Depending on where you are, you're about halfway through the school year (we just crossed the line this week). I remember it as the point at which I started to deal with the mountain of material that I needed to fit into an ever-shrinking spot. File that under Feelings I'm Glad I Don't Have To Experience Any More.
Shortish list this week, but good stuff all around. Remember to share.
Legislation could lead to more public schools to becoming chartersFlorida's leaders keep trying to answer the question, "How can we make it easier to privatize public schools?"
The indispensable Mercedes Schneider transcribed this interview, and it's exhausting just to read how hard M4L co-founder and comms professional Tiffany Justice works to not answer the questions she's asked.
Peter Happ writes about a call for PA to put first things first for Penn Capital Star. We can hope.
At Popular Information, Juss Legum finds some spots in Florida where folks seem to have decided that enough is enough with the book banning. Congrats to the people on the ground doing the work.
From Salon, via MSN, one more explanation of why trying to fix the economy via education is not a viable plan.
Speaking of dumb ideas from people who don't understand schools.
Thomas Ultican with another historical profile of an important education figure.
In which Jose Luis Vilson does a Zoom interview with a room full of third and fourth graders on his birthday.
If the secretary is really looking for some projects, Nancy Bailey has some suggestions.
If you're not familiar with the Claremont Institute, Jan Resseger can bring you up to speed on this crew of right-wing culture snipes.
Gregory Sampson looks at a great new trend-- licensing the name, image, and likeness of young athletes. What could possibly go wrong?
Requiring the Disruption of the School Day to Allow Recruitment to Certain Patriotic Organizations is Not Small Government.
Nothing in Florida gets past Sue Kingery Woltanski, including this wackadoo bill to require schools to open their doors to "patriotic organizations" for recruitment purposes.
For Choice Week, I wrote a Forbes.com piece about the real obstacles to school choice.
Nancy has some really excellent ideas!
ReplyDeleteRebecca deCoca