Well, that was a party. Here's hoping your state was more Michigan and less Florida. Now back to work. Here's some reading from the week.
Initial merit pay vote has troubles
In case you haven't followed my link elsewhere, here's Justin Parmenter's take on the newest development in North Carolina's quest to trash teaching.
Dozens of youths illegally employed to clean meat plants, Labor Dept. saysFrom the Washington Post, this appalling story about youths working in highly dangerous jobs, and the employer's efforts to hide it all from the authorities. Surprise--the youths are all Spanish-speaking.
Also from WaPo, one more story of Why We Can't Have Nice Things, and how current moral panic can trash just about anything, in spite of facts.
Yes, it's a lot of depressing stuff this week. This is a Newsweek story via MSN, and it gives folks in education an awful lot to think about.
Not that it's a surprise to anyone, but it's still a bit stunning to see it in print and official. In the Denver Post.
Courtesy of Paul Thomas, a useful guide to some actual science.
Nancy Bailey asks some questions about what Hanford may or may not really get about reading instruction.
From the New Yorker, so mind the paywall if you've already burned your free reads. A great dig into the culture wars and the women who have helped push them.
Sue Kingery Woltanski is a school board member in Florida, and she blogs at Accountabaloney. She has fears about the level of disinformation and distrust currently in play (and commenters show up to provide evidence). This is what Florida looks like on the ground right now.
Remember Summer Boismier, the English teacher who got in trouble over sharing the link to the Brooklyn Library's banned books program. The woman who got harassed by a bunch of conservatives (including the dudebro now in charge of Oklahoma education). Here's what she's been up to since then.
Jill Barshay at Hechinger (via KQED) unpacks some study that shows that--shocker--students aren't all that interested in logging on for extra work from an online tutor. Who would ever have guessed?
Texas politicians rake in millions from far-right Christian megadonors pushing private school vouchers
NBC news with the also-unsurprising story that school voucher supporters are spending a lot of money to rent some politicians.
I'm going to brag on my home town here, recently profiled in this Pittsburgh news outlet. This is where I have lived and worked for most of my life. It's not a bad little place.
At Forbes this week, I took a look at a policy memo by Helen Ladd about some problems inherent in charter schools as currently practiced.
I don't see the teen loneliness article as depressing, because Tacoma shows we know what to do.
ReplyDeleteThe Paul Thomas article was interesting about Marie Clay. I'm going to delve deeper into her theories.
Thanks for the articles, Peter!