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Keyword: teaching

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  • A mid-career change to high school teaching provides lesson in futility

    06/09/2008 6:20:33 AM PDT · by dawn53 · 111 replies · 145+ views
    St. Pete Times ^ | Sunday, June 8, 2008 | Melanie Hubbard
    I should have put the year I took up boxing on my resume. It's sixth period, my first day teaching high school, and my regular Junior English class refuses to settle down. I give them a brief talk, amid the jostling and visiting (and the walking, and the love taps, and the food trading, and the vaulting over desks) about respect. I will respect them, I say, and they will respect me.
  • Teacher Dies Minutes After Retiring From 36-Year Career

    06/02/2008 6:38:34 AM PDT · by AngieGal · 19 replies · 75+ views
    Fox News ^ | June 01, 2008 | Fox News
    An elementary school teacher retiring after a 36-year career died of a heart attack moments after saying goodbye to her final class for the summer. Sharon Smith, 57, died Friday on the way to a hospital according to her niece, Doreatha Jackson. Smith was a fourth grade teacher at Molino Park Elementary School, where she had worked since 1972.
  • Assaults on Teachers: Not Just for Crackers Anymore

    05/10/2008 1:39:23 AM PDT · by 2ndDivisionVet · 55 replies · 594+ views
    Townhall ^ | May 10, 2008 | Mary Grabar
    One of the unwritten codes for white teachers teaching in public schools has been that when it comes time to discipline a black student, the task should be left to another black teacher or administrator. This is to avoid the possibility that the student might mistake the discipline for just another display of the Eurocentric-White-Power-That-Rules-the-World-and-Keeps-All-People-of-Color-Enslaved-Hegemony. Sometimes, however, a white teacher needs to make requests in the classroom, like telling a poor, disadvantaged student to turn off the blaring music on his iPod. There are classes and workshops for teachers on how to do this “sensitively.” While being interviewed on National...
  • The age of educational romanticism

    05/05/2008 1:07:38 PM PDT · by forkinsocket · 10 replies · 583+ views
    The New Criterion ^ | May 2008 | Charles Murray
    This is the story of educational romanticism in elementary and secondary schools —its rise, its etiology, and, we have reason to hope, its approaching demise. Educational romanticism consists of the belief that just about all children who are not doing well in school have the potential to do much better. Correlatively, educational romantics believe that the academic achievement of children is determined mainly by the opportunities they receive; that innate intellectual limits (if they exist at all) play a minor role; and that the current K-12 schools have huge room for improvement. Educational romanticism characterizes reformers of both Left and...
  • The Ed Schools’ Latest—and Worst—Humbug

    04/24/2008 8:30:15 AM PDT · by Dawnsblood · 1 replies · 39+ views
    City Journal ^ | Sol Stern
    New York City teems with many more of these schools than any other district in the country. A handful have been around for years, including El Puente Academy for Peace and Justice, with its wacky hip-hop curriculum (“An F for Hip-Hop 101,” Summer 1998). But Mayor Michael Bloomberg and schools chancellor Joel Klein’s project to break up many of the system’s dysfunctional large high schools and replace them with new small schools has spawned many more. The Department of Education’s website lists at least 15 of the new small high schools that either are explicitly named as social justice schools...
  • Right way to grade teachers

    04/07/2008 5:28:14 AM PDT · by moderatewolverine · 30 replies · 40+ views
    The New York Sun ^ | April 7, 2008 | Randi Weingarten
    Chancellor Joel Klein of New York City's Department of Education and superintendents from other parts of the state are opposing language in the budget bill clarifying last year's agreement that teachers shouldn't be evaluated on student test scores; they should be assessed on how they use test scores and other data to adjust their teaching to help students improve. This enlightened approach to tenure decisions is something that the Legislature and the governor agreed last year was eminently reasonable. The approach is akin to judging doctors on how they use the results of blood tests, X-rays, and the like to...
  • Retired Teacher Reveals He Was Illiterate Until Age 48

    02/12/2008 7:51:36 AM PST · by grundle · 210 replies · 959+ views
    10news.com ^ | February 11, 2008
    OCEANSIDE, Calif. -- John Corcoran graduated from college and taught high school for 17 years without being able to read, write or spell.Corcoran's life of secrecy started at a young age. He said his teachers moved him up from grade to grade. Often placed in what he calls the "dumb row," the images of his tribulations in the classroom are still vividly clear. "I can remember when I was 8 years old saying my prayers at night saying please god tomorrow when it's my turn to read please let me read. You just pretend that you are invisible and when...
  • Common Learning Agenda Blues

    01/08/2008 9:57:25 AM PST · by bs9021 · 88+ views
    Campus Report ^ | January 8, 2008 | Malcolm Kline
    Common Learning Agenda Blues by: Malcolm A. Kline, January 08, 2008 Those who argue that colleges and universities lack standards may be incorrect but only technically. “Under the current curriculum guidelines, students must take four humanities and two social science classes that could include history and political science,” Bucknell’s Nick Mozal writes of that Pennsylvania university’s “Common Learning Agenda.” “However, there is no course requirement to teach students the core history and cultural heritage of the United States.” “Students have difficulty even finding such a course.” Mozal presides over the Bucknell University Conservatives Club, which publishes The Counterweight newspaper, in...
  • D.C. Mulls A Return To Pre-K-8 Schools

    12/30/2007 5:25:04 AM PST · by Amelia · 36 replies · 68+ views
    Washington Post ^ | December 30, 2007 | V. Dion Haynes
    Reflecting a shifting national philosophy on how to educate middle-grade students, D.C. Schools Chancellor Michelle A. Rhee is considering expanding several elementary schools to include students up to eighth grade, going back to a pre-kindergarten through eighth-grade structure once the norm in the District. Rhee has been discussing the idea with parents and teachers for the past several weeks as part of her proposal to close nearly two dozen schools. The idea is being met with skepticism from elementary school parents who do not want adolescents in the buildings with their young children and elementary school teachers who are opposed...
  • Why Academia Leans to the Left

    12/27/2007 11:49:19 AM PST · by GodGunsGuts · 49 replies · 321+ views
    Creation Evolution Headlines ^ | December 26, 2007
    Why do PhDs in academia tend to be politically liberal? A paragraph in Science magazine’s feature “Random Samples” on December 21 suggested a reason: conservatives value other goals, like going into business to make money, or choosing to stay home and raise a family... ... It appears that conservatives are the fittest, working hard to pass on their genes, while liberals are like parasites, advancing primarily by taking over the host (the classroom) and churning out clones to infect other cells. A university setting is a contrived, unnatural environment where the parasites thrive. In the open air of true academic...
  • Elementary Math Grows Exponentially Tougher

    12/26/2007 9:10:30 PM PST · by Amelia · 211 replies · 375+ views
    Washington Post ^ | December 26, 2007 | Maria Glod
    ...Tegethoff used to teach what she called "very boring math," using worksheets of addition and subtraction problems. Now her lessons delve into algebraic thinking. By the third grade, Viers Mill Elementary students are solving equations with letter variables. Long considered a high school staple, introductory algebra is fast becoming a standard course in middle school for college-bound students. That trend is putting new pressure on such schools as Viers Mill to insert the building blocks of algebra into math lessons in the earliest grades. Disappointing U.S. scores on international math tests have added to the urgency of a movement that...
  • Battle-scarred 'sub' in L.A. barrios speaks out

    11/19/2007 4:40:44 AM PST · by radar101 · 23 replies · 315+ views
    WND ^ | November 16, 2007 | Migdia Chinea
    Hi, my name is Migdia Chinea and I'm a recovering LAUSD "substitute." Oh, I'm also UCLA-educated with honors, refined, empathetic, college-level Spanish fluent and a Googleable professional screenwriter. To make ends meet during hard economic times, I became a "substitute teacher" for the Los Angeles Unified School District, or LAUSD – or to put it more kindly, a "guest teacher." As a guest LAUSD teacher I thought I would be an asset, but the system has never appreciated nor taken advantage of my educational or professional hard-earned accomplishments. There's no teaching going on at LAUSD – only confinement of...
  • Teacher: Call me 'Mister' (Men in elementary classrooms scarce)

    10/20/2007 5:59:25 AM PDT · by Diana in Wisconsin · 26 replies · 803+ views
    Madison.com ^ | October 20, 2007 | Susan Troller
    It takes a big man to teach small children. At 6 feet 5 inches tall, Josh Reineking towers over his kindergarten students at Stephens Elementary School, but it's actually his large heart and patient, steady manner that keep his lively charges learning, and in line. It doesn't hurt that he finds it easy to laugh, and thinks on his feet. Oh, and he also doesn't mind folding up like a Swiss Army knife to fit in a kindergarten-size chair. "My friends, my friends. Hands up for a message," Reineking says quietly and firmly as his class of 5-year-olds begin squirming...
  • Academic Cesspools

    10/17/2007 5:54:58 AM PDT · by Kaslin · 5 replies · 116+ views
    Townhall.com ^ | October 17, 2007 | Walter E.Williams
    he average taxpayer and parents who foot the bill know little about the rot on many college campuses. "Indoctrinate U" is a recently released documentary, written and directed by Evan Coyne Maloney, that captures the tip of a disgusting iceberg. The trailer for "Indoctrinate U" can be seen here. "Indoctrinate U" starts out with an interview of Professor David Clemens, at Monterey Peninsula College, who reads an administrative directive regarding new course proposals: "Include a description of how course topics are treated to develop a knowledge and understanding of race, class, and gender issues." Clemens is fighting the directive, which...
  • 'Why are you sweating?' (I asked all 140 of my eighth-grade students to divide 10 by 2.)

    09/29/2007 4:14:11 AM PDT · by shrinkermd · 59 replies · 108+ views
    LA Times ^ | 26 September 2007 | Lance Chapman
    That was a week and a half ago. I am thrilled today that almost all of my students can divide and convert fractions to decimals (based on a test). I am scheduling one-on-one tutoring with the other students to ensure that they will be able to do so, too. I realized that what they needed was a recipe, something to follow every time so that it was systematic. I was kind of intimidated that we would get so far behind in the actual physical science material that we wouldn’t be at the level necessary to take the first periodic assessment...
  • Florida Police Arrest Teacher Who Used Abortion to Cover Up Sexual Abuse

    09/23/2007 8:46:13 PM PDT · by monomaniac · 25 replies · 1,254+ views
    LifeNews.com ^ | September 21, 2007 | Steven Ertelt
    by Steven ErteltLifeNews.com EditorSeptember 21, 2007 Boyntown Beach, FL (LifeNews.com) -- Police in southern Florida have arrested a public school teacher who is accused of having sex with two of his students and using an abortion to cover up his actions. Santaluces High School drama teacher Andrew Foster, 29, allegedly started having sex with the students last year and got one of them pregnant. Foster was arrested yesterday in Collier County by the U.S. Marshals South Florida Fugitive Task Force.The teacher had been on the lam for about two weeks until authorities located him at a hotel in Immokalee. After...
  • Ex-Howard (MD) teacher pleads guilty to sex offense (Kirsten Ann Kinley)

    08/28/2007 7:09:12 PM PDT · by RDTF · 33 replies · 1,604+ views
    The Baltimore Sun ^ | August 28, 2007 | John-John Williams IV
    Former Howard County teacher Kirsten Ann Kinley pleaded guilty Tuesday in Circuit Court to one count of third-degree sex offense for improper sexual conduct with a 15-year-old boy at her Columbia apartment more than two years ago. Similar charges against her involving a second boy were dropped after he refused to cooperate with prosecutors. Neither youth was one of her students. As part of a plea agreement, Kinley, 27, a former special- education teacher at Marriotts Ridge High School in Marriottsville, could receive up to 18 months in jail. She is to be sentenced Nov. 15. -snip-
  • Leaving art out of history

    08/26/2007 5:18:20 PM PDT · by ken21 · 7 replies · 573+ views
    the lost angeles times ^ | 08.26.07 | richard pells
    The vast majority of American historians no longer regard American culture as an essential area of study. Instead, what they care about is social history -- the struggles and hard-won accomplishments of women, workers, African Americans, Latinos, Asians and Native Americans in a country often inhospitable to the poor and the powerless.
  • Get politics, therapy out of classrooms

    08/26/2007 2:25:54 PM PDT · by mathprof · 21 replies · 807+ views
    baltimore sun ^ | August 26, 2007 | Victor Davis Hanson
    Last week I went shopping in our small rural hometown, where my family has attended the same public schools since 1896. Without exception, all six generations of us - whether farmers, housewives, day laborers, businesspeople, writers, lawyers or educators - were given a good, competitive K-12 education. But after a haircut, I noticed that the 20-something cashier could not count out change. The next day, at the electronics outlet store, another young clerk could not read - much less explain - the basic English of the buyer's warranty. At the food market, I listened as a young couple argued over...
  • Parents sue over teacher quality

    08/22/2007 9:43:31 AM PDT · by SteveH · 29 replies · 874+ views
    The Oakland Tribune ^ | 8/22/2007 | Shirley Dang
    Parents sue over teacher quality Suit claims new instructors counted as highly qualified By Shirley Dang The Oakland Tribune Article Last Updated: 08/22/2007 02:41:10 AM PDT Parents and students from the Hayward, Los Angeles and West Contra Costa school districts filed a federal lawsuit Tuesday against the U.S. Department of Education alleging that the department broke with laws meant to ensure a quality teacher in each classroom. When Congress passed the No Child Left Behind Act in 2001, lawmakers specified that teachers needed to be credentialed and teach in a subject where they received proper training in order to be...