Education pundits are championing the creed, "education is the civil rights issue of our generation," to bring a sense of urgency to a broken public education system. Individuals that propose bold restructuring of schools, like Michelle Rhee, Arne Duncan, and a myriad of other reform-minded leaders, are calling the public to rethink longstanding norms in education. Common themes have risen from this progressive dialogue; holding teachers highly accountable for student achievement, using data to drive instruction and assessment, reworking or weakening tenure laws, and providing economic incentives for positive academic results seem to be priorities as we look at changing how schools function.
One of the most popular criticisms of this reform movement is that we are blaming teachers for the downfall of a huge national system. Parents and school staff are speaking out, demanding that we
Parents at PS 889 in Brooklyn speak out against DOE refusal to allow them
to lower class size which will lead to third grade classes of 33 students
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*Below are testimonies from last week's NYC Council Education budget
hearings by two parents at PS 889 in Brooklyn, by Ro White and Jessica
Kurtz, explai...
12 hours ago