Posts Tagged ‘Achievement Gap’

Daily Education News – 6/5/13

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Here are several stories in today’s news about Delaware education and from across the nation:

Local News

The News Journal
Colonial sighs as school tax hike approved by a slim vote
Colonial School District voters narrowly approved a second, smaller property tax referendum Tuesday, staving off large-scale layoffs and other cuts. The tax passed 3,005-2,938, a margin of 67 votes, according to unofficial results from the New Castle County Department of Elections. “I’m so relieved and I’m so thankful to the voters and the community,” said Superintendent Dorothy Linn.

WHYY
Governor Markell talks education at DC forum
Joined by his counterparts from Mississippi and New Mexico, Governor Jack Markell took part in a roundtable forum on reading hosted by the Washington Post. The discussion centered on making sure students are reading at grade level by the third grade.

Middletown Transcript
State testing brings a day of rewards for AHS students
Hard work might be its own reward, but a free lunch, a live deejay and a chance to dunk your high school principal don’t hurt either. Students at Appoquinimink High School received those dividends and more Friday in honor of their performance on last year’s state standardized tests

Town Square Delaware
Rodel Foundation seeks public input on two initiatives
A blog by C.R. McLeod
While another school year is coming to a close, the Rodel Foundation of Delaware has launched two initiatives that will be underway during the summer months.

National News

WHYY

Pa. schools join Philly in call for more state money
A group of unlikely allies descended upon Harrisburg Tuesday to lobby for additional school funding. Pennsylvania charter school leaders, as well as local officials from Republican-controlled counties, joined Philadelphia in the call for more state aid for basic education. “This isn’t a Republican or Democrat issue,” said Ronald Williams, a GOP member of the Pottstown school board in Montgomery County. “This is an issue that has to do with the future of our children.”

Education Week
Seize the moment to design schools that close gaps

An opinion by Paul Reville, former education Commissioner of Massachusetts
Recently, I stepped down from my position as secretary of education for the commonwealth of Massachusetts. Leading this new, integrated pre-K-through-higher-education cabinet office for Gov. Deval Patrick was one of the great honors of my career. I take great pride not only in what we accomplished during my tenure, but also what our state has achieved over the past two decades of education reform.

The New York Times
Bill to alter Bush-Era education law gives states more room
Renewing the effort to revise No Child Left Behind, the signature Bush-era federal education law, Senator Tom Harkin, Democrat of Iowa, introduced a new version on Tuesday that he said would “replace the failed tenets” of the law..

The Washington Post
Catania plans to announce bills that would overhaul D.C. public schools
D.C. Council member David A. Catania plans to announce wide-ranging legislation Tuesday that could substantially reshape the city’s public education system, as he seeks to increase funding to educate poor children, give more power to principals, change the city’s school lottery system and end social promotion of children who are performing below grade level

Des Moines Register
Sweeping education reforms become law
Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad called the education reform bill he signed into law “a turning point in Iowa history,” but it lacks many of the provisions included in the administration’s initial pitch for improved schools. The final bill, for example, failed to link student performance to teacher evaluations or require high school students to pass end-of-course exams in core subjects.

Daily Education News – 5/29/13

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Here are several stories in today’s news about Delaware education and from across the nation:

Local News

The News Journal
Appeal over charter school bus funds prompts legislative rule tweak
A Democratic lawmaker urged the budget-drafting Joint Finance Committee on Tuesday to change the rules for funding transportation at Delaware charter schools, arguing the current system lacks transparency and is at odds with other education funding provisions. Committee members said Rep. John Kowalko’s proposal would cut hundreds of thousands of dollars in charter school funding and largely dismissed his criticisms.

Delaware targets STEM skills gap
Faced with a persistent gap between science, technology, engineering and math jobs and workers trained to fill them, state leaders are pushing for ways to connect kids with companies. There are more than 3.8 jobs in those fields for every available worker, according to the Delaware STEM Council. By comparison, there are 1.7 unemployed Delawareans for every job outside those fields. “We are looking at a skills mismatch, and one of the biggest challenges we face is finding a way to fix that,” Gov. Jack Markell said. “We are competing not just in a national economy, but in an international economy, and we need our students to be able to compete.”

Delaware State News
For minority students, Delmarva Power’s engineering challenge generates personal power
Over the years, 250 students that have gone through the M.E.R.I.T. program have gone on to graduate from college with a masters, doctorate or bachelor’s degree, said John Hollis, longtime director of M.E.R.I.T. This year’s engineering challenge included an additional mechanism designed to pick up objects.

National News

Politico
Winning the jobs war
An opinion by Governor Jack Markell
While the talk in Washington in recent weeks has veered sharply away from the issues that most affect our daily lives, the people I meet at businesses, in schools and elsewhere in our communities are still most concerned with how their leaders are going to ensure the availability of the things that mean the most to them, like well-paying jobs, quality education, and a fair opportunity for their families.

Education Next
A point-by-point rebuttal of today’s anti-Common Core op-ed in the Wall Street Journal
An opinion by Michael Petrilli
As I’ve said and written about a million times, there are plenty of reasons to be against the Common Core. As with any public-policy issue, there are pros and cons, upsides and downsides—in short, trade-offs. Still, many of those crusading against the Common Core have been playing fast and loose with the facts and purposefully spreading misinformation—nobody more than the folks at the Pioneer Institute.

Daily Education News – 4/29/13

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Here are several stories in today’s news about Delaware education and from across the nation:

Local News

The News Journal
Let’s start treating teachers as true professionals
An opinion by Dick Gephardt, Dean Emeritus of the College of Fine and Performing Arts at Rowan University
More money is a motivating force, but it is not at all certain that all of the teachers who did not receive a bonus would be motivated – or even know how – to improve their performance for the next evaluative cycle. Therefore, the goal – which is to improve student learning – might not be achieved through these means. Gov. Jack Markell states, “We have a serious problem retaining our new teachers … Close to two in five new teachers leave teaching in our state within four years.” This is a serious problem. Under the current system, teachers feel they have little control over what goes on in the schools – yet they are the first blamed when things are not at the quality level that is expected.

WDDE
Legislature looks at revamping Delaware’ s school choice program
A former school board member turned state lawmaker is looking to streamline Delaware’s school choice program this session. Rep. Kimberly Williams (D-Stanton) is sponsoring a bill that would standardize application forms and deadlines at every school and establish anti-discrimination processes. Parents can use the program to apply to send their child to a school outside of their home district or charter and vocational/technical schools. Williams says she saw confusion among families using the program during her time as a Red Clay School District board member. “Basically, [you] need a law degree to figure out Choice in the State of Delaware,” said Williams. “So we are trying to make it much easier for parents to access on the [Department of Education’s] website, dates to be consistent and the criteria to be somewhat the same.”

WHYY
Video: First Person: Dorothy Linn
The Superintendent of the Colonial School District, Dr. Dorothy Linn talks about that district’s push for a tax increase scheduled for a June vote. She outlines why it is needed and what could happen if it is defeated.

National News

Education Week
Charter School research largely positive, says new summary
A new research summary from the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools found that the research on charter school performance over the past four years has been largely positive. The report examined 14 different studies from 2010-13 and found that all but one showed charter students outperforming their regular public school peers.

Michigan House approves budget stripping Common Core Funds
The Michigan House has approved a budget that would prohibit any general funds from being spent to implement the Common Core State Standards or the Smarter Balanced assessments. The push against the Common Core this year began with H.B. 4276, which would prohibit the Common Core from being implemented in the state.

The Washington Post
State funding for preschool drops as Obama calls for expansion
State funding for preschool across the country dropped last school year after a decade of growth, tapping the brakes on the quality and reach of programs as President Obama has called for a massive expansion of early childhood education, according to a national survey scheduled for release Monday. Twenty-seven of the 40 states that fund preschool, including Maryland and Virginia, reported declines in spending per child. The District, the only city included in the report, bucked the trend with significant gains in spending and access for what is already one of the largest preschool programs in the country.

The Wall Street Journal
The diploma’s vanishing value
May 1 is fast approaching, and with it the deadline for high-school seniors to commit to a college. At kitchen tables across the country, anxious students and their parents are asking: Does it really matter where I go to school? When it comes to lifetime earnings, we’ve been told, a bachelor’s degree pays off six times more than a high-school diploma. The credential is all that matters, not where it’s from—a view now widely accepted. That’s one reason why college enrollment jumped by a third last decade and why for-profit schools that make getting a diploma ultra-convenient now enroll 1 in 10 college students.

The New York Times
No rich child left behind
An opinion by Sean F. Reardon, Professor of education and sociology at Stanford
Here’s a fact that may not surprise you: the children of the rich perform better in school, on average, than children from middle-class or poor families. Students growing up in richer families have better grades and higher standardized test scores, on average, than poorer students; they also have higher rates of participation in extracurricular activities and school leadership positions, higher graduation rates and higher rates of college enrollment and completion. Whether you think it deeply unjust, lamentable but inevitable, or obvious and unproblematic, this is hardly news. It is true in most societies and has been true in the United States for at least as long as we have thought to ask the question and had sufficient data to verify the answer. What is news is that in the United States over the last few decades these differences in educational success between high- and lower-income students have grown substantially.

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