Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Delia Armstrong-Busby : Delia Armstrong-Busby EducationQuest: Educational Octoberquest and the Lost Students



Monday, July 14, 2008

The Education Equality Project

The Public always has a place in our k-12 education system. I have attached a blog regarding the recent statements of the Education Equality Project. Leaders of this group include civic and organizational leaders such as Joel Klein, Al Sharpton, Corey Booker, Roy Romer and numerous others.
The issue is one of civic engagement. Civic engagement is essential to establishing the appropriate public scrutiny to enliven and strengthen the American education system.
Should we de-select the civic voices with whom we find dis-agreements? Or should we seek to incorporate all of the voices to enable the essential cultural changes to eliminate the historic mis education and under education trends of our society?
I say, now more than ever we need to attain the collective sophistication to make our schools better.



Friday, July 11, 2008
Written by: Alan Gottlieb

Coming to a press conference near you: The Education Equality Project. Led by NYC Schools Chancellor Joel Klein, a diminutive heavyweight, the EEP rolls into Denver Sunday for a 2:30 p.m. press conference.

That’s right. A press conference. On a Sunday afternoon. In the middle of summer. Oh well, I’ll be there to cover it in my Education News Colorado reporter hat. I guess this is what we get for hosting the convention this fall. After all, this is a project of Democrats for Education Reform. Whitney Tilson calls it “the teacher unions’ worst nightmare.”

The project sounds worthy:


“…a new organization focused on transforming America’s public schools and educational outcomes for high-needs students. The Project will challenge politicians, public officials, educators, union leaders, and others to view fixing public schools as the foremost civil rights issue of the early 21st Century. It will focus America’s attention on its highest needs students, who 54 years after Brown v. Board of Education, still receive far less educational opportunity and often struggle and fail in school.”



It’s studded with big names spanning the political spectrum – among them Geoffrey Canada, Corey Booker (rising star mayor of Newark), Chicago Supt. Arne Duncan, our own Peter Groff, the Ed Trust’s Kati Haycock, Roy Romer…the list goes on and on.

And it’s co-chaired by Joel Klein and the Rev. Al Sharpton. Talk about strange bedfellows!

So is this another high-wattage political stunt, or will this group insist on cutting through the happy-talk B.S. that permeates Eduworld? Sounds like a question I’d better ask Sunday.

Around here, certainly, there’s often a lot more spin than substance, and some of the local luminaries participating in Sunday’s press conference are spinners par excellence when it comes to our local schools. Count me skeptical until EEP proves me wrong.

So head on over to the Denver School of Science and Technology (2000 Valentia St) Sunday at 2:30, and see whether there’s more hot air outside or in.



This entry was posted on Friday, July 11th, 2008 at 12:05 pm and is filed under Reform. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

Leave a Reply
Name (required)

Mail (will not be published) (required)

Website




Security code (Required)*
To prove that you're not a bot, enter this code




Denver Post News
Time is ripe to fix education, experts assert
Rocky Mountain News
DPS plan seeks involvement of parents for 5,280 minutes
Group aims to fashion cure for ailing education system
DPS pay plan loses its luster

Blogroll
Colorado Charter Schools
Colorado Pols
D-Ed Reckoning
DCTA President's blog
Ed is Watching
Edspresso
Education Gadfly's Flypaper
Eduwonk
Eduwonkette
Great Education Colorado Blog
Intercepts
Joanne Jacobs
Manual Math Revolution
Mike Klonsky's Small Talk
School of Blog
Spencer Speaks
The Education Wonks
The Quick and the Ed
This Week in Education
Whitney Tilson's School Reform Blog
Archives
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
Categories
Accountability
Achievement gaps
Alternative pathways
Autonomy
Business involvement
CDE and state board of ed.
Classroom
ECE
Global context
Governance
Grad/dropout rates
High school reform
Higher ed
Integration
Legislative/political follies
Legislature 2008
middle grades
Parental & community involvement
Philanthropic involvement
Poverty
Pre-K
Principal quality
Reform
Research
School choice
School funding and finance
Schools of ed
Small schools
Stupidity
Teacher pay
Teacher unions
Teaching and learning
Testing
The national stage
Uncategorized
Recent Posts
North principal departure is bad news, plain and simple
Ed. Equality Project: hot air on a summer Sunday?
Let a thousand charters bloom
The elephant in the room
Let’s place ProComp in context
Maybe CSAP is too low-stakes
Preschool not serving those who need it most
Good news: candidates shun NEA Panderpalooza
Read the great ProComp debate here
Of No Dentist Left Behind, and ignorant legislators
Login/Logout
Login
Entries RSS
Comments RSS
WordPress.com



Schools for Tomorrow Blog is proudly powered by WordPress
Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS).