Posts from July 14th, 2010
nightcap
July 14, 2010
Remainders: An education reporter joins the school board
- A veteran education reporter is now on Baltimore’s school board. (Baltimore Sun via Russo)
- An Astoria principal who served in the rubber room feels mistreated. (Western Queens Gazette)
- Districts receiving school turnaround grants will have to involve parents. (EdWeek)
- In the ed tech battle, the curmudgeons are winning — at least the media vote. (Learning First)
- Arthur Levine, who grew up in the South Bronx, has a book about kids there now. (NPR)
- Bill Gates got boo’d at the AFT convention, but also a lot of cheers. (YouTube)
- Running for reelection, Maryland’s governor offers to cover the cost of AP tests. (EdWeek)
- Creativity scores are declining as IQ scores increase. (Newsweek via Joanne Jacobs)
space wars
July 14, 2010
City and union agree to fewer school colocations in September
Afraid of another lawsuit from the teachers union, city officials have decided to force fewer new schools to share space this year.
Originally, the Department of Education planned to begin closing 19 schools next September and open 16 schools — most of them brand new — in their buildings. But that plan was put on hold when the union successfully sued to stop the closures. With the court silent on whether new schools could still open, the city announced that it would proceed to open them.
United Federation of Teachers President Michael Mulgrew said he was concerned that opening new schools while keeping the original schools in business would mean severe overcrowding in some buildings.
Now the two sides have reached an agreement that will change some of the planned colocations and, as part of the deal, the UFT has waived its right to sue over the colocations.
Under the agreement, five new schools that would have co-located with closing schools will open elsewhere, including one in the union’s office. The deal also gives the saved schools more support and possibly more staff, but not more money. (more…)
investigation report (updated)
July 14, 2010
No permission slips for deadly field trip, investigators find
Nicole Suriel and her classmates did not have permission slips for the field trip that ended in the 12-year-old student’s death, according to a report released today by the school system’s investigator.
UPDATE: Responding to the report’s findings, the city is firing Erin Bailey, the first-year teacher who led the field trip. It will also seek to put the school’s principal, Jose Maldonado-Rivera, on a two-year probation. The school’s assistant principal, Andrew Stillman, is being demoted to a tenured teacher position.
Suriel’s drowning is also prompting the city to review and possibly change its regulations on field trips, said Department of Education spokeswoman Natalie Ravitz.
Investigators compiled a detailed narrative of the June 22 field trip to an unpatrolled Long Island beach taken by Suriel’s sixth grade class at the Columbia Secondary School for Math, Science and Engineering. They interviewed the school’s principal, as well as the assistant principal, local government and law enforcement officials, eight students on the trip and a college intern who chaperoned. The full report is below. (more…)
Office Space
July 14, 2010
Garrulous Mr. Gates
It’s been a busy week for Bill Gates. While the NEA featured brilliant Diane Ravitch as its most prominent guest, AFT President Randi Weingarten and company chose Gates, who’s done many remarkable things.
I’m not an education expert like Gates, so I’ll comment only on a TED talk he gave last year that’s available online. My experience is limited to teaching 25 years in New York City. Still, several of Gates’ comments did not sit well with me.
How does that [KIPP charter school] compare to a normal school? Well, in a normal school teachers aren’t told how good they are. The data isn’t gathered. In the teacher’s contract, it will limit the number of times the principal can come into the classroom — sometimes to once per year. And they need advanced notice to do that.
My principal can and does visit my classroom whenever he golly goshdarn feels like it. He offers no advanced notice, and walks around the building visiting my colleagues in exactly the same fashion. Gates’s version of what happens in a “normal school” sounds more like a crass stereotype than any contract I’ve ever heard of. (more…)
Headlines
July 14, 2010
Rise & Shine: New report to detail state’s low test standards
- A forthcoming report details low standards on state tests. (Post, NY1, S.I. Advance)
- Some are skeptical about the state’s will to raise standards. (GothamSchools)
- Thieves stole laptop computers from PS 107 for the second time in a month. (Brooklyn Paper)
- City teachers are among many getting kudos from former students on Facebook. (Times)
- In D.C., scores are down at elementary schools but up at middle and high schools. (Washington Post)


