Monday, November 23, 2009

California Tuition Hikes Spark Protests


by Peter Phillips
Consortium News
November 23, 2009

It’s often said that California sets the trends for the rest of the United States – and that has surely been the case with the impact of tax cuts primarily benefiting the wealthy. California is facing a severe budget crisis, causing sharp cuts in public services.

The budget crisis also has forced steep tuition hikes at public universities, once free for all qualified students and the pride of California. Now, as students protest the higher charges, they are being met with police action – and with ridicule from the mainstream news media, as Peter Phillips recounts in this guest essay:

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Thursday, November 5, 2009

Late governor's son takes '1 million steps' to Jacksonville


By Jessie-Lynne Kerr
Story updated at 6:33 AM on Friday, Oct. 23, 2009
FLORIDA TIMES-UNION


Taking a page from the successful 1970 campaign of his late father, Lawton "Bud" Chiles III on Thursday brought his One Million Steps for Florida's Kids awareness campaign to Jacksonville...

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Tuesday, September 1, 2009

E.O. Wilson And Will Wright: Ant Lovers Unite!


An Open Mic Discussion Of Life And Games

September 1, 2009
National Public Radio

Ants make some people cringe — but for E. O. Wilson and Will Wright, they provide never-ending fascination.

Biologist E. O. Wilson, professor emeritus at Harvard University, is a two-time Pulitzer-winning ant expert who helped develop theories of island biogeography, chemical ecology, and sociobiology. A leader in the modern environmental movement, Wilson has devoted his life to understanding how all forms of life are connected.

Computer game mastermind Will Wright has read every one of Wilson's books. He credits Wilson for inspiring him to develop SimAnt, one of the games he created along with The Sims — the most successful computer game in history — and more recently Spore, in which players create virtual single-cell organisms and evolve those organisms into more complex forms of life...

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Friday, August 21, 2009

Secret Recipes Revealed: Demystifying the Title I, Part A Funding Formulas


By Raegen Miller
August 17, 2009
Center for American Progress

Title I, Part A of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act authorizes grants to help with the education of children in low-income areas, but the formulas used to determine the grants need to be improved...

Download the full report (pdf)

Download the executive summary (pdf)

Interactive Map: Title I Education Grants

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Thursday, August 20, 2009

Summary of Early Learning Challenge Fund


National Women's Law Center

The House also expects to take up the Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act which includes the new Early Learning Challenge Fund. The new Early Learning Challenge Fund would provide competitive grants to challenge states to build comprehensive, high-quality early learning systems for children up to age five...

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Friday, August 7, 2009

Laughter and learning


by Jos Houben
August 2009 issue
Ode Magazine

The upside of looking on the lighter side of life...

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Sunday, August 2, 2009

COMMENTARY: The Green School Makeovers


Countless Benefits for Eco-Friendly Schools

By Kristen O’Neill
emagazine

The LEED for Schools rating system, The Green Flag Schools Program and the Alliance to Save Energy's Green Schools Program all share a common goal: to create healthy, ecologically friendly learning environments for students and teachers.

Friday, July 17, 2009

Mother Tongue Absent in Thousands of Classrooms


By Haider Rizvi
IPS

UNITED NATIONS, Jul 16 (IPS) - Millions of children across the world fail to receive a basic education not only because they are born into poverty, but because local authorities do not allow them to read and write in their native language at school...

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Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Obama's Classroom Spies


By DAVID PRICE
CounterPunch
June 23, 2009

Professional associations like the American Association of University Professors, the American Psychological Association and the American Anthropological Association need to speak out in opposition of the permanent establishment of PRISP. PRISP risks further blurring already hazy borders marking proper independent academic roles, and it stands to confuse academic identities in ways that many will not even realize...

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Hungry for a Better Education: Teachers, Parents Lead Hunger Strike Protesting Cuts, Layoffs at LA Schools


DemocracyNow!
June 10, 2009

Teachers, parents and community members are on a hunger strike protesting cuts and layoffs at Los Angeles schools, which have come as part of a statewide effort by California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger to reduce education funding by nearly $1 billion. We speak to LA high school teacher and “Hungry for a Better Education” participant Sean Leys, now on his fifteenth day of the hunger strike.

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Teaching Pioneer Deborah Meier on Obama’s Education Policy and the Future of Charter Schools


DemocracyNow.org
May 21, 2009

As part of the Obama administration’s education plan, Education Secretary Arne Duncan has urged states to consider partnerships with successful charter school operators. We speak to Deborah Meier, who has spent nearly four decades working in public education as a teacher, principal, writer and public advocate. She is considered to be the founder of the small schools movement and founded a number of public elementary and secondary schools in New York and Boston that serve predominantly low-income African American and Latino students...

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Grading 529 College Savings Plans


National Public Radio

Morning Edition, May 20, 2009 · This is the season when students graduate from high school and their parents worry about how to pay for college.

Many hope to benefit from a tax-free fund designed for college savings called a 529 plan. Over the past couple of decades, Americans have put about $80 billion into these funds. But Greg Brown, who works for the independent investment research firm Morningstar, argues 529s have serious flaws.

"The problem with 529s is that they add a layer of complexity and confusion that really … doesn't need to be there," Brown tells NPR's Steve Inskeep.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

The Corporatization of Public Education


Wednesday 15 April 2009
by: Andy Kroll, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

Education Secretary Arne Duncan's pledge to put more big-city mayors in charge of their school districts would exclude democratic forms of school governance and let big businesses decide the fate of public schools. Education Secretary Arne Duncan's pledge to put more big-city mayors in charge of their school districts would exclude democratic forms of school governance and let big businesses decide the fate of public schools.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

A Scandal More Shameful than AIG and Just as Costly for Taxpayers


by Keli Goff
Huffington Post
April 8, 2009

...• A 2008 study found that high school dropouts cost the American public more than $100 million a year.

• A 2009 study found that one high school dropout in Ohio will cost that state's taxpayers $200,000 from the time they dropout until they are 65 years of age.

• Every 29 seconds another American student becomes a dropout, meaning two (depending on how quickly you read) have dropped out since you began reading this post....

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Shut Out - How the Cost of Higher Education Is Dividing Our Country


Just this week, on the front page of my hometown paper was the less-than-shocking news that, in our new economically wounded world, if your parents can pay the staggering tuition demanded by our top private colleges in full, you have a major leg up in the race to the college of your choice. New York Times reporter Kate Zernike quotes Robert A. Sevier, an "enrollment consultant to colleges," saying, "If you are a student of means or ability, or both, there has never been a better year." And as fans of my beloved Brooklyn Dodgers used to say in my childhood, "Wait till next year!"

In the meantime, college and university endowments are plummeting, non-tenured professors and teaching assistants are being dropped, and classes cut back on campuses nationwide. Going to college was, of course, something only a thin slice of the American elite once did. If it turns out that we are indeed in a twenty-first century version of the Great Depression, who knows what a college campus will look like, or who will be walking its paths to class, a decade from now?

As the latest entry in TomDispatch's ongoing series on the fallout in the U.S. from the global economic meltdown, Andy Kroll, who last wrote on the ways in which new Secretary of Education Arne Duncan militarized Chicago's school system, explores higher education in the financial doldrums. Still a college student himself, in a state that's been clobbered by bad times and the collapse of the American auto industry, Kroll considers an American world in which the door to college could be slammed shut on so many. Tom...

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Reduce the Rate: Rev. Jesse Jackson Joins Movement Against Crippling Rates on Student Loans


Democracy Now!
March 12, 2009


Amid massive government bailouts of the nation’s banks,
we speak to the Reverend Jesse Jackson about “Reduce the Rate,” his new campaign urging the Obama administration to slash the interest rates on crippling student loans. We also speak with Alan Collinge, founder of Student Loan Justice and author of The Student Loan Scam: The Most Oppressive Debt in U.S. History—and How We Can Fight Back.

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Differentiated Instruction Allows Students to Succeed


By Ben Johnson
3/2/09
Edutopia

...Designed Differentiation is the deliberate act of modifying instruction or an assignment in order to customize the effect to match the particular developmental level and skills of a student or group of students. The ideal is to provide equivalent learning activities that cater to the students' strengths but bring all of the students to the same learning objective. On one end of the spectrum is the one-size-fits-all learning activity, while on the other end is the completely individualized learning plan for each student. Although, I believe it is time for the latter, realism demands that teachers deal with something that hovers around the middle of the continuum...

Monday, January 12, 2009

How Access to Information Can Tackle Poverty and Pollution



...The unbelievable technological advancement enjoyed by wealthy countries is unprecedented in human history. But technology has always been the driving force behind social change, from stone tools to better irrigation techniques to gunpowder. Yet today the missing link to creating a more equitable world is not a lack of technologies that can foster it, but a lack of access to information about, and financing for, those technologies in the places that most urgently need them.

Why the Free School Rules


The Indypendent

By John Tarleton
From the June 15, 2005 issue

I was shocked at first. But it’s a great place to do what you want and to pursue your dreams,” says Lipner, 14, an aspiring writer who is currently working on a fictional short story about super-powerful energy drinks and an email chain letter.

“Since she’s been in this school, she’s been totally motivated to go,” says her father, Richard Lipner. “She seems more like herself.”

Located in the basement of the Free Methodist Church on the southern edge of Park Slope, the Free School is a rambunctious, easygoing refuge for kids fleeing the more structured system of learning that is the norm at most schools. There is no curriculum, no classes and no grades for the school’s 29 students who range from 5-15 years old. If the kids aren’t interested in what a teacher is offering, they can walk away and do something else, like play a musical instrument, start a game of charades, sample different varieties of cheese, work on a zine, walk a dog or surf the Internet.

“The primary focus of the school is to support the kid’s social and emotional growth so that they are able to get in touch with their own interests and inner motivation,” says Alan Berger, the Free School’s founder and director.

For Berger, there is no sense of urgency about cramming information into his students’ heads. Playing charades is seen as being just as valid as memorizing multiplication tables or the names of all the state capitals.

“It takes kids different amounts of time to deprogram and detox from the regular school system,” Berger says. “The kids have to take responsibility for their own education. It’s about you and what you want to learn.”

The original free school was started in Summerhill, England in 1921. There are dozens of free schools in the United States currently, including those in Sudsbury Valley, Massachusetts and Albany, New York, that have flourished since the 1960s. The core of the school is a regular meeting where students, teachers and staff sit down as equals to set the school’s course.

Berger, who worked for seven years as an assistant principal at Murray Bergstraum High School, was frustrated by the public school system’s unwillingness to embrace project-based learning in place of traditional rote memorization. In October 2003, he began organizing the Free School with a notice that went out in the Park Slope Food Co-op’s newsletter, and the school opened last September with 34 students and three teachers, two interns and a number of parent volunteers. Tuition is $9,000 per year with a sliding scale for less financially advantaged families. People of color make up about half the student body, which hails from Brooklyn, Queens and Manhattan.

“I knew this was the best shot for my son,” said Corrine Goodman. Her son Sylvan, 14, who was unable to function in a normal school setting, has gone from being unwilling to write to an aspiring writer working on two novels.

“This is the first time he is interacting with a community on a regular basis,” Goodman said. “It’s been invaluable for him.”

Growing Pains

The process of launching the school has been a learning experience for everyone involved. Expectations that all children would flourish harmoniously in a completely free environment have been tempered by experience. In November, the school placed a cap on the number of boys after the girls expressed concerns that their needs weren’t being met. The school also now has a Consequences Committee composed of a fluctuating group of about five children plus one adult that reviews complaints filed by students, staff and teachers.

“Instead of being punitive, we try to find a logical consequence to their actions,” says Barbara Danish-Brown, a volunteer who works with the Consequences Committee.
“The children have been very thoughtful about what makes sense when someone breaks a school rule,” Goodman adds. “I don’t know whether that would have been the case in September or October.”

Berger himself recently landed in front of the Consequences Committee after he chided a student for allowing her cell phone to ring during a meeting only to have his own go off several minutes later. His consequence: he was allowed to check his messages but otherwise couldn’t use his cell phone inside the school for the rest of the day.
“I learned my lesson,” he says.

However, the Free School’s wide-open democracy has inspired some criticism from within. A couple of the older boys, Rafael and Aaron, have both urged their fellow students to elect a school president.

“We needed a school president so kids would have one person to go to with problems instead of having so many meetings,” says Rafael, who would like to be president.
So far, this proposal has been voted down.

“People wanted to continue to have meetings and to have their say,” Danish-Brown says.
http://www.indypendent.org/2005/06/15/why-the-free-school-rules/

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Addressing Inequity in Education


By Laine Alison Zalac

December 15, 2008

This essay is the high school winner of The Nation's Third Annual Student Writing Contest.

I am a graduating senior from an urban public high school. I am in a lottery alternative school that focuses on a college preparatory curriculum. What I know the next president has to address is inequity in education, because it reflects inequity in society. No Child Left Behind? What a joke. I see students left behind all the time, and I am in the best school in my district. My school doesn't have clocks that work, but less than three miles away is a suburban school with an indoor swimming pool. I live in Ohio, where we still depend entirely too much on property taxes to fund public education despite contentions and legal suits that the funding system is illegal. The legislature has not yet resolved this issue, and there is a huge disparity between many districts...