Join the conversation

...about what is working in our public schools.

The Public School Insights Blog

richardsimmons.jpgIn case you hadn't noticed at first glance, the soberly-dressed person at right is Richard Simmons.  (The hair is admittedly a giveaway.)  He donned the suit and the earnest expression yesterday to testify before the House Education and Labor Committee about the need to increase time for physical education in public schools.  

According to the Washington Post, the affair was less formal than the photograph suggests:  The irrepressible Simmons reportedly kissed onlookers, photographers and even Congressmen as he entered the hearing room, and he lent the hearing the atmosphere of "a support group" where lawmakers traded stories of weight loss. ...

Last Sunday the Dallas Morning news published a disquieting article about students' results on the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills (TAKS).  Here are a few excerpts:

 

Students are passing the ninth-, 10th- and 11th-grade language arts TAKS at higher rates than ever. Some even post near-perfect passing rates.

But on the short-response portion, fewer than half of North Texas students pass.

                                                ...

Testing experts say exams should include sections that expose such academic cracks.

But rarely do Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills tests ask students to do more than fill in a bubble.

...

Hugh Price Picture WEB.jpgPublic School Insights recently caught up with Hugh Price, former President of the National Urban League and current chair of ASCD's Whole Child Initiative. In an expansive telephone interview, Price told us about his new book, Mobilizing the Community to Help Students Succeed, which describes how educators and communities can work together to improve student motivation in school, celebrate academic success, and foster stronger student achievement. ...

vonzastrowc's picture

Testing the Tests

The past month has witnessed many skirmishes over the reliability of rising state test scores as measures of some high-profile education reforms' success. At issue are: ...

It appears that a phony debate continues to rage over whether schools alone or out-of-school social programs alone can close achievement gaps between poor and wealthy students. Provoked by the "Broader, Bolder Approach to Education," an important statement calling for both in-schoolHyperventilate.jpg and out-of-school interventions to boost student achievement, the debate is distracting us from constructive deliberation about what it will take to support all students' achievement.

Of course schools can and should make a profound difference in the lives--and academic achievement--of our most vulnerable students. Indeed, that's a major premise of this website, which highlights the success of public schools and districts across the country, many against sobering odds. Let's be clear: It serves no one well--least of all educators--to depict public schools as powerless and educators' dedication as wasted. Defeatism has no place in discussions of school reform. ...

michael_geisenWEB.jpgA few weeks ago, we were excited to learn that Crook County Middle School's Michael Geisen, a forester-turned-science teacher, was named by the Council of Chief State School Officers as the 2008 National Teacher of the Year. Selected for an innovative teaching approach that focuses on the individual needs of students, school/community connections, and collaboration with his colleagues, Geisen is now spending a year traveling nationally and internationally as a spokesperson for education.

He recently spoke with Public School Insights about a variety of topics including what he hopes to achieve as teacher of the year, his belief in the need to redefine "basic skills" and "intelligence," the support teachers receive (or should receive), and how he personalizes teaching to foster a life-long love of learning while increasing standardized test scores.

Listen to 5 minutes of highlights from our interview (or read through the transcript below): ...

On Tuesday, we pondered the concern that the community schools approach recently championed by Randi Weingarten of the AFT could turn schools into "social service agencies of last resort" while driving education to the margins.  This is indeed a danger, we argued, when schools must use their money to "fill the void" left by cuts to essential social services. ...

FatCat.jpgWell, the DC Examiner did it again.  Their story about superintendents' compensation this morning bears the inflammatory headline, "Fat Cat Edu-crats: High Pay, Lavish Perks Enrich Schools Chiefs."  This just days after publishing "Local Teachers Are Cashing In," a story about the less than 2 percent of DC-area teachers who earn more than $100,000/year. ...

Addressing the American Federation of Schools convention after her election as president, Randi Weingarten urged the dramatic expansion of the community school model:

Can you imagine a federal law that promoted community schools — schools that serve the neediest children by bringing together under one roof all the services and activities they and their families need?…Imagine schools that are open all day and offer after-school and evening recreational activities, child care and preschool, tutoring and homework assistance. Schools that include dental, medical and counseling clinics.

Robert Podiscio of the Core Knoweldge Blog worries that such schools could relegate education to the margins while becoming "social service agencies of last resort." This is definitely a danger--if schools lack the resources and support to carry out their broader role. Pondiscio thoughtfully describes what often happens when schools must redeploy their existing resources to fill the void left by policymakers who blithely de-fund programs for communities in greatest need. ...

WarleneGaryWEB.jpgLast week, we interviewed Paul Houston, who recently retired from his 14-year position at the helm of AASA, about his legacy as an educator and his thoughts on the current state of education reform.

This week, we turn our attention to another education leader who is reflecting on a long and distinguished career: Warlene Gary, who in late June retired from her position as executive director of the national PTA.

In our exclusive interview, Gary speaks about what she has accomplished in her 35-year career, her commitment to equity, her efforts at the PTA to reach out to poor communities and communities of color, and her frustration with the "paralysis of analysis" that hamstrings so many education reform discussions in Washington, DC. ...

Syndicate content