Year: 2010


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Read: Diversity Department


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What the dropout nation is reading about:

1. John Fensterwald notes some new teachers union antics on the Race to the Top front. The NEA’s California affiliate and its locals are intoning to districts that they shouldn’t sign the memorandums of understanding required to receive Race funds. Other NEA and AFT affiliates will likely take similar steps — or even

A student at the Codman Academy charter school looks at college options.

What the dropout nation is reading about:

  1. John Fensterwald notes some new teachers union antics on the Race to the Top front. The NEA’s California affiliate and its locals are intoning to districts that they shouldn’t sign the memorandums of understanding required to receive Race funds. Other NEA and AFT affiliates will likely take similar steps — or even offer their own alternate visions (as seen in Pennsylvania) as other state legislatures ignore their lobbying and entreaties.
  2. Meanwhile in Tennessee, outgoing Gov. Phil Bredeson is pushing to use student test score data in evaluating teacher performance in a special session. The state’s largest teachers union has its own thoughts. Of course.
  3. By the way, my American Spectator colleague, Joseph Lawler, offers his own skeptical thoughts about Race to the Top, looking at Massachusett’s reform efforts (which may soon sit on Gov. Deval Patrick’s desk).  In Kentucky, the Bluegrass Policy Institute takes aim at state legislators for offering a Trojan Horse version of Race reforms (HT to EducationNews). And Jamie Davis O’Leary looks at what he describes as Ohio’s embarrasing Race reform plans.
  4. James Guthrie takes some time at Education Next to assess whether school reform is actually happening. He has his answer. I would say that it is happening, but still incomplete.
  5. Monise Seward is none too pleased with the results from the Southern Education Foundation’s report on public education in the southern states. Her biggest issue: “the correlation between minority status and/or poverty with low academic expectations by the ‘experts’ and public education institutions.” The lack of discussion about over-diagnosis of black and Latino males (along with white males) is particularly jarring to her.
  6. At the New York Review of Books, David Kaiser and Lovisa Stannow read over the U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics’ report on sex abuse in juvenile prisons and jails. Let’s just say that they are more shocked by the evidence than yours truly. If anything, America’s juvenile justice system is sometimes even more shameful in the pervasive neglect, abuse and denial of due process rights to children than the woeful public schools this publication covers.
  7. EdTrust releases their report on addressing achievement gaps in the age of Race to the Top and No Child. From its perspective, it isn’t enough to just close the gap. More thoughts from yours truly this weekend.
  8. Mike Antonucci notes that the president of the AFT’s California affiliate has some choice thoughts about parents who support the newly-enacted “parent trigger” in the state’s Race to the Top-driven school reforms passed yesterday. No comment.
  9. This headshaker of the week comes from the News Leader in Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley. And the lack of thought starts at the headline: “We can’t let charter schools steal funds from public education.” Pardon me, but public charter schools are part of the public education system, right? Or am I — and virtually everyone else covering education — just dreaming?
  10. While Michigan politicians aren’t even considering handing over control of Detroit’s traditional district to Mayor Dave Bing, Wisconsin is still picking over whether Milwaukee’s mayor will gain control over that city’s public schools. As reported in the Journal-Sentinel, one parent opposed to mayoral control asks: “How in the world does excluding parents from selecting their school leadership encourage them to participate in the education of their children?” Everyone in the hearing savvy about the politics of school boards elections likely laughed under their breath and paid him no more mind.
  11. And finally, the debate between education civil rights activists such as Gary Orfield and the charter school movement over diversity in charters is the subject of my latest National Review report. As I hinted at in the piece, it’s easy for those in the ivory tower to go on and on about diversity when they have the choice to not send their children to the nation’s worst dropout factories and academic failure mills. Integration only works if the schools are of the kind that all children can achieve their respective educational destinies.

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More on Motor City Dropout Factories


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Readers of today’s report on Detroit Public Schools certainly didn’t lack for their own thoughts. Two of them, however, stood out in different ways. The aptly-named MI Man devoted eight…

Rotten Apples

Readers of today’s report on Detroit Public Schools certainly didn’t lack for their own thoughts. Two of them, however, stood out in different ways.

The aptly-named MI Man devoted eight paragraphs to discussing his wife’s experiences teaching in the Detroit system. While rightly noting that some of the district’s problems would be fixed if conservatives, liberals and communities would encourage the revival of “two-parent families” in the city’s worst neighborhoods, he fails to note the role of either the district’s AFT local or the low quality of instruction in fostering the city’s urban decay.

Roy, on the other hand, caught one of my moments of understatement, this related to the 3-minute reduction in teacher instructional days that the union won in the new contract. As he points out, the 3-minute a day reduction equals to slightly more than a full day of vacation time. Which does little for students who need as much instruction as possible. On the other hand, of course, given the condition of education in Detroit, are the kids really ill-served?

Those who want to see what the rest of Detroit looks like can check out this photo essay by Yves Marchand and Romain Meiffre. The photography is breathtaking. The city’s decay? Not so much. But it’s a reminder of what happens when cities forget to take care of the proverbial broken windows and fail to foster economic, social and educational growth. Decline is inevitable.

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Burning Questions In the World of School Reform


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Some things to consider this week: Why is it that Jay P. Greene, Michael Holzman, Sara Mead and Erin Dillon are the only players in school reform interested in addressing…

Burning Man

Some things to consider this week:

  1. Why is it that Jay P. Greene, Michael Holzman, Sara Mead and Erin Dillon are the only players in school reform interested in addressing the problems within America’s special education programs? Based on the evidence that school districts are essentially diverting chunks of the $11 billion in stimulus funds for such programs into regular classrooms, shouldn’t this — and the other widespread problems — be as concerning to ed reformers as the achievement gap?
  2. Will the next frontier in social entrepreneurism come in helping children and parents choose the best schools for their educational needs? Right now, this sorely-needed element in sustaining school reform remains all but ignored within the Beltway. But without such grassroots outfits — and companies providing similar information services on regional and national levels — all the progress made by the wonks will be for naught.
  3. As Democrats such as Connecticut Sen. Christopher Dodd head for greener pastures, will Republicans offer a compelling package of school reforms? Or could many members of the GOP find themselves teaming up with the American Federation of Teachers and the National Education Association in opposing the reauthorization of No Child and other measures?
  4. Which city will join New York City, D.C., L.A., Milwaukee and New Orleans as the leading hotbeds for school reform activities? Indianapolis could be a possibility if Mayor Greg Ballard fully embraces predecessor Bart Peterson’s charter school mandate. But can he? Will it be Michael Jackson’s hometown, which has one of the highest concentrations of charter schools? Or could it actually be St. Louis? Your thoughts?

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Read: New Year Edition


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Happy New Year!. Here’s what’s happening in the dropout nation: Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter declines to run for another term, according to the Washington Post and the Denver Post. How…

Detroit Public Schools' book depository.

The dilapidated school book depository isn't the only thing falling apart within Detroit Public Schools.

Happy New Year!. Here’s what’s happening in the dropout nation:

  1. Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter declines to run for another term, according to the Washington Post and the Denver Post. How does this affect the state’s school reform efforts — especially its petition for some of the $4.3 billion Race to the Top dollars? Depending on the strength of the other players in the state legislature — and whether Democrats fear they will lose control of two of the three branches of government — it may affect little in the short run. But don’t think the state’s teachers unions and suburban school districts — who oppose strong school reform — aren’t pleased by this event.
  2. With Ritter’s resignation, along with the decisions by U.S. Senators Bryan Dorgan and Chris Dodd to not run for re-election this year, Republicans can capture a number of seats in statehouses and in Congress. But don’t forget that in Connecticut, Richard Blumenthal may step into the Democratic nomination for Senate in place of Dodd — and he’s a heavyweight. And in any case, Republicans have been as divided over school reform (if not more so) as Democrats have been. For example, many congressional Republicans — whose districts lie in suburban areas — aren’t supporting the reauthorization of the No Child Left Behind Act.
  3. Speaking of Colorado, more woeful suspension and expulsion data, courtesy of the Denver Post. Given my own reports on the subject, none of this is surprising.
  4. At EducationNews.org, former Michigan schools superintendent Tom Watkins gives his former home state the business for poor academic performance and wasteful education spending.
  5. Speaking of the Wolverine State, I review the performance — academic and otherwise — of its largest school system in The American Spectator. Calling Detroit the nation’s worst urban school system is merely understatement.
  6. At Educated Guest, John Fensterwald observes California’s efforts to pass reforms aimed at winning Race to the Top funding. The state assembly finally managed to pass some form of the parent power provisions that can really ensure long-term change. He also notes some of the possible action at the state and federal level this year, including the proposed $23 billion in new subsidies to save teacher jobs that may be contained in the proposed second round of stimulus spending.
  7. In Cleveland, the school district’s superintendent proposes to close 18 schools deemed academically failing. Opposition? Of course. But the package, contained in 113 PowerPoint slides deserves scrutiny. It is a grab-bag which includes embracing the small high schools concept all but abandoned by the Gates Foundation and the creation of K-8 schools that harkens back to the old common school. Not much there.
  8. Contrary to popular beliefs, traditional public schools are as much a preserve of affluent, but not extraordinarily wealthy, parents as they are a waystation for the urban poor and middle class. As Greg Toppo reports, the recession is making this more common — and bringing the typical complications that comes with a system in which politics is as much a driving force as the pursuit of academic rigor.
  9. In research and reports: The Afterschool Alliance just released a compendium of its series on the use of afterschool programs for older children. Interesting read.
  10. At Flypaper, Katherine Porter-Magee tosses proverbial cold water on the theory that technology means moving away from the use of rote memorization in teaching students. Google and Wikipedia, in short, is only useful if you have a solid base of knowledge on which to use them.

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