4 Key Strategies for Improving School Culture for Black and Latino Male Students: An evaluation of a New York City initiative supporting Black and Latino male students yields key insights about improving school culture. Contributed by the Research Alliance for New York City Schools.
Tuesday, October 24, 2017
4 Key Strategies for Improving School Culture for Black and Latino Male Students
4 Key Strategies for Improving School Culture for Black and Latino Male Students: An evaluation of a New York City initiative supporting Black and Latino male students yields key insights about improving school culture. Contributed by the Research Alliance for New York City Schools.
Teachers' Lower Expectations for Black Students May Become 'Self-Fulfilling Prophecies,' Study Finds
Teachers' Lower Expectations for Black Students May Become 'Self-Fulfilling Prophecies,' Study Finds: When evaluating the same black student, white teachers were nine percentage points less likely than black teachers to expect that the student would earn a college degree, researchers say.
Thursday, September 28, 2017
Friday, September 22, 2017
New York Has Rewritten the Common Core. Here's What You Need to Know.
New York Has Rewritten the Common Core. Here's What You Need to Know.: A look at what's new in New York's replacement standards, and what led the state to consider an overhaul in the first place.
Teacher Evaluation: Why Multiple Measures Matter
Teacher Evaluation: Why Multiple Measures Matter: In an industry as large as public education and where learning is our business, one might think we'd lead the way in measures of accountability. But we are not.
Your One-Stop Shop for ESSA Info on Teachers, Testing, Money, and More
Your One-Stop Shop for ESSA Info on Teachers, Testing, Money, and More: For teachers, parents, principals, and others, the Every Student Succeeds Act is no longer on the horizon. Now it's in their schools. Here's an EdWeek guide to all things ESSA.
Thursday, September 14, 2017
Social-Emotional Skills Should Be an Integral Part of Every Lesson We Teach
Social-Emotional Skills Should Be an Integral Part of Every Lesson We Teach: As I have come to understand and teach social and emotional skills, I've learned they can't be—indeed, should not be—viewed as something separate from our lessons, or something to be taught one hour a week. These skills are part of everything we do.
Scientists to Schools: Social, Emotional Development Crucial for Learning
Scientists to Schools: Social, Emotional Development Crucial for Learning: Students' social, emotional, and academic development are 'deeply intertwined,' and all are central to learning, a group of scientists said in a consensus statement released Wednesday.
Catching Up: John B. King Jr. on Trump, ESSA, and Heading Back to the Classroom
Catching Up: John B. King Jr. on Trump, ESSA, and Heading Back to the Classroom: King has some big worries about how his successor, U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos, is handling civil rights enforcement.
Monday, August 28, 2017
'Is Social-Emotional Learning Really Going to Work for Students of Color?'
'Is Social-Emotional Learning Really Going to Work for Students of Color?': There is an urgency to expand the definition and practices of social-emotional learning in order to create equitable school environments for students of color, Dena Simmons writes.
Social and Emotional Skills are the Foundation for Deeper Learning
Social and Emotional Skills are the Foundation for Deeper Learning: Drawing on his own experiences as a student from a troubled background, a member of an Aspen Institute commission discusses the need for social and emotional learning.
'Is Social-Emotional Learning Really Going to Work for Students of Color?'
'Is Social-Emotional Learning Really Going to Work for Students of Color?': There is an urgency to expand the definition and practices of social-emotional learning in order to create equitable school environments for students of color, Dena Simmons writes.
Saturday, August 26, 2017
Is Social-Emotional Learning a Hoax? Readers Respond
Is Social-Emotional Learning a Hoax? Readers Respond: Checker E. Finn Jr.'s recent Commentary questioning the validity of social-emotional learning sparked an outpouring of responses from readers. Here’s what they had to say.
Thursday, August 24, 2017
One More Way High-Poverty Schools Get Less: Teacher Pensions
One More Way High-Poverty Schools Get Less: Teacher Pensions: Teachers who work at high-poverty schools and with mostly students of color are paid less than their peers at affluent schools with mostly white students—but the disparity is worse than people think, a new report says.
Wednesday, August 23, 2017
Teachers Share Resources for Addressing Charlottesville Hate Rally in the Classroom
Teachers Share Resources for Addressing Charlottesville Hate Rally in the Classroom: How can teachers talk to their students about the white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Va.? These resources might help start the conversation.
The Nation's Teaching Force Is Still Mostly White and Female
The Nation's Teaching Force Is Still Mostly White and Female: While a vast majority of the nation’s public school teachers are white women, the latest data from the federal staffing survey shows increasing diversity, and big differences between the teaching force at traditional and charter schools.
Friday, July 14, 2017
How School Vouchers will Bring Decades Old Segregation Back into Schools Today
Rep. Robert C. “Bobby” Scott (D-VA), ranking member of the
U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Education and the Workforce and a panel of distinguished guests: Daniel
A. Domenech, executive director, American Association of School Administrators Richard
D. Kahlenberg, senior fellow, The Century Foundation Catherine E. Lhamon, chair
of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights Justin Reid, director, African American
Programs, Virginia Foundation for the Humanities spoke on the the racist
origins of private school vouchers.
In 1959, five years after the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark
Brown v. Board of Education ruling outlawing segregation in schools, Prince
Edward County, Virginia, officials chose to close all of the county’s public
schools rather than desegregate them. When they were forced by court mandate to
make all schools available to black and white students, county officials turned
to “tuition grants”—a private school voucher system—to further avoid
integration.
At this event, Rep. Bobby Scott (D-VA), representing
Virginia’s 3rd Congressional District and the panelists discussed “The
Racist Origins of Private School Vouchers,” which looked at the
segregationist policies and actions that led to the implementation of one of
the first voucher systems in the country. The panelist also addressed current
voucher programs that have led to inequities along racial and socioeconomic
lines, as well as various voucher schemes proposed by President Donald Trump
and Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos.
The Importance of Early Childhood Education on Health and Well-Being
The Urban Institute, in collaboration with Policies for Action (P4A), recently delivered an empowering research forum on P4A’s latest findings on early education’s lasting impacts on health and well-being from policymakers designing and implementing programs at the city and state levels. This forum sparked a positive dialogue on the importance of health in early childhood investments and identified avenues for cross-disciplinary engagement and research around early childhood education and health.
The preschool years are a critically important time to provide special education services to children with developmental delays or disabilities. At this early age, children’s brains are going through their most important period of development, so this is the time when services can make the biggest impact. New York City’s Universal Prekindergarten Program provides preschool special education services if a student shows a significant delay in any of the five areas of development: cognitive (thinking and learning); communication (understanding and using language); physical/motor (vision, hearing, and movement); social/emotional (getting along with other people); and adaptive/self-help (independent living skills, such as toileting, eating, and dressing).
Notable scholar, Dr. Sherry Glied, Dean and professor of public service at New York University’s Wagner Graduate School of Public Service discussed her current research, “Seeing and Hearing: The Impacts of New York’s City’s Universal Prekindergarten Program on the Health of Low-Income Children.”
Thursday, July 6, 2017
Social Emotional Learning is Necessary for Students' Success
Teaching Ahead: A Roundtable reported an article in Education Week and suggested emotional and social learning can take on various forms in the classroom, especially for teachers of color. It can be a regular morning meeting, where students review and discuss their perspectives on school culture and current events. It can be an analysis of a conflict of a novel and a discussion about different paths the characters might have taken. It can be a simple moment that provides a student the space to think and reflect without the threat of punishment, rather than react automatically, and often aggressively, to distress. It can be a situation in which a teacher of color shares an experience about how to handle encounters of racism or other injustices related to identity. It can be a scenario that pushes students to generate various solutions for coding problems in a computer science class.
Implementing more emotional and social learning will require a new movement in American education. It is not enough to train and develop the brains of our children, while leaving their hearts empty or unloved. In order to make our children more prepared for the real world, teachers must look beyond grit and structure. We must teach our children to feel, to adjust, and to thrive in the face of any adversity they may encounter.
Implementing more emotional and social learning will require a new movement in American education. It is not enough to train and develop the brains of our children, while leaving their hearts empty or unloved. In order to make our children more prepared for the real world, teachers must look beyond grit and structure. We must teach our children to feel, to adjust, and to thrive in the face of any adversity they may encounter.
GOP Healthcare Bill Could Strip Public Schools of Billions for Special Education
According to a report by Emma Brown from Education, The Republican health-care legislation would curtail billions of dollars in annual funding they count on to help students with disabilities and poor children.
For the past 30 years, Medicaid has helped pay for services and equipment that schools provide to special-education students, as well as school-based health screening and treatment for children from low-income families. That money pays for nurses, social workers, physical, occupational and speech therapists and medical equipment such as walkers and wheelchairs. It also pays for preventive and comprehensive health services for poor children, including immunizations, screening for hearing and vision problems and management of chronic conditions like asthma and diabetes.
Schools have been able to register as Medicaid providers and seek reimbursement, as doctors and hospitals do, since 1988. Two-thirds of districts that bill Medicaid use the money to pay the salaries of employees who work directly with children, such as school nurses and therapists, according to a January survey by the School Superintendents Association (AASA).
But the Republican push to overhaul health care would implement a new “per capita cap” system for Medicaid: Instead of matching whatever states spend on Medicaid, the federal government would instead give them a fixed amount for each Medicaid enrollee.
Under the House GOP bill, which passed last month, that change would reduce federal spending about $880 billion over the next decade, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. The Senate GOP version would cut about $772 billion over the same time period.
The Senate bill is being revised after pushback from several key Republicans — including Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, who has raised concerns about the impact of Medicaid cuts on special education. Details may change as Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) seeks to negotiate a deal that can pass.
Schools receive less than 1 percent of federal Medicaid spending, according to the National Alliance for Medicaid in Schools. But federal Medicaid reimbursements constitute the third-largest federal funding stream to public schools, behind $15 billion they receive each year for educating poor children and $13 billion they receive to educate students with disabilities under the Individuals with Disabilities in Education Act (IDEA).
For the past 30 years, Medicaid has helped pay for services and equipment that schools provide to special-education students, as well as school-based health screening and treatment for children from low-income families. That money pays for nurses, social workers, physical, occupational and speech therapists and medical equipment such as walkers and wheelchairs. It also pays for preventive and comprehensive health services for poor children, including immunizations, screening for hearing and vision problems and management of chronic conditions like asthma and diabetes.
Schools have been able to register as Medicaid providers and seek reimbursement, as doctors and hospitals do, since 1988. Two-thirds of districts that bill Medicaid use the money to pay the salaries of employees who work directly with children, such as school nurses and therapists, according to a January survey by the School Superintendents Association (AASA).
But the Republican push to overhaul health care would implement a new “per capita cap” system for Medicaid: Instead of matching whatever states spend on Medicaid, the federal government would instead give them a fixed amount for each Medicaid enrollee.
Under the House GOP bill, which passed last month, that change would reduce federal spending about $880 billion over the next decade, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. The Senate GOP version would cut about $772 billion over the same time period.
The Senate bill is being revised after pushback from several key Republicans — including Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, who has raised concerns about the impact of Medicaid cuts on special education. Details may change as Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) seeks to negotiate a deal that can pass.
Schools receive less than 1 percent of federal Medicaid spending, according to the National Alliance for Medicaid in Schools. But federal Medicaid reimbursements constitute the third-largest federal funding stream to public schools, behind $15 billion they receive each year for educating poor children and $13 billion they receive to educate students with disabilities under the Individuals with Disabilities in Education Act (IDEA).
New York City Schools that Serves Mostly Homeless Students
NEW YORK CITY COMMUNITY SCHOOL INITIATIVE
Community Schools are neighborhood hubs where students receive high-quality academic instruction, families can access social services, and communities congregate to share resources and address their common challenges. Community Schools prioritizes student wellness, readiness to learn, personalized instruction, community partnerships and family engagement as key strategies to leverage better academic outcomes among high-need students.
Community Schools recognize that students who are hungry, can’t see the blackboard, or are missing school regularly face critical obstacles to learning in the classroom. By providing an extra meal, connecting a parent to job training, or enrolling a student in an afterschool program, they can lower barriers to learning and help kids succeed.
Read Mayor de Blasio's strategy to launch and sustain a system of over 100 Community Schools across NYC by 2017.
Community Schools are neighborhood hubs where students receive high-quality academic instruction, families can access social services, and communities congregate to share resources and address their common challenges. Community Schools prioritizes student wellness, readiness to learn, personalized instruction, community partnerships and family engagement as key strategies to leverage better academic outcomes among high-need students.
Community Schools recognize that students who are hungry, can’t see the blackboard, or are missing school regularly face critical obstacles to learning in the classroom. By providing an extra meal, connecting a parent to job training, or enrolling a student in an afterschool program, they can lower barriers to learning and help kids succeed.
Read Mayor de Blasio's strategy to launch and sustain a system of over 100 Community Schools across NYC by 2017.
Wednesday, July 5, 2017
States Seek New "Ambitious" ESSA Goals
The NCLB law set a 12-year deadline for states to achieve universal proficiency, with progress measured by the adequate yearly progress, or AYP, and benchmarks. In contrast to the NCLB law, ESSA requires only that states set "ambitious" academic achievement, graduation rate, and English-language proficiency goals without setting specific deadlines. According to Burnette's article in Education Week, many states are coming up with the “ambitious ... long-term goals” required in the accountability plans they must submit to the federal government later this year under the Every Student Succeeds Act. For example:
- Delaware: Proposes to increase its graduation rate from 84 to 92 percent by 2030; also wants to boost the proportion of students passing its English/language arts exam from 50 percent to 70 percent and raise the proportion of those passing the math exam from 36 to 70 percent by that same year.
- Hawaii: Has more than 14 goals that include reducing chronic absenteeism by 6 percent, increasing 3rd-grade literacy by 11 percent, and increasing its graduation rate by 4 percent by 2020.
- Illinois: Is proposing that 90 percent of its 3rd graders will read at or above grade level by 2032; that 90 percent of 5th graders will meet or exceed math expectations by that year; and that 90 percent of students will graduate from high school college- or career-ready by then.
- Louisiana: Proposes to “raise the ambition of its long-term goals for students to levels exceeding the national average in every measure.” For example, receiving an A on the state report card, would require that high schools graduate more than 90 percent of their students, that high school students receive at least a 21 on the ACT college-readiness test, which is used as the statewide exam (up from the 18 score currently required), and that the majority of the students receive a “mastery” rating on the state’s standardized test rather than “basic.
- Maryland: Is “proposing to implement an ambitious and rigorous long-term goal of reducing nonproficient students by one-half by the year 2030.” The state wants to cut in half its achievement gap within six years.
- Montana: In its final plan, Montana sets a 2020 target date, but no uniform goals for districts. “Local school districts should take the lead on setting goals for their community schools. Measurement of quality at the state level must be rigorous, yet flexible,” the plan states.
- Oklahoma: Without giving specifics, says it “is a priority ... that the long-term goals are lofty but achievable” and that the state “is committed to providing [local districts], schools and students the supports necessary to achieve these goals.”
- Tennessee: Has proposed, among other things, that the state will rank in the top half of states on the National Assessment of Educational Progress by 2019, that 75 percent of its 3rd graders will be proficient in reading by 2025, and that the average ACT composite score in Tennessee will be a 21 by 2020.
- Washington: Wants to have all of its students “on track” to meeting statewide standards in 20 years.
Friday, June 30, 2017
Principal Leadership in Support of Student with Disabilities
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