GoBigEd |
Reporting on key Nebraska K-12 education issues on a daily basis from Susan Darst Williams, a writer who lives at the base of Mount Laundry, Nebraska. To subscribe to this blog's mailing list, and see a variety of other education features and information, visit the main education website, www.GoBigEd.com |
Wednesday, February 28, 2007
Posted
7:45 PM
by Susan Darst Williams
'PRESERVE ACADEMIC FREEDOM AT ALL COSTS' GUYS ARE KIDDIE DIDDLERS, BUT . . . The subject is a tough one: protecting Internet freedoms while protecting our children from the horrible exploitation of Internet kiddie porn. Of course I'm NOT for kiddie porn, and of course, I'm conflicted because I'm also very troubled by calls on government to censor anything, anywhere, including in schools. I revere the First Amendment and hate the idea of government "thought police" deciding what people should be able to see and learn. But more than that, I'm troubled because I can't BELIEVE there isn't better judgment among our school officials and political leaders about keeping horrible junk away from kids in the first place. You know: the kind of junk that's so bad, good-hearted people are being forced to demand censorship in school curricula, school libraries and on the Internet. We shouldn't need to even be having these conversations, much less these lawsuits and criminal cases. But even more than weak-kneed school gatekeepers, I'm troubled by people who would seek to wrap themselves in the American flag and argue for "freedom of speech" in contending that everyone should be allowed to view pornography -- even child porno -- the very concept of which, as the mother of four beautiful daughters, just crushes me. That's why it's discouraging and distressing to learn that a big shot with the ACLU -- who has argued vehemently in the past that kiddie porn ought not to be censored -- who's supposed to be fighting to protect our rights and freedoms as a knight in shining armor in our best-in-the-world legal system -- is now in court himself on -- guess what? -- a kiddie porn charge. See: www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=54471 Here's hoping that school boards and school officials will err on the side of caution more, and maybe listen to conservatives more and maybe even women more, on these issues. I don't know if liberals are kinkier when it comes to sex and morality, but judging from observing the culture for the last 25 years, I think maybe they are. It's a factor we'd better keep in mind when setting school policies. As for the higher trust in women than men on morality issues, I just have noticed that the vast majority of people who have trouble with porno in general and kiddie porn in particular are men. For what it's worth . . . more women should be more vocal on this facet of child protection, and could really make a difference. (0) comments Tuesday, February 27, 2007
Posted
12:10 PM
by Susan Darst Williams
IS NOT THE ANSWER; SECEDING FROM FEDERAL FUNDING IS Nebraskans, take note: most of the proposals now circulating in the Legislature and elsewhere around the state for reforming K-12 education are demonstrably counter-productive. “Free” school-based preschool? “Free” all-day kindergarten? “Free” social services in schools? More governance, in the form of a soon-to-be-statewide Learning Community and centralized Educational Service Units? These, and more, are all doomed to fail – because “more, more, more” isn’t the answer. And the facts prove it. Here’s just one: did you know the average Nebraska school was spending $2,471.62 per pupil in the 1981-82 school year, but that rose to $8,012.96 per pupil in 2004-05? That’s according to the Nebraska Department of Education, http://ess.nde.state.ne.us. That’s a spending increase of 325% in 23 years. Has quality increased by anywhere near that level? Or has it declined? Based on the reading, writing and arithmetic skills of people in their teens, 20s and 30s, observers would have to say the latter. But the more we slip into the nationalization of our schools through accepting federal funding and being forced to do school the feds’ way, the more expensive schooling is becoming, and the less effective it is. Federal funding is what brought us Goals 2000, School to Work, No Child Left Behind and now our significantly dumbed-down learning standards that are boilerplated with almost every other state in the Union. Federal funding is why most of our public schools use boneheaded reading and math curriculum instead of what works – because federal funding backs the stuff that DOESN’T. Federal funding is what is tying our school administrators’ hands on so many counter-productive policies, maintaining the outrageous racial achievement gap despite our best intentions to close it, and invading everybody’s privacy on a regular basis with federally-mandated data collection on students – including those in private schools and homeschools -- down to the microrecord level. Ironically, although it is federally-funded testing that is demonstrating the shortcomings in our educational system – NAEP, the National Assessment of Education Progress -- it is federal funding that Nebraska schools need to escape if we have any hope of doing a better job for our kids. Spending more money, starting more kids in organized schooling at earlier ages, hiring more people to work in schools, crafting more standards, employing more people to regulate and enforce those standards, training more educators how to carry out more programs, spending more time and money on technology and record-keeping to keep track of it all, and making kids devote longer hours in school each day and give up more and more weeks of vacation each year, all wind up costing taxpayers MORE money, and equipping students LESS well to join the ranks of the grown-up world. AA-OO-GAH! Listen up! A New York Times article last week exposed the truth about the push by teachers’ unions and educrats to get more funding for schools, more years of schooling for each child, and more hours in school, using National Assessment of Educational Progress test scores for 12th graders in 2005. Those scores are going downhill despite spending increases in real dollars of over 20% in the last decade alone. The average high-school senior in 2005 had 360 more hours of instruction than the average senior in 1990. Yet the percentage of seniors whose reading was deemed “proficient” has dropped to 35%, from 40%, since 1992. And of the 2005 seniors tested, 39% lacked even basic high school math skills. See: www.nytimes.com/2007/02/23/education/23tests.html?_r=4&ref=us&oref=login&oref=slogin&oref=slogin&oref=slogin You can read more about the national results, although they don’t break out Nebraska’s at the 12th grade level here, on: http://nationsreportcard.gov/reading_math_grade12_2005/s0046.asp What are we to do? Well, here’s just one suggestion: We ought to withdraw NOW from federal funding. According to the audited financial reports of Nebraska school districts on the state’s website, http://ess.nde.state.ne.us, federal dollars supplied 8.9% of what it took to run Nebraska’s schools last year -- $224 million of the total of $2.5 billion. Yes, it would hurt to do without that $224 million. But oh, what our kids would gain. Let’s do it for them. For our businesses and farms. For our future. We could dooooooo this, Nebraskans. Let’s! (3) comments Sunday, February 25, 2007
Posted
8:43 PM
by Susan Darst Williams
COULD BE A PRODUCTIVE ADDITION TO THE OMAHA METRO ED WAR EFFORT A new committee, the Metro Student Achievement Steering Committee, is forming with a goal of helping parents, students, educators and others understand and take part in efforts to improve achievement in Omaha area public schools. Leaders include Bob Bell, former president of the Omaha Chamber of Commerce; Omaha World-Herald publisher John Gottschalk; Douglas County Commissioner Chris Rodgers; Omaha By Design executive director Connie Spellman and Millard Public Schools Board President Brad Burwell.
Posted
8:28 PM
by Susan Darst Williams
LOOK OUT, OR WE'LL GET RUN OVER BY THE SOCIALISM BUS Flashing yellow light, bigtime, about Omaha Sen. Gwen Howard's compromise bill in the Nebraska Legislature. It would result in the hiring of countless more nonteaching staff members, primarily to conduct social work services within the public schools. The intent is laudable -- to try to "level the playing field" so that kids of all demographic groups and family backgrounds have equal educational opportunity. Often, their approaches to school are inequitable because of social problems -- poverty, parental drug addiction, lack of transportation resulting in absenteeism, and so forth. But the pricetag on school social work is enormous, and not just in dollars and cents. It also continues the destructive trend toward socialistic schools that focus on just about everything BUT academics. Study after study shows that the more nonteaching personnel you put into a public school, the lower the quality of the academic performance. That's because therapeutic tangents and social engineering are emphasized above content. It's counter-productive, and clearly so. The Howard compromise is also problematic because it incorporates the bad ideas of an overarching "learning community" that would destroy local control by locally-elected officials, and collectivizing the tax base, which would further remove accountability and cost controls from school spending decisionmaking.
Posted
8:19 PM
by Susan Darst Williams
NEBRASKA DISSES BRAINIAC STUDENTS A tip o' the hat to Omaha-based novelist and screenwriter Richard Dooling, whose op-ed in The World-Herald last week revealed that Nebraska habitually derogates its most accomplished high-school scholars by ignoring their competition in the pinnacle of academics, the 10-event Academic Decathlon. Dooling said Nebraska is the only state that does NOT provide any funding for student contestants among the 40 states that regularly send contestants to the national Academic Decathlon. Dooling said that's according to volunteer coordinator John Anstey of the University of Nebraska at Omaha. Meanwhile, Nebraska teams has finished in the top five for three years in a row. Dooling knows first-hand what a great program this is, that Nebraska educrats and politicians either hate or take for granted: his son was formerly an Aca-Deca contestant from Omaha Creighton Prep.
Posted
8:17 PM
by Susan Darst Williams
TO COMPETE IN ATLANTA Kudos to all participants in a recent robotics competition in west Omaha that drew teams from five states. Note this new item in the Go Big Ed Hall of Fame on www.GoBigEd.com: Junior robotics engineers from Omaha Mercy and Crete, Neb., high schools will compete in a national robotics competition in Atlanta in April after winning a competition at Elkhorn Mount Michael that drew 15 teams from five states. The students built robots that carried out preprogrammed tasks and then displayed teamwork skills after being paired randomly with another team to have their robots perform remote-controlled tasks. (2/24/07) (0) comments Thursday, February 22, 2007
Posted
11:09 AM
by Susan Darst Williams
SUPREME COURT WON'T REVIEW ANTI-CHRISTIAN SCHOOL HOLIDAY POLICY The U.S. Supreme Court has refused to review a school lawsuit out of New York City that challenges the constitutionality of an anti-Christian school policy. The decision Tuesday ends the appeal of the policy, which permits the display of the Jewish menorah and Islamic star and crescent in NYC public schools during the holidays of those two religions, but bans the display of Nativity scenes in the days approaching Christmas. The NYC schools have more than 1 million students in 1,200 schools. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit had upheld the constitutionality of the ban against the Christian symbols. Those judges said the ban on Christian symbols while allowing the minority religious symbols would teach "pluralism" and "tolerance." But it was a sharply-divided court. Usually, the U.S. Supreme Court will take appeals in which the lower court vote was close, and a clear constitutional issue has been raised. That didn't happen this time. No candy canes in THEIR stockings next year! Read more on www.thomasmore.org (0) comments Wednesday, February 21, 2007
Posted
11:05 AM
by Susan Darst Williams
BIG PHARMA BACKING OFF MANDATORY SEX DISEASE SHOTS It was outrageous: the governor of Texas signed an executive order requiring all sixth-grade girls to get vaccinated against the sexually-transmitted disease, Human Papilloma Virus, or they can't be in public school. Yes, HPV is thought to be a big cause of cervical cancer. But here's the deal: you can't get HPV by sneezing and sniffling, but by having SEX. Sure, sixth-grade girls go to bed with someone every night -- THEIR TEDDY BEARS!!! Not only that, but where does the GOVERNMENT come off outvoting PARENTS on their own children's health prevention, especially when you can only catch this disease by having SEX, which the vast majority of parents are doing a far better job than the schools in telling kids not to HAVE?!?!? Well, the normal people caused a hooboo, and now the silly governor is backing down, and according to the Wall Street Journal, the pharmaceutical company that pushed all of this through, Merck & Co., is backing down, too. The Journal report revealed that the vaccination, Gardasil, costs $360 for three doses. Ouch! Besides the stupidity and the cost, parents and physicians were concerned about exposing children to unforeseen side effects of the vaccine, which was recently OK'ed by the Food and Drug Administration. Apparently, HPV is on the wane. And it doesn't affect kids or young women, anyway. Good thing this one was headed off before it spread to Nebraska. At least, one would hope.
Posted
10:27 AM
by Susan Darst Williams
IN NORTH PHOENIX ARE NOT REGULAR PUBLIC SCHOOLS! Here's a nugget from Matthew Ladner of the Goldwater Institute: Just for fun, go to www.greatschools.net and call up a list of every middle school within 30 miles of the 85028 zip code. This zip code is in North Central Phoenix. You’ll get a list of 200 middle schools. Next rank the schools according to their performance on the Terra Nova reading exams. The top 4 middle schools in Phoenix region are charter schools, and six of the top 10. Rounding out the top ten are three magnet schools. In other words, nine of the top ten middle schools are all schools of choice. Only a single traditional public school makes the list -- at number 9. ------------------- Now, how many charter schools are there in Nebraska? None. How many magnet middle schools? Maybe one or two in the Omaha Public Schools, but they don't draw significantly from outside their own locales. Just another indication of what we're missing in Nebraska, by not having a "market economy" for education.
Posted
10:23 AM
by Susan Darst Williams
APPLE'S STEVE JOBS TAKES ON THE ED UNIONS http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/tech/news/4560691.html
Posted
10:15 AM
by Susan Darst Williams
FOR A REAL 'MARKET ECONOMY' FOR SCHOOLS Here's a well-worded essay on why we need to go 'way beyond the bureaucratic public school systems we have now. I didn't realize this: close to 25% of American children are now being educated OUTSIDE the public schools. Interesting, and important: http://www.edspresso.com/2006/11/the_future_of_american_schools.htm (0) comments Tuesday, February 20, 2007
Posted
12:00 PM
by Susan Darst Williams
Operation Pied Piper: Solving the OPS Hooboo, Plus . . . Reviving the Class I Schoo’s, Killing the ESU’s, And Ending Vaccination Blues Doesn’t the mess in the Legislature over what to do about the longstanding racial achievement gap within the Omaha Public Schools remind you more and more of The Cat in the Hat Comes Back? The more they try to fix it, the squirrely-er things get. Good thing there’s a great solution just waiting to be discovered: Announcing Operation Pied Piper: getting Nebraska’s low-income kids into better schools where their specific academic needs can be better met, and saving untold millions of tax dollars to boot. How it would work: tax credits for private scholarships. The Unicameral would pass a new state law authorizing dollar-for-dollar tax credits on state income tax in exchange for donations that individuals and corporations would give to private scholarship funds or to the private schools themselves, designated as being for tuition assistance for poor kids. Instead of paying taxes to the state, you’d donate money to a private scholarship fund. The money would provide tuition assistance to low-income kids to attend the private schools of their choice. The scholarships could be managed by the school boards already existing for private schools, or by 501(c)(3) private scholarship funds, new or existing, such as the Children’s Scholarship Fund of Omaha. Yes, there would be a “loss” of tax revenue because of these tax credits – but private-school tuition is less than half the average cost per pupil in the public schools. The west Omaha private school our daughter attends, which is great, costs $3,400 a year, vs. over $8,000 spent per year in the neighboring west Omaha public districts. So for every kid that we help get into a private school, we’d be saving over $4,000, equal to the tax dollars that WOULDN’T have to be spent for kids who would be educated in the private schools. It would far more than offset the “loss” of tax money because of the tax credits. Plus, we wouldn’t have all the problems and entanglements of voucher systems, which threaten the autonomy of the private schools, since with tax funding come government strings attached. Plus, and this is important: no doubt we would be getting many of the “worst” students out of the public schools. OPS has had a striking racial achievement gap for decades; many minority and low-income kids are “stuck” in failing schools but have no way of affording a better chance in private schools. Let’s say 1,000 more kids leave OPS because of this opportunity. They’d have to be from families with low incomes so that the kids qualify for lunch subsidies. A lot of them would have some of the lowest test scores in OPS. Think about it: that’d be removing many of the lowest test scores from the OPS average. Those 1,000 kids would be getting a better education in private schools, so they’d be happy. And the average test scores of our state’s flagship public school district, OPS, would go much higher!!!! That’d make the REST of us happy, too. We would look good on paper, nationally! That’s the name of the game in economic development. And we taxpayers want to fund success, not failure, with our tax dollars. Right? THINK ABOUT IT, PEOPLE!!!! Plus, we wouldn’t NEED no stinkin’ mega-bureaucratic new Learning Community, expensive new interdistrict magnet schools, socialistic revenue sharing schemes, or any of the other foolish “solutions” being presented in the Legislature. So far, seven states are offering tax credits for private scholarships, representing thousands of kids helped and millions of tax dollars saved. Those states are: Arizona, Florida, Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island. There’s already an active and successful private scholarship fund operating in Nebraska – the Children’s Scholarship Fund, based in Omaha. It’s providing tuition assistance this year for 1,860 kids to go to private schools around the state, including many who live within the Omaha Public Schools boundaries. Reportedly, twice as many kids applied for tuition assistance as there was money to share. The fund is scrupulous about offering only half as much as tuition really costs, so that the family has “buy-in.” It’s a great and wonderful program. I have a low-income friend whose daughters were able to go to a private K-8 school because of this, and she is eternally grateful. It would be greatly expanded with the dollar-for-dollar tax credit feature, private schools would have an incentive to expand or start up, and other funds could get started up fairly quickly. Surely there are some state senators who can see how much better this would be than the red-faced, turf-protecting, nationally-embarrassing WWF mess we’re in now. Let’s dooooooooo it. Let Your Senator Know You Want Your Class I Vote to Count The Class I country schools controversy comes before the Legislature’s Education Committee today. The hearing will be held at 1:30 p.m. in Hearing Room 1525 in the State Capitol. Contact Ed Committee members and your individual senator through www.GoBigEd.com/In_the_Unicameral/ Hope LB 234 gets through; see below for it and the other upcoming hearings: Tuesday, February 20 LB 30 (Hudkins) Provide for reorganization of certain Class I and Class VI school districts LB 234 (Dierks) Provide for reorganization of certain school districts as prescribed LB 357 (Flood) Provide for community schools, operating councils, elementary grants, and attendance centers LB 658 (Raikes) Change provisions relating to Class I and Class VI school districts Monday, February 26 LB 521 (Howard) Add classifications of students to be reported in the fall school district membership reports LB 643 (Raikes) Change the Tax Equity and Educational Opportunities Support Act to eliminate certain income tax provisions LB 644 (Raikes) Provide for summer school student units in the state aid formula LB 649 (Raikes) Modify the state aid formula under the Tax Equity and Educational Opportunities Support Act LB 691 (Synowiecki) Change Tax Equity and Educational Opportunities Support Act provisions with respect to full-day kindergarten Tuesday, February 27 LB 455 (White) Allow school districts to exceed applicable allowable growth rate for increased energy or insurance costs LB 492 (Harms) Adopt the Education Facilities State Aid Act and create the Education Facilities Review Board LB 498 (White) Adopt the Business Partnership in Rural Education Program Act LB 595 (Kopplin) Create the Task Force on School Funding for Economic Growth LB 614 (Raikes) Change adjusted valuation provisions under the Tax Equity and Educational Opportunities Support Act LB 655 (Raikes) Change state aid to school provisions relating to adjustments on budget statements It’s Long, Long Past Time To Get Rid of Nebraska’s Educational Service Units It is cuckoo-crazy to keep operating nineteen separate Educational Service Units within Nebraska. Sure, it made sense 30 years ago, when ed tech and special ed were new challenges, for districts to pool resources and share ESU services. But they’re irrelevant, outdated, bloated and expensive now. They’re also under the accountability radar, accused of abusing or overstretching the state’s Open Meetings laws, and violating the spirit of the Legislature’s school spending lid outrageously with over-use of Interlocal Agreements. The functions of the ESU’s could easily be absorbed by existing districts, and we could use three of the ESU buildings as shared warehouses across the state. Millions would be saved. Voila! Presto! Who’s a state senator with a pulse and a brain wave? Get on it, and thanks! Mega-Costly Autism Holocaust Makes It Imperative To Nix Mercury in All Vaccinations Former Nebraskan Linda Weinmaster of Lawrence, Kan., is leading the charge in Nebraska to get dangerous mercury out of vaccinations. Her son Adam has autism, and she is convinced it is because of the mercury used as a preservative (in Thimerosol) in the shots that she got during pregnancy, and he had in early childhood. Caring for kids with autism and related disorders is going to cost Americans untold billions of dollars, not to mention the heartaches and headaches for families dealing with these difficult disorders. Mrs. Weinmaster is asking that citizens contact your senator and ask him or her to support LB 49, the Mercury Vaccine Drug Act, sponsored by Sen. Carol Hudkins of Malcolm, Neb. You can find your senator on www.GoBigEd.com/In_the_Unicameral For more about the mercury / vaccinations controversy, see www.nomercury.org and www.achamp.org New Kudos Added To Go Big Ed Hall of Fame See http://www.gobiged.com/Go_Big_Edbr_Hall_of_Fame/ for some inspiring new entries. (0) comments Sunday, February 18, 2007
Posted
8:14 PM
by Susan Darst Williams
ANOTHER SET OF LOCAL KIDS DOING NEAT THINGS THIS WEEK Addendum to the new "Go Big Ed Hall of Fame" entries posted earlier today: Students from Norris Middle School in south-central Omaha, part of the Omaha Public Schools, are at the Hyatt Regency Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., through Wednesday at the National Engineers Week Future City Competition. The middle-schoolers invented a city called New Modaville, with outstanding health-care services, among other features, and won one of 35 regional competitions in order to compete nationally. See www.futurecity.org (2/18/07)
Posted
7:23 PM
by Susan Darst Williams
PARENT OF INDETERMINATE GENDER! WHAT'S FOR DINNER?!? Over in Scotland, they're now censoring the words "Mom" and "Dad." Why? Because they "discriminate" against homosexuals and transgendered people who, unfortunately for the children involved, have children in their households. If those "homophobic" words are spoken -- "Mom" and "Dad" -- then those children will feel confused and sad in front of nurses, teachers and others. It doesn't matter what the OTHER 99.9% of the children in this world might feel. Instead, people, textbooks and so forth are supposed to refer to you as "parent" or "guardian" or some other genderless, loveless, senseless, toothless, upless and downless term. O . . . . K. Now, how long do you guess before this becomes public policy in the US of A? We've lost the American flag to the fruitcakes in Congress who think it should be burned . . . we've lost apple pie to the cholesterol police . . . and now we're going to lose MOM!?!?!?!?!?! Over my dead you-know-what. Here's the scoop on it: http://www.lifesite.net/ldn/2007/feb/07021603.html
Posted
6:11 PM
by Susan Darst Williams
OF THE GO BIG ED HALL OF FAME Come to www.GoBigEd.com and click on the "Go Big Ed Hall of Fame" at lower left to see some new additions to a list of distinguished Nebraskans in education: -- Three South High School students will travel to Las Vegas for the national African-American History Challenge, having won the Omaha contest sponsored by 100 Black Men of Omaha Inc., and the Omaha Public Schools. They are Michaela Jungbluth, Jennifer Monjarez and Mayra Jacobo, coached by Maria Walinski, a South social studies teacher. Bryan Middle School won the junior-high competition. (2/18/07) -- Andrew Leibel of Superior High School and Spencer Farley of Lincoln Lutheran Middle School have been honored as the state’s top volunteers and awarded the Prudential Spirit of Community by Prudential Financial and the National Association of Secondary School Principals. Andrew started and operates a community theater, and Spencer turned an unsightly weedy area near a historic house into a public flower garden. (2/18/07) -- Lincoln High School and Millard North High School led all others in the number of juniors awarded Nebraska Young Artist awards by the University of Nebraska-Lincoln’s Hixson-Lied College of Fine and Performing Arts. Sixty-five students from more than 30 high schools gained honors in visual art, dance, music and theater. (2/18/07) -- Omaha Burke High School won the Nebraska Academic Decathlon for large schools and Omaha Brownell-Talbot won the small schools division. Runners-up included Creighton Preparatory Academy of Omaha, Omaha Central High School, Nebraska City Lourdes Central, and Omaha Duchesne Academy. That’s two public high schools (Burke and Central) and four private high schools honored as the cream of the academic crop. (2/18/07) (0) comments Friday, February 16, 2007
Posted
5:01 PM
by Susan Darst Williams
SUPERINTENDENT TURNS CRUMMY PHOENIX DISTRICT AROUND, THEN FACES NASTY UNION IRE http://www.goldwaterinstitute.org/aboutus/ArticleView.aspx?id=1411 (0) comments Thursday, February 15, 2007
Posted
7:12 PM
by Susan Darst Williams
SCHOOL CHOICE, HOWEVER, DEMONSTRABLY IMPROVES ACADEMICS http://www.goldwaterinstitute.org/Common/Files/Multimedia/EarlyEdvSchoolChoice.pdf (0) comments Tuesday, February 13, 2007
Posted
1:35 PM
by Susan Darst Williams
AND TOLD NOT TO DARKEN NEBRASKA'S DOOR AGAIN Good: http://www.ago.state.ne.us/content/media/020107%20CAHS%20Order.htm
Posted
11:43 AM
by Susan Darst Williams
OUGHT TO BE HUBBING HERE State senators in Indiana are beginning to realize that they were tricked in to establishing a massive, new, socialistic health system enveloping schoolchildren last legislative session. The educrats slipped it in, under the radar. They sold it as a way to curtail Medicaid costs, which are indeed suffocating. But there's going to be hell to pay in terms of forced mental health screening, forced medication, forced sexual "health" services available to minor children behind their parents' backs, and Soviet gulag-style repercussions for those who oppose this system, from recordkeeping to withholding of academic rewards such as graduation. Here's one of the Indiana senators crying out about it: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9RRQBhVRVb0 Guess what? Same darn thing happened in the Unicameral. Nebraska lawmakers ought to be hoppin' mad . . . and ought to get busy undoing, before our kids and families are undone.
Posted
8:53 AM
by Susan Darst Williams
DON'T EVEN THINK ABOUT IT Can you believe the Texas governor signed that executive order requiring girls going in to sixth grade to get a vaccination against Human Papilloma Virus? Yes, HPV is a rampant sexually-transmitted disease that can cause cancer of the cervix, but the average age of a woman with cervical cancer is 48 -- and the drug company that made the vaccine admits that it's not proven that it even prevents transmission. Plus, there are all kinds of risks with the vaccine. Here's a story: http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=54219 More than anything, it's the outrageous "we know better than you do" attitude that puts the schools in authority over the parents in terms of protecting their children's health. At our house with our four girls, there was no question that they would choose to be sexually chaste until marriage. That's the way it was for El Magnifico and me; that's the way our girls are. I would hope that most parents are teaching their children not to be promiscuous so that they wouldn't need to be protected against the things that go wrong if you are. I mean, do you know anybody -- ANYBODY? -- who is teaching their child to yeah, go ahead, get out there and go crazy and debauch yourself?!?!? Here's hoping the Texas citizens conk their governor over the head with a wet petunia and get him to rescind that ridiculous E.O., post haste. (0) comments Monday, February 12, 2007
Posted
10:52 PM
by Susan Darst Williams
CAN IT HAPPEN HERE? OR SHOULD IT? Santa Ana, Calif., schools have cut 480 jobs since 2004 and $58 million from the budget because of declining enrollment in the (formerly) 53,000-student district. That's despite relatively low housing costs, a relatively high birth rate, and fast population growth in the county. The statistics are according to the February newsletter of the National Association of Christian Educators / Citizens for Excellence in Education, which is headquartered in nearby Costa Mesa. So where are the kids going? Private schools and homeschools, the association says. Could it happen in Nebraska? Or should it? Well, they say everything starts on the Left Coast, both good and bad. The shock of dwindling enrollment and accompanying resource fizzles would certainly get the attention of the public school bureaucracy -- that is, if it's not too late by then to fix the problems that are driving the kiddies away. (0) comments Saturday, February 10, 2007
Posted
3:11 PM
by Susan Darst Williams
UTAH! School choice comes to Utah, with meaningful change even for middle-class families. Take note, Nebraska: http://www.boston.com/news/education/k_12/articles/2007/02/09/utah_oks_sweeping_voucher_program/
Posted
3:05 PM
by Susan Darst Williams
WHY YOU SHOULD LEAVE YOUR CHILD IN PUBLIC SCHOOL http://www.newswithviews.com/Turtel/joel35.htm (0) comments Friday, February 09, 2007
Posted
9:44 AM
by Susan Darst Williams
NEBRASKA IS READY FOR A 'G.I. BILL' Here's the model for a statewide school choice system that will work beautifully, as described by a distinguished, longtime education advocate who, ironically, benefitted from the national G.I. bill several decades ago: http://www.ednews.org/articles/7816/1/The-WWII-GI-Bill-Exhibit-A-for-School-Choice/Page1.html (0) comments Wednesday, February 07, 2007
Posted
2:15 PM
by Susan Darst Williams
SPOTLIGHTS GLOBALIZATION OF SCHOOLS Here's an account of a speech made by longtime State Board of Education member Kathy Wilmot of Beaver City, Neb., tracking the unfurling tentacles of the globalized education monster. (Note: the story refers to a document that former President Clinton signed in 2000; it was the Dakar Framework for Action, a U.N.-related set of international accords dealing with educational standards, with a date of compliance of the year 2015) http://www.zwire.com/site/index.cfm?newsid=17818290&BRD=377&PAG=461&dept_id=601696&rfi=8
Posted
1:00 PM
by Susan Darst Williams
ALL-DAY KINDERGARTEN IS A BUST, YET NEBRASKA PLUNGES IN, ANYWAY . . . AND SCHOOL CHOICE IMPROVES PUBLIC SCHOOLS, TOO, BUT NEBRASKA SHUNS IT, ANYWAY Here's a news release from that African-American educational freedom fighter Starlee Rhoades, based on a report published by the Arizona-based Goldwater Institute. It's another example of how the data contradict Nebraska's recent public policy moves. Translation: we're moving the wrong way in many areas. Nebraska's switch to all-day kindergarten, and utter lack of meaningful school choice, are just two examples among many: All-Day Kindergarten Failing as Education Reform All-day kindergarten fails to improve Stanford 9 reading, math, language arts scores Contact: Starlee Rhoades (602) 462-5000 x 226 PHOENIX—A report published today by the Goldwater Institute examines Stanford 9 test scores and finds Arizona kindergarten programs initially improve learning but have no measurable impact on reading, math, or language arts test scores by fifth grade. The study, Putting Arizona Education Reform to the Test: School Choice and Early Education Expansion, by Matthew Ladner, Ph.D., vice-president for research at the Goldwater Institute, is the first of its kind to empirically test the relationship between Arizona kindergarten programs and later school achievement. Governor Napolitano has made expanded kindergarten a key piece of her education reform strategy, saying: The data is simply overwhelming that the combination of quality childcare and full-day kindergarten will reap rewards many times the financial investment we make now. Our children…will have higher academic achievement if we start them off on a stronger footing. Darcy Olsen, president of the Goldwater Institute, says, "This report demonstrates that all-day kindergarten is not an education reform strategy that policymakers can hang their hats on. All-day k delivers short-term benefits at best." The study analyzes test score data from schools throughout Arizona that offered all-day kindergarten or preschool programs during the 1999-2000 school year. In those schools, reading and math test scores for third graders are higher than those without all-day or pre-k. By the fifth grade, however, there is no difference in test scores between schools with and without these programs. Dr. Ladner controls for the percentage of students in English Language Learner programs, students eligible for free and reduced lunch, student ethnicity, teacher experience levels, among other variables. The Goldwater Institute also examined the impact of all-day kindergarten on AIMS passing rates and found passing rates did not improve. The study also measured the impact of competition from charter and private schools on public school test scores. Building on a 2001 study by Harvard University economist Dr. Caroline Hoxby, which found schools in Maricopa County facing competition for students from charter schools had faster student achievement gains, Dr. Ladner applied a similar methodology to schools in Pima County. Stanford 9 test scores show that during the 2001-2004 school years, students at Pima County public schools facing competition moved up in their Stanford 9 rankings faster than schools not facing competition. Schools facing competition made gains twice as large on the Stanford 9 math test than those not facing competition. In Stanford 9 reading scores, competition group schools gained an average of four national percentile points, while the non-competition group averaged less than one. "This report is not an indictment of kindergarten as an institution. It just makes clear that if policymakers are looking for an education reform strategy that has been proven to work, the search is over. Early education programs like all-day kindergarten and preschool do not deliver long-term academic improvement. Competition for students, however, increases achievement in the short-term through higher test scores and in the long-term through greater year-over-year achievement gains," explains Dr. Ladner.
Posted
12:56 PM
by Susan Darst Williams
RESULTS FOR BLACK NEBRASKA KIDS IS EVEN 'ABOMINABLER' Another distressing stat from the Advanced Placement report issued Tuesday by the College Board (www.collegeboard.com) is that in Nebraska, African-American students made up 4.6% of the student population among high-school seniors last school year, but were only 1.7% of all AP test takers in the Cornhusker State. The national average among states is to have blacks be 13.7% of the student body and 6.9% of AP test takers. This is extra distressing because research clearly shows that if you took AP courses in high school, your chances of succeeding in college are much better.
Posted
9:12 AM
by Susan Darst Williams
LET'S BE CLEAR: NEBRASKA SUCKS ON ADVANCED PLACEMENT Dang. Too bad. But Nebraska's national rankings on Advanced Placement course measurements released Tuesday by the College Board (www.collegeboard.com) are downright awful: -- Nebraska kids ranked second to last in the percentage of high-school students who took an AP exam last year, ahead of only the Bubbas in Louisiana, and for the second year in a row. --Only 9.3% of Nebraska's 2006 graduates took an AP exam, compared to the national average of 24.2%. -- Only 5.8% of Nebraska's graduates scored a "3" or better on the exams. That's 62% of those few Nebraska kids who did take an AP test. That means four out of 10 of those who tried, failed. And it's probable that lots more kids took the AP classes but elected not to take the year-end exam for fear of failing it. You can get college credit with a "3" at so-so colleges. But most of the better colleges give credit only for a score of "4" or "5." So the stats are even worse than they appear. -- About that 5.8% success rate: only the Bubbas of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama did worse in the scoring and attainment of college credit than Nebraska's kids did. Just another indication that the opportunities for strong students in Nebraska are pretty paltry in our public schools. Earth to policymakers: how does that look to CEO's who might think about locating their businesses and moving their families to Nebraska? If I were in charge, heads would roll. But you KNEW that.
Posted
9:09 AM
by Susan Darst Williams
THEY'RE LETTING US GET GLOBALIZED Here's yet another good story linking the "reforms" of the last few years in K-12 education to an international plan that is slowly globalizing our schools and, through them, us: http://www.newswithviews.com/Chapman/michael.htm One wonders if the powers that be in Nebraska even realize what's going on. If they do, shame on them. If they don't . . . shame on them. This is why I vote to immediately withdraw from federal funding, toss out our awful "standards," do away with teacher certification requirements, strip accreditation rules of everything that isn't basic health and safety regulations, and get back to good teacher-student relationships and the Old 3 R's instead of all this government mumbo-jumbo. (0) comments Tuesday, February 06, 2007
Posted
9:57 PM
by Susan Darst Williams
TO DISCUSS READING PROBLEMS, SOLUTIONS AT FEB. 20 MEETING "Reading and the Student With Learning Disabilities" is the theme of a discussion planned in midtown Omaha from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 20, sponsored by the Omaha Learning Disabilities Association. The public is invited to attend the session, which will focus on reading problems and the programs available to address them. It is planned at Omaha Christian Church, 6630 Dodge St., east entrance. Speaker will be Erin Perry, a special education reading and writing liaison for the Omaha Public Schools. No children or teens, please, as no child care will be available. For more information, please call the LDA office, 348-1567, or email them at ldaomaha@yahoo.com The group's website is www.geocities.com/ldaomaha/countryside.html
Posted
10:03 AM
by Susan Darst Williams
CALLS FOR GRAND JURY INVESTIGATION OF RACIAL ACHIEVEMENT GAP IN NEBRASKA Come to www.GoBigEd.com and click on the "Goals" icon at the upper right: GoBigEd focuses on three goals: better reading, school choice, and cutting school spending. Here’s how: 1. Go Big Read. The focus needs to be on effective reading instruction. That’s how to increase standardized test scores, reduce the outrageous percentage of minority and low-income students who drop out of school, reverse the explosion in unnecessary special education costs, cut property taxes and sales/income taxes, and improve overall learning performance in all subjects statewide. We need to reform school funding and accreditation rules so that phonics-only reading instruction is the primary method of choice in K-3 classrooms. All it takes is 20 minutes a day, but almost no Nebraska grade schools are teaching this time-tested, classic methodology at present. That’s because very few educators have been taught it themselves. Once a child can decode fluently, he or she is ready for all the other language activities, and shouldn’t be held back and grouped with struggling or beginning decoders. That can be achieved in class with “testing out” opportunities, followed by ability grouping and differentiated instruction very similar to what’s now going on in early primary classrooms. It would take about one week and $200 apiece for every K-3 teacher in the state to learn systematic, intensive, explicit phonics. It would be the best investment in staff development any district has ever made, because it would produce an immediate, striking improvement in reading and writing ability in our students. An important component of this plan is a public education campaign to equip parents and child-care providers to carry out successful pre-reading activities with preschoolers at home and in child-care settings, and then effectively support teachers once the children get into formal reading instruction at school. Another key to reading achievement is to reduce class sizes. We can obtain the money for this from judicious non-classroom cuts, such as in #3, below. Also needed are incentives for good teachers: through the grades, give financial rewards to teachers whose students perform better on reading tests than the year before – “value-added assessment.” Set a goal for Nebraska students to test 1st in the nation on the reading portion of the ACT among states with at least 50% participation by 2012. This year, Nebraska ranks behind Iowa, Minnesota, Wyoming, Montana, Kansas and Utah in that measurement. With phonics, we could be No. 1. 2. Go Big Choice. Where it is available, private education is better and cheaper than public education in Nebraska. Dropout rates are much lower in private schools, attendance is much higher, and the rate of college admissions is nearly 100% from the state’s private high schools. Private schools would provide much-needed competition for the public schools if they could gain a level playing field, financially. The public schools would have to improve to compete for students. And that would help everybody. Almost all private schools in the state charge tuition of less than $3,500, while the average public school district has costs in excess of $8,000 per pupil, and that’s just for operating expenses – not counting debt service and so on, which can drive the actual tax dollars spent per pupil sky-high. But even though private schools are so much cheaper, and demonstrably better, low-income students, and those in our most rural areas, have no access to private school. Either their families can’t afford the tuition, or the economics are too tough for private schools to form. School choice is long overdue in Nebraska, and it can be offered to Nebraskans without hurting public schools. In fact, it can help them. Citizens are already hard at work on a school choice plan that would go a long way toward equalizing educational opportunity in this state, putting the K-12 purchasing power in the hands of parents, protecting our multi-billion dollar investment in our public schools, and providing tax cuts as well. In addition, we should be offering corporations and wealthy individuals dollar-for-dollar tax credits for donations to tuition assistance funds such as the Children’s Scholarship Fund. Keep those dollars circulating in Nebraska’s economy and give our state’s extraordinarily generous philanthropists and retirees a chance to help our most vulnerable citizens grow up to have “The Good Life” because of their great educations. Another innovation is “school choice for school boards.” They should be allowed to hire whoever they want in top administrative jobs such as superintendents and principals. Our elected officials need more freedom to open up school management responsibility to the many outstanding candidates who just don’t happen to have teaching certificates, in order to bring innovation and cost-efficiency to schools. 3. Go Big Tax Cuts. School choice in Nebraska would go a long way toward reducing school spending and cutting taxes, since the average cost per pupil in a public school in Nebraska is $8,000 for operating expenses alone. Most of that wouldn’t be necessary if the child is being educated in a private school under the school choice system, since the voucher would be for only a fraction of the $8,000. However, we need to dig much deeper. School spending has been increasing at such an alarming rate, and test scores of inner-city and minority children have been so much worse than suburban white children for so many years, that a grand-jury investigation is in order. The racial achievement gap makes it appear that we have systemic civil-rights violations in this state that have persisted for decades. We need data to understand how Nebraska’s school systems could have been delivering such an apparently unequal education for so long. The only way to get to the bottom of this, and ensure improvement, appears to be through the court system, perhaps the federal courts. Yes, it’s time to “make a federal case out of it.” Our kids and our future are that important. Such an investigation would naturally look carefully at sources and uses of funds and would no doubt expose a myriad of cost-cutting opportunities that would in turn provide room for significant tax cuts. Nebraska also should create the position of Inspector General for Education in the State Auditor’s Office to direct performance and forensic audits over the more than $2 billion in state aid that is distributed annually and, as of now, is audited only on a pro forma basis. These more in-depth audits are an important tool for uncovering waste, fraud, mismanagement, embezzlement, nepotism, no-bid contracts, and many other ways that tax dollars are abused in school systems. We really need to dissolve the Educational Service Units; reform educator retirement and other benefit plans and compensation programs; encourage school boards to appoint citizen audit committees to help them set policies with tighter fiscal controls; require districts to publish their check registers online; shrink bureaucracy with privatization incentives in non-classroom school budget areas such as transportation; and withdraw from federal funding altogether, so that Nebraska has the most high-achieving, cost-effective, accountable, locally-controlled, performance-driven, and taxpayer-friendly educational system in the country. (2) comments Saturday, February 03, 2007
Posted
9:30 AM
by Susan Darst Williams
This Could Be the Start of Something Big C'mon, Nebraska policymakers! Monkey see, monkey do: http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,660192369,00.html (0) comments Thursday, February 01, 2007
Posted
10:04 AM
by Susan Darst Williams
In Accounting Transparency Improvement; GoBigEd Quoted in EdNews.org Three cheers for the Texas education advocate (www.peytonwolcott.com) whose diligent, professional and positive-spirited campaign to get the state education department in Texas to post its check register online has paid off, bigtime. See: www.ednews.org/articles/7461/1/Texas-leads-the-way-in-public-education-financial-transparency/Page1.html Peyton Wolcott is a great lady, with great taste: she chose GoBigEd's lowly editor to give a quote, midway down this story. Hope this snowballs into Nebraska's state ed department and school districts. (0) comments
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