive.com:

"Teachers have excused the city and School Department from required professional development funding several times in recent years.

'It has been a long year and I think we handled it politely. We are the only city employees that responded to a call from the City Council and mayor to give up financial items to help the city. And, we were bludgeoned by some City Councilors. They fail to recognize what we gave up, that school administrators like principals are taking furlough days and the top administrative positions received no salary increase,' Hovey said.

Challenges cited by Alvira facing the School Department involve the transfer of teachers and students from Moseley Elementary School, which was closed in June, to Southampton Road and Paper Mill schools, the notification of layoff to 34 teachers in June which ultimately resulted in most being recalled, and continued financial constraints because school funding this year is at $51 million, some $2 million below last year's level."