Archive for the 'Weekly Roundup' Category

Required Reading

Our weekly roundup of the week’s most important news, information and blog posts about curriculum, teaching, education policy and other items of interest to the Core Knowledge community.

Best of the Blogs

Is Fatalism the Alternative to Romanticism? at the Gadfly
“We should all hope that the collapse of educational romanticism, if indeed it occurs, doesn’t lead us to abandon the belief that just about all our children could and should be learning a heckuva lot more than they’re learning today,” writes Checker Finn. “And it’s the responsibility of grown-ups to make that happen, not to abandon the ship.”

Charter Schools are Great — But Not Why You Think at The Quick and the Ed
“Charters allow organizations and individuals other than the government to run public schools,” notes Kevin Carey. “Even if that’s all they did, that’s way more than enough.”

An Unlikely Pair Finds Common Ground on NCLB at NCLB: Act II
“You wouldn’t expect Charles Murray and Richard Rothstein to agree on anything,” writes David Hoff. But they agree on one thing: “NCLB is bad policy.”

Who Slipped a Mickey in John Merrow’s Kool-Aid? at Eduwonkette
EW has issues with Merrow’s Wall Street Journal Op-Ed (see below).

Teaching, Content and Curriculum

A Lesson About Copycats The Washington Post
Despite a bold yellow warning declaring “Original Work Only,” two winners of this year’s KidsPost poetry contest plagiarized the work of Shel Silverstein and Louis Phillips. The more embarrassing fact is that the plagiarism slipped by the Post’s editors.

Experts Discuss Myths about Latino Kids National Public Radio
New census data shows that about a quarter of children younger than five in the U.S. are of Hispanic decent. Pedro Noguera, professor of education at New York University; and Jeffrey Passel, from the Pew Hispanic Center, discuss the rising number of Latino children and what it means for America.

Pastor Raises Questions about Learning Styles National Public Radio
Reverend Jeremiah Wright made the claim last week that black and white kids have very different learning styles. Education professors Pedro Noguera and Janice Hall discuss Wright’s statement and the research underway to determine how children’s backgrounds can affect the way they learn.

Reading First is the largest concerted reading intervention program in the history of the civilized world ednews.org
Reading guru Reid Lyon cautions we must be “very careful in drawing conclusions from this study and to be very clear about its limitations in making inferences about the success of the policy and the success of the instructional model emphasize in the model.”

Online Education Cast as ‘Disruptive Innovation’ Education Week
By 2019, half of all high school classes will be taught online, predicts Harvard University business professor Clayton M. Christensen and his co-authors, in a new book.

Manners Are Elementary for One Compton Class, Los Angeles Times
Grade schoolers learned their p’s and q’s, then took them to dinner in Beverly Hills. Their principal hopes the etiquette classes will help them see a world beyond their poor neighborhood.

Education Policy

Student Tests – and Teacher Grades By John Merrow, The Wall Street Journal
Only an idiot would overlook student performance, be it dismal or outstanding, writes the education correspondent for the “NewsHour with Jim Lehrer.” However public education lives in an upside-down universe where student outcomes are not allowed to be connected to teaching.

Teachers Found to Be of Two Minds on Reforms By Scott J. Cech, Education Week
Most public school teachers are unequivocally ambivalent about unions and education reform, and have become more so over the past five years, according to a nationwide survey. Read the complete poll from Education Sector here.

Where Clinton, Obama and McCain Stand on Education By Dana Hawkins-Simons, U.S. News and World Report
The candidates’ positions on No Child Left Behind, merit pay and higher ed affordability.

Schools lose in White House race By Mike Baker, BBC News (U.K.)
Why has education featured so little in the U.S. presidential race? The view from the Mother Country.

Parenting and Homeschooling

I Know What You Did Last Math Class By Jan Hoffman, The New York Times
Programs that let parents track grades in real time are popular but can raise stress.

School’s Hardest Test May Be the Walk Home, The New York Sun
There have been dozens of articles about how hard it is to get your child into an elite New York City private school. This is an article about how hard it is to get the child home.

The Flip-Flop Factor: Why Day Care Kids Don’t Play Outside By Tara Parker-Pope, The New York Times
Outdoor play at day care centers is often stifled because a child arrives wearing flip-flops or without a coat or because teachers don’t feel like going outside.

Eleven children and a degree: Hard work pays off for Carolyn Neese Press-Register (Birmingham, AL)
The mother of 11 took care of the kids and homeschooled her children for 20 years while her husband, Bazil Junior Neese, worked as an evangelist. Last weekend, the 51-year-old mom graduated summa cum laude from the University of South Alabama with a bachelor’s degree in secondary education and history.

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Required Reading

Our weekly roundup of the week’s most important news, information and blog posts about curriculum, teaching, education policy and other items of interest to the Core Knowledge community.

Best of the Blogs

Social Justice Teaching at Eduwonkette
Sol Stern, Bill Ayers, Diane Ravitch, yours truly and a cast of dozens debate what it means to teach for “social justice.” Another reason to love edublogs. Where else would this happen?

Choice is a Winner at Joanne Jacobs
School choice works and it’s politically viable.

Ability grouping may matter most for gifted black kids at Gifted Exchange
The average academic performance at an average predominantly black school is lower than the average academic performance at a predominantly white school. This affects all children, but it affects one particular group in a particularly horrible way: gifted black students.

Low ability teachers, low ability students? at Dangerously Irrelevant
Almost a fourth of teachers with high college entrance exams leave the profession within a decade, compared to 11% of individuals with low scores.

A child miseducated is a child lost at The Fierce Urgency of Now
Let us stop bickering. Let us stop with these useless partisan fights. And let us commit to not lose another child in America.

Teaching, Content and Curriculum

Searching for Science to Guide Good Teaching
By Maria Glod, Washington Post
The Bush administration’s chief of education research says teachers too often rely on “folk wisdom” instead of proven methods to help students learn reading and math.

An Initiative on Reading Is Rated Ineffective
By Sam Dillon, The New York Times
President Bush’s $1 billion a year effort to teach reading to low-income children has not helped improve their reading comprehension, according to the Department of Education.

Schools Use Cash as an Incentive to Boost Attendance and Scores
By Sean J. Miller, Christian Science Monitor
Baltimore schools teach students about the stock market and let them keep money from their portfolios. Are cash rewards bribery or a creative way to inspire students?

Value of college tuition is called into question
By Mary Beth Marklein, USA Today
As college tuitions continue to climb, a study fuels concern about whether the investment in higher education by families and taxpayers transltes into better results.

Oregon science teacher honored as 2008 teacher of the year
By Matthew Daly, The Associated Press
Oregon middle school teacher Michael Geisen got to meet President Bush Wednesday when he was celebrated as the national teacher of the year

Education Policy

Districts Experiment With Cutting Down on Teacher Absence
By Bess Keller, Education Week
With new evidence that teacher absences harm student achievement, some districts are experimenting with attempts to cut down on the absences.

Big gains in U.S. education reform, but holes remain
By Jennifer Davis, National Center on Time and Learning, USA Today
“A Nation at Risk” called for the U.S. to consider moving to a seven-hour school day and a 220-day year. A quarter-century later, most American schools operate on the same schedules as they did in 1983–less time in school than many of their international counterparts.

Judge Dismisses Connecticut’s Challenge to Education Law
By SAM DILLON, The New York Times
A federal judge ruled that Connecticut failed to prove that federal officials had forced the state to spend its own money to comply with President Bush’s signature education law.

Teachers, Testing, & Civil Disobedience
Teacher Magazine
Educators debate Seattle teacher Carl Chew’s refusal to administer the Washington Assessment of Student Learning.

Debate on teacher pay bill turns ugly
By Jason Rosenbaum and Janese Heavin, the Columbia Tribune
Lawmakers come to blows in the state Capitol over legislation meant to boost teacher salaries in Missouri.

Parenting and Homeschooling

Keeping Our Daughters Active
By Sanjay Gupta, M.D., TIME Magazine
Although girls’ participation in organized sports is on the rise, adolescent girls are only half as likely as teen boys to be physically active.

Truancy up despite fines for parents
By Graeme Paton, The Telegraph (U.K.)
Fines for parents who fail to send their children to school are failing to cut truancy

Homeschooling an option
By Tatiana Tripp, The Justice (Brandeis University)
To believe that every homeschooled child is sheltered, lacking social opportunities or indoctrinated with religion is ignorant and yet remains a prevalent belief among otherwise intelligent individuals.

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Required Reading

From Core Knowledge

An Epoch-Making Report, But What About the Early Grades?

By E.D. Hirsch, Jr.

In the 25 years since A Nation at Risk was issued, writes Core Knowledge founder E.D. Hirsch, Jr., energetic reform efforts have been put forth, to small overall effect. This persistent lack of significant improvement is owing to the unwavering persistence of the very ideas that caused the decline in the first place—the repudiation of a definite academic curriculum in the early grades by the child-centered movement of the early 20th century.

Best of the Blogs

What Should Happen in Our Houses of Learning? — Diane Ravitch in Bridging Differences
“The goal is not the problem. The implementation is. ”

Gering Public Schools: The School District to Watch — D-ed Reckoning
Direct Instruction turns around a Nebraska district

A Closer Look at School Violence in Chicago — Eduwonkette
What do trends in weapon-carrying and fighting among teenagers in Chicago look like?

Nzeyimana can’t use ‘prowl’ in a sentence — Joanne Jacobs
How do you pass No Child Left Behind, when you don’t speak English?

Teaching, Content and Curriculum

Still at Risk
By Frederick M. Hess, American Enterprise Institute,
When it comes to familiarity with major historical events and significant literary accomplishments, America’s seventeen-year-olds fare rather poorly. When it comes to familiarity with the base of knowledge that enables us to engage in conversations about values and policy, our seventeen-year-olds are barely literate.

Report Calls for Moving Away From K-12 Tests and Sanctions
By David J. Hoff, Education Week
Congress and the next president need to offer a new vision for the federal role in K-12 education, creating a sustained effort to increase the quality of teachers, tailoring accountability systems to measure higher-order thinking, and ensuring that all spending is equalized across school districts, a report from a group of educators and researchers says.

Education Policy

‘Nation at Risk’: The best thing or the worst thing for education?
By Greg Toppo, USA TODAY
Twenty-five years ago this week, Americans awoke to a forceful little report that, depending on your point of view, either ruined public education or saved it. “A Nation at Risk” kick-started decades of tough talk about public schools and reforms that culminated in 2002’s No Child Left Behind, the Bush administration law that pushes schools to improve students’ basic skills or face ever-tougher sanctions.

Obama’s Real Bill Ayers Problem
By Sol Stern, City Journal
Barack Obama complains that he’s been unfairly attacked for a casual political and social relationship with his neighbor, former Weatherman Bill Ayers. But the more pressing issue is not the damage done by the Weather Underground 40 years ago, but the far greater harm inflicted on the nation’s schoolchildren by the political and educational movement in which Ayers plays a leading role today.

Education Secretary Offers Changes to ‘No Child’ Law
By Sam Dillon, The New York Times
Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings used her executive powers on Tuesday to propose a series of ninth-inning regulatory fixes to President Bush’s signature education law, No Child Left Behind, including requiring states to use a single federal formula to calculate and report high school graduation rates. Ms. Spellings also wants to require schools to notify parents of their right to transfer students out of failing schools two weeks before the start of each school year, and to explain more fully to parents the opportunities for federally financed tutoring that are available to students attending troubled schools.

Parenting and Homeschooling

‘America’s Worst Mom?’
By Lenore Skenazy, The New York Sun
When I wrote a column in this paper last week, “Why I Let My 9-Year-Old Take The Subway Alone,” I figured I’d get some emails — pro and con. Two days later I was on the “Today Show,” MSNBC, Fox News, and all manner of talk radio with a new title under my smiling face: “America’s Worst Mom?”

California Court to Reconsider Homeschooling
By Michael Coulter, School Reform News
California’s Second Appellate District Court of Appeals touched off a firestorm when it issued an opinion that parents have no right to homeschool their own children–a firestorm so great that on March 25, a full month after issuing its decision, the court agreed to rehear the case, with a decision expected in June.

Homeschool parents, kids oppose bill
By Michael Brindley, Nashua (NH) Telegraph
For the second time in two weeks, homeschool parents and their children turned out in droves to oppose a bill that would require parents to submit a curriculum plan to the state. The legislature passed a bill in 2006 that eliminated the requirement for parents to submit such a plan on an annual basis.

Homeschooling notification is not an undue burden
Editorial, The Press & Argus Livingston, MI
Parents have every right to homeschool their children, and Lansing needs to be very careful whenever it considers legislation that might inhibit that right. That said, we don’t feel that it’s an undue burden on homeschooling parents to be required to notify their home school district that they’re educating their children at home.

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In Other News…

So much news, so little time. Here are some of the stories I meant to blog about this week before the time conspired against me. Discuss among yourselves.

Can the Schools Be Fixed?
It’s been 25 years since “A Nation at Risk: The Imperative for Educational Reform,” which diagnosed the ills of American education. So how are we doing? Richard Rothstein, a former national educational columnist for the New York Times and research associate of the Economic Policy Institute, weighs in at the Cato Institute. On deck: Sol Stern, Rick Hess, et. al.

Let Teachers “Grab” Pupils
Teachers will be encouraged to physically restrain disruptive pupils under controversial new plans unveiled by U.K. Conservative Partly leader David Cameron.

Can Teaching be a Prestige Profession?
Imagine if you created a parallel teaching track called the Urban Teaching Corps. Teachers in this group would have much higher salaries, could be more easily fired, and would be placed in underserved, urban areas.

Principal Minds the Achievement Gap
Many of Florida’s public schools are being demonized so much so that they are perceived as harming students more than helping them. The American Civil Liberties Union has launched a class-action lawsuit demanding one school district close the gap in graduation rates between racial and socioeconomic groups.

Florida Disciplines Teachers Who Cheat
50 Florida teachers, counselors and administrators have been disciplined in the past 10 years for cheating or making errors in giving the FCAT, as well as other exams, according to files obtained from the state Education Department by the Florida Sun-Sentinel through a public records request.

A Good Grade for Teach for America
High-schoolers taught by the program’s novice instructors scored better on year-end exams, study says.

Teacher, a Wheelchair User, Writes Book About Her Accident
Michelle White, a fourth-grade special ed teacher in Lebanon, PA, believes she is a much better teacher since her accident on a sunny afternoon in September 2001.

Abuse Warnings Ignored for Two Decades
Seattle Public Schools will pay $3 million for failing to act on dozens of warnings that a popular teacher was molesting some of his fifth-grade students, a pattern that lasted two decades.

Semicolonoscopy
Much hand-wringing in France over the fate of the semicolon. Its days are numbered; the growing influence of English is apparently to blame.

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Suspension of Disbelief

First there was the Washington Post story about elementary school kids getting tagged as sexual harassers. Yesterday, Joanne Jacobs posted a story about an 8-year old in Colorado suspended for sniffing a Sharpie marker. It made us wonder what else students are getting in trouble for these days. A quick survey of suspension-worthy offenses making in news in the last week range from serious offenses to seriously strange.

Two girls were suspended from a Pennsylvania high school for writing a “murder list” with the names of 48 students and teachers on it; a boy in Palm Beach, Florida did something similar. A South Carolina 8th grader was suspended for wearing a KKK t-shirt, while a couple of Cleveland area middle schoolers were sent home for putting racially inflammatory posts on You Tube. A Chattanooga 7th grader hid a gun (real) in his locker, while three teenagers in Ontario, Canada were suspended for pointing a machine gun (fake) out of a car window in their school parking lot. A 8th grader in Phoenix realized he had left a knife in his knapsack over Spring Break and, mindful of the school’s strict weapon policy, reported himself to school officials. He was suspended anyway. A 7-year old in Maryland may be expelled for bringing his uncle’s gun to school, thinking it was a toy. In Florida, a 15-year old was charged with a felony for poisoning a teacher’s water with Visine because “he didn’t like the class or her.” Six Florida baseball players were suspended from the team after an alleged hazing incident. A large group of middle school students in James City, Virginia were caught texting each other to plan a cafeteria food fight. School officials thwarted the plot, suspending 15 miscreants. Meanwhile an even larger group of West Virginia high school students got ten days each for breaking into the school and moving about 600 desks into the hallways. They also hid thousands of dollars worth of telephones and calculators, but didn’t damage any of them, and ignited a book in a microwave.

A female high school student in Massachusetts wore the wrong color sweater to school and refused to take it off. A St. Louis freshman wore shorts on a recent 70-degree day and was suspended for violating a rule that prohibits them between November 1 and April 31. A Haverhill, Massachusetts 11-year old accused of sexually harrassing two girls claimed he was only quoting the TV show South Park. A case of suspended animation in Alaska, where a fifth-grade boy got in trouble for drawing Anime-style pictures of nude females. His parents say it’s artwork. Finally, a first grader in Brockton, Mass was suspended for three days after school officials said he sexually harassed a girl in his class by allegedly putting two fingers inside the girl’s waistband while she sat on the floor in front of him.

For the record, it’s not just the kids. A Santa Ana, California elementary school teacher was busted for having a gun in school, and the coach of the Marblehead (Mass.) High School football team drew a two-game suspension for chewing tobacco while coaching.

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