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ED Gov- Enrolling Uninsured Kids in Health CareSecretaries Sebelius and Duncan announced a national coalition to enroll five million children in Medicaid and CHIP within five years. […]
- Support for Education JobsAlabama, Iowa, Maine, Massachusetts, Nebraska, and Tennessee are among the states that will receive funding to support education jobs. […]
- Beyond the Bubble TestsRead Secretary Duncan's remarks to state leaders about Race to the Top Assessment winners and the next generation of assessments. […]
- Joint Agreement for New Orleans RecoverySecretary Duncan and other Obama administration officials announced a $1.8 billion agreement to help renovate and rebuild schools in New Orleans. […]
- Back to School TourSecretary Duncan is taking a bus tour to visit schools, honor and listen to teachers, meet with parents and students, and highlight success. See video, photos, and stories in the blog. […]
- Remarks in Little RockSecretary Duncan discussed his Back to School Tour and the Obama Administration's education agenda, and he thanked America's teachers -- "our unsung heroes" -- in Little Rock, AR. […]
- Emergency Response PlansED grants will help 98 school districts strengthen their emergency response plans. […]
- Charter School GrantsCharter school grants to state agencies in AR, CA, CO, DC, GA, IN, MI, MO, NH, RI, SC, and TX will help increase public school options. […]
- Additional Recovery Funds for CaliforniaNew York and California are among the states that will receive additional Recovery Act funds to support jobs and drive education reforms. […]
- Gainful Employment AnalysisRead the analysis that helped inform ED's proposed regulation that provides a standard for occupational and for-profit postsecondary programs to demonstrate that they prepare students for gainful employment. […]
- Enrolling Uninsured Kids in Health Care
Harvard Feed- Harvard: Interested in the stars? Check out @chandraxray for views like a galactic super-volcano in action http://bit.ly/awKE3et
- Harvard: Find stories about working at Harvard in the print Gazette and online. http://bit.ly/avqJEV
- Harvard: Are you a Harvard alum making a difference in the world through public service? Pls put yr service on the map http://onthemap.harvard.edu/
- Harvard: RT @berkmancenter Our open house is tomorrow (Tues 9/7) 6PM @Harvard_Law. Learn about our work & stay for food/drink! http://bit.ly/cQI5H5
- Harvard: Explore Harvard mobile: access to Harvard maps, news & more in the palm of your hand. http://bit.ly/b5q1Oz
- Harvard: RT @HarvardBiz: Celebrating an Emotional-Labor Day http://bit.ly/b6RMhR
- Harvard: Working with @HSPHNews researchers, Greece goes smoke-free in restaurants http://bit.ly/cb17ew
- Harvard: Harvard admits outstanding students of every nationality and background. Helpful info for international students: http://bit.ly/bS6T4Y
- Harvard: Explore Harvard mobile: access to Harvard maps, news & more in the palm of your hand. http://bit.ly/b5q1Oz
- Harvard: The Class of 2014 bond on their freshmen trips. Multimedia: http://bit.ly/dCt1Jd
- Harvard: FAMILY FUN! Batting cages & 18-hole mini-golf @ Harvard Allston Field & Fairway. Free & open to the public http://bit.ly/a6XYye
- Harvard: What kind of foundation do today's college students need to understand and be prepared for the modern economy? http://nyti.ms/aEGHtH
- Harvard: Explore Harvard mobile: access to Harvard maps, news & more in the palm of your hand. http://bit.ly/b5q1Oz
- Harvard: RT @WHRBSports @Harvard men's soccer vs. Stanford, 9/4 at 7pm. #NCAASoccer Full on-air schedule here: http://bit.ly/9dIKMQ
- Harvard: SWING! Batting cages & 18-hole mini-golf @ Harvard Allston Field & Fairway. Free & open to the public http://bit.ly/a6XYye
- Harvard: We are Harvard Crimson Athletics! Video: http://bit.ly/c7M442
- Harvard: Life is a Cabaret! Check out American Repertory Theater's 2010/11 season. http://bit.ly/iDh8Jhttp://bit.ly/iDh8J @americanrep
- Harvard: Harvard College welcomes four Jack Kent Cooke Foundation Scholars http://bit.ly/aNg5Al
- Harvard: Try Harvard Allston farmers' market - every Friday 3 -7pm until Oct. 29th. http://bit.ly/cQxER9
- Harvard: Good morning! Still sunny skies @Harvard before Earl sets in #hurricane
Tech Talk- USB Malware Problem
- Pros and Cons of Internet Regulation
- Excel Tips for Help Desk
- A story from James
- Is one monitor better than two?
- 5 iPhone Tips and Apps for Network Admins
- 5 Android Tips and Apps for Network Admins
- Build apps for your Android with AppInventor
- Should you use a spreadsheet or a database?
- Why use a Forum?
Twitter Education- education: Article: Back to School Shopping: Remember the Flash Cards http://bit.ly/bCpWRG
- education: Education secretary endorses release of teacher data to parents http://huff.to/cYPghx
- education: Plagiarism on the rise on college campus http://bit.ly/aY9XwG
- education: Teacher cuts student's photo from every yearbook http://bit.ly/cV0LSN (via @offbeat)
- education: RT @gourmet: Michelle Obama addressed hundreds of Chefs at the White House yesterday to launch the Chefs Move to Schools program. http:/ ...
- education: Study: Today's college kids lack empathy http://bit.ly/a44gf4
- education: Seton Hill University plans to give all incoming students iPads http://bit.ly/da6kHK
- education: Woman gets High School diploma at Age 98 http://bit.ly/awEl9X
- education: Top home-school texts dismiss Darwin, evolution http://bit.ly/aO4P38
- education: Vice Principal defends herself in Philadelphia school district's remote access laptop webcam spying incident. http://bit.ly/bHBDaF
- education: NPR reports that a school in Ashburnham has renovated its library to be completely digital. http://bit.ly/16vUgK
- education: Education Department says many states are setting the achievement standards bar too low for students. http://bit.ly/26B1Ip
- education: President Obama wants to shorten summer vacations and have children spend much more time in school. http://bit.ly/2kdRYD
- education: Children Walking to School Alone: an idea whose time has passed http://bit.ly/z33PG
- education: US News examines which high school students are the most likely to graduate from college. http://bit.ly/ZcAph
- education: CNN: educators at the center of a political storm this week because of President Obama's planned message for students. http://bit.ly/Y8fG1
- education: SAT scores show disparities by race, gender, family income http://bit.ly/HWA8W
- education: Government tells schools to prepare to keep on teaching regardless of how many students are sick with H1N1 this fall. http://bit.ly/3GjP1l
- education: Student sues Amazon.com for deleting his homework http://bit.ly/hYgMi
- education: Bill Gates urges lawmakers to improve education with data and federal stimulus money. http://bit.ly/2XLPZ
Google Education- Bland platitudes on education get a failing grade - Arizona Daily Star
- Federal fund for education jobs no help this year - Sioux Falls Argus Leader
- Obama Student-Aid Rule Riles For-Profits, Spurs Most Letters Since 1983 - Bloomberg
- Assessment of teachers not pleasant, but useful - Kansas City Star
- Ruth Barnett, Sky News Online - Sky News
- Sister: 'Little Rock Nine' member's mission was education for all - CNN
- “Real Results”: Nathan Deal to unveil education plan tomorrow at Capitol - Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog)
- Education in Washington: standardized testing and teacher accountability - Seattle Times
- Christie, Schundler conflict is latest in politicization of NJ education ... - The Star-Ledger - NJ.com (blog)
- Japan fattens textbooks to reverse sliding rank - The Associated Press
.EDU Feed- Enrolling Uninsured Kids in Health Care
- Support for Education Jobs
- Beyond the Bubble Tests
- Joint Agreement for New Orleans Recovery
- Back to School Tour
- Remarks in Little Rock
- Emergency Response Plans
- Charter School Grants
- Additional Recovery Funds for California
- Gainful Employment Analysis
- Turning Around Low-Performing Schools
- Education Jobs Fund
- First Summit on Bullying
- $10 Billion to Support 160,000 Education Jobs
- $115.3 Million for Teaching of American History
- New Education Data Website
- Winning i3 Applicants
- We want your feedback!
Tag Archives: school-district
Schools ban bracelets promoting cancer awareness
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. — Cancer has ravaged several of Ann Aberson’s relatives, so she doesn’t have a problem with her two teenage daughters wearing bracelets to raise awareness of breast cancer. But their school principal does. This week, Baltic High School, just north of here, became one of the latest across the USA to ban the rubber bracelets that has a message some say is in poor taste: “I love boobies.” The bracelets have caused controversy in schools in states including California, Colorado, Idaho, Florida and Wisconsin. Some districts allow students to wear them inside-out, and others ban them. “When we had an assembly the first day of school, I basically told the students we are not insensitive to the cause,” Baltic High Principal Jim Aisenbrey says. “I think everybody in the gym, including myself, has had a family member or relative or friend who has dealt with the issue. I do think there are more proper ways to bring this plight to the attention of people, and I don’t think this is a proper way.” “I guess I never thought of them as offensive,” Aberson says. Her grandmother and five of her grandmother’s sisters battled breast cancer. The bracelets, which sell for about $4 in stores, were created by Keep A Breast Foundation, a Carlsbad, Calif., non-profit group that seeks to increase breast cancer awareness among young people. Proceeds from sales support the foundation’s programs, founder Shaney Jo Darden says. She says the bracelets are meant to spark discussions. “That’s the whole idea, it’s getting people to talk about breast cancer, it’s getting people to share their feelings about how this disease has impacted their life,” she says. “The bracelet is doing what it’s meant to do — it’s making people talk.” “Schools banning it? That’s crazy,” says Julie Hubbell of Lewisville, Texas. Hubbell helped organize an auction and barbeque named “Boobie Q” to raise money for the Susan G. Komen Foundation, which fights breast cancer. In the Fresno, Calif., area, students in the Clovis Unified School District were told not to wear the bracelets in class — or to turn them inside out so the message is not visible, spokeswoman Kelly Avants says. The district’s dress code outlaws jewelry with sexually suggestive language or images, she says. Continue reading
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Tagged attention, baltic-high, florida, fresno, life, pc pro school, school, school-district, texas-hubbell
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Feds: No charges in Philadelphia school laptop-spying case
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Federal prosecutors will not file charges against a school district or its employees over the use of software to remotely monitor students. U.S. Attorney Zane David Memeger says investigators have found no evidence of criminal intent by Lower Merion School District employees who activated tracking software that took thousands of webcam and screenshot images on school-provided laptops. A student and his family sued the district in February, claiming officials invaded his privacy by activating the software. That case continues. The district has acknowledged capturing 56,000 screen shots and webcam images so it could locate missing laptops. Memeger says he decided to make Tuesday’s announcement to close the matter before the start of the school year. Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Continue reading
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Tagged attorney-zane, criminal-intent, david-memeger, district, district-or-its, family, its-employees, lower-merion, material, over-the-use, school, school-district, took-thousands
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TV, movies shoot ‘on location’ at L.A. schools needing funds
LOS ANGELES — In an era of yawning budget deficits and teacher layoffs, schools in the Los Angeles area are looking at a nontraditional source for some extra cash — Hollywood. School districts from Lawndale to Glendale are seeking to earn thousands of dollars a day from renting their campuses as locations for movies, TV shows, commercials, and even truck parking. OUTRAGE: Is 2010 the year of the education documentary? DUNCAN: Congress must act on school funding The money is being used to save teachers’ jobs, upgrade school facilities and replenish districts’ dwindling funds. “Schools have historically been reluctant to make themselves available, but now they’re falling over themselves,” said Scott Graham , leasing director for the sprawling 1,000-school Los Angeles Unified School District . Officials at FilmLA, the Los Angeles film promotion nonprofit, say they’ve had a flurry of inquiries from cash-strapped districts in recent months asking how they can market themselves to production companies. The spike of interest from schools is coming at an opportune time. Youth networks such as the Disney Channel and MTV are moving away from reality shows to scripted programs that often feature kids at school, said Trisha Edgar, FilmLA’s property management manager. To serve the increased demand from both schools and producers, FilmLA recently rolled out a new website featuring photos of campuses and a description to make it easier for location managers to find what they’re looking for, whether a football field, classroom or cafeteria. Hollywood has filmed at some of Los Angeles’ architectural standout schools for decades. Viewers have seen the classic red brick-Ivy League look of El Segundo High School in the 1955 drama ” Blackboard Jungle ,” and the TV sitcom that launched Will Smith , ” The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air .” Torrance High School’s graceful Spanish-style arched walkways served as backdrop for TV shows “90210,” ” Buffy the Vampire Slayer ” and “Medium.” In West LA, University High School starred in the romantic comedy “Valentine’s Day,” released earlier this year, and the 2003 Jim Carrey comedy ” Bruce Almighty .” Not all schools allow movie shoots because of the disruption a crew can bring to campus. But with state education cuts resulting in thousands of teacher layoffs and furloughs for the third year in a row, filming is looking more appealing for Los Angeles-area schools. “Any additional revenue is more critical than ever,” said John Vinke, associate superintendent of Lawndale Unified School District, which has had sporadic productions at its nine schools through the years but is hoping to land more regular gigs through FilmLA. School officials who permit movie shoots say it nets them big bucks. They get paid location fees ranging from Los Angeles Unified’s $3,100 per day to Torrance’s $5,500, plus sundries such as cleanup. With more schools signing up for filming and ramped up promotion through FilmLA, Los Angeles Unified has earned the most it’s ever made from filming this school year — $1.5 million from last July through March. FilmLA takes a 16% commission for arranging the deals, the host school keeps three quarters of the remaining amount and the district takes the rest. With movie money paying for everything from pools to playgrounds to some teacher salaries, some schools go to considerable lengths to accommodate filming. El Segundo High Principal Jim Garza removed the school’s palm trees so the campus would look less “Southern California” and fit a wider location demand. At University High in Los Angeles, interiors and exteriors were painted, floor tiles replaced, landscaping overhauled and classes and lockers moved for ” Drillbit Taylor .” The school earned $90,000 for the 2008 comedy starring Owen Wilson . But allowing film crews on campus is not all glitz and glam. University High students and teachers complained in the school newspaper that the “Drillbit Taylor” crew blocked access to classes and took over the parking lot. They also resented security guards stopping them from moving about campus. Similar complaints about the filming of “90210″ several years ago prompted Torrance High to restrict filming to outside school hours. “It was a distraction to students and the learning environment,” said Mitchell Tabaldo, site supervisor, who now gets three or four inquiries a month but few takers after producers hear the restrictions. At El Segundo High, opposition came from outside the school. Neighbors complained to the City Council about trucks occupying streets, noise from generators and crewmembers running through their yards. Over the school district’s protests, the council last year limited filming at any city location to 20 days per year. Principal Garza said the clampdown has virtually stopped the phones ringing at a time when the school year is being shortened because of lack of money to pay teachers. Still, school administrators say they welcome the money and sometimes they can work in perks, too. As part of a $400,000 deal to lease Hollywood High School’s football field for the summer, Disney hired students to work at a ” Toy Story 3 ” mini-amusement park set up there. “In a terribly difficult environment, it’s wonderful,” said Graham, LA Unified’s leasing director. “They’re going to get almost six teachers funded.” Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Continue reading
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Tagged angeles, angeles-unified, city, deals, hollywood, money, mtv, News, school, school-district, university
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Some schools grouping students by skill, not grade level
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Forget about students spending one year in each grade, with the entire class learning the same skills at the same time. Districts from Alaska to Maine are taking a different route. Instead of simply moving kids from one grade to the next as they get older, schools are grouping students by ability. Once they master a subject, they move up a level. This practice has been around for decades, but was generally used on a smaller scale, in individual grades, subjects or schools. Now, in the latest effort to transform the bedraggled Kansas City , Mo. schools, the district is about to become what reform experts say is the largest one to try the approach. Starting this fall officials will begin switching 17,000 students to the new system to turnaround trailing schools and increase abysmal tests scores. “The current system of public education in this country is not working” said Superintendent John Covington. “It’s an outdated, industrial, agrarian kind of model that lends itself to still allowing students to progress through school based on the amount of time they sit in a chair rather than whether or not they have truly mastered the competencies and skills.” Here’s how the reform works: Students — often of varying ages — work at their own pace, meeting with teachers to decide what part of the curriculum to tackle. Teachers still instruct students as a group if it’s needed, but often students are working individually or in small groups on projects that are tailored to their skill level. For instance, in a classroom learning about currency, one group could draw pictures of pennies and nickels. A student who has mastered that skill might use pretend money to practice making change. Students who progress quickly can finish high school material early and move forward with college coursework. Alternatively, in some districts, high-schoolers who need extra time can stick around for another year. Advocates say the approach cuts down on discipline problems because advanced students aren’t bored and struggling students aren’t frustrated. But backers acknowledge implementation is tricky, and the change is so drastic it can take time to explain to parents, teachers and students. If the community isn’t sold on the effort, it will bomb, said Richard DeLorenzo, co-founder of the Re-Inventing Schools Coalition, which coaches schools on implementing the reform. Kansas City officials hope the new system will help the district that’s been beset with failure. A $2 billion desegregation case failed to boost test scores or stem the exodus of students to the suburbs and private and charter schools. The district has lost half its students and will close about 40% of its schools by the fall to avoid bankruptcy. Covington wants to start the system in five elementary schools in hopes of spreading it through the upper grades once the bugs are worked out. “This system precludes us from labeling children failures,” Covington said. “It’s not that you’ve failed, it’s just that at this point you haven’t mastered the competencies yet and when you do, you will move to the next level.” As it plans for the change, Kansas City teachers and administrators have visited and sought advice from a Denver area school district that uses the reform. Adams County School District 50 has about 10,000 students this past school year its elementary and middle students made the shift. The reform will be phased into the high schools starting in the fall. Count 11-year-old Alex Rodriguez as a convert to the new approach. He used to get bored after plowing through his assignments. He had to bring books from home or the library if he wanted a challenge because the ones at his old school were one or two grade levels too easy. “I liked school,” he said. “But it was hard sitting there and doing nothing.” His parents transferred the high achiever and his three younger siblings to the Denver area district after learning it was trying something new. His father, Richard Rodriguez , has been thrilled with the turnaround. “I wish school was like this when I was growing up,” he said. There also is growing interest in Maine, where six districts, with a combined 11,248 students, are transitioning to the reform, starting with staff training and community meetings and gradually changing what happens in classrooms. “It is incredible what is happening in the classrooms in Maine that are trying it,” said Diana Doiron, who is overseeing the effort for the state’s education department. Education officials in Kansas City, Maine and elsewhere said part of the allure is the success other districts have after making the switch. Marzano Research Laboratory, an educational research and professional development firm, evaluated 2009 state test data for over 3,500 students from 15 school districts in Alaska, Colorado, and Florida. Researchers found that students who learned through the different approach were 2.5 times more likely to score at a level that shows they have a good grasp of the material on exams for reading, writing, and mathematics. Greg Johnson, director of curriculum and instruction for the Bering Strait School District in Alaska, recalled that before the switch there were students who had been on honor roll throughout high school then failed a test the state requires for graduation. Now, he said if students are on pace to pass a class like Algebra I, the likelihood of them passing the state exam covering that material is more than 90%. He’s proud of that accomplishment and said teachers love it. “The most die-hard advocates for our system are our teachers because, especially the ones who were back with us before the change, they saw where things were then,” he said. “They see where things are now and they don’t want to go back.” Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Continue reading
Budget cuts likely to widen gap between rich, poor L.A. schools
LOS ANGELES — When state budget cuts imperiled city schools, a group of parents fought back by enlisting Hollywood stars to spread a message targeting one of their own, Gov. Arnold Schwarzeneggar . The satirical video featuring actors Megan Fox and fiancee Brian Austin Green highlights how funding shortfalls have killed jobs for librarians, nurses, translators, janitors and teachers. While the video was filmed in the affluent hills above Hollywood where Green’s son attends Wonderland Avenue Elementary School, the cuts are more deeply felt at an inner-city school like Markham Middle School. Both schools have been highlighted as the Los Angeles Unified School District has grappled with $1.5 billion in budget cuts and nearly 3,000 teacher layoffs during the past two years. But comparing the two schools shows a remarkably uneven impact, and just how much depends on factors ranging from income and parent involvement to teacher tenure. The state’s education funding crisis, now entering its third school year, only promises to widen the breech between the haves and have-nots in the nation’s second-largest school district. Nestled in leafy, secluded Laurel Canyon, Wonderland is more than just a top school in the city — it’s one of the best in the state. In addition to the video that has been viewed more than one million times, Wonderland second graders were featured on CNN writing to Schwarzenegger to protest budget cuts. Serving gang-plagued Watts and two of the city’s largest housing projects, Markham is one of the city’s lowest performers with test scores 34% below the acceptable mark. The ACLU sued the school system this spring charging that Markham students weren’t learning from substitutes who replaced laid-off teachers. Schwarzenegger himself held up Markham as an example of how the teacher tenure system backfires because layoffs disproportionately strike younger teachers eager to work in the inner-city. The two schools have been long divided by more than freeways. The year before Tim Sullivan became Markham principal two years ago, 142 students were arrested around the 1,500-pupil campus. The assistant principal went to prison for sexually abusing female students. To keep kids safe on their way to school and maintain Markham free of gang graffiti, Sullivan decided to meet regularly with local gang leaders. “This isn’t the place for the weak and fainthearted,” said the 43-year-old principal. A more basic problem was finding teachers. Sullivan didn’t get a single inquiry at district job fairs so he recruited recent graduates keen for the challenge at annual salaries averaging $45,000. When budget cuts rolled around last year, Markham lost half its teaching staff — 35 teachers — because they hadn’t reached tenure. They were replaced by substitutes at a daily salary of $173 — more than a fulltime probationary teacher earns, but without benefits. In some cases, the subs served as little more than babysitters. Several gave all students a C grade because they didn’t have enough schoolwork to grade adequately, according to the ACLU lawsuit. Another 34 teachers, including 10 long-term subs, got pink slips this year, spurring the ACLU’s successful injunction to halt the layoffs. “A high moral calling can only last so long before you feel like the butt of a joke,” said English teacher Nicholas Melvoin, who was laid off last year but returned as a long-term substitute. The layoffs have stripped the curriculum to basics, without electives. Markham’s plight drew the attention of Schwarzenegger, who used the school as backdrop to announce his support of tenure reform that would allow schools flexibility in layoffs. Across town, Wonderland Principal Don Wilson’s problems are far different. A pile of resumes sits on his desk for a job opening next year. Electives are not subject to district funding whims. The school has full-time art, music and gym teachers, plus teaching assistants for each teacher, paid for by parents through the PTA’s fundraising nonprofit, which raises $350,000 a year. Boosters have paid for elaborate playgrounds, cutting-edge equipment in classrooms, field trips and professional development for teachers. But Wilson must work to keep that revenue flowing. He spent a recent Saturday night in a tent on the playground to help raise $500 per child in a sleepover fundraiser. “You become a developer,” Wilson said. “That’s a huge part of what I do here.” Parents are asked to contribute $700 a year per child and many donate more in cash and other initiatives such as buying mugs embossed with children’s art work. “Parents really value the public school opportunity because they’re not paying the big tuition bill,” said PTA President Terri Levy as she organized an appreciation event to provide breakfast, lunch and a car wash for each teacher. Wilson knows he’s fortunate, although he, too, has lost personnel and is down to having a nurse only one day per week at his 550-pupil school. The principal, who spent much of his career in the sprawling city’s more urban schools, said suburban and inner-city parents want the same for the children. But Wonderland parents possess not only a huge amount of resources, including those to make the slickly produced video opposing cuts, they also have high expectations. That’s the key difference, Wilson said. “They bring expectations as to what an education should be,” he said. “At other schools, parents and teachers come with a limited vision of high expectations.” Markham’s Sullivan doesn’t begrudge more affluent schools in the district. He does wish the system was more equitable. “Just give us an even playing field to show what we can really do,” he said. Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 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Tagged angeles-unified, attention, brian-austin, children, cnn, green, hollywood, layoffs, markham, president, school-district, schwarzenegger, spring, teacher
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Major cuts: High schools face hard economic lessons
SAN JOSE, Calif. — Students graduating from high school this spring may be collecting their diplomas just in time, leaving institutions that are being badly weakened by the nation’s economic downturn. Across the country, mass layoffs of teachers, counselors and other staff members — caused in part by the drying up of federal stimulus dollars — are leading to larger classes and reductions in everything that is not a core subject, including music, art, clubs, sports and other after-school activities. VIDEO: More deep cuts looming for public schools VIDEO: Hard times for even richest districts Educators and others worry the cuts could lead to higher dropout rates and lower college attendance as students receive less guidance and become less engaged in school. They fear a generation of young people could be left behind. “It’s going to be harder for everybody to get an opportunity to get into college,” said Chelsea Braza, a 16-year-old sophomore at Silver Creek High School in San Jose . “People wouldn’t be as motivated to do anything in school because there’s no activities and there’s no involvement.” The library at Silver Creek High is open for only an hour a day. The career center is closed. There is no more summer school. And student athletes must pay $200 each. State budget cuts will make things even worse next year. The school will probably have five fewer classroom days and lose three of its four guidance counselors and three of its four custodians, as well as its health aide, mental health coordinator and student activities director. The future of student government, clubs, pep rallies, homecoming and prom is in doubt. The federal government’s $787 billion economic stimulus package saved an estimated 300,000 education jobs for this year, but many of those positions are once again in jeopardy as that money dries up. “Literally tens of millions of students will experience these budget cuts in one way or another,” said Education Secretary Arne Duncan , who is urging Congress to provide another round of emergency funding for schools. “If we do not help avert this state and local budget crisis, we could impede reform and fail another generation of children.” Sen. Tom Harkin , D-Iowa, has introduced legislation that would create a $23 billion fund to help schools retain teachers, principals and other staff members. The fate of the bill is uncertain. The American Association of School Administrators estimates that 275,000 education jobs will be cut in the coming school year, based on an April survey. Other AASA surveys found that 52% of administrators plan to cut extracurricular activities, and 51% are reducing elective courses not required for graduation. The Charlotte-Mecklenburg school system in North Carolina, which cut $90 million last school year, plans to slice off an additional $78 million and eliminate more than 1,000 positions, including almost 650 teachers. The district will cut its middle school sports teams next year, and schools are cutting electives such as German and creative writing, Superintendent Peter Gorman said. “I’m very concerned when we can’t offer those courses which hook an individual student to pursue their passion, or what could be their life’s vocation,” Gorman said. In the Tupper Lake Central Schools in New York , the rural district in the Adirondacks will lose 25% of its instructional staff in the upcoming school year, which will probably result in bigger classes and the elimination of electives such as photography, modern art and ceramics, said Superintendent Seth McGowan. “It seriously compromises the depth of the education our students will be receiving,” he said. In Illinois, more than 20,000 jobs in schools — including an estimated 12,600 teachers and administrators — will be lost next school year, said Brent Clark, executive director of the Illinois Association of School Administrators. South Florida’s Broward County, the nation’s sixth-largest school district, could lay off 800 to 1,000 teachers because of a $130 million budget shortfall. Officials are trying to figure out how to save sports and electives, considering options like sharing an art teacher between schools. California’s relentless budget crisis is taking its toll on schools like Silver Creek High, part of San Jose’s East Side Union High School District, which is seeking to slash an additional 10% from its $200 million budget. Over the past two years, the district, which has 12 campuses and 25,000 students, has eliminated more than 450 full-time positions, including nearly 200 teachers and certified staff, said Assistant Superintendent Cathy Giammona. Class sizes have swelled to an average of 35 students, with more than 40 crammed into AP Calculus sections. And schools in the district won’t offer any courses unless they are fully enrolled, leading to cuts in electives such as photography, business, woodworking and Japanese. Silver Creek High senior Anthony Chavez, who credits his counselors with helping him win a scholarship to the University of California at Berkeley, said he worries that students won’t get the same opportunities with just one counselor for more than 2,400 students. “Through my four years here my counselors helped me with everything. I’m the first generation in my family to go to college,” he said. “I didn’t even know what SATs were.” Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Continue reading
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Tagged congress, family, florida, german, illinois, life, mental-health, News, school-district, silver, silver-creek, university, video
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Major cuts: High schools face hard economic lessons
SAN JOSE, Calif. — Students graduating from high school this spring may be collecting their diplomas just in time, leaving institutions that are being badly weakened by the nation’s economic downturn. Across the country, mass layoffs of teachers, counselors and other staff members — caused in part by the drying up of federal stimulus dollars — are leading to larger classes and reductions in everything that is not a core subject, including music, art, clubs, sports and other after-school activities. VIDEO: More deep cuts looming for public schools VIDEO: Hard times for even richest districts Educators and others worry the cuts could lead to higher dropout rates and lower college attendance as students receive less guidance and become less engaged in school. They fear a generation of young people could be left behind. “It’s going to be harder for everybody to get an opportunity to get into college,” said Chelsea Braza, a 16-year-old sophomore at Silver Creek High School in San Jose . “People wouldn’t be as motivated to do anything in school because there’s no activities and there’s no involvement.” The library at Silver Creek High is open for only an hour a day. The career center is closed. There is no more summer school. And student athletes must pay $200 each. State budget cuts will make things even worse next year. The school will probably have five fewer classroom days and lose three of its four guidance counselors and three of its four custodians, as well as its health aide, mental health coordinator and student activities director. The future of student government, clubs, pep rallies, homecoming and prom is in doubt. The federal government’s $787 billion economic stimulus package saved an estimated 300,000 education jobs for this year, but many of those positions are once again in jeopardy as that money dries up. “Literally tens of millions of students will experience these budget cuts in one way or another,” said Education Secretary Arne Duncan , who is urging Congress to provide another round of emergency funding for schools. “If we do not help avert this state and local budget crisis, we could impede reform and fail another generation of children.” Sen. Tom Harkin , D-Iowa, has introduced legislation that would create a $23 billion fund to help schools retain teachers, principals and other staff members. The fate of the bill is uncertain. The American Association of School Administrators estimates that 275,000 education jobs will be cut in the coming school year, based on an April survey. Other AASA surveys found that 52% of administrators plan to cut extracurricular activities, and 51% are reducing elective courses not required for graduation. The Charlotte-Mecklenburg school system in North Carolina, which cut $90 million last school year, plans to slice off an additional $78 million and eliminate more than 1,000 positions, including almost 650 teachers. The district will cut its middle school sports teams next year, and schools are cutting electives such as German and creative writing, Superintendent Peter Gorman said. “I’m very concerned when we can’t offer those courses which hook an individual student to pursue their passion, or what could be their life’s vocation,” Gorman said. In the Tupper Lake Central Schools in New York , the rural district in the Adirondacks will lose 25% of its instructional staff in the upcoming school year, which will probably result in bigger classes and the elimination of electives such as photography, modern art and ceramics, said Superintendent Seth McGowan. “It seriously compromises the depth of the education our students will be receiving,” he said. In Illinois, more than 20,000 jobs in schools — including an estimated 12,600 teachers and administrators — will be lost next school year, said Brent Clark, executive director of the Illinois Association of School Administrators. South Florida’s Broward County, the nation’s sixth-largest school district, could lay off 800 to 1,000 teachers because of a $130 million budget shortfall. Officials are trying to figure out how to save sports and electives, considering options like sharing an art teacher between schools. California’s relentless budget crisis is taking its toll on schools like Silver Creek High, part of San Jose’s East Side Union High School District, which is seeking to slash an additional 10% from its $200 million budget. Over the past two years, the district, which has 12 campuses and 25,000 students, has eliminated more than 450 full-time positions, including nearly 200 teachers and certified staff, said Assistant Superintendent Cathy Giammona. Class sizes have swelled to an average of 35 students, with more than 40 crammed into AP Calculus sections. And schools in the district won’t offer any courses unless they are fully enrolled, leading to cuts in electives such as photography, business, woodworking and Japanese. Silver Creek High senior Anthony Chavez, who credits his counselors with helping him win a scholarship to the University of California at Berkeley, said he worries that students won’t get the same opportunities with just one counselor for more than 2,400 students. “Through my four years here my counselors helped me with everything. I’m the first generation in my family to go to college,” he said. “I didn’t even know what SATs were.” Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Continue reading
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Tagged adirondacks, counselors, family, german, illinois, life, mental-health, north, school-district, silver
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Black students’ field trip draws parents’ anger in Michigan
DETROIT (AP) — A school district in Michigan is defending its intentions after a field trip by African-American elementary students drew complaints from excluded children and their parents. Officials said Wednesday that 30 students from Dicken Elementary School in Ann Arbor met last week with an African-American rocket scientist at the University of Michigan. It was part of a larger effort to help close persistent test-score gaps between black and white students. SCIENCE, MATH: Vanderbilt, Fisk collaborate to get more minorities doctorates MINORITY ACHIEVEMENT: Young students improve, but gap remains later District spokeswoman Liz Margolis says the students were booed by others when they returned, and Principal Mike Madison admonished those children for their response. Madison told parents in a letter that the activity could have been approached better but the goal was positive. Officials will also discuss the matter at a parent-teacher meeting Thursday. Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Continue reading
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Tagged activity, been-approached, drew-complaints, material, math, michigan, News, principal-mike, response, school, school-district, students, university
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