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Jeff Bernstein

Tight Budgets Whittle Away School Days - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    After several years of state and local budget cuts, thousands of school districts across the nation are gutting summer-school programs, cramming classes into four-day weeks or lopping days off the school year, even though virtually everyone involved in education agrees that American students need more instruction time.
Jeff Bernstein

Education Week: Chicago Community Group Breaks Down Home-School Barriers - 0 views

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    Several years after relocating from Ecuador to Chicago, Shirley Reyes found herself living a lonely life, anxiously waiting at home each day for her children and husband to return from school and work. Ms. Reyes' isolation ended, however, when she joined the Logan Square Neighborhood Association, a community-based group that shakes up the traditional approach to parent involvement in schooling by focusing on altering school culture, empowering parents, and breaking down barriers between parents and schools.
Jeff Bernstein

Wisconsin Senate Blocks School Choice Expansion - 0 views

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    The Wisconsin Senate approved a measure Tuesday that would freeze the expansion of school vouchers and grant the Legislature the power to decide which schools or districts should qualify. The bill would limit voucher participation to school districts already in the program on the day the measure takes effect. Any school districts who want to get in after that would need separate legislation. The bill's author, Senate President Mike Ellis, R-Neenah, said the proposal would give the Legislature more say and flexibility on voucher expansion than the one-size-fits-all criteria laid out in current law.
Jeff Bernstein

Education Shouldn't be an Unfair Game! | School Finance 101 - 0 views

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    "A common claim these days, either in political rhetoric or in the context of litigation over the equity and adequacy of state school finance systems is that money simply doesn't matter. The amount of money we put into any school or district is inconsequential to the outcomes children achieve or quality of education they receive. The public schooling system is simply a money black hole! Thus, it matters not how much money we throw at the system generally and it matters not whether some children get more than others. Further, it matters not whether children with greater educational needs have resources comparable to those with lesser needs and greater preexisting advantages. Yes, these arguments are contradicted by the vast body of empirical evidence which finds otherwise! And these arguments are often used to deflect emphasis from disparities in resources across children that are egregious on their face, and often not merely a function of state legislative neglect of state school finance systems, but state legislative actions to drive more public resources to those already more advantaged. And things are only getting worse."
Jeff Bernstein

Testing Takes Its Toll on Special Needs Students - SchoolBook - 0 views

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    It has been a challenging week for many third- through eighth-grade public school students in New York City, as they have started their days on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday with the federally mandated English Language Arts exams. But as Gotham Schools reported on Wednesday, the week has been especially challenging for some students with special needs. This year, test-taking time has doubled for all students. For those students with disabilities who are given more time to complete the tests, "testing can stretch as long as three hours on each day of testing. That means the students could spend more than half of the school day - and more than 18 hours total - on state exams this week and next," Jessica Campbell reports for Gotham.
Jeff Bernstein

Tests Raise Questions About Longer School Day - Chicago News Cooperative - 0 views

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    Mayor Rahm Emanuel and new leaders of Chicago Public Schools have been pushing for a longer school day and year to raise student performance. But last week's state test results show that charter schools-which typically have more instructional time-actually have a lower percentage of students exceeding state standards.
Jeff Bernstein

Chicago Test Results Raise Questions About Extending Days - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Mayor Rahm Emanuel and new leaders of Chicago Public Schools have been pushing for a longer school day and school year to help raise student performance. But last week's state test results show that charter schools - which typically have more instructional time - actually have a lower percentage of students exceeding state standards.
Jeff Bernstein

Chicago's Longer School Day: Much-Needed Reform Or Political Cynicism? - 0 views

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    When Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel announced last year that he would begin a campaign toward his current gig, it was only a matter of weeks before he introduced his "longer school day" proposal. The issue didn't raise many eyebrows during the campaign, but in recent months it has led to near-daily blows between the Chicago Teachers Union, the school board and the Emanuel administration.
Jeff Bernstein

What You Need to Know About the Seattle Teachers' Rebellion and the Deeply Flawed Test ... - 0 views

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    "High school teachers in Seattle are saying no to the spread of high-stakes standardized tests. On January 10, the staff of Garfield High School voted unanimously to refuse to administer the Measures of Academic Progress (MAP) test to their ninth-grade students. For two weeks they've held firm, even as the superintendent of schools has threatened them with a 10-day unpaid suspension, and teachers at other schools have joined their boycott."
Jeff Bernstein

Ed Next Book Club Podcast: Chester Finn's Troublemaker: A Personal History of School Re... - 0 views

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    School reformers are a dime a dozen these days, with education policy a suddenly sexy field and more than a few people willing to challenge the status quo. But it wasn't always so. Back in the 1960s, when Fordham Institute president Checker Finn got his start as an education gadfly, contrarian thinking was hard to come by. In Troublemaker: A Personal History of School Reform Since Sputnik, Finn takes readers on a magic bus ride through the most momentous twists and turns of the past 40 years of education history-many of which he found himself in the middle of. What lessons should today's reformers take from past education battles? Which critical episodes are most often overlooked? And does Finn's own life experience make him optimistic or pessimistic about America-and its schools-going forward?
Jeff Bernstein

Will New York's Large High Schools Survive? - SchoolBook - 0 views

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    Can you blame them? After last week's study showing that student achievement is higher in the city's new, small high schools - and city officials reiterated their commitment to a policy of creating more of the smaller schools - some of the principals and staff members of some of the city's largest high schools are feeling a bit worried these days.
Jeff Bernstein

For the Record: Teacher layoffs, race and enrollment | catalyst-chicago.org - 0 views

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    As the Chicago Teachers Union struck back at CPS over the longer-day issue Friday, claiming 115 schools nixed the plan in straw polls, it also sought to highlight the disproportionate effect of this year's school layoffs. Bearing the brunt of the layoffs are schools with more African-American students and those where at least 87 percent of students are eligible for free or reduced-price school lunches.
Jeff Bernstein

Charter school in Coconut Grove draws controversy - Miami-Dade - MiamiHerald.com - 0 views

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    Late last month, Miami-Dade school district officials scolded the Academy of Arts & Minds charter school for charging fees to students to attend basic classes - in violation of state law. But when the school's governing board met the next day, the fee issue was not mentioned. And when a parent began reading from the district's warning letter to the school, two board members walked out.
Jeff Bernstein

More Money, More Money, More Money? Have we really ever tried sustained, targeted schoo... - 0 views

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    "I'm no-longer surprised these days by the belligerent wrongness of rhetoric around school funding equity and adequacy. Arguably, much of the supporting rationale for the current (and other recent) education reforms is built on the house of cards that when it comes to financing equitably and adequately our public school systems - especially those serving our neediest children, we've been there and done that. In fact, we've been there and done that for decades."
Jeff Bernstein

9 Things to Know About School Choice - 0 views

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    "To help kick off School Choice PR Week, Forbes ran a puff piece about choice entitled "Kicking Off School Choice Week With 9 Things You Need To Know". The piece comes from contributor Maureen Sullivan who in 2009 was elected to the the Hoboken school board arguing "for lower taxes and higher standards" during her "nearly" four year term (Sullivan was elected as a member of the Kids First team, then defected because she found them insufficiently reformy, leading to a great deal of fiscal grandstanding and wrangling in Hoboken) Her 9 things make a nice compendium of what choice advocates offer as arguments these days."
Jeff Bernstein

Students required to take 9 hours of English and math exams and state using dummy quest... - 0 views

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    Those dreaded state tests are here again. All third-to eighth-graders in New York began Tuesday the first of three consecutive days of English Language Arts assessment, to be followed next week by three days of math tests. And those state tests have never been longer. A typical third-grader last year spent 150 minutes over three days taking the ELA test and 100 minutes over two days on the Math exam. This year, all students will spend 270 minutes in the ELA exam and 270 minutes in the Math test - 90 minutes over each of six days. The stakes also have never been higher, not for the pupils who take the tests or the teachers whose evaluations will be based on their students' performance or the schools that could face closure if pupil scores drop.
Jeff Bernstein

Education Week: Counselors See Conflicts in Carrying Out Mission - 0 views

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    Middle and high school counselors believe they have a unique and powerful role to play in preparing all students for good jobs or college, but they feel hamstrung by insufficient training, competing duties, and their own schools' priorities, according to a study released today. The online survey of 5,300 counselors was conducted this past spring for the College Board's Advocacy & Policy Center. One of the largest-ever surveys of counselors, it paints a picture of a committed but frustrated corps that sees a deep schism between the ideal mission of schools and the work that takes shape day to day.
Jeff Bernstein

Rahm Emanuel Angers Teachers Union Over Longer School Day - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    One by one, teachers at public elementary schools here have been voting to buck their own union and take Mayor Rahm Emanuel up on an unusual offer: to accept bonus pay in exchange for waiving union contract provisions and keeping children at some schools longer each day.
Jeff Bernstein

A Few Additional CT Charter Figures « School Finance 101 - 0 views

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    I was admittedly in a bit of a rush the other day to pull together some figures on CT charter schools based largely on data I had previously compiled, some of which only included Achievement First charter schools.  Here, I include all charter schools in Hartford, New Haven and Bridgeport, and address only the % Free Lunch numbers using the most recent available data from the NCES Common Core of Data, which are from 2009-10.  A few quick points are in order.
Jeff Bernstein

Diane Ravitch: My View: Rhee is wrong and misinformed - Schools of Thought - CNN.com Blogs - 0 views

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    "A few days ago, CNN interviewed former D.C. schools chancellor Michelle Rhee about American education. Rhee, predictably, said that American education is terrible, that test scores are flat, and that we are way behind other nations on international tests. I disagree with Rhee. She constantly bashes American education, which is one of the pillars of our democratic society. Our public schools educate 90% of the population, and we should give the public schools some of the credit for our nation's accomplishments as the largest economy and the greatest engine of technological innovation in the world. It's time to set the record straight."
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