EDITORIAL: Howard Students Succeed Through Civil Rights Movement Strategy
THE WASHINGTON INFORMER — Watching students from Howard employ a strategy proven to be successful during the civil rights movement illustrated several positive things including, not definitely not limited to, the importance of Blacks knowing our history.
read morePrince George’s School Structure Remains Unchanged
THE WASHINGTON INFORMER — ANNAPOLIS — After more than three months of working on recommendations to improve the Prince George’s County public school structure, nothing will change for now. A proposal to allow elected members of the school board to select a vice chair and create an inspector general office died in a Senate committee on Monday, the last day of the Maryland General Assembly.
read moreCivil Rights Groups to Congress: Betsy DeVos is Approving Plans That Violate ESSA
U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos is approving plans that fly in the face of the Every Student Succeeds Act’s protections for vulnerable children, according to more than a dozen civil rights groups, including the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights.
read moreThe unfinished business of school discipline
“Unfortunately, not all students were equal beneficiaries of these improvements. The non-partisan U.S. Government Accountability Office examined how school discipline practices affect black students, boys, and students with disabilities compared to their classmates. Its report was developed at the request of Representatives Bobby Scott (D-VA) and Jerrold Nadler (D-NY) and was released in March of this year.”
read moreNew Report on Student Internet Access at Home Shows Persisting Digital Divide
The report was required under the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) and was supposed to be released in June 2017. When the deadline was missed, the Alliance for Excellent Education joined the Consortium for School Networking (CoSN) and 18 other organizations in a coalition letter calling for it to be released as soon as possible, given the critical information it reveals about home access to high-speed broadband internet, especially for historically underserved students.
read moreTrump Fails in Bid to Slash Education Budget – Education Week
The new spending level approved by Congress, after months of delay, amounts to a broad rejection of the more-austere budget proposal released last year by Trump and Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos. The president and the secretary sought to eliminate some department programs and cut back others, and create two new major school choice initiatives.
read more5 Ways to Cut the College Price Tag
“Working as a Financial Aid Counselor, families often ask me how they can pay for college. More often than not this conversation takes place during the student’s senior year in high school. As a first-generation college student, there are things I wish my family and I had known to help us save on our college bill. These are a few things that families can do to help cut the cost of college:”
read moreVIDEO: CCEE Meeting Webcast for April 12, 2018
Live and recent hosted webcasts of the California Collaborative for Educational Excellence (CCEE) meetings.
read moreCOMMENTARY: How Schools Have Successfully Prevented Violence – Education Week
After every school shooting, we ask how the horrific tragedy happened and whether anything could have been done to prevent it. In the aftermath of the Parkland, Fla., shooting, it came to light that law-enforcement officials had not followed up on a tip they received in January about accused perpetrator Nikolas Cruz’s concerning behavior. We are not asking the right questions soon enough. Did anyone see warning signs? Could anyone have taken action?
read moreEarly childhood educators learn new ways to spot trauma triggers, build resiliency in preschoolers
A hug may be comforting to many children, but for a child who has experienced trauma, it may not feel safe.
read moreOPINION: The HBCU Community Needs Bipartisan Support
THE MADISON TIMES — “My experience as a former HBCU president and now leader of TMCF, working on behalf of our 47 publicly-supported HBCUs, gives me a broad perspective on the federal government’s partnership with HBCUs, as delivered through this event’s multiple listening sessions and direct engagement opportunities with members of Congress and senior leadership within the Trump Administration.”
read moreVIDEO: 2018: The Year of ESSA
Crisis in urban education
“School is too much about conformity, and that can be toxic to black youth who get the message that they must abandon behaviors and ways of expressing themselves to make themselves acceptable in a white-dominated society, said Emdin, an associate professor at Columbia University’s Teachers College. He is the author of The New York Times bestseller, ‘For White Folks Who Teach in the Hood and the Rest of Y’all Too.'”
read moreEquity Matters video debuts
NSBA’s equity video, produced for the annual conference in San Antonio, debuted at the Saturday General Session. “Equity Matters” shines a spotlight on the importance of educational equity.
read moreOPINION: MLK50: Fifty Years after Kerner and King, Racism Still Matters
THE MADISON TIMES — Fifty years ago, the nation was rocked by the brutal and public assassination of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Eerily echoing the title of King’s final book “Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community?”, his murder sent a powerful shock wave through the soul of America resulting in urban rebellions springing up in over 100 cities and placing the nation at a political and social crossroads.
read moreCOMMENTARY: When It Comes to ‘Dreamers,’ Schools Have a Trump Problem – Education Week
President Donald Trump chose Easter Sunday to again vilify the children of immigrants, falsely claiming that dangerous “caravans” of immigrants are crossing the border to take advantage of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. This follows the president’s implications earlier this year that young immigrants were fording the Rio Grande River simply to join the cross-border gang MS-13 and infiltrate our schools.
read moreMarch for Our Lives Milwaukee: The Youth are in Power
THE MADISON TIMES — “What adults fail to realize, we are just getting started. Our age does not limit our power,” said (student) Tatiana Washington. “I am urging you to vote responsibly because we are scared for our lives.”
read moreCOMMENTARY: We need to revive King’s campaign against poverty
THE MADISON TIMES — In the last years of his life, Dr. King turned his attention to the plague of war, poverty and continued racial injustice. He understood that the war on poverty had been lost in the jungles of Vietnam. The Civil Rights Movement had successfully eliminated legal segregation and won blacks the right to vote. Now it was time to turn to this unfinished business. We should not let the trauma of his death divorce us from the drama of his life, nor the riots that came in reaction to erase the agenda that he put forth for action
read moreEvent to Explore American Education 35 Years After ‘A Nation at Risk’ – Politics K-12 – Education Week
The Reagan Institute Summit on Education will feature seven former secretaries of education, including Bill Bennett, who served under President Ronald Reagan; Lamar Alexander, who served under President George H.W. Bush; Richard Riley, who served under President Bill Clinton; Margaret Spellings, and Rod Paige, who served under President George W. Bush; Arne Duncan and John King, who served under President Barack Obama.
read moreNorthside Teen Job Fair Attracts Students, Local Business and Organizations
THE MILWAUKEE COURIER — Hundreds of teens flocked to the Washington Park Library Wednesday afternoon to participate in the Milwaukee Public Library’s Northside teen job fair. Over 15 employers and organizations such as Summerfest, City Year Milwaukee and the Milwaukee County Zoo had booths at the fair, many companies hiring summer interns or employees.
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