Friday Open Thread
Good News
Ballard's concert choir is going to Carnegie Hall in the middle of March for the second year in a row. Their wind ensemble has been invite to play next year there as well. Kudos to those singers and musicians.
Cleveland High was named a STEM Lighthouse School by OSPI, one of six in the state. Good job, Cleveland.
News
Interesting piece from KPLU on the use of class rather than race for integration purposes.
What's on your mind?
Ballard's concert choir is going to Carnegie Hall in the middle of March for the second year in a row. Their wind ensemble has been invite to play next year there as well. Kudos to those singers and musicians.
Cleveland High was named a STEM Lighthouse School by OSPI, one of six in the state. Good job, Cleveland.
Along with well-deserved recognition, Cleveland will also receive a $20,000 grant from OSPI to serve as a mentor to other schools and school districts that are creating their own STEM environments.No director community meetings this Saturday.
News
Interesting piece from KPLU on the use of class rather than race for integration purposes.
"Stronger Together" is not the name of the latest social-media fitness app. It's a grant proposed in President Obama's new budget, reviving an idea that hasn't gotten much policy attention in decades: diversity in public schools.Good article from Ed Week Leaders about two school leaders in Vancouver, Washington getting down to the nitty-gritty of what affects student life and then, student performance.
When a school reaches a stable level of about 30 percent middle-class students, the lower-income students achieve at higher levels and the privileged students do no worse, says Halley Potter, the author of one of the Century Foundation reports. Similarly, the racial achievement gap shrinks in schools that have less than a "supermajority" of 60 percent of any one race.
“The district has really educated itself about the areas of poverty and trauma and mental health,” says Staci Boehlke, the center coordinator at Fruit Valley. “It’s not, ‘We’ve got to get this fixed so they can learn.’ It’s just part of the fabric.”Selah School district has decided to postpone any changes to their bell times for next year. On the other hand, Evergreen Public Schools will be changing their bell times to nearly an hour later for high schools.
“To me, the community-schools work is critical to finishing that transformation,” he says. “So much of this is about recognizing the power that comes from alignment. It’s not just about additional resources.”
Any time the district finds a way to cut costs—by trimming miles off bus routes through a new GPS-mapping system, for example—it targets the freed-up funds toward its strategic vision, lending sustainability to the initiative by incorporating much of its funding into the annual operating budget rather than relying solely on philanthropy to subsidize it.
What's on your mind?
Comments
I also see that Seattle is installing new artificial turf.
Are they maintaining these fields any better than they do buildings?
http://www.wthr.com/story/27979749/trouble-in-the-turf-lack-of-synthetic-turf-testing-maintenance-puts-athletes-at-risk
As I previously reported, there is anecdotal evidence that the rubber turf fields may have health risks to those who use them. The feds are finally going to do a study.
HF
NEmom
Opting Out Sounding Better and Better
I agree with you that momsrising is less than transparent about who is running it, who is funding it and who it represents. But I don't think it is a bad group overall.
I am not sure that they understand all the issues at play in the City/Seattle Preschool proposed agreement, but they do support early learning. Early learning is not a bad thing, but it needs to be done right. It can't use space that SPS needs for K-12, and it can't perpetuate the two separate but unequal tracks for children with disabilities.
GL
NY Times on Oakland Schools
Includes this => on Broad Academy
When Mr. Broad first announced the initiative in 2001, he noted that the average urban schools leader lasted just over two years and had little preparation in finances or management.
The new academy, he said, would “dramatically change this equation“ by seeking candidates in educational circles as well as recruiting from corporate backgrounds and the military, introducing management concepts borrowed from business. Those chosen embark on a two-year fellowship, trained and mentored while working in their districts.
The fellows meet with speakers from think tanks, other school districts, charter networks and the business world. During one session last fall in New York, administrators from large districts shared a conference room with charter leaders and discussed challenges they have in common: how to recruit racial minorities to teaching, how to staff executive teams, and how to change punitive disciplinary cultures.
Broad-trained superintendents currently run districts in two dozen communities, including Boston, Broward County, Fla., and Philadelphia. They have lasted an average of four and three-quarter years, delivering incremental academic progress at best. Like others in the field, they have run up against the complexities of trying to improve schools bedeviled by poverty, racial disparities, unequal funding and contentious local politics.
Some prominent academy alumni have resigned after tumultuous terms. Mike Miles, the Dallas schools superintendent, quit last June after just three years, during which he battled teachers over new evaluation criteria and performance-based pay.
In Los Angeles, John Deasy stepped down as superintendent in the fall of 2014 after a turbulent tenure in which he testified against teachers’ unions during a landmark trial involving tenure and job protections, and presided over a botched rollout of a $1.3 billion plan to give all students iPads. That same year, John Covington abruptly resigned as chancellor of a state-operated district for the lowest performing schools in Detroit. Two years earlier, Jean-Claude Brizard resigned from the Chicago Public Schools after 17 months on the job and a bruising teachers’ strike.
With a current position of "Bye Bye Common Core"
Can Kasich win the Ohio Republican Primary?
Is this thrust against CCSS by politicians due to strong opposition to CCSS by so many in the public?
How about Hillary and Bernie where does each stand on Common Core?
Wonder what the "National Governor's Association" thinks about CCSS today?
Here is what Michelle Malkin thinks about Kasich and CCSS .. given at CPAC 2016. Malkin sees previous support for CCSS by Kasich.
-- Dan Dempsey
THREE and ONE HALF minutes of Michelle Malkin on CCSS.
At around Minute 4:30 Malkin states that in the past Kasich smeared those parents and teachers opposed to Common Core. At 6:30 Malkin goes after National Governors Association and those who wrote the CCSS in 2009. She names the connections of those who wrote the CCSS. --- great to see this put out there. By minute 8:00 she is done with CCSS
-- Dan Dempsey
A letter went out to Lafayette Spectrum families that states that there will be no more self-contained Spectrum programs in any elementary schools in Seattle starting in the 2016-2017 school year.
http://lafayettees.seattleschools.org/UserFiles/Servers/Server_12179/File/Communications/FAQ%20021016%20LH.pdf
There's no date on the letter, but the post was added to the Lafayette school site on 2/10/16.
-West Seattle parent
-West Seattle parent
https://ballotpedia.org/2016_presidential_candidates_on_education
Who knows if what candidates say and what each would do after election are similar?
-- Dan Dempsey
There is a document indicating that Jones spoke in favor of appointing Maggie O'Sullivan to Rainier Prep. O'Sullivan is the founding principal of Rainier Prep.
She is seeking early endorsements from Democratic Districts. Do these Democrats know of Erin Jones relationship to the corporate ed. reformers?
It's interesting that the administration continues to use communication services that they are fully aware are broken and send messages to the wrong families.
Leslie Harris has told Soup for Teachers she's looking into this latest fiasco.
--JvA
and maybe Erin Jones is their chosen bus driver.
-- Dan Dempsey
Enrollment planning does not respond. You'll get more information through a public records request. Are you loking for waitlists for next fall? They haven't made assignments using the school choice requests yet. The info won't be available until mid-April.
The language is confusing, but I think it is supposed to refer to the fact that you don't have to call or wait for a letter to find out your child's assignment. Hopefully they will add clarifying language so they don't get slammed with calls.
-just called
Rep. Pat Sullivan: 360-786-7858
Rep. Tana Senn: 360-786-7894
Rep. Joan McBride: 360-786-7848
Rep. Chris Reykdal: 360-786-7940
Rep. Christine Kilduff: 360= 786-7958
http://www.thenation.com/article/trump-has-become-a-racial-taunt-at-high-school-sporting-events/
Appalled
Rep. Pat Sullivan: 360-786-7858
Rep. Tana Senn: 360-786-7894
Rep. Joan McBride: 360-786-7848
Rep. Chris Reykdal: 360-786-7940
Rep. Christine Kilduff: 360-786-7958
Citizen Kane