Latest News and Comment from Education

Friday, May 6, 2011

Bullying grabs global attention - CNN.com

Bullying grabs global attention - CNN.com

Bullying grabs global attention

By Catherine E. Shoichet, CNN
May 6, 2011 6:05 a.m. EDT
Phoebe Prince, 15, committed suicide in January 2010 after weeks of ridicule and teasing at school.
Phoebe Prince, 15, committed suicide in January 2010 after weeks of ridicule and teasing at school.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • France's education minister pledges to shut down bullies' Facebook accounts
  • A debate over bullying surges in Brazil after a school shooting
  • Mexican legislators approve an anti-bullying measure
  • UNICEF says the Internet and cell phones facilitate bullying worldwide

(CNN) -- The guilty pleas of students in a Massachusetts school harassment case this week thrust the spotlight back on bullying in the United States, but the issue is also drawing more attention beyond America's borders.

France's education minister made national headlines this week when he announced plans to combat bullying by shutting down Facebook accounts of students who harass their classmates.

Mexican legislators approved a new anti-bullying measure this year. And debates on the topic surged in Brazil last month, after a gunman who killed 12 students at a school in Rio de Janeiro said in a homemade video that bullying was one of his motives.

Five classmates of a Massachusetts high school freshman who hanged herself in the stairwell of her family's apartment pleaded

Finally A NIMBY I Can Get Behind. | Dailycensored.com

Finally A NIMBY I Can Get Behind. | Dailycensored.com

Finally A NIMBY I Can Get Behind.

I would like to say he is my friend, but the truth is I only know him through the internet. He is the guy you wish was living next door, down the road, or across your backyard fence. For starters, he is always in a good mood, which I believe always comes from doing the right thing and being happy with what he does. But then, who wouldn’t be happy doing what he does? From my limited connection, I see a fellow who is self employed as a pest control person who refuses to use the chemical soup that contributes to all the ills and diseases we suffer every day. Instead, he finds and uses natural, organic remedies that are effective in eliminating even the dreaded bed bug. He does this all with remedies that leave the environment safer than when he found it. But that’s not all. I don’t know how he makes a living at it because whenever I have contacted him with a problem his help has always been immediate and free. You may have read

KOCH OUT News | www.kochwatch.org

News | www.kochwatch.org

Memorial Day Resources | Larry Ferlazzo's Websites of the Day...

Memorial Day Resources | Larry Ferlazzo's Websites of the Day...

4LAKids - some of the news that doesn't fit: RHEE THE REFORMER/“ERASE TO THE TOP” -- The Michelle Rhee Test Score Scandal in Seussical Verse

4LAKids - some of the news that doesn't fit: RHEE THE REFORMER/“ERASE TO THE TOP” -- The Michelle Rhee Test Score Scandal in Seussical Verse

Modern School: Left Wing Orgy at California State Capital

Modern School: Left Wing Orgy at California State Capital

Left Wing Orgy at California State Capital


The right wing anti-teachers union blog, Intercepts, just discovered that anti-war activist and conspiracy theorist Cindy Sheehan was planning on joining the California Teachers Association protests at the California State Capital next week. The discovery sent them into paroxysms of paranoid conspiracy theories of their own, calling it a “public relations coup,” and sarcastically speculating that CTA would have to “collectively bargain a jurisdictional agreement over who gets to occupy what.”

The problem is that the CTA has no intention of occupying the state capital. They have called upon members to show up throughout the week of May 9th to rally, lobby legislators and beg

Sweeping School Bill Hits Roadblock - Chicago News Cooperative

Sweeping School Bill Hits Roadblock - Chicago News Cooperative

Sweeping School Bill Hits Roadblock

A sweeping school bill that reformers lauded as a landmark and that United States Secretary of Education Arne Duncan described as a national model is hitting snags in the Illinois House.

The measure, which the Illinois Senate passed unanimously last month, was the result of months of backdoor negotiations between some of the state’s most powerful interests–teachers unions, business groups and an out-of-state education group bankrolled by some of the country’s wealthiest political contributors.

The bill marked a rare give-and-take between the competing interests. It had the blessing of three labor groups — the Illinois Education Association, Illinois Federation of Teachers and Chicago Teachers Union – along with two reform groups, Advance Illinois and Stand for Children. Business groups signed off. School administrators

New Schools Chief’s Roots Lie in a Brooklyn School

Over a decade ago, before Mayor-elect Rahm Emanuel chose him to run the third-largest school system in the country, Jean-Claude Brizard was a rookie principal with a daunting mandate: Remake a troubled vocational high school in Brooklyn that had been given one last chance to avoid closure.

George Westinghouse High School, described as chaotic by both Brizard and the union chapter leader at the time, was clinging to outdated vocational programs, such as training students for jewelry-making jobs they could no longer find. The hallways were often violent, the site of student fights, while some teachers had checked out long ago, said Louis Esposito, the school’s union leader at the time.

“It needed order, it needed control, and that’s what he did,” Esposito said.

The scrutiny following Brizard’s selection as Chicago Public Schools chief has focused largely on his recent

Progress in unexpected places | Thoughts on Public Education

Progress in unexpected places | Thoughts on Public Education

Progress in unexpected places - by John Fensterwald - Educated Guess

In unheralded corners of California, Latino and African American students are busting the averages, producing higher scores and larger numbers of college-ready graduates. This is happening in places like Val Verde Unified and Desert Sands Unified in Riverside County and Sanger Unified in Fresno County. They were among districts with outstanding grades in “A Report Card [...]

NYC Educator: It's a Miracle!

NYC Educator: It's a Miracle!

It's a Miracle!

I have a kid in my afternoon class who's been here three years and managed not to learn English. That in itself is remarkable. Teenagers are naturally social, and it takes real determination to shut out a culture that announces itself pretty much everywhere. Yet this kid never wanted to be here, and only mixes with others who speak his language.

As you might imagine, this has not resulted in what you'd call excellent grades. Yet a month ago, after many calls that went nowhere, the kid's dad showed up quite unexpectedly for parent-teacher conferences. Since then, the kid has not missed a single homework assignment. If I were Michelle Rhee, I suppose I'd loudly proclaim I'm the best teacher ever. Were I to take that approach, though, I'd have to ignore that his test grades are still abysmal, and when asked to complete tasks in class, the kid cannot do it. I said to him, "Boy, it's remarkable you can do this stuff at home but not in class."

What that really means is I know he's copying the homework. But really

The Cutthroat Curriculum | Dailycensored.com

The Cutthroat Curriculum | Dailycensored.com

The Cutthroat Curriculum

DownloadedFile 150x150 The Cutthroat Curriculum  “When you are basing the effectiveness of teachers on lots of softer things, whether the kids feel good, whether the classroom is happy, whether we’re creative (don’t get me wrong, those things are important), but if the kids can’t read…that’s not acceptable,” former Washington D.C. Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee asserted indignantly in a recent interview with Charlie Rose, defending hertesting based reform movement, one she has touted very successfully in a year long celebrity tour of the applauding corporate media. Rhee is fighting a battle against these “softer things,” as The American Thinker recently observed, an image she cultivates carefully in her iconic stern pose on the cover of Time Magazine – humorless, severe, standing imposingly above the viewer as she holds a broom, ready to sweep away “bad teachers” like errant spitballs and broken pencils littering the classroom floor, and with them, “softer things” like creativity, and perhaps, empathy.

And certainly, Rhee has little empathy for “bad teachers,” and in fact, has

We don’t want a place at the table. Don’t mess with our TRS. « Fred Klonsky's blog

We don’t want a place at the table. Don’t mess with our TRS. « Fred Klonsky's blog

We don’t want a place at the table. Don’t mess with our TRS.

There is a subtle yet detectable shift in the message about pensions coming from IEA leadership.

In a posted video on the IEA website, Swanson injected some language about the need for teacher voice in any changes to our pension.

No. no. no.

If this is more of his “sitting at the table” stuff, every member should be worried

In Lasting Appreciation « InterACT

In Lasting Appreciation « InterACT

In Lasting Appreciation

As we wrap up teacher appreciation week, I want to honor two educators whose influence has now served me well for about 25 years. I attended Harvard High School (now Harvard-Westlake) in North Hollywood, California. There are two faculty members in particular whom I recall with the utmost fondness and respect.

Holmes, Cohen

Phil Holmes, with me at our 20-year class reunion (2007)

When I made the leap from freshman to sophomore English, I left behind the status of a mere student and became a young scholar, thanks to the ingenuity and high expectations of Mr. Phil Holmes. The first signs of