Skip to main contentRemainders: 60 percent more high-poverty schools since 2000
By | May 29, 2013, 11:35pm UTC - Nationally, the number of high-poverty schools increased by 60 percent since 2000. (Hechinger)
- A teacher says due process, not value added scores, is the real fight in teacher evals. (Accountable Talk)
- The advocacy group NYCAN issued a paper supporting charter schools’ right to have pre-K. (GS in Brief)
- The principal of Aviation High School also graduated from it, surprised to be a mechanic. (DNA Info)
- A side project by Amplify staff is offering robot classes for high school students. (Robots in the LaRE)
- A mother worries that technology will distract her son and his classmates from exams. (Insideschools)
- Jeb Bush cited flimsy research when making the case for expanding Michigan’s charter sector. (HuffPo)
- The head of a national charter group’s New York City history involves cabs and big plans. (Flypaper)
- A principal who runs a tight ship cautions against authoritative language and ideas. (Practical Theory)
- Diane Ravitch panned the parent trigger activist whose work ended a principal’s career. (DR’s Blog)
- Rick Hess says Ravitch offered some legitimate criticism but crossed the line of decency. (Straight Up)
- Lisa Hansel: The Common Core needs a common curriculum; teachers won’t object. (Core Knowledge)