Posts Tagged ‘Education Philanthropy’

Daily Education News – 2/8/13

Posted by

Local News

The News Journal
Follow along today to learn more about STEM education
Today Nichole Dobo is in Baltimore for an event hosted by the Education Writers Association. It’s called Under the Microscope: Examining STEM Education.

National News

Education Sector
A Los Angeles High School illustrates the strengths and challenges of blended learning 
Washington, D.C.—Blended learning, an innovative educational model that combines online with traditional instruction is starting to take hold across the country as a means for improving efficiency, reducing costs, and boosting student achievement.  A new article from Education Sector, The Right Mix: How One Los Angeles School is Blending a Curriculum for Personalized Learning, profiles an East Los Angeles charter school, the Alliance Tennenbaum Family Technology High School, which illustrates both the strengths and the challenges of implementing this radical new way of educating students.

Education Week
Teachers’ ratings still high despite new measures
Even with changes to evaluation systems, only subtle differences emerge between the best and the weakest teachers—as well as all those in the middle.

The New York Times
A long struggle for equality in schools
Looking back at the school desegregation case he took as a young lawyer, Rubin Salter Jr. sees a pile of wasted money and squandered opportunities. After almost four decades in court and nearly $1 billion in public spending, little has changed for the black children whose right to a good education he had labored to defend.

Success of immigrants’ children measured
Americans who were born to immigrant parents, many of them the adult children of an enormous wave of immigrants who began arriving in the 1960s, are doing better than the foreign born on important measures of socioeconomic success, and in at least one area — education — have outperformed the population as a whole.

Education News
Connecticut likely to ease into new teacher evaluations
Connecticut administrators and teachers may win some reprieve in the push to start using a new teacher evaluation system. Writing in The Hartford Courant, Kathleen Megan explains that while the system will be in use next year, the Board of Education is considering a proposal to allow districts to phase it in more gradually.

Daily Education News-12/20/12

Posted by

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

Local News

Delaware First Media
Gov. Markell asks for Friday moment of silence for Connecticut shooting victims
Governor Jack Markell is asking Delawareans to observe a moment of silence for the victims of the recent school shooting in Newtown, Connecticut. Connecticut Governor Dan Malloy declared Friday to be a day of mourning and asked his fellow governors to join in the remembrance slated for 9:30 AM.

The News Journal
Did your child earn a scholarship from the state? Find out.
The state Department of Education announced the names of hundreds of Delaware students who earned a scholarships based on high scores on math and reading assessments.

National News

Education Week
Facebook’s Zuckerberg donates $500 million for education and health
As the $100 million he donated to the Newark, N.J., schools makes its way into the district there, Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced Tuesday he will donate $500 million of his company’s stock to education and health causes.

K-12 may not benefit from brighter fiscal outlook
Despite some positive signs that could help school budgets, states still are facing a shaky financial environment as they head into the new year. Even in those states where money is being added to education budgets, officials still gun-shy about their finances are looking at more-focused increases. Higher general revenues for states may not always translate to reinvigorated budgets in general

Education Department proposes changes for investing in innovation
The federal Investing in Innovation grant program would get a makeover under a proposed set of new priorities. While the Department of Education will still be looking to further the initial general principles of the i3 program, they’ll also be aiming future competitions more narrowly at one or more of 10 different areas of focus.

Hechinger Report
Advice, caution from early adopters of new teacher evaluations
Two-thirds of states are in the process of adopting new evaluations, and many will include student achievement, along with intensive classroom observations. It’s unclear whether the new evaluations will have the desired effect. But early adopters say they have at least begun to pinpoint what hasn’t worked, and what teachers and principals find most useful.

Daily Educations News- 12/5/12

Posted by

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

National News

Houston Chronicle
Head of education defers using STAAR in students’ grades  
Texas high school students are getting a reprieve for a second consecutive year on a requirement that would have made the state’s new and more difficult standardized tests count toward 15% of their final grades in key courses. Education Commissioner Michael Williams announced he is continuing the suspension of the rule at least until the 2013-14 school year.

Education Week
Arne Duncan sketches out ‘long haul’ agenda
U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, who says he plans to serve in the Obama Cabinet for the “long haul,” has begun sketching out his priorities for the next four years. They include using competitive levers to improve teacher and principal quality and holding the line on initiatives he started during the president’s first term. The secretary is also making clear what he won’t do: devote a lot of energy to a reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act if Congress doesn’t get serious about rewriting the current version, the No Child Left Behind Act.

Study: More churn at the top in large districts
Running one of the nation’s largest school districts typically comes with prestige and pay that draw would-be educational superstars, but also pressure and political complexity that cause them to burn out far faster than leaders of the majority of districts. A study published in the December issue of the American Educational Research Journal finds in 90 percent of 100 California districts studied, 43 percent of superintendents left within three years—but 71 percent of superintendents left the largest 10 percent of districts, which include those of 29,000 or more students, during that time.

New York Times
Grants back public-charter cooperation
In an effort to encourage collaboration between charter schools and traditional neighborhood schools, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has awarded $25 million in grants to seven cities. The grants will support a variety of projects in the seven cities, which are among 16 that have signed district-charter collaboration compacts with the Gates Foundation over the last two years.

Inside Higher Ed
A $10,000 platform  
Governors in Florida, Texas, and Wisconsin appear to be at the forefront of what could be an emerging approach to higher education policy, built largely around cost-cutting. The governors are pursuing strategies that include mandating low-cost options like the $10,000 degree, holding down tuition prices, tying funding to degree completion, and paying faculty on the basis of performance.

Follow Us

We're social

Stay Informed


Contact Us

For further info