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Posts from September 3rd, 2010

nightcap

Remainders: Philly “school reform” includes $1 million turnstiles

  • In Philadelphia, the school reform commission spent $1 million on turnstiles. (Notebook)
  • CNN launches week of programming featuring concrete ways to improve schools. (CNN)
  • 49 million students go back to school this fall; about 3 million will finish high school. (NCES)
  • DFER endorsed Smikle, Bing, Hoyt, Squadron, Clark, Fields, Senator Diaz. (Daily News)
  • A teacher is criticized for a lesson about derogatory words like “bastard” and “wuss.” (WashPost)
  • A Minnesota charter school is housed on two semi-trailers. (Bemidji Pioneer)
  • A new radio documentary explores proposed changes to teacher training. (America RadioWorks)
  • Who wants the chance to fill David Steiner’s shoes at Hunter College? (Rick Hess Straight Up)
  • Philadelphia’s mayor is making the black-and-Latino male dropout rate. (Inquirer)
  • A fancy school in Moldova launches with new teaching materials, indoor toilets. (Jezebel)
  • Ratings of one group proposing to rewrite tests differed “wildly” depending on reviewer. (EdWeek)
  • The case for “Twitter-sized queries that unpack into full-bodied math… investigations.” (dy/dan)
press foul

Fact-checking claims about the absent teacher reserve pool

New York Magazine’s news blog Daily Intel ran a post this morning summing up the Wall Street Journal’s take on the number of unemployed teachers who are “ignoring openings,” as the Journal put it. Both publications got facts wrong, but in their own ways.

Daily Intel’s post adheres faithfully to the WSJ and Department of Education’s line until the very last paragraph when its author took a left turn. She writes:

The Journal thinks Klein is holding on to the pool for philosophical purity. “For Mr. Klein, forcing teachers into vacancies would go against his philosophy of giving principals market-based autonomy and accountability.” So in order to promote free-market principals and accountability, Klein wants to offer job security for life to laid-off employees during a recession with no stipulations for getting them back into the city’s workforce? We must have missed that social-studies class.

Klein does not want to offer job security for life to laid-off employees during a recession with no stipulations for getting them back into the city’s workforce. In fact, he wants the opposite. (more…)

testing testing

City schools to act as pilot sites for new national standard tests

Students at 100 New York City schools will be among the first to take early versions of the new standardized tests being built with federal dollars.

The schools will test early versions of new third- through eleventh-grade exams that a consortium of 26 states — New York included — is creating. The same schools will get extra funding this year to pilot the new common core standards in their classrooms.

Because New York is a “governing state” in the consortium, its education officials have already agreed to begin using the new tests by the 2014 school year. It also means that New York officials, including city Deputy Chancellor Shael Polakow-Suransky, are helping design the new tests.

The PARCC group — Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers — won a $170 million federal grant yesterday, which it will use to build the tests.

The new exams will complement the new national education standards that New York has also agreed to take on. They will also completely overhaul the form that state standardized exams take, and when they’re given, Suransky said today. (more…)

human capital

From the comments: excessed teachers respond to city criticism

With the school year about to begin, Department of Education officials are highlighting the fact that many of the city’s out-of-work teachers haven’t tried to find new jobs.

The common response from excessed teachers is that they have made an effort, but it hasn’t paid off — they aren’t finding work. Some report that the city’s website makes it difficult to apply for open positions.

Two readers, both in the pool of teachers who’ve been excessed and haven’t found new work, commented saying that they can’t see job vacancies because the department’s website doesn’t recognize them as excessed teachers.

One possible cause of this problem could be that some principals don’t understand how to register their excessed teachers with the city. When this happens, the DOE and its website don’t recognize the teacher’s new status.  (more…)

Outside the Cave

Inception: The Ideas That Matter

What’s the most resilient parasite? An idea. A single idea from the human mind can build cities. An idea can transform the world and rewrite all the rules.

~ Cobb, in Christopher Nolan’s “Inception”

The basic theme of the movie “Inception” is that ideas are incredibly powerful, but that placing them in people’s heads is very difficult. You can’t just put an idea in someone’s head that you want them to have because they will immediately recognize it as foreign and reject it; rather, you have to put more foundational ideas in minds, and then let them grow into larger ideas.

This seems to be an important lesson for those of us trying to change things in schools. We need to get to the ideas that serve as the foundation for the practices we know our students need. As I got ready to return to work this week, this idea of the challenges and power of inception resonated in my mind. It hits three questions that have been bouncing around my brain all summer:

  1. Seven years after I first entered the classroom, what are the two or three ideas I have about teaching that are most worth fighting for and spreading?
  2. As I become department chair and step into a pedagogical leadership role for the first time, what ideas are going to be most valuable for new and struggling teachers?
  3. As my school enters its seventh year, how do we spread to new and resistant staff members the ideas that have made us successful? (more…)
Headlines

Rise & Shine: 2,000 pre-kindergartners still without schools

  • Families of about 2,000 pre-k students might wait til Tuesday to find out their placements. (Daily News)
  • State Senator Suzi Oppenheimer plans to hold hearings on the re-calibrated state test scores. (Post)
  • About 1,700 teachers currently lack full-time teaching positions. (GothamSchools, Daily NewsWNYC)
  • Many of them have not applied for new jobs or attended recruitment fairs. (Post, Wall Street Journal)
  • The federal government gave states $330 million  to develop new tests. (Times, Washington PostCSM)
  • An education professor argues that politics, not proven results, drive Obama education policy. (SF Gate)
  • Staten Island residents rallied against a city plan to reduce bus service for middle schools. (SI Advance)
  • Opposition is growing to a city plan to help build a new Harlem Childrens Zone building. (Daily News)
  • Merrick Academy is re-hiring three of the 11 teachers it laid off via FedEx. (Daily News, WNYC)
  • A Staten Island teacher who sued the city over her suspension for using vulgar slang has settled. (Post)
  • The L.A. Board of Ed formally asked for test scores to be used in teacher evaluations. (L.A. Times)

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