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For some strange reason, I am always cynical about surveys. It seems like people spout off information, and use it to support their own causes. What really happens with the accumulated data anyway? For a few years we were able to evaluate our schools and their leaders in a very secretive system at the end of the the year. ...
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Texas has had its share of headaches when it comes to testing. Does anyone else remember the TECAT? That was a test that every Texas teacher had to take to keep on trucking. It was an absurd, expensive ordeal where teachers were treated like cattle because lawmakers weren't sure that they were educated enough ...
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My mother always used to say, ''Open the jar, and the worms will come out.'' This seemed to apply to almost any controversial situation. Bloggers are having a field day with a ''jar opening'' decision about school vouchers. On cnn.com we learn that Utah lawmakers have okayed vouchers for all students currently ...
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See the video posted on dallasnews.com showing a group headed to Austin to participate in a rally for vouchers.
Several private school parents said they need public funding so they don't have to skimp on other things to cover education costs. Public school parents at the rally said vouchers could help their children bail ...
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Eighth and tenth grade students in six Montgomery schools might have the opportunity to be in cutting edge classes for sex education. On washingtonpost.com an article called ''Schools Picked to Pilot Sex-Ed Lessons'', we get the latest about the ongoing controversy of the pilot program. Montgomery County school Superintendent ...
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Everyone wants to blame teachers for low test scores. After all, teachers are the easiest targets. I have to wonder how much money is being spent on all of the research studies about improving teacher quality. What about the time and effort spent on discussions about the No Child Left Behind Law? Are ...
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The ongoing dilemma about where to house and how to motivate middle school students is back in the news on newyorktimes.com. As any parent with a child this age will tell you, middle school students are an unusual lot. They come in a variety of sizes with all sorts of interesting personalities. If you teach them ...
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I knew it would happen. Yet another committee has decided that teachers are the ones to blame when students don't do well. After all, they can't do anything about the parents or living situations that some of these children might have, so according to dallasnews.com a new report stresses the improvement of ...
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