Archive for March, 2010

Obama promise: Brighter education futures for kids

Sunday, March 14th, 2010

By DORIE TURNER (AP)

ATLANTA — President Barack Obama is promising parents and their kids that with his administration’s help they will have better teachers in improved schools so U.S. students can make up for academic ground lost against youngsters in other countries.
A plan to overhaul the 2002 education law championed by President George W. Bush was unveiled by the Obama administration Saturday in hopes of replacing a system that in the last decade has tagged more than a third of schools as failing and created a hodgepodge of sometimes weak academic standards among states.
“Unless we take action — unless we step up — there are countless children who will never realize their full talent and potential,” Obama said during a video address on Saturday. “I don’t accept that future for them. And I don’t accept that future for the United States of America.”
In the proposed dismantling of the No Child Left Behind law, education officials would move away from punishing schools that don’t meet benchmarks and focus on rewarding schools for progress, particularly with poor and minority students. Obama intends to send a rewrite to Congress on Monday of the law.
The proposed changes call for states to adopt standards that ensure students are ready for college or a career rather than grade-level proficiency — the focus of the current law.
The blueprint also would allow states to use subjects other than reading and mathematics as part of their measurements for meeting federal goals, pleasing many education groups that have said No Child Left Behind encouraged teachers not to focus on history, art, science, social studies and other important subjects.
And, for the first time in 45 years, the White House is proposing a $4 billion increase in federal education spending, most of which would go to increase the competition among states for grant money and move away from formula-based funding.

Read the article in full at freerepublic.com

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Texas School Board’s Vote Could Make Nation’s History Textbooks more Conservative

Sunday, March 14th, 2010

March 12, 2010
Terrence Stutz
AUSTIN, Texas – In a move that is expected to inject more conservative-friendly language in school textbooks across the nation, the Texas Board of Education passed new curriculum standards for U.S. history and other social studies courses Friday.

The board’s influence extends beyond the state because Texas is the one of the largest purchasers of school textbooks in the United States, The New York Times reports.

The tentatively approved curriculum would, among other things, question the assumption that the Founding Father’s wanted a secular government and tout the superiority of American capitalism. The board also consistently voted down attempts to include more references to Hispanic role models in American history.

The vote came after three days of intense debate, with a final skirmish over how to teach the Battle of the Alamo.

Board members tentatively approved the new standards 11-4 after three fractious days of debate that touched on civil rights, religion, politics, music and a host of other topics that will be covered in the new requirements for classroom instruction and textbooks.

Four of the five minority members on the board opposed the long list of standards, citing in particular the inadequate coverage of blacks and Hispanics in U.S. and Texas history.

Read the full article at hispanicbusiness.com

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Education News From Around Florida

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

Florida Keys Keynoter: Schools in the Keys are reading for $8 million of “very painful” budgets cuts and layoffs.

Naples Daily News: FCAT man comes to the rescue at a Collier County High School.

Daytona Beach News-Journal: A Volusia County high school band is marching to Europe for a nine-day musical tour.

Palm Beach Post: Indianapolis Colts football star steps off the gridiron and returns home to speak with students at his Palm Beach County alma mater.

Orlando Sentinel: A plan to overhaul how teachers are paid and evaluated is now one step closer to reality. Controversy is not far behind.

St. Petersburg Times: The NAACP is taking a Pinellas School Board member to task for calling a group of students hoodlums.

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New Jersey School Report Cards for 2009 Now Available

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

One of the major goals of the New Jersey Department of Education is to increase school- and district-level accountability for educational progress by communicating useful information to members of the public to be used in measuring how well their schools are doing. The New Jersey School Report Card has provided the public with information about every school in New Jersey since 1995 when the Legislature mandated the annual accountability report. You can view this report on the official website of the New Jersey Department of Education’s website.

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