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Education Issues Blog
To Educate and Inform on Issues Relating to Public Education
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Our blog is a tool box. Make it work for you. Here you will find data, studies, and perspectives that inform the discussion about school choice. Send stories of events in your state. Tell us about studies that clarify issues. Do your own studies. Use the information you find here to advocate for League positions.
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Race and Testing Wars
The pushback against testing is spreading. The New York Times reports that some minority groups have joined the anti testing movement. This is a significant change from what began as a white middle class movement. Testing is the stick that education reformers like current U.S. DOE Secretary John King and others use to spotlight struggling schools. Without testing, many argue, the plight of these students is ignored.
Now, some black parents and children are joining the Opt Out groups in Baltimore and Philadelphia. Educators cite examples of students who feel labeled as failures and curriculum that is little more than test prep. Warren Simmons, a senior fellow at the Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, sums up the problem. Testing identifies there is a problem but does not tell you what is wrong and how to fix it.
I take heart when I consider the evolving discussion about educational policy. Since the 1990s, we have moved from a focus on basic skills to one on critical thinking and problem solving. We then moved into high gear on testing in order to motivate educators to identify the needs of all students. Even now the conversation is moving toward the appropriate roles of teaching and technology to improve learning. There are also hints about the role of neuroscience in defining appropriate learning strategies.
Eventually we will get to the heart of the matter: time and money. This will become the biggest test of our political will to adapt our educational system to meet the needs of the nation. These discussion too are emerging in the courts.
Teachers vote with their feet
Does eliminating tenure makes any difference in the quality of the teacher workforce (as judged by achievement test score gains)? The Brookings Institute published an article that sheds some light on the impact prior to 2011. By comparing the departure rate of teachers with lower gain scores to those with higher gain scores, one would expect more lower rated teachers to leave.
Attacking Tenure: Why?
What are these anti tenure cases really about? Are reformers convinced the workforce has more than its share of ineffective teachers? Or, are they concerned many teachers prefer to work in traditional schools where they can earn higher salaries and benefits? Thus, charters and private schools struggle to compete for high quality teachers.
There is a general anti union undercurrent, but I am continually surprised how few Floridians seem to know that tenure in Florida is a thing of the past. Why are other states filing law suits?
NPR Tunes In: Where Did the Money Go?
NPR is doing a series on public education. They are starting with funding equity and adequacy. Florida is in court over this very issue. I liked the historical context that NPR provided e.g. “Education is a public good and paying for it is a public obligation”.
There is an interactive map on the NPR website where you can find how much funding your state or county within the state received in 2013-14. I got an itchy trigger finger and began poking around. Here’s what I found–it was surprising!
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