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Jeff Bernstein

Report Gives Most States an F for Teaching Civil Rights - Curriculum Matters - Education Week - 0 views

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    A majority of states deserve a failing grade for how they handle the teaching of civil rights history in their standards, while just three-Alabama, Florida, and New York-merit an A, concludes a new report by the Southern Poverty Law Center.
Jeff Bernstein

Targeting schoolchildren - The Washington Post - 0 views

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    THE CLEAR INTENT of Alabama's viciously xenophobic immigration law - and the likely effect, now that most of it was upheld by a federal judge this week - is to hound, harass and intimidate illegal immigrants into uprooting their lives and moving elsewhere. The law aims to do this by various means, but none is more pernicious than a provision requiring the state's public schools to collect information on every student's immigration status, starting in kindergarten and going to 12th grade.
Jeff Bernstein

Are Top Students Getting Short Shrift? - Room for Debate - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    It sounds so democratic, a very American idea: break down the walls of "remedial," "average" and "advanced" classes so that all students in each grade can learn together, with lessons that teachers "differentiate" to challenge each individual. Proponents of this approach often stress that it benefits average and lagging students, but a new study from the Thomas B. Fordham Institute suggests that the upsides may come at a cost to top students - and to the international competitiveness of the United States. By trying to teach children of varying abilities in one classroom, is American society underdeveloping some of its brightest young people?
Jeff Bernstein

miracleschools - Harvest Preparatory School - 0 views

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    The Star Tribune declares it a miracle school on 9/24/11 with the headline 'At this school, usual excuses don't apply' http://www.startribune.com/opinion/otherviews/130474133.html Claim from the article: In this year's state math tests in grades three through eight, this school outperformed every metro-area school district, including Edina and Wayzata. Its students outperformed all state students in reading proficiency (77 percent to 75 percent), and state white students in math proficiency (82 percent to 65 percent).
Jeff Bernstein

Regular Teachers, Regular Schools - Teacher in a Strange Land - Education Week Teacher - 0 views

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    My friends (a group with a disproportionately large percentage of teachers) are neatly divided into two camps: the folks who thought last year's Education Nation was such a smarmy, hyped-up caricature of "journalism" that they're avoiding the whole thing in favor of grading papers or watching baseball--and those who are watching, hoping fervently that NBC will have learned something from their heartfelt complaints / letters / tweets / blogs. Call them education's jaded pessimists and earnest optimists.
Jeff Bernstein

Educators Move to Curb Cheating on Handling Standardized Tests - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Citing heightened concerns about educators' cheating that have emerged after recent scandals in Atlanta and Philadelphia, a New York State panel has recommended an overhaul in how the state administers and grades its standardized tests.
Jeff Bernstein

Reaction to Cheating Recommendations: Who Will Pay? - SchoolBook - 0 views

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    Members of the Board of Regents said today that they would back the state education department's recommendations to overhaul New York's system for grading its standardized tests. But the state, as well as local districts, are asking: Who is going to pay for it?
Jeff Bernstein

What To Do About Lax Standards for Edu-Majors? - Rick Hess Straight Up - Education Week - 0 views

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    I blogged yesterday on Cory Koedel's eye-opening research regarding the inflated grades awarded to undergraduate education majors. In response, several colleagues from the world of teacher preparation have asked what I'd have them do. Not wanting to seem unhelpful, here are a couple suggestions to get things started. (That said, I trust those involved in teacher ed, if they put their minds to it, can readily come up with many more and better.)
Jeff Bernstein

South Bronx School: Not More of this Value Added Assessment ****!!! - 0 views

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    Sad news today. In an unanimous edict, the state appeals court ruled that the city can turn over Teacher Data Reports of teachers in grades 4-8 to the media. Rupert Murdoch and the New York Post are said to be quite overwhelmed with joy right now.
Jeff Bernstein

School 'Reform': A Failing Grade by Diane Ravitch | The New York Review of Books - 1 views

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    Class Warfare: Inside the Fight to Fix America's Schools by Steven Brill Simon and Schuster, 478 pp., $28.00                                                   As Bad as They Say? Three Decades of Teaching in the Bronx by Janet Grossbach Mayer Empire State Editions, 166 pp., $16.95 (paper)                                                  
Jeff Bernstein

Nancy Folbre: What Makes Teachers Productive? - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    If you watch the documentary "Waiting for Superman" or read Steven Brill's "Class Warfare: Inside the Fight to Fix America's Schools," you will learn that many advocates of school reform think they know how to increase teacher productivity: Rate teachers according to their students' performance on standardized tests and fire those who don't make the grade. But economic theory suggests several reasons why this approach will probably backfire.
Jeff Bernstein

New Eval System Pushes Out 34 Teachers | New Haven Independent - 0 views

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    New Haven's new method of grading teachers spurred low performers to improve their game-and led 34 others to leave the school district, officials announced Monday in the first test of a nationally watched component of the city's school reform drive.
Jeff Bernstein

Indiana's Phased Turnaround Model - Rick Hess Straight Up - Education Week - 0 views

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    A few weeks back, the Indiana Department of Ed opted to intervene in seven schools across Indiana. Six of the schools are in Indianapolis and one is in Gary. Of the seven, the Indiana Department of Ed is taking over five, and contracting with three different external operators to take the lead on these schools. The lever was provided by Public Law 221, which allows the state superintendent to bring in external turnaround school operators for a school that has received the state's lowest grade for six consecutive years. The operators are Edison Learning, EdPower, and Charter School USA. (The other two schools will remain under the auspices of the local school district.)
Jeff Bernstein

Testing, No Testing, Too Much Testing - On Special Education - Education Week - 0 views

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    Gretchen Herrera expected it would just be her and her son, who has Asperger syndrome and Type 1 diabetes, on the steps of the capitol building in Columbia, S.C., this Saturday, protesting standardized testing. The reasons for her protest began building last May. She had tried several times to have Anthony, 12, exempted from South Carolina's annual tests in reading, math, and other subjects when he was in 6th grade last school year. But no reason would do-not even a doctor's note that explained Anthony's blood sugar could spike because of his Asperger-related anxiety.
Jeff Bernstein

Grading the Governors' Cuts: Cuomo vs. Kasich vs. Corbett (revised) « School Finance 101 - 0 views

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    "Here's a quick data driven post on Governor's state aid cuts - or aid changes. So far, I've been able to compile data from a few states which make it relatively easy to access and download data on district by district runs of state aid (and one state that does not, but I have good sources of assistance). Here, I compare changes in state aid to K-12 public school districts in Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York."
Jeff Bernstein

CPS approves increased school choice | Cincinnati.com | cincinnati.com - 0 views

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    The board voted unanimously to change Cincinnati Public Schools into a "district of choice," which will offer a variety of schools and educational options to students in grades K-8.
Jeff Bernstein

Review of Florida Formula for Student Achievement: Lessons for the Nation | National Education Policy Center - 0 views

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    Former Florida Governor Jeb Bush and the Foundation for Excellence in Education have embarked on a well-funded campaign to spread selected Florida education reforms to other states. These reforms include assigning letter grades to schools, high-stakes testing, promotion and graduation requirements, bonus pay, a wide variety of alternative teacher credentialing policies, and various types of school choice mechanisms. This policy potpourri was recently presented by Gov. Bush in Michigan, and the documents used allow for a concrete consideration and review. Regrettably, Bush's Michigan speech relies on a selective misrepresentation of test score data. Further, he offers no evidence that the purported test score gains were caused by the recommended reforms. Other viable explanations, such as a major investment in class-size reduction and a statewide reading program, receive no or little attention. Moreover, the presentation ignores less favorable findings, while evidence showing limited or negative effects of the proposed strategies is omitted. Considering the overwhelming evidence that retention is ineffective (if not harmful), it is troubling to see Mr. Bush endorse such an approach. Finally, Florida's real problems of inequitable and inadequate education remain unaddressed.
Jeff Bernstein

For San Diego Schools, a Fear That Larger Classes Will Hinder Learning - NYTimes.com - 1 views

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    Many in the forefront of what is called the education reform movement - like Bill Gates, the philanthropist, and Arne Duncan, the nation's education secretary - have attended private schools with small class sizes. Others, like New York's mayor, Michael R. Bloomberg, and its former schools chancellor Joel I. Klein have sent their children to private schools with small class sizes. Imagine if the poorest public school children had the same opportunity. That is what has been happening for several years in this urban district of 130,000 students. Using state money and federal stimulus dollars, San Diego has held class size to 17 in kindergarten through second grade at its 30 poorest schools.
Jeff Bernstein

Student-Teacher Programs Called Flawed - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    The National Council on Teacher Quality, an advocacy group, is to issue a study on Thursday reporting that most student-teaching programs are seriously flawed. The group has already angered the nation's schools for teachers with its plans to give them letter grades that would appear in U.S. News and World Report.
Jeff Bernstein

Schools | Charter high schools in Detroit not making grade | The Detroit News - 0 views

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    Once touted as a solution to Detroit's public school woes, charter high schools are often doing just about as poorly - and in many cases worse - at educating students and getting them ready for college, a Detroit News analysis of recent test data shows.
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