Education

Twenty-five percent of ACT test takers in 2012 were prepared for college, according to ACT’s 2012 Condition of College and Career Readiness report. Sixty-seven percent were ready to pass a college writing course, 52 percent were pr...
Twenty-five percent of ACT test takers in 2012 were prepared for college, according to ACT’s 2012 Condition of College and Career Readiness report. Sixty-seven percent were ready to pass a college writing course, 52 percent were prepared to read a social science textbook, 46 percent were ready for college algebra and 31 were likely to pass biology. Forty percent of ACT test takers reached the readiness benchmark in three areas. Twenty-eight percent didn’t qualify in any subject. Passing an ACT benchmark means a student has a 50 percent chance of earning a B or better and a 75 percent chance of earning at least a C. Thirty-seven percent of test takers want to earn a professional or graduate degree, 45 percent will settle or a bachelor’s and 5 percent are aiming at an associate degree.
score: 1 22 minutes ago
Karen Lewis, the fiery leader of the Chicago Teachers Union who led a strike last year and became a nationally known anti-school reform figure,  has been elected to another three-year term as president. Today she will lead the first of &...
Karen Lewis, the fiery leader of the Chicago Teachers Union who led a strike last year and became a nationally known anti-school reform figure,  has been elected to another three-year term as president. Today she will lead the first of … Continue reading →
score: 1 about 1 hour ago
It's a movie, starring Tyra Banks and a young Lindsay Lohan, that's about the struggles of being a doll.
It's a movie, starring Tyra Banks and a young Lindsay Lohan, that's about the struggles of being a doll.
score: 1 about 1 hour ago
Be sure to check out this op-ed on Yahoo Finance regarding Senator Warren's proposal to cut interest rates on federal student loans.This Ed Money Watch post has a rundown of all of the pending proposals, including the one sponsored ...
Be sure to check out this op-ed on Yahoo Finance regarding Senator Warren's proposal to cut interest rates on federal student loans.This Ed Money Watch post has a rundown of all of the pending proposals, including the one sponsored by House Republicans that will be up for a vote next week.
score: 1 about 3 hours ago
Vouchers have been at the center of the school choice movement for many reformers, but they may be in trouble. Here making that argument is Abby Rapoport of The American Prospect, where this appeared. By Abby Rapoport When news broke ...
Vouchers have been at the center of the school choice movement for many reformers, but they may be in trouble. Here making that argument is Abby Rapoport of The American Prospect, where this appeared. By Abby Rapoport When news broke … Continue reading →
score: 1 about 7 hours ago
SUPPOSEDLY, E! has confirmed that Beyowulf is pregnant according to several sources.
SUPPOSEDLY, E! has confirmed that Beyowulf is pregnant according to several sources.
score: 1 about 18 hours ago
"A young Houston couple is planning to give away $4 billion—but only to projects that prove they are worth it. Can they redefine the world of philanthropy?" The New Science Behind Philanthropy (WSJ via @mikepetrilli)
"A young Houston couple is planning to give away $4 billion—but only to projects that prove they are worth it. Can they redefine the world of philanthropy?" The New Science Behind Philanthropy (WSJ via @mikepetrilli)
score: 1 about 19 hours ago
Hello everyone! A bit late this week due to spontaneous napping. Napping Is Good. I hope you all managed to find a little corner of time for some top left activity this week? I took some time to draw out a calendar for the summer (I c...
Hello everyone! A bit late this week due to spontaneous napping. Napping Is Good. I hope you all managed to find a little corner of time for some top left activity this week? I took some time to draw out a calendar for the summer (I can never find a diary that really has the layout that suits, so I keep a small pocket diary and have a squared-paper notebook which I rule up into day, week, month or other time period diary pages at whatever resolution I need depending on the time of the academic year and can also interleave them with lists as needed - this last round I ruled up the rest of the exam period with one line = 15 minutes for the heart of the working day (for student appointments etc.), June with half hour slots and lots of blank space underneath for having lists of tasks in, and a 'all summer 'vacation' on one page' one for planning more generally (things like when I can work from home and therefore take delivery of a new bed - much needed, and a TLQ problem since at least last summer, which is finally close to being resolved)), and it's kind of depressing how many weeks already have a meeting or some other annotation in them, and how little time there really is, what with conferences and conference papers and the like (before anyone gets kindly indignant on my part, like most UK academics I'm on a 12-month contract, not one of those nine month ones). That makes prioritising some Top Left activities even MORE important, right?No topic this week, unless you start one yourselves. Weekly reporting format:goal from last weekwhat you achievedanalysis of last week: what worked, what went wrong, what might need to change. analysis of next week (optional, but lets see if it is useful): what's coming up, any restrictions or particular time management challenges goal for next week: TLQ goal(s) for the next weekRoll call Normal 0 false false false EN-GB X-NONE X-NONE MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 /* Style Definitions */ table.MsoNormalTable {mso-style-name:"Table Normal"; mso-tstyle-rowband-size:0; mso-tstyle-colband-size:0; mso-style-noshow:yes; mso-style-priority:99; mso-style-qformat:yes; mso-style-parent:""; mso-padding-alt:0cm 5.4pt 0cm 5.4pt; mso-para-margin:0cm; mso-para-margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:11.0pt; font-family:"Calibri","sans-serif"; mso-ascii-font-family:Calibri; mso-ascii-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman"; mso-fareast-theme-font:minor-fareast; mso-hansi-font-family:Calibri; mso-hansi-theme-font:minor-latin;} Amanda: (1) Analyze data from last week, (2) Run qPCR experiment, (3) Read 2 papers.Contingent Cassandra: finish/hand in grades (upper right but necessary), get at least a bit of exercise (4).Daisy: revise, revise, revise, and revise some more. Revisions to supervisor by end of weekElizabeth Anne Mitchell: Pull together latest drafts, list what needs to be done, and where to shop them when finished. This latter will affect the order of the articles.JaneB: a) do as much data collection for interim report as possible b) draft results section of DCP2Jodi A Campbell: Restructure chapter two, write 2500 words of chapter two, get through 8 ILL booksluolin88: one hour revising.Matilda: this week's goal is a tiny one. To make a nice weekly plan, and record my actually activity.metheist: My writing goal then is 2000 words for chapter 4. I will go to the gym 2 days this week and also cook 2 days.Propter Doc: Plan data analysis for project A. Write two blog posts. Think about project B.theorydave: Convert list of bullet points into a coherent results section for paper
score: 1 about 19 hours ago
In between Hurricane Nia spottings and Javerey makeouts and breakups, another character caught my eye – Jessica. The Southern princess’ sweet, homegrown accent and ex-boyfriend probz were instantly relatable.
In between Hurricane Nia spottings and Javerey makeouts and breakups, another character caught my eye – Jessica. The Southern princess’ sweet, homegrown accent and ex-boyfriend probz were instantly relatable.
score: 1 about 19 hours ago
The Columbus Dispatch editorial, Another Blow to City Schools complains that the city's schools “scrubbed” 2.8 million attendance records since 2006.  They allegedly marked some students with low scores as withdrawn so they wouldn’t be c...
The Columbus Dispatch editorial, Another Blow to City Schools complains that the city's schools “scrubbed” 2.8 million attendance records since 2006.  They allegedly marked some students with low scores as withdrawn so they wouldn’t be counted against the district.  Columbus schools are also facing criminal investigations for grade changing. Obviously, I have no idea whether Columbus schools are guilty and, if they are, whether they did something qualitatively different than accumulating millions of speeding tickets. Statistical gamesmanship predated data-driven "reform," and those policies are not an excuse for cheating.  They just create a "perfect storm" where the damage done by education's longstanding "culture of compliance," is combined with inherently destructive and punitive accountability schemes, and where all are made worse by the resulting malfeasance.  I also know that I must be particularly careful with my words when addressing this tragedy. "Juking the stats" is not limited to schools.  It has long been said that the prime qualification for a policeman, for instance, is a course in creative writing.  As it was cryptically explained in The Wire, our legal system could not function without the ability to "turn felonies into misdemeanors."  I suspect that the cumulative damage of manipulating the nation's withdrawals and grades, as well as other tricks for jacking up attendance rates, will dwarf the consequences of outright cheating scandals. But, the Ohio case prompts die-hard supporters of test-driven accountability, such as Secretary of Education Arne Duncan and Andrew Rotherham, to grasp at more straws. They seem to claim that because test-driven accountability has opened multiple doors to a wide variety of scandals that, somehow, their favored policies aren't to blame. I am curious about whether classroom teachers would agree with my speculation that fabricating grades and attendance are bound to be the most common results of numbers-driven accountability.  It so easy to jack up those numbers and, in my experience, it happened continually.   Was it not inevitable that systems would look for ways to put a "W" for Withdrawn next to the names of students who lowered their metrics?  My school, for instance, had the highest dropout rate in the state, but for the price of a part-time clerk, whose job it was to find someone to say that former students intended to go back to school somewhere, sometime, our problem disappeared.  Once systems start down that road of, wink wink, making bad numbers go away, who knows where it will stop? Once schools are held accountable for graduation rates, was it not inevitable that something like "credit recovery" would result?  Once teachers were forced to "pass kids on" because of some bogus online tutorial or doing a quick project, did anyone believe that grade inflation would stop at that point? In our school, once teachers (who had 140 students) were pressured to meet with all of the parents of all of the failing students (who had not responded to phones calls and letters), was it not inevitable that overburdened teachers and/or principals would sidestep the conflicts by changing enough "Fs" into "Ds" to stay out of trouble?  I certainly stayed below my quota of "Fs." Different schools pressured educators to comply with different policies but I doubt that many teachers did not do what we were all pressured to do. And, don't get me started with "working off" absences.  "Reformers" can claim, correctly, that statistical gamesmanship and outright cheating did not begin with NCLB.  My first principal told me to "pick my battles."  Through my entire career, my goal was to comply as little as possible with mandates for dropping absences and bad grades.  I know a lot of teachers who were consistently pressured to do far worse.  The idea of not playing the game of making statistics look good was never on our radar screen. To my knowledge, we did not violate the law.  Ser
score: 1 about 19 hours ago