Skip to main contentRemainders: In California, a 40-year-old teacher evaluation law
By | June 4, 2013, 1:42am UTC - In California, a 40-year-old law is inducing teacher evaluations based on test scores. (CIR/Hechinger)
- A mom confesses that she’s just out of steam on parenting by the end of the school year. (Jen Hatmaker)
- Sara Mosle: We need a Race to the Cool to air-condition schools during the hot summer. (Opinionator)
- Central Brooklyn sixth-graders who say they don’t get homework rock a breakout metal band. (Noisey)
- The gains for children that the federal stimulus fueled are being whittled away. (American Prospect)
- A visiting poet offers an account of a morning working with New York City students. (Brooklyn Rail)
- Alan Singer: Newsday’s reports about cheating on Long Island reflect a battle against teachers. (HuffPo)
- In a letter, city officials point out that New York City suspends students less often than Baltimore. (Times)
- A teacher who wrote about tenure changes says the effects are far-reaching. (School Justice Solutions)
- Australia is running into cost and execution issues when replicating Joel Klein’s policies. (Australian)
- MORE, a UFT caucus, wants a “coordinated grievance campaign” against evaluations. (GS in Brief)