Latest News and Comment from Education

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

The state spits in Newark’s face | Bob Braun's Ledger

The state spits in Newark’s face | Bob Braun's Ledger:

The state spits in Newark’s face



Christopher Cerf--the new Newark superintendent


(Editor’s Note: I was unable to attend Wednesday’s meeting of the state school board and asked Melissa Katz, a well-known student activist and supporter of public education, to cover the meeting for me. Her report is complete and comprehensive and will give the most thorough  account of what happened at the meeting I have yet seen).
The controversial deal cut between New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and Newark Mayor Ras Baraka bore its first fruit Wednesday when the state school board voted 6-4 to name former state education commissioner Christopher Cerf to take over as the state-appointed superintendent o Newark schools. All six board members voting for Cerf, a national proponent of charter schools and a business entrepreneur, were appointed by Christie; those voting against Cerf were holdovers from previous administrations. No public comment was allowed at the meeting.
Cerf’s nomination had been opposed by the Newark groups that successfully drove out Cami Anderson as state-appointed superintendent after her four years of contentious, incompetent and, at times, tragic rule.  Just the day before, more than one hundred protesters rallied in Newark against the Cerf appointment. All speakers but one–Baraka himself–called for a rejection of Cerf’s appointment. Baraka, clearly angry at those–like this writer–who opposed his deal with Christie–would not criticize the former education commissioner who originally hired Anderson.
What follows is a comprehensive account of Wednesday’s board meeting written by Melissa Katz, a junior at The College of New Jersey, an aspiring urban teacher, and a student activist who has consistently supported the aspirations of Newark residents to run their own schools after 20 years of state rule:
By MELISSA KATZ
In what is usually a regular, monthly meeting at the State Board of Education, the tension in the room could be felt. Less than 24 hours earlier, over 100 people stood on the steps of Newark City Hall, protesting the proposed appointment of Christopher Cerf as the new Superintendent of Newark Public Schools. Equally as many if not more phone calls and emails were made to the State Board President Mark Biedron with the same message: the community of Newark was saying ‘no’ to Chris Cerf.
This morning, that proposal became a reality.
In a 6-4 vote by the State Board of Education, Cerf was appointed as the next — The state spits in Newark’s face | Bob Braun's Ledger:

As Congress moves to strip his power, Duncan is staying until the final buzzer - The Washington Post

As Congress moves to strip his power, Duncan is staying until the final buzzer - The Washington Post:

As Congress moves to strip his power, Duncan is staying until the final buzzer






Christina Waters’s cellphone rang, and she looked down to see that the number was blocked. She knew immediately it was U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan, just calling to check in.
It has been that way since Waters attended a 2009 church picnic in Chicago and came away with a bullet lodged in her head from stray gunfire. She suffered hearing loss in one ear, and her college dreams were delayed. But she pushed forward, with encouragement from Duncan, who has known her since elementary school. Now 24, Waters is studying kinesiology at Sam Houston State University in Texas.
Waters belongs to a circle of strivers that Duncan has quietly cultivated, students across the country who are clearing hurdles that would discourage many others. He calls regularly to offer support and advice.
That unfiltered, direct contact has been key in shaping Duncan’s belief that poor students hold the same potential as their affluent peers but face more obstacles to a high-quality education in America’s public schools. Trying to correct that imbalance, Duncan has injected an unusual amount of federal influence into traditionally local decisions about public education.
The result is that most Americans now accept public charter schools as an alternative to neighborhood schools, most teachers expect to be judged in some measure on how well their students perform on standardized tests, and most states are using more demanding K-12 As Congress moves to strip his power, Duncan is staying until the final buzzer - The Washington Post:

Lawmakers Move to Limit Government’s Role in Education - The New York Times

Lawmakers Move to Limit Government’s Role in Education - The New York Times:

Lawmakers Move to Limit Government’s Role in Education





WASHINGTON — Congress on Wednesday moved to substantially scale back the federal government’s role in education, particularly the use of high-stakes standardized testing to punish schools, in the first significant proposed revisions since the No Child Left Behind law was passed 14 years ago.
While there is near-universal agreement that the law should be retooled, the paths to change are starkly different.
The House on Wednesday passed its version, a measure laden with conservative prescriptions that congressional Democrats and President Obama opposed. The Senate began debate on its alternative, a bill with at least some bipartisan support, but one the White House still finds wanting.
No Child Left Behind, which passed Congress by overwhelming margins, had been considered one of the signature domestic achievements of President George W. Bush. But its provisions for using standardized tests has ignited debate ever since.
Those fights have intensified during the intervening years since Speaker John A. Boehner and Senator Edward M. Kennedy created their compromise that Mr. Bush signed.
The House version of a revised education bill includes a provision that would permit low-income students to transfer federal dollars between school districts, something the Obama administration has pledged to veto. The bill, which passed, 218 to 213 had almost no Democratic support.
In the Senate, there were calls for cooperation.
“We’ve asked senators to show restraint,” said Senator Lamar Alexander, Republican of Tennessee, who is working with Senator Patty Murray, Democrat of Washington, on a compromise bill. “Our goal is to have a success, and that’s to get President Obama to sign it. For us back home, No Child Left behind is the No. 1 issue.”
Both the Senate and House versions of education legislation address what critics of No Child Left Behind have opposed for years — a punitive system of testing overseen by the federal government — in favor of more local Lawmakers Move to Limit Government’s Role in Education - The New York Times:

On The Sacramento Bee's soft spot for K.J. - Sacramento News & Review -

Sacramento News & Review - On The Sacramento Bee's soft spot for K.J. - Feature Story - Local Stories - July 9, 2015:

On The Sacramento Bee's soft spot for K.J.

The Bee has been criticized before for its handling of Johnson’s various controversies, and this latest legal dust-up isn’t helping




It’s weird when news organizationsbecome the news. But that’s exactly what happened when Mayor Kevin Johnson filed a lawsuit against the city and SN&R.
The July 1 lawsuit came after SN&R refused to back off its public-records request for emails between his office and attorneys involved in a legal entanglement with the National Conference of Black Mayors. As a result, Johnson sued to block the city’s release of said emails, citing attorney-client privilege—emails that the city attorney had already determined to be public record.
Weird.
Even taking SN&R out of the equation, the lawsuit is odd—and a pretty big deal. When was the last time (if ever) that a mayor sued his or her own city? When was the last time (if ever) that a mayor requested a restraining order against the city he or she governs?
News of Johnson’s landmark legal moves spread fast. By end of day Wednesday, all three major local TV news stations had visited SN&R’s Del Paso Boulevard headquarters to interview publisher Jeff vonKaenel. National outlets such as Deadspin, The Huffington Post and USA Today also picked up the story.
All of which just makes The Sacramento Bee’s coverage of the lawsuit all the more, well, weird.
Take its initial report, for starters: After the news broke, the paper posted a short, unbylined brief on its website. That’s not necessarily the strange part; breaking news is a fast beast, surely the paper’s print version would be meatier.
Nope. The Bee’s July 2 print version of the story was buried on page A3, credited only to “Bee Metro Staff.”
How and why, exactly, did Bee editors decide this story wasn’t front-page news?
(Full disclosure: I worked at the Bee from 2000-09 as a features writer and have a pretty good idea of its Sacramento News & Review - On The Sacramento Bee's soft spot for K.J. - Feature Story - Local Stories - July 9, 2015:


Why Mayor Kevin Johnson sued SN&R, what we've learned—and what happens next



“The mayor is completely open and transparent.” That’s what Mayor Kevin Johnson’s spokesman Ben Sosenko told the TV cameras and reporters gathered outside Sacramento Superior Court Room 44 last week.
Shortly before that, Sosenko flatly refused to answer any of SN&R’s questions about the mayor’s use of private emails to do city business. He made it clear that he didn’t intend to answer any of SN&R’s questions any time soon, either.
“It is what it is,” he said with a smirk.
Regular readers know that, last week, Johnson took SN&R and the city of Sacramento to court, in order to block the city from releasing about 100 emails, which the mayor says are protected by attorney-client privilege (read about the lawsuit on SN&R’s Page Burner blog athttp://tinyurl.com/KJlawsuit).
But the bigger story may be that, thanks to Johnson’s lawsuit, we now know that the mayor has actually failed to turn over thousands of emails from his private Gmail accounts. Those emails were sent by city employees, doing city business, and aren’t protected by attorney-client privilege.
Outside the courtroom, SN&R attorney Thomas Burke told the gathered media that Johnson’s use of private email accounts is a way to get around the California Public Records Act. “There’s no way to check whether or not you have access to everything that they’re doing in the public’s business,” Burke said.
Sosenko wouldn’t talk to SN&R, but assured the other reporters gathered that the Gmail accounts, which use “OMKJ” for “Office of Mayor Kevin Johnson” in the address, were no problem, because “the private email accounts are used for things that are not city business.”
Not even remotely true: The OMKJ emails accounts are routinely used for city business. To take just a few examples: Johnson and his staff used outside emails extensively to discuss strategy for the 2013 arena deal. Other OMKJ emails obtained by SN&R show Sosenko responding to an article in the Bee about an anti-gang program, and developing talking points for remarks Johnson made to Sacramento police officers about the unrest in Ferguson, Mo. By using these outside accounts, Johnson has effectively short-circuited California’s public-records law. And no one on the city council, or the city manager or city attorney, seems willing to do anything about it.
Back in March, SN&R requested any emails sent and received using the set of special “OMKJ” Gmail accounts used by the mayor’s staff (see “Special delivery” by Cosmo Garvin, SN&R News, April 23, at

Why Mayor Kevin Johnson sued SN&R, what we've learned—and what happens next


Big Education Ape: Nine things that burn in your brain when the mayor sues you - Sacramento News & Review - http://bit.ly/1HgQb6c

Nine things that burn in your brain when the mayor sues you - Sacramento News & Review -

Sacramento News & Review - Nine things that burn in your brain when the mayor sues you - Feature Story - Local Stories - July 9, 2015:

Nine things that burn in your brain when the mayor sues you

A special Mayor Kevin Johnson listicle





This week was at once weird, unexpected, electric and head-scratching.We got sued by the mayor, what the hell is going on? Only a listicle will do. And, so: Nine things that burn in your brain when K.J. sues you.
1. Wait, did we really just get sued by K.J.? Our attorney reassured us that Johnson’s attorneys likely wouldn’t follow through with their threat of litigation. Why would they? Journalists enjoy a legal right to newsgathering, including the request of public records. It’d be supremely dumb for them to sue us. And yet, it happened.
2. Why didn’t the Bee tell the mayor’s lawyer to buzz off? The mayor’s attorney, David Pittinsky, threatened our writer Cosmo Garvin and Marissa Lang, a reporter at The Sacramento Bee. This attorney was clearly harassing these journalists. Garvin, what with his zero-tolerance policy for empty threats and white-collar intimidation, ultimately ignored Pittinsky. But Lang sort of acquiesced to Pittinsky’s demand, even writing the polite, “Let me know if there’s anything else you need from my end” on her email communique. (In her defense, Pittinsky then totally mischaracterized what she’d agreed to as part of the final lawsuit.) Still, why didn’t the Bee tell K.J.’s lawyer to go burn some popcorn? Their decision is symptomatic of Scoopy’s soft spot when it comes to the mayor, and the Bee’s post-lawsuit coverage of the email shenanigans clearly suggests embarrassment at The Hive. (Read Rachel Leibrock’s essay on page 21.)
3. Someone in K.J.’s office actually gave this the thumbs-up? I keep imagining this scene as a Woody Allen film:
K.J. (in mayoral library reading Nietzsche): “I’m sick of that pesky Cosmo Garvin digging in my emails. Have my attorneys do something about it.”
Staffer (polishing mayoral bust): “Sir, yes sir.”
(Staffer calls attorney.)
Staffer: “Do something about these damn hacks snooping in our emails.”
Lawyer (sipping espresso with pinky pointed toward the sky): “I have the perrrfect solution.”
In all seriousness, there’s clearly information in these emails that will impact the various National Conference of Black Mayors lawsuits. Ironically, suing SN&R makes it even more likely that those messages will see daylight.
4. Nobody seemed to care about K.J.’s private Gmails months ago when Cosmo Garvin was writing about it. What changed? This paper’s been banging the drum about the mayor using secret Gmail accounts for public work for months. We served it up on a silver platter, comparing Johnson’s email practices to those of Hillary Clinton while Secretary of State (we even commissioned the sweet illustration on this page). Yet not a peep from the Bee editorial board or any other news media outlet. Until K.J. made the mistake of suing us—and now it’s front-page, 5 p.m. news. Nice one, traditional media!
5. K.J. says his national profile is good for Sacramento. But how does a “coup” with a black Sacramento News & Review - Nine things that burn in your brain when the mayor sues you - Feature Story - Local Stories - July 9, 2015:





Related stories this week:
The city of Sacramento needs to pause its plan to delete 54 million old emails
It's really bad timing for the city to dump years' worth of public records.

Why Mayor Kevin Johnson sued SN&R, what we've learned—and what happens next
Mayor’s spokesman to SN&R: “It is what it is.”

On The Sacramento Bee's soft spot for K.J.
The Bee has been criticized before for its handling of Johnson’s various controversies, and this latest legal dust-up isn’t helping. 

Special Nite Cap: Catch Up on Today's Post 7/8/15


SPECIAL NITE CAP 

CORPORATE ED REFORM




Civil Rights and Community Groups Demand End to High Stakes Testing and Moratorium on Charter Schools | Seattle Education
Civil Rights and Community Groups Demand End to High Stakes Testing and Moratorium on Charter Schools | Seattle Education: Civil Rights and Community Groups Demand End to High Stakes Testing and Moratorium on Charter SchoolsThis letter was issued on July 7, 2015.“We respectfully disagree that the proliferation of high stakes assessments and top-down interventions are needed in order to improve our
50 Years Later: Jonathan Kozol’s "Death at an Early Age" - Living in Dialogue
50 Years Later: Jonathan Kozol’s "Death at an Early Age" - Living in Dialogue: 50 Years Later: Jonathan Kozol’s "Death at an Early Age" The 50th anniversary of Jonathan Kozol’s Death at an Early Age comes as we confront the horror of the Charleston, S.C. massacre and the epidemic of police killings of unarmed blacks. At a time like this, it is best to read Kozol’s masterpiece o
What should — and should not — be written into a new U.S. education law - The Washington Post
What should — and should not — be written into a new U.S. education law - The Washington Post: What should — and should not — be written into a new U.S. education lawBoth the U.S. House and Senate are now — eight years late — debating this week how to rewrite the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, known in its current form as No Child Left Behind. Signed into law in 2002, NCLB was supposed to
The case against school vouchers: Sen. Patty Murray takes a stand on Senate floor - The Washington Post
The case against school vouchers: Sen. Patty Murray takes a stand on Senate floor - The Washington Post: The case against school vouchers: Sen. Patty Murray takes a stand on Senate floorThe main focus of the current conversation on rewriting No Child Left Behind has been on whether or not annual standardized testing of students will be retained in a new bill. But there are other important issues t
Dialogue With the Gates Foundation: How Do We Build the Teaching Profession? by Anthony Cody - Garn Press
Dialogue With the Gates Foundation: How Do We Build the Teaching Profession? by Anthony Cody - Garn Press: Dialogue With the Gates Foundation: How Do We Build the Teaching Profession? by Anthony CodyThis article originally appeared on Living In Dialogue | Anthony Cody | 2015(This essay is also included in Anthony Cody’s book, The Educator and the Oligarch.)By Anthony Cody.In the summer of 2012  I
4LAKids NTERNATIONAL MOVEMENT TO STOP THE PEARSON OCTOPUS
4LAKids - some of the news that doesn't fit: INTERNATIONAL MOVEMENT TO STOP THE PEARSON OCTOPUS: INTERNATIONAL MOVEMENT TO STOP THE PEARSON OCTOPUS7/8/2015 2:57 pm EDT   ::  I am posting from Madrid, Spain where I am presenting a paper, Hacking Away at the Pearson Octopus, at the International Conference on Learning. The movement to stop the Pearson octopus' stranglehold on education is global.In
Journey 4 Justice Alliance Demands that ESEA Stop Test-and-Punish and Improve Urban Schools | janresseger
Journey 4 Justice Alliance Demands that ESEA Stop Test-and-Punish and Improve Urban Schools | janresseger: Journey 4 Justice Alliance Demands that ESEA Stop Test-and-Punish and Improve Urban SchoolsOn Monday, in the week when the Senate is taking up the reauthorization of the federal education law, the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), the Journey for Justice Alliance sent a powerful
THE FUTURE OF PUBLIC EDUCATION AS A PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN ISSUE by Joseph A. Ricciotti - Wait What?
THE FUTURE OF PUBLIC EDUCATION AS A PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN ISSUE by Joseph A. Ricciotti - Wait What?: THE FUTURE OF PUBLIC EDUCATION AS A PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN ISSUE by Joseph A. RicciottiEducation advocate and retired educator Joseph Ricciotti recently published this commentary piece on the BAT Blog website.Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders is to be applauded for his recently announced presidential p
Jersey Jazzman: More Obnoxious Charter School Propaganda
Jersey Jazzman: More Obnoxious Charter School Propaganda: More Obnoxious Charter School PropagandaMake it stop! MAKE IT STOP!State Sen. Shirley Turner recently introduced legislation seeking a moratorium on expanding enrollment for New Jersey’s charter public schools. This legislation will rob educational opportunity from thousands of New Jersey’s children already in charter schools, and deny more
No Child Left Behind Is Heading Out, but Standardized Tests Are Here to Stay - The Atlantic
No Child Left Behind Is Heading Out, but Standardized Tests Are Here to Stay - The Atlantic: No Child Left Behind Is Heading Out, but Standardized Tests Are Here to StayNo Child Left Behind is really, really unpopular. Roughly three in 10 Americans think the George W. Bush-era federal education law has actually worsened the quality of education, according to a 2012 Gallup poll. The original law on
Cuomo says de Blasio must earn mayoral control | Capital New York
Cuomo says de Blasio must earn mayoral control | Capital New York: Cuomo says de Blasio must earn mayoral controlGovernor Andrew Cuomo is not finished antagonizing Mayor Bill de Blasio on mayoral control of New York City's schools. Speaking Tuesday about de Blasio's recent criticism of the governor, Cuomo said the mayor will have to earn further extensions of mayoral control."Next year we can
The Great Common Core Textbook Swindle - The Daily Beast
The Great Common Core Textbook Swindle - The Daily Beast: The Great Common Core Textbook SwindleOnly one in eight Common Core-aligned textbooks actually meet Common Core standards—and none by textbook giants Pearson or Houghton Mifflin Harcourt—but they were repackaged and sold to public schools anyway, at taxpayers’ expense.Cheryl Schafer was a veteran math teacher by the time Common Core arrived
The False Promise of Core Knowledge | Nicholas Tampio
The False Promise of Core Knowledge | Nicholas Tampio: The False Promise of Core KnowledgeWhen I was in second grade, my friend Rebecca and I used to read books together. We would peruse classics such as C.S. Lewis's Chronicles of Narnia series, Charles Dickens's novels, and Paul de Kruif's Microbe Hunters, a history of the scientists who discovered vaccines. Rebecca and I were both public school
Reid, McConnell point fingers over No Child Left Behind fix | TheHill
Reid, McConnell point fingers over No Child Left Behind fix | TheHill: Reid, McConnell point fingers over No Child Left Behind fix"Republicans and Democrats have long agreed that the No Child Left Behind is broken and needs to be fixed, but the Senate didn't do anything about it for seven long years, missing its deadlines repeatedly," McConnell said from the Senate floor, referring to Re
Teachers union opposes BROADIE Metro schools chief finalist
Teachers union: Reference opposes Metro schools chief finalist: Teachers union: Reference opposes Metro schools chief finalistAt least one of the references listed by a controversial candidate for Metro Nashville Public Schools director wouldn't actually recommend the candidate, which should raise another red flag about the candidate, says the local teachers unions.The Metro Nashville Education As
Congressman Fattah Statement on ESEA Reauthorization and Its Implications for Education Reform in Pennsylvania | news.sys-con.com
Congressman Fattah Statement on ESEA Reauthorization and Its Implications for Education Reform in Pennsylvania | news.sys-con.com: Congressman Fattah Statement on ESEA Reauthorization and Its Implications for Education Reform in PennsylvaniaWASHINGTON, July 8, 2015 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ --Congressman Chaka Fattah (D-PA) issued the following statement on the Elementary and Secondary Education Act
Poverty rates in every U.S. school district, in one map - The Washington Post
Poverty rates in every U.S. school district, in one map - The Washington Post: Poverty rates in every U.S. school district, in one mapAnyone who cares about the plight of poor children in America should take a look at a new interactive map, below, put together by the new nonprofit EdBuild.The map shows Census Bureau poverty rates in each of the nation’s nearly 14,000 school districts nationwide. T
Tell Congress: No to School Vouchers! Protect Public Education in ESEA Reauthorization
CFI Office of Public Policy | Center for Inquiry: Tell Congress: No to School Vouchers! Protect Public Education in ESEA ReauthorizationThis week both the House and Senate are debating the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA). We expect that there will be attempts, in both chambers, to amend ESEA to include private and religious school voucher schemes.This means your taxpayer dollars coul
Holding Charter Schools Accountable | Center for Popular Democracy
Holding Charter Schools Accountable | Center for Popular Democracy: Why Are Charters Exempt from Meaningful Oversight?Charter enrollment has doubled three times since 2000. Today, there are an estimated 6,400 charter schools in the U.S. enrolling over 2.5 million students.[i] While charter schools were originally envisioned as small-scale, innovation incubators that encouraged risk-taking—and were

YESTERDAY

Back To School: Congress Takes Up Controversial Education Bill - Bloomberg Politics
Back To School: Congress Takes Up Controversial Education Bill - Bloomberg Politics: Back To School: Congress Takes Up Controversial Education BillSenate, House debate changes in key piece of George W. Bush's domestic legacy.The U.S. House will try again this week to pass a Republican rewrite of the No Child Left Behind education law, with party leaders seeking to gain support from conservative me
The Non-Profit Industrial Complex's Role in Imposing Neoliberalism on Public Education
The Non-Profit Industrial Complex's Role in Imposing Neoliberalism on Public Education: The Non-Profit Industrial Complex's Role in Imposing Neoliberalism on Public Education"In the long run, NGOs are accountable to their funders, not to the people they work among. They're what botanists would call an indicator species. It's almost as though the greater the devastation caused by neoliberalism
Unions Love This New Version of No Child Left Behind
Unions Love This New Version of No Child Left Behind: Unions Love This New Version of No Child Left Behind. That Should Worry Conservatives.The Senate has begun floor consideration of a reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), currently known as No Child Left Behind (NCLB).This congress has the opportunity to consider conservative policy reforms that would genuinely re
Secretary Duncan flip on parental involvement a real flop | WagTheDog
Secretary Duncan flip on parental involvement a real flop | WagTheDog: Secretary Duncan flip on parental involvement a real flopAccording to the Educational Testing Service web site, ETS isthe world’s largest private educational testing and measurement organization, ETS develops, administers or scores more than 50 million tests annually in more than 180 countries at more than 9,000 locations inter
Al Franken: What Congress must do for LGBT kids - CNN.com
Al Franken: What Congress must do for LGBT kids - CNN.com: What Congress must do for LGBT kidsStory highlightsAl Franken, Randi Weingarten: Many LGBT students live in fear of harassment, abuse. Current civil laws don't protect LGBT youthThey say Congress must include Student Non-Discrimination Act in overhaul of No Child Left Behind ActAl Franken represents Minnesota in the U.S Senate and is a mem
Michigan governor outlines plan to dissolve Detroit public school system - World Socialist Web Site
Michigan governor outlines plan to dissolve Detroit public school system - World Socialist Web Site: Michigan governor outlines plan to dissolve Detroit public school systemMichigan’s Republican governor Rick Snyder has called for breaking up the Detroit Public School system. The plan is modeled on the Obama administration’s forced bankruptcy and restructuring of General Motors, which created a “b
Sacramento city documents detail Kevin Johnson’s involvement in black mayors’ group | The Sacramento Bee
Sacramento city documents detail Kevin Johnson’s involvement in black mayors’ group | The Sacramento Bee: Sacramento city documents detail Kevin Johnson’s involvement in black mayors’ groupThe city of Sacramento released more than 6,100 emails and more than a dozen documents Tuesday detailing Mayor Kevin Johnson’s past involvement in the embattled National Conference of Black Mayors.The involvemen
Obama Admin Says It Won’t Support Senate ESEA Draft; Higher Ed Wants Those “Higher Standards” | deutsch29
Obama Admin Says It Won’t Support Senate ESEA Draft; Higher Ed Wants Those “Higher Standards” | deutsch29: Obama Admin Says It Won’t Support Senate ESEA Draft; Higher Ed Wants Those “Higher Standards”There is a lot of info in this post. I could not capture it all in the title. All quotes are from Politico’s Morning Education for July 07, 2015, which has much more to it than I highlight in this pos
Thompson: Remembering The Full Horror of "Death at an Early Age"
This Week In Education: Thompson: Remembering The Full Horror of "Death at an Early Age": Thompson: Remembering The Full Horror of "Death at an Early Age"Thanks to Alexander and NPR's Claudio Sanchez for reminding us of the 50th anniversary of the firing of Jonathan Kozol for "curriculum deviation."Everyone should (re)read this book. Rather than immediately using it t
GUEST: A gifted city teacher says Cerf must never come to Newark | Bob Braun's Ledger
GUEST: A gifted city teacher says Cerf must never come to Newark | Bob Braun's Ledger: GUEST: A gifted city teacher says Cerf must never come to NewarkBy JONATHAN ALSTONChris Cerf Must Not Become the Next Superintendent of Newark’s Public Schools: He has Already Exploited Us Enough(Editor’s Note: Mr. Alston calls this the “polite” version of his incomparable analysis of what is going on in the New
Marriage ruling may boost school climate for LGBT families and students | EdSource
Marriage ruling may boost school climate for LGBT families and students | EdSource: Marriage ruling may boost school climate for LGBT families and studentsWhen the U.S. Supreme Court issued a major civil rights decision on marriage in Loving v. Virginia in 1967, striking down a state law banning interracial marriage, Alameda Unified teacher Gene Kahane was a 3rd-grader in Richmond, California, and
CURMUDGUCATION: Jeb's Ed Backers Revealed
CURMUDGUCATION: Jeb's Ed Backers Revealed: Jeb's Ed Backers RevealedLong-time observers of the reformster scene are familiar with the Foundation for Excellence in Education (FEE) the advocacy group that was, among other things, supposed to help Jeb Bush leverage his reformy career into a Presidential run.At various times they have promoted specious arguments for testing, tried to use aging demogra
Obama administration: Education bills lack accountability - Yahoo News
Obama administration: Education bills lack accountability - Yahoo News: Obama administration: Education bills lack accountabilityWASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration said Monday it cannot support either the Senate or the House versions of bills being considered this week to update the Bush-era No Child Left Behind education law.Cecilia Munoz, director of the White House Domestic Policy Counc
Principal: Stop blaming Common Core for problems in public education - The Washington Post
Principal: Stop blaming Common Core for problems in public education - The Washington Post: Principal: Stop blaming Common Core for problems in public educationThis is the tenth in a continuing series of letters between two award-winning school principals, one who likes the Common Core State Standards and the other who doesn’t. The debate over the Common Core State Standards has become so polarize
Q&A: Post education reporter Lyndsey Layton pulls back the curtain on this week’s No Child Left Behind fight in Congress - The Washington Post
Q&A: Post education reporter Lyndsey Layton pulls back the curtain on this week’s No Child Left Behind fight in Congress - The Washington Post: Q&A: Post education reporter Lyndsey Layton pulls back the curtain on this week’s No Child Left Behind fight in CongressBoth the House and Senate will consider major education bills this week. Lyndsey Layton covers national education issues for The
'Every Child Achieves' Won't Fix The Fed-Ed Farce
'Every Child Achieves' Won't Fix The Fed-Ed Farce: ‘Every Child Achieves’ Won’t Fix The Fed-Ed FarceBills to rewrite No Child Left Behind put Republicans in a bad political position and expand the federal role in education.Tuesday, the House and Senate are scheduled to take up separate bills to replace No Child Left Behind (NCLB). While out here in the hinterlands normal people are calling for an
Charter Schools Are Not Required To Provide Bus Transportation to Students, Judge Rules | FlaglerLive | FlaglerLive
Charter Schools Are Not Required To Provide Bus Transportation to Students, Judge Rules | FlaglerLive | FlaglerLive: Charter Schools Are Not Required To Provide Bus Transportation to Students, Judge RulesPointing to choices made by parents, a state judge has ruled that a Southeast Florida school district cannot require a charter school to provide bus transportation to students.Administrative Law J
Battle Over Standardized Testing Exposes Deep Rifts in Education Reform Community | TakePart
Battle Over Standardized Testing Exposes Deep Rifts in Education Reform Community | TakePart: Battle Over Standardized Testing Exposes Deep Rifts in Education Reform CommunityOne faction says the high-stakes exams hurt children of color, while the other side believes they help the fight for civil rights.The words read like a familiar manifesto against standardized testing, condemning it as harmful
5 Key Principles to Guide Consideration of any ESEA Title I Formula Change | Center for American Progress
5 Key Principles to Guide Consideration of any ESEA Title I Formula Change | Center for American Progress: ESEA Reauthorization: 5 Key Principles to Guide Consideration of any ESEA Title I Formula ChangeLast year, the federal government spent more than $14 billion to help educate low-income students as part of Title I, Part A, of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, or ESEA. For schools, pa
Warren Buffett gifts record $2.84 billion to Gates Foundation, other charities - World - Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News
Warren Buffett gifts record $2.84 billion to Gates Foundation, other charities - World - Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News: Warren Buffett gifts record $2.84 billion to Gates Foundation, other charitiesDonation mark Buffett's largest annual philanthropic contribution, increasing his total charitable giving to over $21.5 billion; 'Oracle of Omaha' has pledged to give away nearly all of his weal
Common Core Math Writer: “Too Busy with K-8″ to Adequately Develop High School Math Standards | deutsch29
Common Core Math Writer: “Too Busy with K-8″ to Adequately Develop High School Math Standards | deutsch29: Common Core Math Writer: “Too Busy with K-8″ to Adequately Develop High School Math StandardsOn July 06, 2015, Andrew Ujifusa of EdWeek posted a piece entitled, “Are Test Scores Proving Fears About Common-Core High School Math Correct?”In his post, Ujifusa writes about the Smarter Balanced As