Latest News and Comment from Education

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

North Penn teachers go out on strike | Philadelphia Inquirer | 04/19/2010

North Penn teachers go out on strike | Philadelphia Inquirer | 04/19/2010

North Penn teachers go out on strike


Classes in Montgomery County's largest school district have been canceled for Monday after negotiators failed Sunday to broker a contract agreement between the teachers union and the school board.
The walkout in the North Penn School District follows months of contentious talks, court actions, and severed negotiations.
The union and school board negotiated for seven hours Sunday at district offices in Lansdale. According to the district Web site, the board made its last proposal to the union about 7:45 p.m. At 8:50, the district issued an announcement that there would be no school Monday.
"The strike could run seven days if it goes its full duration," said Alan Malachowski, president of the North Penn Education Association, the union that represents the district's 1,070 teachers. "We're hopeful it can be shorter than that if we can get back to the table and continue bargaining."
The walkout cannot run longer because state law requires students to have 180 school days before June 30, Malachowski said.
Talks will resume Monday with a state mediator, said Vincent Sherpinsky, school board president.
Both sides exchanged several proposals but failed to reach an accord.
Sherpinsky said the district's last offer included an 18.81 percent cumulative pay increase over the course of five

Washington Twp. school race sounds political

Eight candidates are vying for three school board seats in Washington Township at a time when state aid cuts have turned a spotlight on what can sometimes be low-profile affairs.


Schools face financial squeeze in Cherry Hill

When her daughter Samantha, now 17, asked to transfer from private Haddonfield Friends to public grade school in Cherry Hill, Lisa Farkas was skeptical.

Can Philadelphia learn from Lafayette High?

NEW YORK - History teacher Patrick Compton is leafing through pages of the 1967 yearbook of Lafayette High School, alma mater of baseball great Sandy Koufax and broadcaster Larry King in a working-class enclave of Brooklyn.