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Lauren Tripp

Don't! The Secret of Self Control - 0 views

  • Once Mischel began analyzing the results, he noticed that low delayers, the children who rang the bell quickly, seemed more likely to have behavioral problems, both in school and at home. They got lower S.A.T. scores. They struggled in stressful situations, often had trouble paying attention, and found it difficult to maintain friendships. The child who could wait fifteen minutes had an S.A.T. score that was, on average, two hundred and ten points higher than that of the kid who could wait only thirty seconds.
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    A New Yorker article following up on the marshmallow study
Lauren Tripp

School to prison pipeline gets first Congressional hearing - 1 views

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    Wednesday's Judiciary Committee hearing was a milestone for a movement that has fought to raise awareness about these kinds of policies in schools around the country. The issue sits squarely at the intersection of race, educational equity and criminal justice. The committee heard testimony from Obama administration officials, a former Chicago Public Schools student, reform advocates and criminal justice leaders who sought to answer some basic questions: What good has the rise of zero-tolerance school discipline policies, now responsible for three million suspensions a year, done for the students they were supposed to protect? And just as pressing: What justifiable explanations are there for the deep disparities that zero-tolerance school discipline so reliably produces?
Lauren Tripp

Interview with Jonathan Kozol - 2 views

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    I'm so glad Kara posted her link already because this is a great follow-up to it. If you are interested in learning more about the kids in "Shame of the Nation", here is an interview with Kozol talking about the impact of poverty on schools and his new book "Fire in the Ashes".
Lauren Tripp

Why America's Education System Is Like Apartheid - 0 views

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    We like to believe all students have an equal opportunity to learn regardless of the color of their skin or the amount of money their families have. However, a new report by the Schott Foundation for Public Education details just how far from that ideal the education available to students from differing backgrounds in New York City actually is.
Lauren Tripp

The Government's Ignoring the Achievement Gap - 0 views

  • The consulting firm McKinsey & Company estimates that closing the racial and ethnic achievement gaps would increase national gross domestic product by hundreds of billions of dollars, or 2% to 4% of our overall GDP.
Lauren Tripp

Reconstruction of the US immigration history - 0 views

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    "Only about half the US population have ancestry arrived to the country before the Civil War, and less then 20% of the 2000 population can be attributed to colonists arrived before the US independence" (p. 1632).
Lauren Tripp

For Kids, Self-Control Factors Into Future Success : NPR - 2 views

  • A new study says that self-control makes the difference between getting a good job or going to jail — and we learn it in preschool.
    • Lauren Tripp
       
      So, maybe the most important moral curriculum is self-control?
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    I agree that it is an extremely important factor in curriculum. The article mentions that major factors for predicting adult success are intelligence, family's socioeconomic status and self-control. Given the difficulty in changing the former two, and the demonstrated potential to alter self-control, it seems necessary that this be a major component of elementary school curriculum and continue to be taught in middle and high school. Self control seems particularly important in high school when individuals are faced with more freedoms and especially more dangerous freedoms, such as choosing experimentation with drugs and alcohol over staying in to study. One potential issue I do see in teaching self-control effectively (as mentioned in the three curriculum article) is the problem of creating reward junkie. It seems like many of the benefits to be reaped from self-control are not as immediate as children may like to see, and so reward systems may be harder to implement given the lack of immediate reinforcement. But if an method could be found, it seems like reward systems could be beneficial. Despite the risk of becoming reward junkies, reward systems can be very effective with teaching behavioral type actions.
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    While teaching self-control is important to learn at a young age i believe this is the parents job. If parents do not reinforce this behavior at home the teachers' efforts would be useless. Teachers are teaching theory in the classroom and parents are living practice outside the home.
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    I agree completely with the above statement that such teaching is the parents' job. In my opinion, parents across the board are letting not only their own kids down, but their kids' classmates as well by not doing their parenting jobs effectively at home.
Lauren Tripp

Texas, Budget Cuts and Children - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • What’s supposed to happen when today’s neglected children become tomorrow’s work force?
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    This is an interesting connection: today's education budget cuts directly impact the viability of our future economy. So much for racing to the top...
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    The unfairness is appalling. The low spending looks so attractive but it's the children in their schools that don't get spent on. And the hypocrisy, "In practice, however, when advocates of lower spending get a chance to put their ideas into practice, the burden always seems to fall disproportionately on those very children they claim to hold so dear." And this quote just straight up scared me: "Consider, as a case in point, what's happening in Texas, which more and more seems to be where America's political future happens first". If this is just the beginning, or a taste of where the rest of America is going to end up, then some serious steps need to be taken to prevent it.
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    This sounds crazy. They're making budget cuts in all the wrong places! I understand that cuts are necessary because of the economy but this is going to have a seriously negative impact on their state. If children are "the future" then theirs isn't looking very bright and I think it would be wise of them to reconsider. Having one of the lowest high school graduation rates, ranking 5th in child poverty, and being below national average health wise does not look very good on their part. Not a very promising future if you ask me!
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    This is a very well written column by Mr. Krugman. Unfortunately I feel he is correct that if our country does not switch its current path we will soon be going the way of Texas. For years the education system has been neglected and now we are starting to pay the price for it. An almost 40% non graduation rate is completely unacceptable for one of the wealthiest nations in the world and unless we stand up to this assault on our basic human rights we will have nobody to blame but ourselves.
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    I was initially attracted to this post because I have several friends who live in Texas. After reading through it, I started thinking about the whole budget cut thing and I realized I'll never know exactly what that means until I'm a teacher and being directly affected by it. I can ready all I want about numbers but I really won't know how big of a difference it is until I'm a part of it. On top of that, I won't have much of an argument against budget cuts to teachers unless I know exactly why cuts are coming from teachers and not somewhere else. Anyways, just a thought that came up. Maybe I should start paying attention to these details so I can be well-informed of the history of teachers salary and budget cuts if I become a teacher?
Lauren Tripp

Poverty and Potential: Out-of-School Factors and School Success | National Education Po... - 5 views

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    An academic version of the impact of poverty on schools - good source for your PROBE papers!
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    I'm probably going to use this! Thanks.
Lauren Tripp

The Good Behavior Game - 0 views

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    This is one of Jessica Ross' sources, and I think it's really an interesting connection to the idea of school as a game and the possibility of creating reward junkies vs. the benefits of instant feedback. Here's the quote she liked from it: "Clearly,verbally identifying misbehaving students by name, publicly stating specific transgressions, and the provision of team debits on a blackboard may have acted as a discriminative stimulus for appropriate conduct (Salend, Reynolds, & Coyle, 1989) and provided a source of immediate feedback."
Lauren Tripp

Joachim de Posada says, Don't eat the marshmallow yet | Video on TED.com - 1 views

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    The video of the kids in this marshmallow study is priceless.
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    This is crazy research. I don't even have much else to say. I do agree though. I think self-discipline is important. But I almost think balance is more important. I think it's OK to indulge occasionally. We need to learn discretion and discernment to know when to indulge and when to be disciplined.
Lauren Tripp

How Learners Can Be On Top of Their Game: An Interview with James Paul Gee (Part Four) - 2 views

  • No one needs a Halo test after finishing Halo on hard and no one should need an algebra test after finishing an equally well-designed algebra curriculum.
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    Can we use video games as an example for improving education?
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    I particularly enjoyed this quote: "We define accountability around teachers failing to teach children." A lot has been said in class about the failure of standardized testing to really hold teachers accountable to giving a well-rounded education, but that quote says it succinctly. In terms of video games and the education system, I think the author has come up with a really amazing (although not totally new) concept. If I had a dollar for every time I heard someone complain about how utterly unnecessary tests are, I'd be a very wealthy person. But comparing it to a video game gives this idea a lot of legitimacy. I've played video games. I may not have every level memorized, but I have the basic skills needed to play the game. This is (sadly) not true of many of the things I've learned in school. I have the BASIC skills needed for mathematics, but once calculus is in conversation, I'm done. I've taken the course, but because I had no vested interest in the class, I did what most students end up doing--master the information for a short amount of time, regurgitate it, then forget it in order to clear my mind for memorizing the next lot of (to me) useless information. If schools could take a more fundamentally hands-on approach to education (like video games), I think we'd see a lot more genuine mastery of material for long-term use. Plus... I bet we'd also combat the problem of truancy!
Lauren Tripp

Sent to Jail for Caring About Her Kids' Future - 2 views

  • An African-American single mother of two from Akron, Ohio, was sentenced to two concurrent five-year prison sentences for a felony conviction of "falsifying documents" so that her two daughters could attend public school in the mostly white Copley Township outside Akron. The five-year sentences were suspended, but Kelley Williams-Bolar was ordered to spend 10 days in prison and perform 80 hours of community service afterward for the "crime" of sending her children to the Copley schools by using her the address of her father, a resident of Copley. Williams-Bolar and her father Edward Williams were also charged with grand theft for "stealing" $30,500, the cost of "out of district" tuition for the two children for two years. The jury couldn't agree that the two engaged in theft, but they did convict Williams-Bolar on the fraud charge. Judge Patricia Cosgrove reduced the sentence, but insisted that Williams-Bolar serve some time so as not to "demean the seriousness" of the "crime." But what exactly is the crime?
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    The idea that parents are willing to sacrifice anything for their children is not a new concept. Although this mother may have gone about trying to get her children a better education in the wrong way she had the best of intentions. I think the real crime is that this mother was forced into breaking the law in order to provide her children with a good education. The inconsistency and inequality of our education system is the real crime here.
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    Coming from another country where the "school district" concept doesn't exist, it is hard for me to understand how students are forced to go to a school that can't provide with what they need/want. For this I don't think that it is a crime for a parent to do anything to offer their kids a better schooling. Although this might not seem fair to some people, I'm sure that if they were in the same situation they will do the same. It could be argued that students could try really hard to be the top student but when they are competing with other top students in top schools...what are their chances?
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    Having lived just outside of Tallahassee for 20 years and also living in an area with sub-par standards in education, I can honestly say that I have known people who have committed this federal offense. Perhaps that calls into question my bias, but I believe that concurrent five-year prison sentences is unacceptable(as seen by the outcome). It almost seems that the judge was attempting to make an example of the offender, but regardless the law is the law. That means that the real question is why was she forced to send her children to another school? I think it would be important for the district of the school that the defendant lived in to start a series of reviews to see if they can possibly improve their educational system. Books, facilities, food, and teachers are all relevant to the equation of school improvement. That is the lesson we have been drawing from the entire course and I think that cases like this where people are willing to risk felonies in order to give their child a better education reinforce the idea that the school districts need to constantly review themselves.
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    I find the fact that this woman's actions are considered criminal to be deplorable. But, at the same time I can understand why the current structure would fail if everyone took their kids and put them where they wished. The answer, in my eyes, is far from criminalizing these actions. We should closer analyze the motivations of these actions with an aim to create a system that reduces the need for this behavior. Perhaps we need to broker a contract between the state and local governments so that school funding is not so drastically unequal from district to district.
Lauren Tripp

Thoughts on the Failure of Merit Pay - 1 views

  • Chapter 9 summarizes Deming's strong opposition to merit ranking and merit pay. Bottom line: It is bad for corporations. It gets everyone thinking about what is good for himself or herself and leads to forgetting about the goals of the organization. It incentivizes short-term thinking and discourages long-term thinking.
Lauren Tripp

Teacher Pay for Performance: Experimental Evidence from the Project on Incentives in Te... - 0 views

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    "While the general trend in middle school mathematics performance was upward over the period of the project, students of teachers randomly assigned to the treatment group (eligible for bonuses) did not outperform students whose teachers were assigned to the control group (not eligible for bonuses)." So much for the argument that paying teachers more is enough to raise their kids' test scores!
Lauren Tripp

Nth Wave Feminism: By Request: Why Are There So Few Male Teachers? - 4 views

  • Almost anything you read about men in teaching talks about how there is an assumption that women are more nurturing and therefore better suited to teaching. Horace Mann would be so proud.
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    I like this article, it has a lot of good points. I think the main reasons it points out are very true and it is sad that there are so many negative outlooks on male teachers.
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    I liked this article, too. I think it's sad that people tend to distrust male elementary school teachers, like the only reason they would choose to work with children is because they have bad intentions.
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    I think this is interesting. In this day in age if men want to teach younger children, so be it. As long as they are capable of running the environment and producing a classroom that promotes positive education they should teach. There shouldn't be a social stigma about a male teaching kindergarten. That's ridiculous and rather ignorant.
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    I completely agree that there shouldn't be a social stigma about male teachers in elementary schools. Men can be just as nurturing and as good as teachers as women. It just makes sense to me that there are so few male teachers because of the low status and low pay aspect. That aspect is still around and prominent in the teaching profession. Men wouldn't want to put themselves into that situation in addition to the negative stereotypes.
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    I thought this article was really interesting especially the comment the author makes when she says..."There is an idea that elementary school is not academically rigorous, but that high school is. The older the kids, the more "acceptable" male teachers are." I think this is pretty ridiculous and pretty degrading towards the women that do teach in elementary schools. The first years of a child's education are the most vital because they learn "how to learn" and they will use those habits for the rest of their lives. To say that this is not an honorable profession would be unfair and ignorant.
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    It can be said the same for ANY predominately female oriented occupation (i.e. nursing, childcare, etc). The social stigma of being a man in these professions persists (though to a lessening degree in nursing) in being involved with children because of the assumed nurturing aspect that women a deemed naturally inclined and a lacking sense of trust and security for a child's well being when left in the care of a man.
Lauren Tripp

Children need food, health care, and books. Not new standards and tests. - 1 views

  • To summarize: What should schools focus on first? Food, health care, and books. Not on new standards and tests.
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    Here's the original article on which the previous blog post was based.
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    While reading this article, i found myself agreeing with almost all of what Krashen was saying. Poverty does effect student learning. Fortunately for me, i never had to experience going to school hungry or sick. I always had books available to me in my school library and a school nurse present in case anyone got sick. I cannot imagine what it feels like to go to school without these basic things, nor do i want 25% of american children to go either. It's no wonder that students who live in poverty do worse in school. What is even more heart wrenchings is the fact that our government only cares of how well its country does internationally. What the government doesn't realize is that if it helps to reduce poverty, our children will be able to learn more efficiently and then it can get the international ranking it wants so badly. Until our government starts caring about our hungry children that go to school and not how the United States ranks internationally in education, then we cannot improve.
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