Posts Tagged ‘ESEA’

Daily Education News – 2/7/13

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Local News

The News Journal
Delaware must make real education reforms
I appreciated Kendall Massett’s recent article, ‘Families, children benefit from school choice,’ but I wish she had spent as much time talking about how broken this system is in practice as she did talking about its theoretical merits.

National News

Education Week
School chiefs leader joins Common-Core project
Gene Wilhoit, who directed the Council of Chief State School Officers when it helped lead the design and adoption of the Common Core State Standards, has joined a nonprofit that was founded by the lead authors of the standards.  Student Achievement Partners announced today that Wilhoit has joined the organization, which is playing a central role in guiding assessment and instructional materials for the standards now in place in all but four states.  Last June, Wilhoit retired from his post as executive director of the CCSSO, a membership organization that serves state commissioners of education. He had said at the time that he would continue work to help states implement the common core.

Teachers’ ratings still high despite new measures
In Michigan, 98 percent of teachers were rated effective or better under new teacher-evaluation systems recently put in place. In Florida, 97 percent of teachers were deemed effective or better.  Principals in Tennessee judged 98 percent of teachers to be “at expectations” or better last school year, while evaluators in Georgia gave good reviews to 94 percent of teachers taking part in a pilot evaluation program.  Those results, among the first trickling out from states’ newly revamped yardsticks, paint a picture of a K-12 system that remains hesitant to differentiate between the best and the weakest performers—as well as among all those in the middle doing a solid job who still have room to improve.

Virtual educators critique value of MOOCs for K-12
When 200 students sign up for a course, educators normally think of ways to split up the classroom into more manageable sizes. But for the University of Miami Global Academy, an online high school run by the University of Miami, building a class with hundreds of students was all part of the plan when it launched its first “massively open online course,” or MOOC, in November. The six-week, noncredit course—a virtual seminar designed to help high school students prepare for the SAT II subject test in biology—used virtual-conferencing software to allow students to interact with the teacher in real time.

Roll Call
Update our education legislation
Op-Ed by Chris Minnich
More than 11 years ago, our government enacted the No Child Left Behind law, a reauthorized version of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act that increased focus on standards and assessments and required each state to set annual targets for student performance. This law has since helped the country’s education system by serving a critical purpose in raising awareness, setting high expectations for all and driving states to meet those expectations for every student. However, our ability to best serve all students has evolved over the past decade. As a result, the law is now outdated and is no longer assisting states on the way to improving their systems.

Daily Education News – 12/28/12

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

Local News

New monthly e-publication by Office of Early Learning
The Office of Early Learning has launched a monthly, new e-publication to support the early learning initiative. See the December 2012 newsletter here.

The News Journal
3 charter schools won’t open in 2013
Three new charter schools have opted not to begin classes next year, citing challenges related to finances, finding a suitable location and a school leader. The schools that will not open in the 2013-2014 academic year as planned are: Early College High School in Dover along with Academia Antonia Alonso and First State Montessori Academy, both in Wilmington.

Class notes: Howard assistant principal wins state accolade
The Delaware Association of Secondary School Principals named a Howard High School of Technology educator as the 2013 Delaware Secondary Assistant Principal of the Year. Assistant principal Clifton Hayes has worked at Howard since 2006. As the Delaware representative, Hayes will compete for the National Assistant Principal of the Year competition in Washington in March.

National News

The Wall Street Journal
Schools test personalized math program
The School of One program was started in New York City three years ago and was named one of the 50 best inventions of 2009 by Time Magazine. In its application for $40 million from the Obama administration’s Race to the Top education grant program, the city pledged to make a “systemic shift in which schools adopt a student-centered approach” through programs like School of One. New York City was named one of 61 finalists last month.

Education Week
International tests spark questions on Finland’s standing
Finland’s score of 514 on TIMSS for 8th grade math was not statistically different from the U.S. average of 509, the data show. Massachusetts, meanwhile, posted a score of 561, placing the Bay State below just four nations in the TIMSS rankings. (The TIMSS scale runs from 0 to 1,000, with 500 being the average of participating nations.) Finland trailed South Korea, the top performer on TIMSS in 8th grade math, by nearly 100 points. “That’s a full standard deviation. That is massive,” Loveless said. “On PISA, they’re only five points apart.”

The Chief State School Officers weigh in on teacher quality
The Council of Chief State School Officers ‘s outgoing Executive Director, Gene Wilhoit, made it clear that its recently released report was focused on those things related to teacher quality that the states are directly responsible for: licensure, ‘program quality’ in their schools of education, and the data collected by the state that can be used to improve both.  And Wilhoit expressed a strong determination on the part of the chiefs to do whatever is necessary to make sure that teacher education programs reflect the spirit of the Common Core State Standards and raise the quality of incoming teachers even if that means closing down significant numbers of education schools or alternative programs that train our new teachers.

Educators tout IB’s links to Common Core
While the common core—so far adopted by 46 states and the District of Columbia—is intended to bring a universal rigor to high school diplomas nationwide, the IB has been an established international benchmark of college readiness for more than a half century and is in more than 3,500 schools worldwide.

Los Angeles Times
Schools face more penalties as feds reject California waiver
Federal officials have rejected California’s request for exemption from rules that penalize low-performing schools and school districts, state officials announced. The state’s failure to win a “waiver” from the No Child Left Behind law was not entirely a surprise, but was still unwelcome news to officials.

Daily Education News- 9/5/12

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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
State representative and educator signs on as headmaster at Odyssey Charter
The Odyssey Charter School, known for its curriculum focused on math and Greek language, has announced the appointment of a new headmaster, Nick Manolakos. Manolakos has worked in public education for 34 years, most recently as academic dean for A.I. du Pont High School. He has worked at five other schools in Delaware, including Skyline Middle School, where he was principal from 2000 until 2006.

National News

Education Week
Ed. dept. gears up to oversee NCLB waivers  
Now that more than half the country is operating with No Child Left Behind waivers, the Department of Education must oversee 34 different state accountability systems and hold states to the promises they made to win the new flexibility. States are preparing to provide their first evidence that they are implementing their plans as proposed—and are already asking federal officials if they can tweak their proposals.

Nearly 900 districts set to compete for new Race to Top  
With $400 million up for grabs, 893 districts or groups of districts have told the Department of Education that they plan to compete in the latest Race to the Top competition. This includes nearly 200 large districts that are eligible for the top awards of between $30 million and $40 million. Another 433 small districts plan to compete for $10 million to $20 million. The rest are somewhere in between.

Associated Press
Emanuel appeals to parents as school strike looms
The Chicago teachers union has called for a strike Monday if there’s no agreement on a contract. Mayor Emmanuel has declined to take questions about the ongoing negotiations from reporters who followed him from school to school on the first day of classes for many of Chicago’s 400,000 public school students. A strike has become more likely as negotiations between the city and the union that represents more than 26,000 public school teachers have become increasingly contentious. The school district has offered teachers a four-year contract with raises of 2 percent a year, an offer that teacher’s union president Karen Lewis has repeatedly called unacceptable.

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