Lincoln’s Thanksgiving Proclamation
Wednesday, November 21st, 2007
Wednesday, November 21st, 2007
John Rogers and Jeannie Oakes, co-directors of UCLA’s Institute for Democracy, Education, and Access, found that the problem with public education in California isn’t the racial achievement gap, it’s the gap between the rest of the nation and California.
Rogers and Oakes write:
“For example, for years, people have been describing and lamenting California’s general decline in education. We’ve all heard it. Test scores of California’s Latino and African American students are, on average, among the lowest in the country. However, white students don’t do well either, and by a wide margin: California’s white eighth-graders score below white eighth-graders in every state but West Virginia and Nevada on the NAEP reading test.”
If it’s bad, it’s bad for everybody, regardless of race, gender, ethnicity, English language status, income, parent education or teacher experience. What a great way of looking at the problem. Wish I had thought of it.
Tuesday, November 20th, 2007
1) EIA Exclusive: Colorado Public Employees Unions’ Secret Agreement
2) Share It Fairly But Don’t Take a Slice of My Pie
3) On the Docket
4) Three Headlines, One Newspaper, Same Day
5) Two Million Teachers Update
6) Last Week’s Intercepts
7) Quotes of the Week
Monday, November 19th, 2007
Monday, November 19th, 2007
“Like so many of you, I woke up on the morning of the November 5 payday with the admiral in my bedroom.” – United Teachers Los Angeles President A.J. Duffy. (November 9 United Teacher)
Friday, November 16th, 2007
Harry Potter creator J.K. Rowling is the winner of this year’s NEA poll as the substitute teacher American students would most like to have for a day. Last year’s winner was actress Jessica Alba.
Either one would be an improvement over this Georgia substitute teacher.
Friday, November 16th, 2007
Well what do you know? It turns out Resolution 4204, the measure in Washington State to eliminate the supermajority needed for school levies, didn’t lose after all.
The resolution trailed by 38,000 votes on Election Day, but now has an 11,000 vote lead. Thank heaven for those late King County ballots. They always come through in the clutch.
Thursday, November 15th, 2007
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