Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger "Folsom Prison Blues"
Latest News and Comment from Education
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A Federal Book Ban Bill - Well, you knew this was coming. Representative Mary Miller (IL-15), Chairwoman of the Congressional Family Caucus, has introduced a federal book ban bil...1 hour ago
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February’s Parent Engagement Resources - 6 Practical Tips for Planning a Family STEM Night at Your School is from Ed Week. When It Comes to Screen Time, Expert Guidance and Family Realities Diverg...2 hours ago
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WILL HISTORY REPEAT ITSELF? TRUMP, EPSTEIN, AND THE GHOST OF NIXON’S SMOKING GUN - WHERE DID ALL THE REPUBLICANS WITH SPINES GO3 hours ago
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WILL HISTORY REPEAT ITSELF? TRUMP, EPSTEIN, AND THE GHOST OF NIXON'S SMOKING GUN - WILL HISTORY REPEAT ITSELF? TRUMP, EPSTEIN, AND THE GHOST OF NIXON'S SMOKING GUNWHERE DID ALL THE REPUBLICANS WITH SPINES GOThe Setup: A Tale of Two Ta...3 hours ago
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This and That, February 28, 2026 - There was a *Shelter in Place *this week for two southend schools but this time it was Franklin High School and John Muir Elementary. They are one mile a...4 hours ago
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Pre-Order this dazzling book here… - https://bookshop.org/p/books/dangerous-dirty-violent-and-young-a-fugitive-family-in-the-revolutionary-underground-zayd-ayers-dohrn/81fdbaea6f44a43b?ean=978...5 hours ago
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The System Works — Just Not for the Future - “Every system is perfectly designed to get the results it gets.” Meaning that once you change your aspiration—when you set your sights on different results...9 hours ago
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"If you’ve studied history — and you know I have — that’s the moment when the hair on the back of your neck should stand up" - Steve Bannon told an audience: “And I will tell you right now, as God is my witness, if we lose the midterms … some in this room are going to prison – my...10 hours ago
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I Always Believe the Children - Yesterday, I responded to a jury summons, showing up at the courthouse along with 160 other potential jurors to sit and wait. I've done this before, so ...10 hours ago
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Nancy Bailey's Education Website: Three Overlooked Reasons Why Children Struggle With Reading - Nancy Bailey's Education Website: Three Overlooked Reasons Why Children Struggle With Reading Three overlooked reasons for children’s struggles to read an...12 hours ago
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When segregation limited care, Black hospitals filled gaps, served ‘as community hubs’ - [image: Black hospitals]Before integration, segregation shaped where Black patients could receive care, where Black physicians could practice and what ki...20 hours ago
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Federal Voucher Program Myths - The Department of Education released a fact sheet about the federal voucher program in the so-called Big Beautiful Bill. It makes big claims about expand...1 day ago
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Area Eligibility in the Summer Meal Programs - The Management Bulletin provides guidance on area eligibility in the Summer Meal Programs.1 day ago
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Resolution for an AI Moratorium in NYC Schools - Below is a draft resolution calling for a moratorium on the use of AI in NYC public schools until rigorous guidelines can be enacted to prevent harm to stu...1 day ago
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The Great AI-in-Education Paradox - "Google has scored another chance to get its products into schools in the form of a 'sizable investment' in AI training." Peter Greene1 day ago
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Julian Vasquez-Heilig: When AI Becomes Your Boss - Julian Vasquez-Heilig describes a future in which AI is not merely doing the work that humans used to do, but hiring humans to do work that AI used to do. ...1 day ago
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The State of the Union: Leaving Children and Families Behind - Parents listened for a plan, but what they heard was cuts, bureaucracy, xenophobia, and culture wars.1 day ago
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Play nicely: Children who are not friends connect better through play when given a goal - *Getting children to play together cooperatively depends less on their personal social skills and more on what they are doing – especially if they are n...1 day ago
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McMahon Continues Dismantling Dept. of Education. Will She Succeed? - As someone who has advocated for responsible and equitable federal public education policy since the No Child Left Behind era, through the Race to the Top ...1 day ago
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Gifted and Talented Redux - I got my master’s degree in gifted education—actually, a master’s in curriculum and instruction with an emphasis on identifying and serving gifted students...1 day ago
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SOTU Redux: Trump the demagogue performs for a captive audience - Passive Democrats sat on their hands and played his foil.2 days ago
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Center for Christian Virtue is the new White Hat Management, just as Jesus intended - Unlike the notorious Charter School operator, though, CCV's operation is far, far less transparent.2 days ago
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U.S. Preschools: Limited Access and Underpaid Teachers - I have yet to meet anyone who publicly opposes increasing the number of three and four year olds going to public or private preschools. Most parents, poli...2 days ago
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After a crushing defeat by Mamdani the billionaires regroup. - I’m home after five days in the hospital with RSV and pneumonia.3 days ago
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The Scat Report: Navy's largest warship sails into a shit storm in the Persian Gulf. - Weekend Quotables: There's poop in the Potomac and trench warfare at sea.4 days ago
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At Substack: Does Outlier Education Success Provide Template for Universal Education Reform?: New Hampshire Edition - Does Outlier Education Success Provide Template for Universal Education Reform?: New Hampshire Edition4 days ago
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TN Taliban Introduces Bill To Punish Women Who Have Abortions With Life in Prison or Death Penalty - from *The Tennessean*: Two Tennessee Republicans are seeking to impose the death penalty on women who have abortions, requiring the same penalties for w...4 days ago
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Failure is the Real Test of Character - I had a profound experience at the Education Deans for Justice and Equity session at the 2026 AACTE conference in New Orleans. A friend and colleague whom ...5 days ago
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Public School Profiteering in Stockton - By Thomas Ultican 2/21/2026 There is always drama in Stockton, but the public schools are doing surprisingly well. The latest tempest in a tea pot involved...6 days ago
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Florida School Finance Update: Here’s your manageable standard, now fund it! - I’ve had the pleasure of running some new models with updated data in the past few days. I recently produced a lengthy report on school funding in Florida....1 week ago
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What does 62 get you? - It’s my uncle’s 70th coming up. That’s a big deal. He is my mother and aunt’s baby brother. 70. But he’s agonizing – his business is turning 43. He’s think...1 week ago
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A New National Reading Panel? It Depends - … I believed that because of its weaknesses, the report was dangerous in its potential for misuse. ~ Joanne Yatvin, from Education Week (2003). Educator,...1 week ago
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“The Time Had Come to Find My Work”: Diane Ravitch’s Authentic Autobiography - One of my favorite genres is the biography (and by extension, the autobiography). In my early years, I was taken with the life of Abraham Lincoln, and I re...1 week ago
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The Curriculum of Bad Bunny at the Super Bowl Halftime Show - “¿Esto lo que tu queria?” The scene with Bad Bunny in the Spike Lee-inspired Double Dolly shot was the wink to the audience that pulled ... Read More Th...1 week ago
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The Curriculum of Bad Bunny at the Super Bowl Halftime Show - “¿Esto lo que tu queria?” The scene with Bad Bunny in the Spike Lee-inspired Double Dolly shot was the wink to the audience that pulled ... Read More Th...1 week ago
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Operation Mincemeat Compulsive Disorder - If you regularly read my blog, you’ll be expecting a charter school takedown, a TFA rant, or some other education policy analysis. But I’m doing something ...1 week ago
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“Odyssey” Is An AI-Powered Video Tool That Could Be Useful To English Language Learners - I’ve previously shared how I used AI text-to-image tools with English Language Learners (see How I’m Using AI Art Generation To Teach English To Newcomer...1 week ago
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Hearings and testimony on need to reform Mayoral control from Diane Ravitch, parents, and advocates - Above is a video of the City Council hearing last week on Mayoral control, also available here. There were incisive questions from the new Education Co...1 week ago
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A Structural Problem, A Temporary Fix - Why Florida House’s 90:10 to 85:15 Shift Misses the Real FEFP Funding Issue Yesterday, I attended the House...2 weeks ago
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Affordability Crisis Deniers Must Be Challenged by Workers’ Power - A nation that can feed its billionaires but not its children has an economic system built to protect cruelty.2 weeks ago
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Affordability Crisis Deniers Must Be Replaced by Workers’ Power - A nation that can feed its billionaires but not its children has an economic system built to protect cruelty.2 weeks ago
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Climbing the Stairs: Publishing The Truth Is An Act Of Resistance, Reading The Truth Requires Action - Thank you for beginning 2026 with me on Substack and Teaching in Dangerous Times. Here is the painting that I shared with family and friends on a New Year ...3 weeks ago
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Epstein/Trump Horrors - The Department of Justice release over 3 million documents that were in the Epstein files. The follow document was released then it was wiped off the DOJ w...3 weeks ago
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The Problem with "the Science of Reading" - The problem with “the science of reading” is that it’s not new.4 weeks ago
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Surviving “The Great Aggression” - Your parents and/or your grandparents lived through The Great Depression. We are now living in “The Great Aggression,” an unprecedented assault on our demo...4 weeks ago
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Absolute MUST WATCH from David Jolly - the former Republican Congressman who is running for the Democratic nomination for Governor of Florida. The embedded video is just under 8 minutes. Rick...4 weeks ago
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AI Is Not Ruining Schools. It’s Just Doing What Schools Asked. - “The risks of AI in schools outweigh the benefits, report says” is the title of a recent NPR story. The title is dramatic, reassuring, and deeply misleadin...5 weeks ago
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Donald Trump and the Triumph of Narcissism - Although I am neither an historian nor a psychologist, I know enough American history to know that Trump’s demand that Greenland capitulate to his desire...5 weeks ago
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20 Best Cdpap Programs In Staten Island, NY (2024 Updated) - 20 Best Cdpap Programs In Staten Island, NY 1. Dhcare Licensed Home Care Agency Rating: (5.0 ) Located in: Kingston Place Medical... The post 20 Best ...1 month ago
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Is College Harder Than High School? A Comprehensive Guide - Transitioning from high school to college is a significant milestone in every student’s life, and it often...1 month ago
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Shutting Down The Site - Ten years ago, I ran for a seat on the LAUSD School Board of Education with the goal to *Change the LAUSD*. I am proud of the campaign we ran. We achieve...1 month ago
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A colleague looks back at 2025 - Forwarded this email? Subscribe here for more I get knocked down But I get up again BETSY WOLF DEC 31READ IN APP I’ve been quiet for most of 2025. Much of ...1 month ago
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The Company You Keep - Even though the filing period for the 2026 elections isn't until April, let's all pay close attention. The candidates lining up to run will tell you more a...2 months ago
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It Is Up to Us to Defend Democracy - Do we have the courage to defeat an authoritarian regime? I believe we do, if we organize strategically and effectively. There is no time to waste. Do we...3 months ago
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This Is What Democracy Looks Like - The polls for Prop 50, CA’s ballot initiative that counters MAGA’s illegal gerry-mandering in Texas, opened Tuesday, November 4, 2025,… The post This Is ...3 months ago
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Dear NJ Teachers and Their Families: You MUST Not Vote For Jack Ciattarelli - To all NJ public school staff and their families: *You must not vote for Jack Ciattarelli. He will do serious, lasting damage to you personally, and the ...3 months ago
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John Kowalko Passed Away. The Champion Of Opt-Out. A Delaware Hero. - Former Delaware State Representative John Kowalko died yesterday, He was 80 years old. He was my friend and he was the most Progressive legislator I have e...4 months ago
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Keep ICE’s Big Tech partners out of our kids’ counseling services! - Mental health is a prerequisite for learning, and all kids deserve access to mental healthcare. As the Trump administration ramps up its mass deportation c...4 months ago
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Blogoversary #19 — Time to Move on - Times have changed. I had a nice long run here, but let’s face it, it ended a while ago. So I’ve moved. I’m not writing much any more, but when I do it wil...5 months ago
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McGrath and Kaminsky: Key Names in the School Policy Debate - The landscape of American school policy is no longer shaped only behind closed doors. It’s debated in town halls, on social media, and through public prote...8 months ago
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"Didn't do *that*," part 1: new Schofield case developments reveal crucial 10th Circuit/Ledger lie - The record is clear. Jeremy Scott confessed at least 40 times in a 2017 hearing. He never recanted. The Ledger must retract its lie to force Judge Kevin Ab...9 months ago
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Achieve 3000 Answers Key (Updated 2023) - Are you on the hunt for the most recent Achieve 3000 answers for the year 2023? Your search is over! ... Read more9 months ago
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Il Papa è Morto - Francis brought a distinct pastoral outlook to his papacy. A simple man, he lived in a small apartment in the guesthouse. He sought to make the church acce...10 months ago
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Kemenangan Member Birutoto Main PG Soft Speed Winner - Kemenangan Member Birutoto Main PG Soft Speed Winner Birutoto – Situs Slot Gacor Terpercaya The post Kemenangan Member Birutoto Main PG Soft Speed Winner...10 months ago
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Mike Shulman the ARISE UFT Judenrat - I was surprised to learn that Mike Shulman has aligned himself with ARISE. I previously supported him, advocating that the Castle Doctrine could have bee...10 months ago
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How Do We Fight Trump? - Dear Friends, I don’t know when and why it hit me. But I suddenly realized how serious Trump is about changing the country into something that horrifies. I...10 months ago
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Can Students Expect a Relevant Education to be Delivered by Irrelevant Educators? - As a veteran teacher of forty years in the classroom, let me be clear, teachers are not completely at fault for becoming irrelevant in their profession. It...11 months ago
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The US Department of Education Should not be Eliminated. Still, it must be reformed. - If you don’t have an attention span that lasts long enough to learn what I’m teaching in this post, start with the conclusion first. Then if you want to re...1 year ago
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Malcolm & John David Washington Talk NFL, Christopher Nolan & ‘The Piano Lesson’ - 'The Washington brothers built their careers apart—until an irresistible project drew them together. In The *Piano Lesson*, they tackle a father’s thorny...1 year ago
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AIN’T IT AWFUL - As the terrible feelings of dread and angst spread across the world the great majority of the American people feel powerless before the onslaught of those ...1 year ago
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Did Darryl Willie lie or interfere in the whistleblower investgation? Why not both? - Willie said below to Action News Jax [image: image.png] It's troubling for quite a few reasons. First he is saying the board knew about the complaint an...1 year ago
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Could This Be Gadfly’s End? Top 12 Articles From 2023 Read By Fewer Than Ever - After 9 years of pounding my head against the wall - well, it seems like the wall is winning.2 years ago
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Redesigning School Governance: Beyond Mayoral Control - From time to time the legislature passes a bill with a sunset provision, unless the law is reauthorized by a specific date the law reverts to the law it re...2 years ago
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POSTPONED: Florida’s Impact on Social Studies - POSTPONED: discussion with Florida and DC educators and advocates on the impact of Florida's new laws Continue reading2 years ago
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Vote NO on the UFT Contract. Here is Why: - The best reason to vote no on this contract is this: UFT Unity* lied* to us in 2018. They misrepresented that contract. It was predicated on deals we wer...2 years ago
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Testimony to the CPS Truancy Task Force - I prepared testimony for one of two public hearings held by the Chicago Public Schools Truancy Task Force, a body mandated by state legislation. The meetin...3 years ago
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Tennis Memories from a Time When Racism and Anti-Semitism Still Prevailed - I learned tennis at a public park in Brooklyn- Lincoln Terrace- where the teaching pro was a mailman named Phil Rubell. Almost all the kids who took lesson...3 years ago
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There Is A Teacher Shortage.Not. - THERE IS A TEACHER SHORTAGE. And just to be sure you understand, it’s not that teachers don’t want to teach. It’s not that there aren’t enough teachers cer...3 years ago
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Want to know the condition of a Philly school building? New map to help. - [image: Two students walk by a Philadelphia school building.] Aging infrastructure has been an issue for Philadelphia schools for years. A new interactive...3 years ago
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STREET LIFE - My mom told me, “You should treat all people equally, but don’t bring a “colored” into the house.” I believed … Continue reading →3 years ago
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Schools Matter: Reflecting on Green Dot’s Disastrous Locke Takeover - *“Green Dot came and made it into more of a jail.” — Chris* My history of opposing the Green Dot Charter School Corporation back when I was an activist i...3 years ago
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Book Banning Turns to Dick and Jane - Breaking News: Dateline February 4, 2022 - Parents in Dimwitty, Alabama have asked the Dimwitty Board of Education to ban the children's primer *Fun with...4 years ago
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Have You Heard Has a New Website - TweetHave You Heard has a new website. Visit us at www.haveyouheardpodcast.com to find our latest episodes and our entire archive. And be sure to check out...4 years ago
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Follow me at Substack - I've moved. Follow me at Substack I'm now posting regularly at Substack. You can subscribe for free to my new Edu/Pol blog at michaelklonsky.substack.com ...4 years ago
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I’ve moved. - I’m on Substack now. You can continue to receive periodic posts for free. Or you can read every post and comment for $5 a month, $60 a year. fredklonsky.su...4 years ago
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Milwaukee Bradley Foundation at Center of Attacks on U.S. Voting Rights - The Big Money Behind the Big Lie Donald Trump’s attacks on democracy are being promoted by rich and powerful conservative groups that are determined to win...4 years ago
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Milwaukee Bradley Foundation at Center of Attacks on U.S. Voting Rights - The Big Money Behind the Big Lie Donald Trump’s attacks on democracy are being promoted by rich and powerful conservative groups that are determined to win...4 years ago
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Aspiring Teachers Get New Help Paying For College - [image: colorful classroom pattern] *; Credit: shuoshu/Getty Images* Cory Turner | NPR New rules kick in today that will help aspiring teachers pay for c...4 years ago
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Major victory over a corporate charter school chain and their trade association - Original post at Robert’s page on Medium. On Tuesday, March 23, 2021, I got my second big win in court against a charter school corporation. It was also a ...4 years ago
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Tips Akses Situs Judi Qq Tanpa Perlu Takut Nawala - Kegiatan berjudi slot melalui situs judi qq online, sekarang sudah dilakukan oleh banyak penjudi Indonesia. Tentu, Kamu yang sedang membaca artikel ini a...4 years ago
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The Threat of Integration - I have lived in the same house in the Miracle Mile section of Los Angeles for over 30 years, where up until now I have had little or no interaction with th...5 years ago
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New Teacher Evaluation Report Released by the Network for Public Education - A new report on current teacher evaluation systems throughout the US was just released by the Network for Public Education. The report is titled, “Teachers...5 years ago
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www.job-applications.com - https://www.job-applications.com/bed-bath-and-beyond-job-application/5 years ago
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Teacher Creates National Database Tracking COVID-19 Outbreaks in Schools - Kansas educator Alisha Morris's online coronavirus news-tracker goes viral, now hosted on a new NEA website.5 years ago
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Correction for July 10th Post on School District Audit - On July 10, 2020 we published a post “School District Caught Manipulating Attendance Records to Get More Money” which incorrectly cited Valley Park School ...5 years ago
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We fight for a democracy worthy of us all! - The nation stands at a crossroads, said NEA President Lily Eskelsen GarcÃa in her final keynote address to the 2020 NEA Representative Assembly and it’s up...5 years ago
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Giving Private Schools Federal Emergency Funds Slated for Low-income Students Will Shortchange At-risk Kids - Low-income Seattle students began to pick up bagged lunches in March after their school closed. Karen Ducey/Getty Images Derek W. Black, University of Sout...5 years ago
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The Passing Of Chaz 1951-2020 Age 69 - I am the son of Chaz and like to inform you that he passed away this afternoon from the COVID virus. My father passed in peace beside his loved ones. We ar...5 years ago
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Let The Next Round Of Anti-Semitic Ads Begin - All four pro-public education candidates came in first in their LAUSD school board elections, but two will face run-offs in November.5 years ago
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The Fight For Our Children - *The number of suicides among people ages 10 to 24 nationally increased by 56 percent between 2007 and 2017, according to a new federal report showing the ...6 years ago
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Love Grow Your Own (but not without the actual growth part) - The Governor of Virginia, Ralph Northam, recently announced a grow-your-own type of program for teachers. According to this piece: On Monday, Governor Ral...6 years ago
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Another attempted cash grab by the corporate ed crowd in Washington State: House Bill 2788 - The League of Women Voters has opposed charter schools because they don’t have boards elected by the voters but instead the corporation running the schools...6 years ago
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Some of Our Graduates Don't Even Know How to Tighten a Nut - Are schools neglecting practical knowledge and skills? Many of our students are graduating from high school with extremely limited practical knowledge essen...6 years ago
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Read to Self: Just a Kid and a Book. - Date: Monday, January 5, 2020 Place: My classroom Student: Mrs.Mims, could we start doing Read to Self again because I got this great book for Christmas an...6 years ago
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Reminiscences - I just finished dumping the rest of my lesson plans. I guess I held on to the calculus ones for so long because I spent so much time working on them an...6 years ago
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Just Asking for some Teachers I know. - Recently Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers stated, We must … recognize that part of supporting our kids in the classroom means supporting the educators who t...6 years ago
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Charging a terrified 10-year-old girl as a criminal is a very bad look for state attorney Dennis Ward - What the hell is going on? As a parent, I feel very comfortable using this exact wording to ask this … Continue reading →6 years ago
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Cara Menang Bermain Judi Bola Online - Bermain judi bola online tentu saja memiliki kesenangannya tersendiri baik itu mendapatkan keuntungan maupun ketika menantikan hasil skor pada sebuah perta...6 years ago
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Blaming Schools for Student Absences is Like Denouncing Doctors for Disease by Steven Singer - Originally posted at: https://gadflyonthewallblog.com/2019/08/25/blaming-schools-for-student-absences-is-like-denouncing-doctors-for-disease/?fbclid=IwAR1LV...6 years ago
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Jersey journalist roughed up at session sponsored by charter school groups - The sponsors of an event that doesn’t like journalists An independent New Jersey journalist was roughed up, his video camera was seized, and he was ejected...6 years ago
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K12 Inc. Data Breach Puts thousands of students at risk - It's hard to believe school districts are still contracting with this horrible company. K12 Inc. is the largest for-profit online alternative to actual pub...6 years ago
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A Critique of Standards-Based Grading - It first happened to me about ten years ago. I was beginning my third year of teaching in a new school in Washington, DC. Social studies teachers were si...6 years ago
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Reduced time for testing? Not so fast. - NYSED and Commish Elia continue to say that the NYS Assessments are of reasonable length, I completely disagree. Here is what NYSED states are average expe...6 years ago
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A Response to NorthJersey.com's Explosive "Cashing in on Charter Schools" Series - From NorthJersey.com's Cashing in on Charter Schools series Please note: THIS is what journalism looks like. For the better part of a *DECADE* I have wa...6 years ago
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This Week in Education Organizing - February 15, 2019 - Coalition for Education Justice to Release Report on CRE Eighty-five percent of public school students in New York City are Black, Latinx, or Asian and y...7 years ago
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The World According to Michelle Rhee - The men behind the curtain fashioning the brave new world of corporate run education in America! Michelle Rhee is the founder of StudentsFirst, The New T...7 years ago
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Libraries, books and overcoming the effect of poverty - *Published in the New York Times, September 20, 2018* *To the Editor:* *Re “Why libraries still matter.” [https://www.nytimes.com/2018/09/08/opinion/sund...7 years ago
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TSJ's 17th Annual Curriculum Fair - *TSJ's 17th Annual Curriculum Fair* *** REGISTER HERE *** *From Puerto Rico to Chicago:* *Reclaiming and Reimagining Our Communities* Saturday, November 1...7 years ago
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Whose Opinions Matter in Education World? - It's hard to identify education heroes and sheroes. And perhaps even harder to pinpoint just whose work is slanted, paid-for and dishonest.7 years ago
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Book Review: The History of Institutional Racism in U.S. Public Schools (2018, Garn Press) by Susan DuFresne - I recently had the privilege of reading Dufresne’s powerful illustrated history of educational and institutional racism in the United States. Dufresne blen...7 years ago
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Corruption on Top of Corruption: How Rahm’s Response to Sexual Abuse of Students Reveals His Core Function - Rahm Emanuel’s response to the Chicago Tribune investigation that found CPS failed to protect hundreds of students from sexual abuse is cowardly. It is co...7 years ago
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New Local Businesses in Sacramento - Starting a new local business in Sacramento is a monumental task, but can be accomplished with footwork, perseverance and knowledge. One must learn the loc...7 years ago
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Lesson Plan: Rhyme and Rhythm in Poetry - I’ve started a recent unit on poetry with my class. I’m not a poet, and I’m not a poetry fan (I don’t hate it, but I’m a prose gal), so this makes it harde...7 years ago
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The Apotheosis of Betsy DeVos - Betsy Devos has drawn few headlines in recent months, and that is a good thing for the Secretary of Education. Her tenure began with Vice President Mike P...7 years ago
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A Teacher’s Tale in the Midst of the Terror in our Schools - Students’ active-shooter plan for teacher in wheelchair: ‘We will carry you’ Reprinted from Allison Slater Tate Feb. 21, 2018 at 4:58 PM Like teachers all ...8 years ago
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Social Emotional Data. The new Cash Cow in the Corporate Assessment Industry - Recently I was asked to allow my son to participate in a survey at school. The "opt in" survey form specifically stated, "the questions on the survey rela...8 years ago
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Education Is a Civic Question - In their final post to end Bridging Differences' decade-long run, Deborah Meier and Harry Boyte urge readers to put the energy, talents, wisdom, and hard w...8 years ago
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Site News: New Home for Education News & Commentary - Quick! Get over there! The daily education news roundup and education commentaries that you're probably looking for are now being published over at The Gra...8 years ago
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Should We Be Grateful? - In an odd turn of events, and with little explanation, Michigan Governor Rick Snyder has decided to return the state’s School Reform Office back to the Dep...8 years ago
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Parents Deserve to Know Who Is Being Appointed to State Board of Ed - I spent a rather surreal day at NJ Senate's Judiciary Committee meeting yesterday. This Committee, headed by Democrat Nick Scaturi, is responsible for a...8 years ago
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An Open Letter to NC Lawmakers - An Open Letter to NC State Lawmakers and NC State Superintendent Mark Johnson: I am a NC native, voter, and public school teacher. I am addressing you all ...8 years ago
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The Secret to Fixing Schools (My Next Bestseller) - The Secret to Fixing Schools (My next bestseller) Prologue I just finished watching a fascinating documentary on Netflix entitled, “The Secret”. The film p...8 years ago
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CPS Targets Special Education Teacher Sarah Chambers - Here are the remarks from an action we did today at River Point Plaza, a new development that used over $30 million in TIF funds. CPS claims we are broke...8 years ago
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Farewell, Sleep - Today is the official last day of my spring break. I've done a scientific survey: My natural bedtime is 2 AM, and my natural wake up time is 9:41 AM. Tom...8 years ago
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March is nearly over and I didn't do anything for WOMEN'S HISTORY MONTH - I was inspired when I saw this meme I guess it can be called of WOMEN IN STEM and "IT'S OKAY TO BE SMART" And I began thinking about how the only subjec...8 years ago
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REPORT: States With the Best and Worst Schools - States With the Best (and Worst)Schools By *Evan Comen, Michael B. Sauter, Samuel Stebbins and Thomas C. Frohlich* January 20, 2017- http://247wallst.com ...8 years ago
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Test Refusal = People Power - In recent months, social media has been ablaze with talk of regular folk taking action to resist the Trump agenda. Protests are a daily occurrence, and ev...8 years ago
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Attitude Determines Altitude* (*conditions apply)… and the Importance of Humane District Themes - It has been a tumultuous few years in the South Brunswick community, specifically the South Brunswick School District. All you have to do is google the dis...9 years ago
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What Is To Be Done? Trump, the Election, and the Student Loan Crises - President-elect Donald Trump delivering acceptance speech in New York, NY on November 9 (Photo Credit: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images Ever since now Presi...9 years ago
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Prison Gerrymandering: Incarceration Weakens Vulnerable Voting Communities - One person equals one vote: seems simple enough. Unfortunately, that hasn’t worked out for many Americans throughout history, specifically women and peop...9 years ago
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Random Musings and Observations. . . . - I’ve been gone a while from the blogging scene. Some of my more regular readers no doubt noticed but did not hassle me about it. Thank you for that. Sinc...9 years ago
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WTU Headquarters On The Auction Block: Union Prez Liz Davis Doesn't Pay Property Tax! - *June 30th is the last official day of WTU Prez Davis' constitutional term. Malcolm Barnes explores this unfortunate scandal in the article below. What r...9 years ago
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AB 934: A LEGISLATIVE FIX FOR VERGARA? - By Michael Stratford | in the Politco Morning Education Report | via email 05/24/2016 10:00 AM EDT :: Two national education groups are backing a Califor...9 years ago
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To simply say you have a growth mindset does not mean you actually have one - By definition, you cannot have a growth mindset when learning is anchored to standardized tests. Standardized tests are a one … Continue reading →9 years ago
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Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Brouhaha in Brooklyn: Live-blogging the PEP’s school closure vote | GothamSchools
Brouhaha in Brooklyn: Live-blogging the PEP’s school closure vote | GothamSchools
Brouhaha in Brooklyn: Live-blogging the PEP’s school closure vote
by Philissa CramerTonight’s school closure vote is underway in Brooklyn. Anna and Maura are on the scene and will be providing dispatches until the meeting’s bitter end.
12:45 a.m. I’m just going to go ahead and say it: Don’t expect Remainders tonight.
12:40 a.m. Just a reminder that there are a number of items on the PEP’s agenda that don’t involve school closures. One of those is the space plan for PS 15 and PAVE Academy in Red Hook. Julie Cavanagh, the PS 15 teacher who tried to win the right to picket outside Mayor Bloomberg’s house last week, explained why she’s still out on a school night: “I am going to make them look me in the eye when they vote.”
It may take a lawsuit to preserve schools
It may take a lawsuit to preserve schools:
"On Tuesday night at the San Francisco Board of Education meeting my administration brought forward a preliminary budget proposal that encompassed the next two fiscal years and contains cuts of a magnitude never seen in California public education to date. To say it is a bleak outlook would grossly underestimate the size of the tsunami that is about to hit not only San Francisco's schools but the entire state education system. Yes, these cuts will be greater than those imposed after Prop. 13 and even greater than those experienced during the Great Depression."
To provide some perspective, here simply is our situation: SFUSD has an unrestricted general fund budget of approximately $400 million. Due to the actions taken in Sacramento over the last 18 months, our projected deficit over the next two years will total $113 million, or $1,365 less per student. This means we will be getting $4,977 per student instead of $6,342 per student. So we face 21 percent less for teachers and counselors, for books and math texts, for computers and art classes, and for field trips and science labs.
Sacramento has presented us with this problem and no new math can help us. School districts throughout the state are required by law to make the numbers work or face being put under state receivership. California school districts have been fiscally prudent; this is not a problem created by educators. We've tried to do more with less in a state whose dwindling commitment to education has gotten so bad that by next year we will rank dead last in the country for how much we spend per pupil. How is it possible that the eighth richest economy in the world can have the lowest per-pupil expenditure in the
Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/01/26/ED9H1BNOE4.DTL#ixzz0dmZJzWXm
To provide some perspective, here simply is our situation: SFUSD has an unrestricted general fund budget of approximately $400 million. Due to the actions taken in Sacramento over the last 18 months, our projected deficit over the next two years will total $113 million, or $1,365 less per student. This means we will be getting $4,977 per student instead of $6,342 per student. So we face 21 percent less for teachers and counselors, for books and math texts, for computers and art classes, and for field trips and science labs.
Sacramento has presented us with this problem and no new math can help us. School districts throughout the state are required by law to make the numbers work or face being put under state receivership. California school districts have been fiscally prudent; this is not a problem created by educators. We've tried to do more with less in a state whose dwindling commitment to education has gotten so bad that by next year we will rank dead last in the country for how much we spend per pupil. How is it possible that the eighth richest economy in the world can have the lowest per-pupil expenditure in the
Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/01/26/ED9H1BNOE4.DTL#ixzz0dmZJzWXm
President Obama to Propose Freezing Spending on Some Programs - Politics K-12 - Education Week
President Obama to Propose Freezing Spending on Some Programs - Politics K-12 - Education Week
President Barack Obama's fiscal year 2011 budget will propose freezing some $447 billion in discretionary programs. The change will save about $15 billion next year (or to put in perspective, a little more than the federal government spent on Title I grants to districts last year).
The freeze doesn't apply, apparently, to military and veterans programs, as well as programs such as Social Security. And it likely would not apply to programs covered under the health-care-overhaul bill, the future of which is pretty uncertain. And it won't apply to any spending put into a "jobs bill," such as the $154 billion measure the House approved late last year, which included some substantial education spending.
It's not clear yet whether, and which, K-12 education programs will be subject to the freeze, since it is for overall spending levels not individual programs. (We know that at least one program, the $4 billion Race to the Top competition, will be slated for an increase of $1.35 billion and opened up to school districts).
But it certainly sounds as if programs such as Title I grants to districts and special education, or smaller Education Department programs, such as TRIO, could be in the mix for cuts or freezes. And if they see even a small increase when everything else is level-funded, that will be a big deal, symbolically.
But, at the same time, symbolism may not mean much to cash-strapped districts, which are still making program and staff cuts despite the $100 billion in
Eduflack: The NYC HIgh School Improvement Experience
Eduflack: The NYC HIgh School Improvement Experience
Whenever Eduflack writes about the "successes" of New York City's school improvement efforts under Chancellor Joel Klein, I get publicly flogged by some audience or another. Most take significant issue with my conclusions that NYC Department of Education has improved the quality of the public schools. Others take issue with giving Klein (and NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg) credit for such school improvement. And even if I can get the opposition to acknowledge an uptick in student achievement in NYC, they will immediately retort that the gains are minimal, and not nearly enough to declare turnaround efforts in New York a success.
My responses to such criticism have been relatively simple. The test scores, at least on New York's state exams, do show gains in both reading and math in NYC. If you don't believe the final tallies coming from Albany, you should at least acknowledge that NYC has won the Broad Prize, and that Broad similarly crunched the numbers and found academic gains across the city. And if the gains aren't big enough for you yet, first, give it time. Then remember how large the NYCDOE truly is. Upticks in a system that size are worthy of praise.
Always a glutton for punishment, Eduflack is going to raise the NYC achievement flag again. Today, we're going to reflect on a forum hosted yesterday by the Alliance for Excellent Education. Offering a multi-hour symposium yesterday under the banner of "Informing Federal Education Policy Through Lessons from New York City," the Alliance also put a spotlight on a new report it has released, "New York City's Strategy for Improving High Schools."
Whenever Eduflack writes about the "successes" of New York City's school improvement efforts under Chancellor Joel Klein, I get publicly flogged by some audience or another. Most take significant issue with my conclusions that NYC Department of Education has improved the quality of the public schools. Others take issue with giving Klein (and NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg) credit for such school improvement. And even if I can get the opposition to acknowledge an uptick in student achievement in NYC, they will immediately retort that the gains are minimal, and not nearly enough to declare turnaround efforts in New York a success.
My responses to such criticism have been relatively simple. The test scores, at least on New York's state exams, do show gains in both reading and math in NYC. If you don't believe the final tallies coming from Albany, you should at least acknowledge that NYC has won the Broad Prize, and that Broad similarly crunched the numbers and found academic gains across the city. And if the gains aren't big enough for you yet, first, give it time. Then remember how large the NYCDOE truly is. Upticks in a system that size are worthy of praise.
Always a glutton for punishment, Eduflack is going to raise the NYC achievement flag again. Today, we're going to reflect on a forum hosted yesterday by the Alliance for Excellent Education. Offering a multi-hour symposium yesterday under the banner of "Informing Federal Education Policy Through Lessons from New York City," the Alliance also put a spotlight on a new report it has released, "New York City's Strategy for Improving High Schools."
Villegas to resign from Southwest ISD
Villegas to resign from Southwest ISD:
"The Southwest Independent School District will soon be looking for a new chief after Superintendent Velma Villegas announced her retirement, effective June 30, during a Jan.18 school board meeting.
“This decision is one that has mixed emotions for me because I have come to love the Southwest community and my work as your superintendent,” she said in a letter to the board.
Villegas said she plans to spend more time with her family and do some consulting work, including helping Texas A&M-San Antonio develop its teacher preparation program.
A Texas native, Villegas has led the district since 2005. She previously was an assistant superintendent in Spring Branch ISD near Houston."
“This decision is one that has mixed emotions for me because I have come to love the Southwest community and my work as your superintendent,” she said in a letter to the board.
Villegas said she plans to spend more time with her family and do some consulting work, including helping Texas A&M-San Antonio develop its teacher preparation program.
A Texas native, Villegas has led the district since 2005. She previously was an assistant superintendent in Spring Branch ISD near Houston."
Daily Media Use Among Children and Teens Up Dramatically From Five Years Ago - Kaiser Family Foundation
DAILY MEDIA USE AMONG CHILDREN AND TEENS UP DRAMATICALLY FROM FIVE YEARS AGO
Big Increase in
Most Youth Say They Have No Rules About How Much Time They Can Spend
The amount of time spent with media increased by an hour and seventeen minutes a day over the past five years, from 6:21 in 2004 to 7:38 today. And because of media multitasking, the total amount of media content consumed during that period has increased from 8:33 in 2004 to 10:45 today.Generation M2: Media in the Lives of 8- to 18-Year-Olds is the third in a series of large-scale, nationally representative surveys by the Foundation about young people’s media use. It includes data from all three waves of the study (1999, 2004, and 2009), and is among the largest and most comprehensive publicly available sources of information about media use among American youth.
Mobile media driving increased consumption. The increase in media use is driven in large part by ready access to mobile devices like cell phones and iPods. Over the past five years, there has been a huge increase in ownership among 8- to 18-year-olds: from 39% to 66% for cell phones, and from 18% to 76% for iPods and other MP3 players. During this period, cell phones and iPods have become true multi-media devices: in fact, young people now spend more time listening to music, playing games, and watching TV on their cell phones (a total of :49 daily) than they spend talking on them (:33).
Parents and media rules. Only about three in ten young people say they have rules about how much time they can spend watching TV (28%) or playing video games (30%), and 36% say the same about using the computer. But when parents do set limits, children spend less time with media: those with any media rules consume nearly 3 hours less media per day (2:52) than those with no rules.
Media in the home. About two-thirds (64%) of young people say the TV is usually on during meals, and just under half (45%) say the TV is left on “most of the time” in their home, even if no one is watching. Seven in ten (71%) have a TV in their bedroom, and half (50%) have a console video game player in their room. Again, children in these TV-centric homes spend far more time watching: 1:30 more a day in homes where the TV is left on most of the time, and an hour more among those with a TV in their room.
“The amount of time young people spend with media has grown to where it’s even more than a full-time work week,” said Drew Altman, Ph.D., President and
Black and Hispanic children spend far more time with media than White children do. There are substantial differences in children’s media use between members of various ethnic and racial groups. Black and Hispanic children consume nearly 4½ hours more media daily (13:00 of total media exposure for Hispanics, 12:59 for Blacks, and 8:36 for Whites). Some of the largest differences are in TV viewing: Black children spend nearly 6 hours and Hispanics just under 5½ hours, compared to roughly 3½ hours a day for White youth. The only medium where there is no significant difference between these three groups is print. Differences by race/ethnicity remain even after controlling for other factors such as age, parents’ education, and single vs. two-parent homes. The racial disparity in media use has grown substantially over the past five years: for example, the gap between White and Black youth was just over two hours (2:12) in 2004, and has grown to more than four hours today (4:23).
Big changes in TV. For the first time over the course of the study, the amount of time spent watching regularly-scheduled TV declined, by 25 minutes a day (from 2004 to 2009). But the many new ways to watch TV–on the Internet, cell phones, and iPods–actually led to an increase in total TV consumption from 3:51 to 4:29 per day, including :24 of online viewing, :16 on iPods and other MP3 players, and :15 on cell phones. All told, 59% (2:39) of young people’s TV-viewing consists of live TV on a TV set, and 41% (1:50) is time-shifted, DVDs, online, or mobile.
Effective Teaching Campaign grades contract | Philadelphia Public School Notebook
Effective Teaching Campaign grades contract | Philadelphia Public School Notebook
While progress was made in site selection, teacher standards and evaluations, and tailoring professional development to the needs of specific schools, "we also see a larger missed opportunity," said Lauren Jacobs of the Cross City Campaign for School Reform, a coordinator of the campaign. More should have been done to make these schools more attractive places to work, she said.
The Effective Teaching for Every Childcampaign gave the new teachers' contract mostly high marks in a report card, but said that it does not provide enough incentives to recruit and keep teachers in hard-to-staff schools.
At a rally and press conference in front of School District headquarters, about 60 students, parents and teachers gathered to express their opinion on the contract. To express their mixed feelings, they chanted, "Way to go, more to go."
The campaign is urgently concerned about distributing effective and experienced equitably across the system and creating stable staffs at the neediest schools. It gave the contract a D on incentives because:
Do you keep pushing when others can’t (or won’t) ’see’ your vision? � EducationCEO's Blog
Do you keep pushing when others can’t (or won’t) ’see’ your vision? EducationCEO's Blog
Approximately 1.5 years ago our organization, Millennium Scholars Academy (MSA), submitted a charter petition to the Gwinnett County Board of Education. We proposed to open the first K-12 Visual and Performing Arts (tuition-free) charter school in the county. At the time that we submitted our petition, we had enrollment commitments for 160 students, ranging from grades K-9; we even had parents whose children were not school-age who asked us to consider adding a Pre-K program!
The board denied our petition, citing several reasons, including the following: (1) looping/multi-year classrooms were already being implemented in schools throughout the county; (2) our plans for the arts program was too extensive to do during the traditional school day (Kennedy Center Arts Edge Standards); and (3) Understanding by Design was not research based. As required by the state, I responded to the board’s deficiencies. I even went so far as to imply that looping implementation must be based on the zip code of the
Approximately 1.5 years ago our organization, Millennium Scholars Academy (MSA), submitted a charter petition to the Gwinnett County Board of Education. We proposed to open the first K-12 Visual and Performing Arts (tuition-free) charter school in the county. At the time that we submitted our petition, we had enrollment commitments for 160 students, ranging from grades K-9; we even had parents whose children were not school-age who asked us to consider adding a Pre-K program!
The board denied our petition, citing several reasons, including the following: (1) looping/multi-year classrooms were already being implemented in schools throughout the county; (2) our plans for the arts program was too extensive to do during the traditional school day (Kennedy Center Arts Edge Standards); and (3) Understanding by Design was not research based. As required by the state, I responded to the board’s deficiencies. I even went so far as to imply that looping implementation must be based on the zip code of the
voiceofsandiego.org | News. Investigation. Analysis. Conversation. Intelligence. - San Diego Schools' New Testing Idea: No Child Left Unmeasured
voiceofsandiego.org | News. Investigation. Analysis. Conversation. Intelligence. - San Diego Schools' New Testing Idea: No Child Left Unmeasured
By EMILY ALPERT
Tom O'Malley knew that the fourth grade classes at Birney Elementary had been a success -- but the numbers said it had failed.
O'Malley said two years ago, he and a fellow teacher got a crop of children who were badly behind. They helped the students improve, making even bigger gains than the last classes they taught. But because the kids didn't do as well as the earlier class, who came in ahead and scored higher, test scores seemed to drop.
"I felt like a failure as a teacher," O'Malley said, shaking his head. "I'm not one of these teachers who are scared to be held accountable. I just want to be held accountable for what I actually do."
His story underscores a nagging problem with test scores, especially under No Child Left Behind: Schools are gauged by how well they do from year to year, but nobody is comparing the same children. When school officials say that fourth grade math scores sunk or soared, they really mean that one class of third graders -- the class from last year -- did well or poorly
Education Research Report: Achievement Effects of Four Early Elementary School Math Curricula: Findings from First Graders in 39 Schools
Education Research Report: Achievement Effects of Four Early Elementary School Math Curricula: Findings from First Graders in 39 Schools
Achievement Effects of Four Early Elementary School Math Curricula: Findings from First Graders in 39 Schools
Achievement Effects of Four Early Elementary School Math Curricula: Findings from First Graders in 39 Schools reports on the relative impacts of four math curricula on first-grade mathematics achievement. The curricula were selected to represent diverse approaches to teaching elementary school math in the United States. The four curricula are Investigations in Number, Data, and Space; Math Expressions; Saxon Math; and Scott Foresman-Addison Wesley Mathematics.
First-grade math achievement was significantly higher in schools randomly assigned to Math Expressions or Saxon Math than in those schools assigned to Investigations in Number, Data, and Space or to Scott Foresman-Addison Wesley Mathematics.
The research described in this report is consistent with WWC evidence standards:
First-grade math achievement was significantly higher in schools randomly assigned to Math Expressions or Saxon Math than in those schools assigned to Investigations in Number, Data, and Space or to Scott Foresman-Addison Wesley Mathematics.
The research described in this report is consistent with WWC evidence standards:
Schools Matter: Bill Gates Honors His Empire's Prime Directive on Uganda's Kill The Gays Bill
Schools Matter: Bill Gates Honors His Empire's Prime Directive on Uganda's Kill The Gays Bill
With Bill and Melinda softening any resistance to good old fashioned corporate colonialism in Africa with their foundation's unlimited supply of tax-sheltered handouts, Microsoft has established a lock on educational technology in Uganda and elsewhere on the continent. And just this week, Forbes reportsthat Gates has teamed with Coke and TechnoServe to assure Coca-Cola global advantage in the fruit juice market.
With Bill and Melinda softening any resistance to good old fashioned corporate colonialism in Africa with their foundation's unlimited supply of tax-sheltered handouts, Microsoft has established a lock on educational technology in Uganda and elsewhere on the continent. And just this week, Forbes reportsthat Gates has teamed with Coke and TechnoServe to assure Coca-Cola global advantage in the fruit juice market.
The project seeks to help local farmers whose fruit will be used for Coca-Cola's locally produced and sold fruit juices. TechnoServe will train farmers in improving quality, increasing production and getting organized into farmer groups, and it will facilitate gaining access to credit.
U.S.-based TechnoServe's corporate partners include Cargill, Kraft,Nestle -Nespresso, Olam International,Peet's Coffee & Tea andUnilever . Since its founding in 1968, TechnoServe has helped to create or expand thousands of businesses in more than 30 countries.
Hey, I wonder if TechnoServe will offer Ugandan farmers any
The DC VOICE Ostrich: DC VOICE City-Wide Reform Campaign Action Briefing
The DC VOICE Ostrich: DC VOICE City-Wide Reform Campaign Action Briefing
DC VOICE City-Wide Reform Campaign Action Briefing
| author: The DC VOICE OstrichOn Thursday, January 28th at 12:30 pm DC VOICE is hosting a city-wide conference call and webinar to update the community about the status of the Demand Reform Demand Equality Campaign focused on Community Schools, Parent/Community Resource Coordinators, and Professional Development. Community members have demanded that community schools be a priority for education reform in the District, and DC VOICE intends to make sure we keep it a priority for policymakers during budget season.
Call toll free: 1-866-415-4341
Conference code: 634019443
Webinar: DC VOICE City-Wide Reform Campaign Action Briefing
Please join us in this movement to coordinate community partnerships within schools so we can offer our children and families the best education and comprehensive services possible. This city-wide action call and webinar will also give you a chance to ask questions and learn how you can get involved.
Call toll free: 1-866-415-4341
Conference code: 634019443
Webinar: DC VOICE City-Wide Reform Campaign Action Briefing
Please join us in this movement to coordinate community partnerships within schools so we can offer our children and families the best education and comprehensive services possible. This city-wide action call and webinar will also give you a chance to ask questions and learn how you can get involved.
Mentoring: The New Activism in America - THE DAILY RIFF - Be Smarter. About Education.
Mentoring: The New Activism in America - THE DAILY RIFF - Be Smarter. About Education.
"Everyone should be involved . . . in some way to help out." Here are four ways to make a difference:
Newark Mayor Cory Booker is on the move with a call for action in the
"education movement" in this 1:23 video below.
He is a participant in the upcoming movie "The Lottery" coming this Spring.
"education movement" in this 1:23 video below.
He is a participant in the upcoming movie "The Lottery" coming this Spring.
Booker should know. He is a member of numerous boards and advisory committees that are committed to education including: Democrats for Education Reform, Columbia University Teachers' College Board of Trustees, and the Black Alliance for Educational Options.
"Everyone should be involved . . . in some way to help out." Here are four ways to make a difference:
- Be a mentor only requires four hours a month. "Everyone should be a involved in the life a child that is not your own or some way to help out".
- There are also "e-mentors" - mentoring by e-mail.
- Get involved in the local scene. Put political pressure on changing local schools.
- Check out the organizations in every state that are fighting for change, innovation and choice.
10 Lessons Every College Student Should Learn from Mark Zuckerberg - Becoming a Computer Technician
10 Lessons Every College Student Should Learn from Mark Zuckerberg - Becoming a Computer Technician

It is a story that gets told hundreds of times over and will continue to be told a hundred times more. Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, along with many of his Harvard computer science contemporaries, set up the wildly popular, time-sinking, “it’s complicated”-touting social networking site in 2004 from their dorm room. From single-school directory featuring a high-contrast male mascot with a hauntingly creepy expression to worldwide phenomenon, according toForbes it eventually led Zuckerberg to a net worth of $1.5 billion in 2008. Computer scientists and college students hoping to start their own business have a few broad lessons to learn from his success that may apply to careers and life alike.
Facebook grew because of Zuckerberg’s flexibility and willingness to change his product based on consumer demands and financial opportunities. “Change,” of course, does not have to necessarily indicate inherent compromise. As his brainchild expanded from a Harvard dorm room to a global community, Zuckerberg never strayed away from its two most basic premises. At no point did he charge users to take advantage of the networking service – profits came purely from advertisements. Nor did Facebook ever mutate beyond its core ideal of connecting people with one another. While the artifice grew and shifted and modified to fit requests, the social networking service never quit being a social networking service. Because of this, Facebook stands as a perfect example of exercising a great deal of adaptability without ever having betrayed its initial intentions.
10 Lessons Every College Student Should Learn from Mark Zuckerberg

1. Be open to change without losing sight of your goals.
Recovery School District's books are in better shape, but still flawed, audit finds | New Orleans Metro Education News - - NOLA.com
Recovery School District's books are in better shape, but still flawed, audit finds | New Orleans Metro Education News - - NOLA.com
'These findings have to stop happening. That's the bottom line,' State Sen. Ed Murray said.
The state-run Recovery School District's problems with overpaying employees who no longer work for it have continued for a third straight year, although to a reduced extent, according to a new report released by the state's legislative auditor Monday.
The report also rapped the district for making some late payments to vendors for a second straight year and for failing to adequately track equipment such as laptops, among other concerns.
RSD officials said they've made significant progress on reducing overpayments, adding that most of the problems predate current district leaders, including RSD Superintendent Paul Vallas. In general, they attributed many of the findings to the fact that, because the RSD is a state agency that was created quickly after Hurricane Katrina, it's hamstrung by financial and accounting rules that don't apply to other school districts.
"A lot of these are penny-ante things that are a product of us being subjected to rules and regulations that no other school districts are subjected to," Vallas said.
However, members of the legislative audit advisory council, made up of state lawmakers, grilled Vallas and State Superintendent Paul Pastorek for hours on Monday morning at a meeting held in the Superdome.
RSD officials said they've made significant progress on reducing overpayments, adding that most of the problems predate current district leaders, including RSD Superintendent Paul Vallas. In general, they attributed many of the findings to the fact that, because the RSD is a state agency that was created quickly after Hurricane Katrina, it's hamstrung by financial and accounting rules that don't apply to other school districts.
"A lot of these are penny-ante things that are a product of us being subjected to rules and regulations that no other school districts are subjected to," Vallas said.
However, members of the legislative audit advisory council, made up of state lawmakers, grilled Vallas and State Superintendent Paul Pastorek for hours on Monday morning at a meeting held in the Superdome.
Teachers challenging state's raid of funds | State News | eastvalleytribune.com
Teachers challenging state's raid of funds | State News | eastvalleytribune.com:
"Two teachers are challenging a maneuver by lawmakers to balance the state budget by taking money they say legally can go only to supporting public schools.
The lawsuit filed Friday at the state Supreme Court contends legislators are violating both constitutional provisions and state law by siphoning off 10 percent of the money that is raised from the sale of state trust lands. Attorney Tim Hogan of the Center for Law in the Public Interest said the move also runs afoul of the federal law which gave Arizona the trust lands when it became a state in 1912.
Hogan wants the high court to direct the state Land Department to return the nearly $10 million already taken from the special trust fund and a prohibition against future transfers."
The lawsuit filed Friday at the state Supreme Court contends legislators are violating both constitutional provisions and state law by siphoning off 10 percent of the money that is raised from the sale of state trust lands. Attorney Tim Hogan of the Center for Law in the Public Interest said the move also runs afoul of the federal law which gave Arizona the trust lands when it became a state in 1912.
Hogan wants the high court to direct the state Land Department to return the nearly $10 million already taken from the special trust fund and a prohibition against future transfers."
SAISD exploring charter school increase
SAISD exploring charter school increase:
"When James Aden relocated here from Berkeley, Calif., he wanted to live near downtown and he wanted his children in good schools, so he moved into the coveted Alamo Heights school district.
But Aden toured a school there and decided he wanted something more for his kids — including a measure of diversity he felt was lacking at his neighborhood school. Now Aden's kids attend Hawthorne Academy, a district-run charter school in the San Antonio Independent School District that is open to students who live outside the district boundaries.
Parents like Aden are one reason the San Antonio Alliance, which represents SAISD teachers and other district staff, would like to see more district schools become charters."
But Aden toured a school there and decided he wanted something more for his kids — including a measure of diversity he felt was lacking at his neighborhood school. Now Aden's kids attend Hawthorne Academy, a district-run charter school in the San Antonio Independent School District that is open to students who live outside the district boundaries.
Parents like Aden are one reason the San Antonio Alliance, which represents SAISD teachers and other district staff, would like to see more district schools become charters."
Literacy to be schools' top job The Post and Courier - Charleston SC newspaper
Literacy to be schools' top job The Post and Courier - Charleston SC newspaper:
"Teaching students to read is more important than anything else in Charleston County School District.
The county school board unanimously agreed Monday night that that should be the district's top priority, and their historic decision will focus current and future superintendents on the problem of illiteracy.
The final approval of the board's first-ever literacy policy will translate into roughly $8 million being directed this year toward new reading initiatives and will prevent struggling readers from being passed to the next grade without extra help.
The new policy is the culmination of reactions stirred by a series of Post and Courier stories revealing the serious illiteracy problem in local schools; nearly 20 percent of the county's ninth-graders read on a fourth-grade level or worse"
The county school board unanimously agreed Monday night that that should be the district's top priority, and their historic decision will focus current and future superintendents on the problem of illiteracy.
The final approval of the board's first-ever literacy policy will translate into roughly $8 million being directed this year toward new reading initiatives and will prevent struggling readers from being passed to the next grade without extra help.
The new policy is the culmination of reactions stirred by a series of Post and Courier stories revealing the serious illiteracy problem in local schools; nearly 20 percent of the county's ninth-graders read on a fourth-grade level or worse"
Minnesota teacher pay raises small ... and still controversial - TwinCities.com
Minnesota teacher pay raises small ... and still controversial - TwinCities.com:
"As school districts across Minnesota scrambled this month to approve new two-year teacher contracts, teachers ended up with their smallest pay raises in years.
But maybe not small enough.
Cost-of-living raises averaged less than 1 percent, but many districts will shell out millions to cover seniority raises promised in years past and rising health insurance costs.
And that has irked some lawmakers who have tried to hold education harmless despite mounting state budget deficits. When the legislative session begins in February, they have to figure out how to erase a projected $1.2 billion shortfall over the next 18 months."
But maybe not small enough.
Cost-of-living raises averaged less than 1 percent, but many districts will shell out millions to cover seniority raises promised in years past and rising health insurance costs.
And that has irked some lawmakers who have tried to hold education harmless despite mounting state budget deficits. When the legislative session begins in February, they have to figure out how to erase a projected $1.2 billion shortfall over the next 18 months."
Gov. Charlie Crist backs easing class-size rules - South Florida - MiamiHerald.com
Gov. Charlie Crist backs easing class-size rules - South Florida - MiamiHerald.com:
"TALLAHASSEE -- Having already spent $16 billion to reduce class sizes -- and facing a multibillion-dollar budget deficit -- leading Republicans including Gov. Charlie Crist want voters to reconsider their 2002 vote in favor of smaller classes.
Crist, who in the past has opposed tinkering with the class-size amendment, said Monday he now supports essentially freezing it where it is now -- with mandated caps calculated as school-wide averages.
State Sen. Don Gaetz, a former Panhandle schools superintendent, and Rep. Will Weatherford plan to unveil such a proposal in the coming days as a new constitutional amendment that would be put before voters in November if the Legislature approves it."
Crist, who in the past has opposed tinkering with the class-size amendment, said Monday he now supports essentially freezing it where it is now -- with mandated caps calculated as school-wide averages.
State Sen. Don Gaetz, a former Panhandle schools superintendent, and Rep. Will Weatherford plan to unveil such a proposal in the coming days as a new constitutional amendment that would be put before voters in November if the Legislature approves it."
Math school leader retiring - Education - NewsObserver.com
Math school leader retiring - Education - NewsObserver.com:
"The leader of the N.C. School of Science and Mathematics announced his retirement Monday, following 10 years in which the Durham campus continued to grow but questions arose about the administrators he hired and the pay they received.
Chancellor Gerald Boarman said he wants to return to his home in Maryland to spend more time with his family, who had remained there.
The announcement surprised both the school's trustees and members of the UNC Board of Governors, who oversee the elite residential high school for academically gifted students. A spokeswoman for UNC President Erskine Bowles said that Boarman first broached the retirement with him shortly before Christmas."
Chancellor Gerald Boarman said he wants to return to his home in Maryland to spend more time with his family, who had remained there.
The announcement surprised both the school's trustees and members of the UNC Board of Governors, who oversee the elite residential high school for academically gifted students. A spokeswoman for UNC President Erskine Bowles said that Boarman first broached the retirement with him shortly before Christmas."
Female teachers may pass on math anxiety to girls, study finds - latimes.com
Female teachers may pass on math anxiety to girls, study finds - latimes.com:
"Girls have long embraced the stereotype that they're not supposed to be good at math. It seems they may be getting the idea from a surprising source -- their female elementary school teachers.
First- and second-graders whose teachers were anxious about mathematics were more likely to believe that boys are hard-wired for math and that girls are better at reading, a new study has found. What's more, the girls who bought into that notion scored significantly lower on math tests than their peers who didn't.
The gap in test scores was not apparent in the fall when the kids were first tested, but emerged after spending a school year in the classrooms of teachers with math anxiety. That detail convinced researchers that the teachers -- all of them women -- were the culprits."
First- and second-graders whose teachers were anxious about mathematics were more likely to believe that boys are hard-wired for math and that girls are better at reading, a new study has found. What's more, the girls who bought into that notion scored significantly lower on math tests than their peers who didn't.
The gap in test scores was not apparent in the fall when the kids were first tested, but emerged after spending a school year in the classrooms of teachers with math anxiety. That detail convinced researchers that the teachers -- all of them women -- were the culprits."
City Department of Education to shutter problem-plagued Brooklyn charter school - NYPOST.com
City Department of Education to shutter problem-plagued Brooklyn charter school - NYPOST.com:
"The city is about to pull the plug on a Brooklyn charter school that's rife with financial mismanagement, The Post has learned.
East New York Preparatory, which has booted low-performing students and shortened its year by a dozen days, would be only the fourth city charter school ever shuttered and the second to have its charter revoked by the chancellor, who authorized it to open in 2006.
The school, which yesterday received a 30-day notice of the city's intention to close it in June, was put on probation last February, after city officials caught wind of sky-high staff turnover and the dissolution of the school's board of directors.
In November, state Education Department inspectors documented a host of violations that led city officials to drop the hammer."
East New York Preparatory, which has booted low-performing students and shortened its year by a dozen days, would be only the fourth city charter school ever shuttered and the second to have its charter revoked by the chancellor, who authorized it to open in 2006.
The school, which yesterday received a 30-day notice of the city's intention to close it in June, was put on probation last February, after city officials caught wind of sky-high staff turnover and the dissolution of the school's board of directors.
In November, state Education Department inspectors documented a host of violations that led city officials to drop the hammer."
Panel To Vote On School Closings; Heavy Turnout Expected - NY1.com
Panel To Vote On School Closings; Heavy Turnout Expected - NY1.com:
"A citywide education panel is scheduled to vote Tuesday on whether to allow the DOE to shut down some city schools based on their performance rates. NY1's Lindsey Christ filed the following report.
With 20 schools on the chopping block, and people energized by a new process that encourages public comment, Department of Education officials expect to face a large and unfriendly crowd at Tuesday night's public meeting.
Last summer, the state Legislature continued mayoral control of the schools but stripped the DOE of its power to close them. That's now the responsibility of the Panel for Educational Policy, whose members are picked by the mayor and the five borough presidents.
Since school closure decisions are no longer made behind closed doors, the PEP is required to vote in front of the public while also allowing them an opportunity to be heard.
'The participation that I've seen in this school closure issue this year has really been extraordinary and something that we really haven't seen a lot before,' said Kim Sweet of Advocates for Children of New York."
With 20 schools on the chopping block, and people energized by a new process that encourages public comment, Department of Education officials expect to face a large and unfriendly crowd at Tuesday night's public meeting.
Last summer, the state Legislature continued mayoral control of the schools but stripped the DOE of its power to close them. That's now the responsibility of the Panel for Educational Policy, whose members are picked by the mayor and the five borough presidents.
Since school closure decisions are no longer made behind closed doors, the PEP is required to vote in front of the public while also allowing them an opportunity to be heard.
'The participation that I've seen in this school closure issue this year has really been extraordinary and something that we really haven't seen a lot before,' said Kim Sweet of Advocates for Children of New York."
Rubber Rooms: NYC Teachers Paid To Do Nothing - wcbstv.com
Rubber Rooms: NYC Teachers Paid To Do Nothing - wcbstv.com
NEW YORK (CBS) ―
Hundreds of New York City teachers removed from classrooms on a wide range of allegations are sent to offices that are called "rubber rooms."
Many stay there for years, waiting for determinations of their guilt or innocence.
But while they wait they do nothing at all. And they're still paid -- with your tax dollars.
CBS 2 HD takes you "inside … the rubber rooms."
CBS 2 HD's hidden cameras recently got a rare look inside the rooms, which are located in every borough of New York City. As many as 530 teachers are paid to do nothing while the Department of Education investigates various charges against them. Many teachers say it's a nightmare -- being forced to sit in a room all day and not teach.
"The saddest thing is that there are some people doing nothing. Not even that," teacher Leevert Holmes said.
They're officially called "temporary reassignment centers."
NEW YORK (CBS) ―
Many stay there for years, waiting for determinations of their guilt or innocence.
But while they wait they do nothing at all. And they're still paid -- with your tax dollars.
CBS 2 HD takes you "inside … the rubber rooms."
CBS 2 HD's hidden cameras recently got a rare look inside the rooms, which are located in every borough of New York City. As many as 530 teachers are paid to do nothing while the Department of Education investigates various charges against them. Many teachers say it's a nightmare -- being forced to sit in a room all day and not teach.
"The saddest thing is that there are some people doing nothing. Not even that," teacher Leevert Holmes said.
They're officially called "temporary reassignment centers."
Big New York High Schools Fall Hard but Are Not Going Quietly - NYTimes.com
Big New York High Schools Fall Hard but Are Not Going Quietly - NYTimes.com
As the Department of Education sent fewer students to Columbus, enrollment began to decline, but so did the academic level of its entering student body. By 2005, only 6 percent of the entering eighth graders were reading at grade level, and the proportion of special education students rose to nearly a quarter. Another reorganization led the school to create small clusters with names like “Equality” and “Justice,” and to form work-study and other structured programs that give students on the verge of dropping out a second chance.
The school stabilized, but its four-year graduation rate remained stubbornly low, and struggles continued. As measured by the city’s “peer index,” which takes into account over-age and special education students and the academic level of its entering class, Columbus had the eighth-lowest ranking among 380 high schools in 2008-9.
The Columbus student body is in constant flux. Because the school has unscreened admissions, it takes children expelled from charter schools, released from juvenile detention, and others on a near-daily basis: last year, 359 of its 1,400 students arrived between October and June. Even after the city proposed the school’s closing in December, it received 27 more students. Lisa Fuentes, the Columbus principal
As the Department of Education sent fewer students to Columbus, enrollment began to decline, but so did the academic level of its entering student body. By 2005, only 6 percent of the entering eighth graders were reading at grade level, and the proportion of special education students rose to nearly a quarter. Another reorganization led the school to create small clusters with names like “Equality” and “Justice,” and to form work-study and other structured programs that give students on the verge of dropping out a second chance.
The school stabilized, but its four-year graduation rate remained stubbornly low, and struggles continued. As measured by the city’s “peer index,” which takes into account over-age and special education students and the academic level of its entering class, Columbus had the eighth-lowest ranking among 380 high schools in 2008-9.
The Columbus student body is in constant flux. Because the school has unscreened admissions, it takes children expelled from charter schools, released from juvenile detention, and others on a near-daily basis: last year, 359 of its 1,400 students arrived between October and June. Even after the city proposed the school’s closing in December, it received 27 more students. Lisa Fuentes, the Columbus principal
More schools require students to learn personal finance - USATODAY.com
More schools require students to learn personal finance - USATODAY.com:
The recession hit the family hard and they can no longer afford the building. Quach helps pack the goods for a move to a cheaper location. On weekends, her mother often goes door to door, hoping to find new retail customers.
'I never want to go through what they go through,' Quach said, tears gathering in her eyes."
"MIAMI — Each day after school, 17-year-old Phyllis Quach goes to a warehouse filled with silk flowers, stuffed animals and other gift items her parents sell through their South Florida wholesale business.
The recession hit the family hard and they can no longer afford the building. Quach helps pack the goods for a move to a cheaper location. On weekends, her mother often goes door to door, hoping to find new retail customers.'I never want to go through what they go through,' Quach said, tears gathering in her eyes."
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