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Edscoops 2005
- Judge: No Intelligent
Design in Science Classes
A federal judge has ruled that the Dover, Pennsylvania, school district cannot teach the theory of intelligent
design in science classes, saying that would violate the Constitutional separation of church and state. 12/30/05
- More Schools
Serving Breakfast
More children than ever are getting free and reduced-price breakfast at school, but the national School Breakfast
Program still is reaching only two out of five children who need breakfast, a study says. 12/15/05
- Schools
Face Tough Choices on Blogs
Chicago, Illinois, school officials find they are walking a fine line when deciding whether content on a student
or faculty Web log, or blog, should be censored or prompt sanctions. 12/14/05
- Report: Science
Standards Low
Nearly half of U.S. states are doing a poor job of setting high academic standards for science in public schools,
according to a new report. NCLB requires that students be tested in science as of 2007. 12/13/05
- Scrabble
Club Builds Vocabulary
Students at Western Sky Middle School in Arizona are warring over words after school in the Scrabble Club. Teachers
say the club helps students improve their spelling and vocabulary skills. 12/12/05
- School Soda Sales
Drop
The American Beverage Association recently released a report indicating that the amount of non-diet soft drinks
sold in U.S. schools dropped more than 24 percent between 2002 and 2004. The industry is trying to deflect claims
that soda is a key contributor to childhood obesity. 12/09/05
- Mayor Elected
School Board Chairman
Saying leadership from within is key to school reform, Hartford, Connecticut, Mayor Eddie A. Perez appointed
himself to the city's school board, and then participated in the election that made him chairman. 12/08/05
- Department
of Ed Wants Suit Dropped
The U.S. Department of Education has moved to dismiss Connecticut's lawsuit against the No Child Left Behind
Act, arguing that the state has no basis to sue for more money to pay for the reforms. 12/07/05
- Should Classroom Journals Be Private?
Two California high school students suspended after their English teacher read graphic descriptions about
killing her in their class journals are arguing that the journal content is private. 12/06/2005
- Police Fine Students for Swearing
Cursing has become expensive in Hartford, Connecticut's, two high schools. Police are fining students $103 each
time they are caught swearing. Parents must pay the fines if students can't. 12/05/05
- Urban Schools
Show Gains in Math
Students in some of the largest U.S. cities are making gains in math, but showing little progress in reading,
reflecting a national trend in public education. 12/02/05
- Does Suspending
Students Really Punish Them?
Too often when students receive an out-of-school suspension, it's more like a vacation than a punishment,
since students lounge at home. More school officials are questioning the effectiveness of the approach. 12/01/05
- A Teacher's
Tips for Surviving Parent Night
One teacher provides her guide for surviving parent conferences, including having students write short parent
reports, being truthful, and warning parents ahead of time of bad news. 11/30/05
- First New Orleans
School Reopens
On Monday, Ben Franklin Elementary School became the first regular public school in New Orleans to reopen since
Hurricane Katrina devastated the area three months ago. 11/29/05
- Judge Rejects NCLB Challenge
A federal judge in Michigan dismissed the first lawsuit challenging the No Child Left Behind Act, saying the
federal government could require states to spend their own money to comply with the law. 11/28/05
- Schools
Cutting Back on Parties
As part of the effort to fight childhood obesity, some schools are banning parties and asking parents not to
send in treats for students' birthdays. But some parents and educators say the bans go too far. 11/23/05
- School Crime
Drops 50 Percent in Ten Years
A U.S. government report indicates that school crime rates in 2003 were about were half what they were in 1993.
The study also notes that school crime rates have changed very little since 2000. 11/22/05
- New Definitions
of Student Progress
The U.S. Department of Education plans to allow some states to measure not just how students are performing,
but how that performance is changing over time to meet No Child Left Behind Act requirements. 11/21/05
- Financial Literacy
Course Approved
Texas students will be required to study personal financial literacy starting next fall, under a state law signed
this spring. By 2008-2009, high school students will need to pass a financial literacy course in order to graduate.
11/18/05
- Activities Open to Home-Schoolers
Pennsylvania's governor recently signed a bill to allow home-schooled students to participate in any extracurricular
activities in their home district as long as they follow the rules that apply to everyone else. 11/17/05
- Parents Must Disprove
Special Ed Plans
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that it is up to parents to prove that a child's special education plan is inadequate
if they think a school is not providing the "appropriate" education required by federal law. 11/16/05
- NCLB Issue
in Contract Talks
The No Child Left Behind Act is becoming an issue in contract talks, as some teachers seek protection from the
act's sanctions. But administrators say they can't word contracts to violate the law. 11/15/05
- Sleep Critical
to School Performance
Healthy children who stay up an hour or two past their bedtimes have trouble concentrating and a much harder
time learning in school than those who are well-rested, according to a new study. 11/14/05
- Student
Sex in Schools Increasing
According to some educators and students, the number of students having sex at school is increasing, and many
students don't view it as a big deal. Some educators think teens are having sex at school because they have
nowhere else to go. 11/11/05
- Science Program
Questions Evolution
The Kansas Board of Education approved new public school science standards that cast doubt on the theory of
evolution and open the door for instruction on intelligent design. 11/10/05
- Ways
to Beat High-Tech Cheating
The Internet and high-tech cell phones with text messaging can make cheating easier and more tempting for students,
but there are many ways teachers can thwart would-be cheaters. 11/09/05
- Wounded
Principal Called Hero
Gary Seale, the principal of Campbell County (Tennessee) Comprehensive High School, who was shot while struggling
with a student who opened fire in school and killed an administrator, is being called a hero. 11/08/05
- Group
Pushes for More "In-Class" Spending
A new advocacy group wants to force school districts nationwide to boost spending in the classroom, not by raising
taxes, but by trimming administrative and support services such as busing and counseling. 11/07/05
- Study: Mixed Results on
Child Care
Two new assessments of child care support research indicating that long hours in group child care are linked
to better reading and math skills, but poorer social skills and more behavioral problems. 11/03/05
- Helping
New Students Adjust
By having desks and supplies ready in advance, pairing new students with outgoing children, and involving the
class, Arizona teacher Shayna Llamas helps new students ease into her class. 11/02/05
- District Cancels
All Religious Holidays
Instead of adding a Muslim holiday to the school calendar as some parents requested, the Hillsborough County
(Florida) school board voted to no longer close schools for any religious holidays. 11/01/05
- Kids:
School Is Top Stressor
Thirty-six percent of 9-to-13-year-olds recently polled listed homework, grades, and school as the primary sources
of stress in their lives. School ranked above family and friends or peers as a source of stress. 10/31/05
- Culling Out Bad Teachers
A proposed California law to extend the probationary period for new teachers from two to five years could make
it easier to dismiss poor teachers before they become locked into their jobs. 10/28/05
- College
Gender-Gap Grows
A study shows that 57 percent of U.S. college students are women, even though men outnumber women in the 18-to-25
age group. The study raises concerns that schools are not meeting the needs of boys. 10/27/05
- A
New Look at Promotion Policies
Chicago Public Schools officials want to toughen the district's promotion policy, reinstating math test scores
as a criteria for passage to the next grade and making it more difficult for students who cut class to advance.
10/26/05
- Helping
Traumatized Children
Staff in the Framingham, Massachusetts, public schools have been trained to identify and help children who have
been affected by trauma at home. Often trouble at home is a reason children don't perform well in school. 10/25/05
- Fewer
Early Childhood Teachers Attend College
The number of teachers in day care centers and preschools with college degrees has dropped dramatically over
the past 20 years. Studies show a teacher's education can affect a child's long-term learning. 10/24/05
- Schools
Confront Verbal, Online Bullying
More school staff members are trying to address the problem of verbal and online bullying, especially prevalent
in middle schools. Teachers and volunteers discuss the impact teasing can have on children. 10/21/05
- Students
Teach Educators About Islam
Educators from the Howard County (Maryland) public schools joined some of their Muslim students and their families
at a Ramadan meal. Students explained their faith to the teachers and talked about the significance of Ramadan.
10/20/05
- NAEP
Scores: Math Up, Reading Mixed
The scores from the 2005 National Assessment of Educational Progress show improvement in math, but mixed results
in reading, with slight gains among fourth graders and eighth graders losing ground. 10/19/05
- More Schools
Teach Chinese
With China continuing to grow as an economic power, more schools are offering courses in Chinese, aided by funding
from the federal government and China. Chinese is the world's most widely spoken language. 10/18/05
- Citing Excesses, Principal
Cancels Prom
The principal of Kellenberg Memorial High School, a Roman Catholic school in Uniondale, N.Y., cancelled this
year's prom, citing concerns about excessive spending and "decadence." 10/17/05
- School
Reaches Out to Gulf Kids
Students at the Goodwin School in Old Saybrook, Connecticut, bought backpacks and loaded them with school supplies
and a note of encouragement for 170 children from a school in Port Sulphur, Louisiana. 10/14/05
- Hurricanes Show Need
for Data Back-Up
The recent Gulf Coast hurricanes destroyed not only school buildings, but also wiped out billions of bits of
data stored on school computers, highlighting the need for districts to have plans to back-up important data.
10/13/05
- H.S. Separates
Boys, Girls
Cheyenne High School in Nevada hopes to boost its test scores this year by separating ninth and tenth grade
classes by gender. School officials think the plan will improve students' concentration. 10/12/05
- Mentors
for 'Rookie' Teachers
The Ontario, Canada, government plans to spend $15 million on a mandatory new system of mentors, monitors, and
moral support for all of the province's 10,000 new teachers in their first year. 10/11/05
- Schools Warned About 'Choking
Game'
School teachers in Seattle, Washington, and other parts of the country are talking to students about the dangers
of the 'choking game,' in which kids cut off oxygen to their brains to get tipsy. 10/10/05
- Reading
First Under Scrutiny
Members of Congress from both parties and both chambers are meeting with the Government Accountability Office
to begin a study of Reading First, a program endorsed by the Department of Education. 10/07/05
- New
Orleans Students 'Open' New School
Families of about a dozen children from the same closed New Orleans school have "opened" a temporary school
called Sugar Cane Academy in an accountant's office in New Iberia, Louisiana. 10/06/05
- Ten-Year
Effort to Boost Arts Education
The Los Angeles County Arts Commission is working with area districts to help them develop long-range polices
for arts education. Sponsors think it will help restore the arts at all education levels. 10/05/05
- Hurricane-Hit
Schools Get NCLB Reprieve
Schools affected by the recent hurricanes can get a one-year reprieve on NCLB penalties if they can show the
storms interfered with their efforts to make adequate yearly progress. 10/04/05
- Teens Ride Horses to School
to Save Gas
High gas prices "drove" two Rush City, Utah, teens to ride horses 15 miles to school rather than drive. They
"parked" their rides in a stall at their high school, until officials said no horses were allowed on school
grounds. 10/03/05
- Integrating Schools by
Income
Since school officials in the Wake County, North Carolina, district began assigning students to schools based
on family income five years ago, African-American and Hispanic students' reading and math scores have soared.
09/30/05
- England to Ban Junk Food in Schools
Within a year, junk food high in fat, salt, or sugar is to be banned from schools across England, said the country's
education secretary. Celebrity chef Jamie Oliver raised awareness about school lunch menus. 09/29/05
- Evolution
Issue Goes to Court
The issue of what students should learn about the origins of life has moved to a Pennsylvania court; some parents
are suing because their district is teaching intelligent design theory as well as evolution. 09/28/05
- "Snow Days"
in September
Most schools in Georgia were closed Monday and Tuesday for early "snow days" to help conserve fuel as the U.S.
struggles to recover from two hurricanes in a month. 09/27/05
- Fewer
Students Learn Cursive
With more students using computers to communicate and fewer schools teaching handwriting, many students are
graduating from high school unable to write or read cursive writing. 09/26/05
- Metal Detectors Spur
Student Walk Out
Students at DeWitt Clinton High School in the Bronx, N.Y., walked out of classes this week to protest the installation
of metal detectors at the school. Administrators agreed to meet with students. 09/23/05
- School
Coffee Bars Attract Sleepy Students
Several Dallas-area high schools have opened coffee bars for students in libraries and other spots, in part
to entice students to sit and read. Students like the coffee fix, but critics fear schools are making teens
caffeine-dependent. 09/22/05
- Va. District
Tops in U.S.
The Norfolk (Virginia) Public Schools won the nation's top prize in public education, earning the $500,000 Broad
Prize for Public Education, for the consistent improvement shown by its students. 09/21/05
- State Screens Students for Obesity
Starting this year, parents of K-4 students in Pennsylvania will get a report about their children's body-mass
index along with report cards, so parents will know if their children are overweight. 09/20/05
- IBM Urges Staff
to Become Teachers
Concerned that the U.S. is losing ground in a global marketplace, IBM is urging employees to leave the company
and become math and science teachers. IBM will provide funding to those who make the switch. 09/19/05
- Student
Film Flunks Zero Tolerance
Student activists in New Haven, Connecticut, produced a documentary showing how zero tolerance policies can
hurt rather than help struggling students. Teens removed from school can get in more trouble, the film says.
09/16/05
- Study: Children
Born With Ability To Do Math
Children's ability to solve math problems exists long before they begin school, says a Harvard University study.
If preschoolers do have these inborn skills, teachers can develop ways to make it easier for them to learn arithmetic.
09/15/05
- Katrina
Displaces 372,000 Students
At least 372,000 students have been displaced by Hurricane Katrina, and it remains unclear who will pay to educate
them, according to U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings. 09/14/05
- Schools
Ban Backpacks
Some schools in the Clark County (Nevada) School District have banned students from carrying backpacks to class,
saying they take up too much room in classroom aisles, creating hazards. 09/13/05
- Focus Shifts
to "Disciplinary Literacy"
Seventh graders at Washington Middle School in St. Paul, Minnesota, will be approaching subjects more as practitioners
than students this year through an approach called "disciplinary literacy." 09/12/05
- More
Kindergartners in School All Day
Almost two out of three U.S. kindergarten students now are in school for a full day. The number of students
in full-day kindergarten has almost doubled since the early 1980s. 09/09/05
- Evacuees
Start Enrolling in Schools Across U.S
In what could be the largest resettlement of students in U.S. history, thousands of children from Louisiana
displaced by Hurricane Katrina have begun enrolling in schools in other parts of the country. 09/08/05
- Walking to School Good for Teen Health
Teens who walk to and from school may get more exercise throughout the day — including during school hours —
than those who travel by car or bus, a study says. 09/07/05
- District Mulls
$1 School Bus Fare
A Palisades (Pennsylvania)School District board of education member has proposed charging students $1 a day
to ride the school bus to help cover the cost of gasoline. 09/06/05
- 'Virtual Cafeteria' Teaches Good Nutrition
The Carrollton-Farmers Branch (Texas)school district launched a “Virtual Cafeteria” site to show what’s being
served each day at each school. It can tally nutritional information for items on a lunch tray. 09/02/05
- High Teacher
Turnover Forecasted
Forty percent of public school teachers plan to leave teaching within five years, the highest rate since at
least 1990, according to a national study. Half of all high school teachers plan to leave teaching by 2010.
09/01/05
- Bracelets
ID Kids on Buses
All kindergarteners and first graders in New Haven, Connecticut, this year who ride the school bus have yellow
bracelets identifying their bus number and bus stop. An adult also must meet the child at the stop. 08/31/05
- Jogging
for School Repairs
David Heiber, an assistant principal in Thurgood Marshall Middle School in Northeast Baltimore, Maryland, spent
a day jogging among district schools to call attention to the need for repairs at his school. 08/30/05
- Tougher
Teacher Licensing Rules
Starting in 2006, new teachers in Arizona will have to produce a videotape of their teaching, analyze it, and
submit it to a national teaching panel before they can get permanent certification. 08/29/05
- Students Find
Expert Help on the Web
Many current and retired teachers, professors, and other professionals have set up Web sites where they field
homework questions from students (and some teachers' questions as well). 08/26/05
- Proposal
for National School Plan
Arizona's governor Janet Napolitano has proposed a national plan for education reform that includes universal
preschool, a standardized curriculum for all 50 states, full-day kindergarten, and year-round schools. 08/25/05
- State Sues Over NCLB
Connecticut became the first state to file suit challenging the No Child Left Behind Act, calling it an unfunded
mandate that will cost the state millions to revamp its current testing program. 08/24/05
- Rising
Fuel Costs Squeeze Districts
Rising fuel costs are forcing some school districts to trim school bus routes, limit field trips, and cut money
from classroom budgets. Diesel fuel is up about a dollar per gallon since last year. 08/23/05
- Laptops Replace
Books at High School
Empire High School in Vail, Arizona, became one of the first high schools in the U.S.to trade in books for
laptops. All 340 students received an Apple iBook. 08/22/05
- Teachers
Turn to Wacky Ways to Recruit Parents
Florida teachers are turning to in-school pajama parties, refreshments, free baby sitting, and home visits in
an effort to lure parents into getting more involved at their children’s schools. 08/19/05
- AP Course Standards Tightening
The College Board wants to exert more control over its Advanced Placement program by requiring schools and teachers
to submit to a lengthy review of their lesson plans before they can label courses as AP. 08/18/05
- Teacher's Classroom Transformed
Mark Rush, an English teacher at Bushwick High School for Social Justice in Brooklyn, N.Y., won a classroom
"makeover" from the television show Trading Spaces. His classroom was painted, cabinets repaired, and
new bulletin boards and a white board installed. 08/17/05
- More Schools Adopt Uniforms
More students are returning to school this year in the latest styles -- of uniforms. School officials say uniforms
improve behavior and help students focus on their studies. 08/16/05
- School Buses Are
Safest Mode of School Travel
Despite some publicity about a recent string of school bus accidents, school buses remain the safest form of
transportation for school travel, according to the Transportation Research Board. 08/15/05
- Cash
Draws Teachers to Struggling Schools
Hillsborough, Florida, school officials are paying experienced teachers an additional $7,000 to $9,000 this
year to teach in high-poverty schools with low-achieving students. 08/12/05
- Online Degrees Questioned
Officials from the Huron School District in Michigan are saying two teachers who earned doctorates from an online
school do not deserve pay raises because the university is not accredited. 08/11/05
- Inactivity Leads to Weight Gain in Teen Girls
Girls in the U.S. tend to gain weight when they start adolescence because their exercise level drops off significantly,
according to a study. Just two to five hours of brisk walking a week could prevent the weight gain. 08/10/05
- It's
Orientation Time -- For Teachers
First-day jitters are not just for new students. To help new teachers feel ready for school, the Northside district
in San Antonio, Texas, held an orientation for the more than 500 new teachers starting this year. 08/09/05
- Spellings Defends
NCLB
U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings called the No Child Left Behind Act "good policy and good politics"
during a recent speech, and the law is a partnership between states and the federal government. 08/08/05
- Bush:
Teach Intelligent Design
President Bush said this week that schools should teach both the theory of evolution and intelligent design
so students understand both sides of the debate about how life formed on Earth. 08/05/05
- Portrait of the Average
Teacher
Despite districts' efforts to recruit and retain a diversified workforce, the vast majority of new teachers
still are white, female, and likely to move on to other fields, according to a recent study. 08/04/05
- Terrorism
Training for School Bus Drivers
The Connecticut School Transportation Association began free training this month for school bus drivers on how
to evaluate potential terrorist threats. About 200 safety instructors will be trained to teach other drivers.
08/03/05
- Teachers Attend Ethics
Camp
Teachers attending an ethics camp for educators in California learn how to integrate ethical issues into their
lessons and discuss the analysis needed to make fair and just decisions. 08/02/05
- More Warnings on ADHD Drugs
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration plans to strengthen its warnings on Concerta and possibly other ADHD drugs
because of an increase in reports of psychiatric side effects. 08/01/05
- Pesticides
sickening kids, teachers.
Pesticide use in or around U.S. schools sickened more than 2,500 students and school employees over a five-year
period, according to a recent national report. Most of the illnesses were minor. 07/29/05
- Celebrate PC Turnoff
Week
A parents' group, PCTurnoff Organization, is urging parents worldwide
to celebrate PC Turnoff Week August 1-7 by shutting off their children's and their own computers and engaging
in other activities. 07/28/05
- Governor
OKs NCLB Suit
Connecticut Governor M. Jodi Rell signed a law authorizing a legal challenge to the federal No Child Left Behind
Act. State officials want to file a lawsuit against NCLB, saying implementing it will unfairly cost taxpayers
millions. 07/27/05
- Should Schools Ban Word 'Failure'?
The leading teachers' union in Scotland is calling for the word "fail" to be deleted from educators' vocabularies
and replaced with the phrase "deferred success." 07/26/05
- Students: High Schools
Let Them Down
A large number of U.S. high school students say their classwork is not very demanding, and they would work harder
if their courses were more interesting or rigorous, according to a survey. 07/25/05
- More Flexibility for
Diabetic Students
A new Texas state law gives diabetic students more flexibility to manage their disease in school. Students now
will be able to test their blood and administer insulin in class. 07/22/05
- National Guard to Sign On
as Subs
Members of the South Carolina Air National Guard may be recruited to serve as substitute teachers in the Richland
1 school district. Guard members will participate in training before being assigned to schools. 07/21/05
- Taking PE Over the
Internet
Numerous students from the Miami-Dade (Florida) Virtual School are fulfilling their physical education requirement
online, with visits to the virtual town Wellville.07/20/05
- Formula
for Graduation Rates Adopted
Governors from 45 U.S. states adopted a formula to calculate high school graduation rates, in an effort to help
policy makers accurately measure student success and identify academic programs that need improving. 07/19/05
- Student
Gives Teacher Gift of Hearing
For a senior project, student Kristina Coleman raised money to buy teacher Shellee Carrick a cochlear implant
to restore Carrick's hearing. Coleman was moved by Carrick's dedication to her students. 07/18/05
- U.S. 9-Year-Olds
Show Gains
Nine-year-olds in the U.S. are doing better in math and reading and the achievement gap is narrowing, but older
students' progress remains stalled, according to the latest NAEP results. 07/15/05
- NEA Calls
for Higher Starting Salaries
The president of the National Education Association, the largest teachers' union in the U.S., is calling on
districts to increase the salary for starting teachers to at least $40,000. 07/14/05
- U.S. Schools
on "Manhunt"
With the proportion of men in the U.S. teaching ranks the lowest in 40 years, school districts, education groups,
and universities are searching for ways to get more men into classrooms. 07/13/05
- Concern
Grows Over Taser Use
More police officers called to schools to subdue unruly students are using Tasers, weapons that deliver a low-level
electrical shock. Their use is raising concern among educators and parents.
07/12/2005
- Kids Need at Least an Hour of Daily Exercise
A panel of U.S. obesity experts has determined that children need a minimum of one hour of exercise per day
to maintain good health. The hour can be spread across a variety of activities throughout the day.
07/11/05
- Effort Aims to Boost Math,
Science Teachers' Numbers
California state universities and business leaders are collaborating to increase the state's supply of math
and science teachers. Students can earn a bachelor's degree in science, mathematics, or engineering, and be
qualified to teach.
07/08/05
-
Teacher Protests Fast-Food Coupons
An elementary school teacher from Vancouver, British Columbia, wants the school board to prohibit the distribution
of fast-food coupons as rewards for students. The teacher, Steven Coffin, thinks coupons should have some educational
value.
07/07/05
- Airport
Noise Impairs Learning
Children who live near a major airport may have a harder time learning to read, have difficulty memorizing material,
and be more stressed because of the almost constant noise, according to a British study.
07/06/05
- Lawmakers
Clear Way for NCLB Suit
The Connecticut state legislature has authorized a potential lawsuit against the federal No Child Left Behind
Act. Connecticut officials claim meeting all of the law's requirements will cost hundreds of millions of dollars.
07/05/05
- FDA
Probing ADHD Drugs' Side Effects
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration plans to strengthen its warnings about the possibility of psychiatric
side effects in children who take Concerta or other medication for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.
07/01/05
- No
Uniform? No Recess
Elementary school students in New London, Connecticut, who fail to wear their uniforms to school starting this
fall may have to miss recess. Uniforms are mandatory for K-5 students. 06/30/05
- School
District Closing for a Year
The Wilmer-Hutchins School District in Texas will have to close for the 2005-06 school year because it can no
longer afford to operate. The closing displaces 2,700 students and 300 employees. 06/29/05
- Inspiring
Asian-American Students
The Asian Leadership Enrichment Assertiveness Development Academy offered at Arizona State University is helping
Asian-American students understand their culture and develop leadership skills.06/28/05
- Average U.S.
Teachers' Salary is $46,752
U.S. teachers earned an average salary of $46,752 in 2003-2004, a slight increase that did not keep pace with
the rate of inflation, according to a study by the National Education Association. 06/27/05
- Pentagon
Creating Student Database
To help the U.S. military identify potential recruits, the Department of Defense is working with a private firm
to create a database of high school students between 16 and 18 years old and all college students. 06/24/05
- Plans
for Fifth Year of High School
Beginning in fall 2006, the Washington, D.C., school system plans to offer the option of a fifth year at its
high schools for students who need more time to complete graduation requirements. 06/23/05
- Frugal
Teacher Leaves School $2.1 Million
Whitlowe R. Green, a retired Texas high school economics teacher so frugal he bought second-hand clothes, left
$2.1 million to alma mater Prairie View A&M University when he died. 06/22/05
- Teachers Attend Summer
School
More than 350 teachers in the Miami-Dade County (Florida) school district went to summer school this year, taking
courses in areas such as math, health, nutrition, fitness, reading, and the Holocaust. 06/21/05
- Literacy
Investment Pays Off
A literacy program financed by former Netscape CEO Jim Barksdale is helping some of Mississippi's poorest young
students develop a love for books and reading. 06/20/05
- Paraprofessional
Deadline Extended
The deadline for paraprofessionals in Title I schools to demonstrate that they are highly qualified under NCLB
has been extended from January 2006 to the end of the 2005-2006 school year. 06/17/05
- Junk
Food Bill Vetoed
Connecticut Gov. M. Jodi Rell vetoed a bill that would have required all schools in the state to ban sales of
high-calorie snacks and soda. The bill also called for at least 20 minutes a day of recess for all elementary
students. 06/16/05
- More Schools Teaching Relationship
Skills
Concerned about the rising rates of divorce and domestic violence in the U.S., more states are encouraging public
schools to teach students relationship skills.06/15/05
- Taking a New
Approach to Discipline
As discipline problems and suspensions soar in U.S. schools, educators like those in the Charlotte-Mecklenburg
(North Carolina) schools are focusing more on preventing bad behavior. 06/14/05
- District to
Require African History Course
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, public school officials plan to require all high school students to take a course
in African and African-American history in order to graduate. 06/13/05
- Keeping
Students Safe on Overnight Trips
After a U.S. student on a school trip to Aruba disappeared, some schools began reviewing their procedures for
student overnight trips. Planning and precautions are key to successful trips, educators say. 06/10/05
- Contracts
Help Preschoolers Behave
Some preschools are drawing up contracts for student behavior to help 3-to-5-year-olds learn self-control and
avoid expulsion from preschool. Children agree to the contract with their teacher and a parent as witnesses.
06/09/05
- On
Brown Days, Watch for Bears
Brown bear sightings near Thompson Brook School in Avon, Connecticut, have led to "brown alerts," which mean
school doors and windows are closed and everyone stays inside until the bear leaves. 06/08/05
- Education Students
Taste City Life
Prospective teachers from all over Pennsylvania can get a taste of teaching in the Philadelphia schools through
the Urban Seminar program. Education students spend time in classrooms and working on community projects. 06/07/05
- Stop Overprotecting Students
Today’s children are tougher than many adults think, and can survive playing tag, tug of war, and having their
papers graded in red ink, writes author Christina Hoff Sommers. Too many educators are trying to protect children
from even the smallest disappointments. 06/06/05
- U.S. Student
Population Peaks
The student population in the U.S. soared to its highest level in history in 2003, reaching 49.6 million. Most
of these students are children of the baby boom generation. 06/03/05
- Children Develop Cynicism
Early
Children learn to be cynical by as young as 8 years old, according to a recent study. Another study shows that
understanding sarcasm requires complex processing by the brain. 06/02/05
- Study:
Caffeine Worsens Kids' Concentration
A recent study showed that first graders who drank just a few ounces of a caffeinated cola during the school
day became rowdy and inattentive. Young children should have little or no caffeine, the study says. 06/01/05
- Changes
Coming to AP Courses
The College Board, which administers the SAT and Advancement Placement courses, has charged researchers with
reviewing AP course content amid concerns that the courses are too broad and don't allow for in-depth study.
05/31/05
- Reading
Czar Resigns
G. Reid Lyon, head of the U.S. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development branch that sponsors
studies on reading and who consults on the federal Reading First initiative is resigning July 1. 05/27/05
- Student
Reporters Sue District
Members of the East Bakersfield (California) High School newspaper staff are suing their district to prevent
the principal from censoring student newspaper articles on homosexuality. 05/26/05
- Teaching Tops
With Teens
Teaching is among the top ten career choices for U.S. teenagers, ranked as high as doctor and just above lawyer,
according to a Gallup survey. Teaching also was the top pick for girls. 05/25/05
- Changes
to Ninth Grade Math Program
Ontario, Canada, school officials have revamped the ninth grade math curriculum in an effort to decrease the
number of students failing math and eventually dropping out of school. 05/24/05
- Preschool Pays Off for Needy
Kids
Kindergarteners today in some of New Jersey's poorest towns are better prepared than a few years ago, due in
large part to solid preschool programs, educators say. 05/23/05
- Parents
to Blame for Lack of H.S. Rigor
Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack said at least in his state, parents are the obstacles to a more demanding high school
program, because they don't insist their children take more rigorous courses. 05/20/05
- Teacher Inspires
Students
Tamika R. Black, a teacher at Forest Manor Middle School in Indianapolis, Indiana, who has muscular dystropy,
models perseverance for her special education students every day. 05/19/05
- The Season of
Goodbyes
As the school year winds down, some teachers wonder if their students realize how deeply they care about them.
But teachers with that much passion for their students and teaching surely are ingrained in students' memories.
05/18/05
- School Budgets for Dummies
A New York City councilman prepared a 45-page school budget guide to help parents and school officials understand
the city's $20 billion education budget. One aim of the guide is to bring more accountability to the budget
process. 05/17/05
- Training
for Reading Volunteers
A volunteer at Navajo Elementary School in Scottsdale, Arizona, helped develop training for volunteer tutors.
Now tutors know how to assess and instruct students in the basic principles of how to read. 05/16/05
- Teachers
Give Low Score to SAT Essay
The National Council of Teachers of English has given low marks to the new essay requirement on the SAT's, saying
the test rewards students for quantity, not quality, and could encourage mediocre, formulaic writing. 05/13/05
- New NCLB Policy for Special
Ed Students
U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings announced a new No Child Left Behind policy for special education
students. Now special education students will be allowed to take tests specifically geared toward their abilities.
05/12/05
- Banning
Soda, Junk Food from Schools
The Connecticut legislature has proposed a bill that would ban the sale of soda and many snacks in all public
schools. The bill also mandates 20 minutes of recess a day for K-5 students. 05/11/05
- More Students
to Learn Chinese
The U.S. government plans to launch a comprehensive Chinese language program that would begin in kindergarten
and continue through college. Chinese is considered a critical language in the area of U.S. security.05/10/05
- "Mismanaged"
Schools Could Face Takeover
A bill that would allow the state to take over any Arizona school district that "grossly mismanages" its finances
was approved by the Arizona legislature. State officials already have their eyes on a district. 05/09/05
- Standards for
Cheerleaders
The Texas state legislature has proposed a bill that would prohibit high school cheerleaders from presenting
sexually suggestive routines, and give the state authority to punish schools not in compliance. 05/06/05
- Teachers "Taped" for
Fundraiser
Some Lancaster (Pennsylvania) Catholic High School teachers spent their lunch hour taped to the cafeteria walls
to raise money for the American Cancer Society. Ninth graders sold tape, and teachers volunteered to be stuck
to the walls.05/05/05
- Need Grows for Financial
Education
Too many children are growing up without the knowledge to keep them out of financial trouble, studies show,
and schools need to step in. Young adults in the U.S. have a high rate of bankruptcy. 05/04/05
- School Trouble, Low Cholesterol
Link
Children and teens with overall low cholesterol levels appear to be more likely to be suspended from school,
according to a study. The low cholesterol could be a marker for aggressive behavior.05/03/05
- Wanted: Teaching Stars
The U.S. Department of Education is seeking nominations for American Stars of Teaching, which recognizes teachers
using innovative strategies to raise student achievement. Nomination forms are available at American
Stars of Teaching.05/02/05
- Girls Abusing Steroids
A growing number of U.S. girls are using body-building steroids in an effort to look more toned. Up to about
5 percent of high school girls and 7 percent of middle school girls acknowledge trying anabolic steroids at
least once.04/28/05
- Texas Fined for Defying
NCLB
U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings, a former Texas resident, fined Texas $444,282 for exempting
more special education children from regular testing than allowed by the federal law. 04/27/05
- Teacher
Donates Personal Library
Joanne Parizek, a K-5 teacher from Jupiter, Florida, recently donated 500 books to the Orange County (Florida)
school district. Parizek will be switching from teaching reading to being a K-5 math/science lab teacher in
September. 04/26/05
- More Schools
Test for Alcohol
With prom season starting, more high schools in the U.S. are testing students entering school events with Breathalyzers
to determine if they have been drinking alcohol. 04/25/05
- Utah
Turns Back on Parts of NCLB
The Utah state legislature Wednesday approved a bill requiring state officials to ignore provisions of the No
Child Left Behind Act that conflict with Utah's education goals or that require state financing. 04/22/05
- NEA Files
Suit Against NCLB
The National Education Association and school districts in three states have filed a lawsuit against the No
Child Left Behind Act. The suit argues that schools should not have to meet provisions of the law that are not
funded. 04/21/05
- When School Buses Are Scary
School buses are becoming the focus of anti-bullying advocates, who say the lack of adult supervision on buses
means they can be places for intense, constant bullying. 04/20/05
- Eyes
On NCLB Challenge
Officials in other U.S. states are closely watching Connecticut's challenge to NCLB. Connecticut wants to be
exempt from testing students in grades 2, 5, and 7, because of the cost and the quality of the current tests.
04/19/05
- Sixty-Five
Percent Rule Piques Interest
Arizona is the first U.S. state to vote on a measure requiring that 65 percent of every school district's education
operational budget be spent on classroom instruction. About 61.5 percent of education budgets reach classrooms.
04/18/05
- School
Seeks Informants
Administrators at Model High School in Rome, Georgia, plan to offer students up to $100 for anonymous tips about
thefts, threats, and drug or gun possession on campus. 04/15/05
- Students
Use More Profanity
Profanity is increasingly part of children's everyday speech, and many educators are unsure of how to curb it.
In some schools, swearing no longer is reported because other discipline problems take precedence. 04/14/05
- Too
Much Television Can Spawn Bullies
Preschoolers who spend a lot of time watching television are more likely to become bullies, according to a recent
study, and the risk increases with every hour of television a young child watches. 04/13/05
- "Cooperative"
States Will Get Help With NCLB
State officials who show they are committed to the No Child Left Behind Act will find that federal officials
are more flexible in how they enforce it, according to Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings. 04/12/05
- Teens Engaging in Less Risky Behavior
Today's teens are having fewer babies, committing fewer crimes, and engaging in less drug use than those in
1993, according to a recent U.S. study. On the negative side, more teens are obese, live in poverty, or live
in single-parent homes. 04/11/05
- Teacher-to-Teacher Workshops
The U.S. Department of Education again is sponsoring six summer workshops for teachers and principals conducted
by their peers. Presenters will be discussing strategies they used to help students succeed. 04/08/05
- Catholic
School Enrollment Down
Enrollment in U.S. Roman Catholic schools decreased again this year, dropping 2.6 percent from last school year.
Rising tuition costs and the closing or consolidation of 173 schools contributed to the enrollment decline.
04/07/05
- Title IX Strengthened
The U.S. Supreme Court toughened Title IX, a federal law prohibiting sex discrimination in federally funded
education programs, by extending the law's protection to those who report unequal treatment. 04/06/05
- Debating Internationally
Without Leaving School
Students in North Port High School in Florida have debated with students in New Zealand and Russia, among
other places, thanks to video teleconferencing. North Port is one of only a few high schools in the U.S. using
video teleconferencing to practice debating. 04/05/05
-
School May Eliminate Grade Levels
District officials are considering eliminating grade levels at Carman Park Elementary School in Michigan and
having students learn according to their abilities in multi-age groups. The earliest any changes would take
place is place is 2006-07. 04/04/05
- Kids
Write Book on Starting School
Youngsters at Mildura South Primary School in Australia recently completed writing a book to ease the fears
of children starting school. The full-color book, Millie Starts School, looks at school life through the eyes
of a young student. 04/01/05
- Title IX Strengthened
The U.S. Supreme Court toughened a federal law prohibiting sex discrimination in federally funded education
programs by extending the law's protection to those who report unequal treatment. 03/31/05
- First Lady
Backs Education for Afghan Women
U.S. First Lady Laura Bush visited Afghanistan to promote education for the country's women. Under Afghanistan's
former government, the Taliban, women were forbidden to attend school. 03/30/05
- U.S. Schools Are Safer
While the school shootings in Minnesota have raised concerns about school safety, interventions by students
and teachers have made U.S. schools safer than they were a few years ago, experts say. 03/29/05
- Kids Want Yanks, Sox to Shake Hands
Students from the Merriam School in Acton, Massachusetts, want the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox players
to shake hands before their first 2005 game April 11. The idea stemmed from lessons on sportsmanship.03/28/05
- No Consensus on Paddling
While spanking students in school is banned in 27 U.S. states and the District of Columbia, some educators and
parents still defend the practice as an effective form of discipline. 03/25/05
- Mixed Feelings
on NCLB
While most states are doing a better job of helping struggling students and using data to improve performance
under NCLB, they need more funding to help schools labeled as failing. 03/24/05
- Minnesota
Educators Reach Out to Students
Educators from Red Lake High School and surrounding communities in Minnesota are reaching out to students and
staff members reeling from a shooting that left seven dead at the school. The student shooter killed himself.
03/23/05
- School Shooter Kills
9, Self
A high school student on a Minnesota Indian reservation killed his grandparents and then opened fire in his
school, killing seven people and wounding 13 before killing himself. 03/22/05
- At-Risk Tendencies
Seen by Sixth Grade
As early as the sixth grade, up to 40 percent of students who ultimately will not graduate from high school
can be identified, according to a study. Researchers say the study shows the importance of early intervention.
03/21/05
- State Mulls
ID to Pick Up Students
A bill in the Florida legislature would require parents or guardians to show identification to school personnel
before they can pick up their children. 03/18/05
- Study
Criticizes School Administrators' Programs
A study by Arthur Levine, president of Teachers College at Columbia University, released this week said many
graduate programs for administrators are "inadequate to appalling" with irrelevant curriculum.. 03/17/05
- Male Teachers' Numbers Fall
The number of male teachers in the U.S. is at a 40-year low, according to recent figures. Low status, poor pay,
and fear of lawsuits keep many men out of classrooms. 03/16/05
- Students: New SAT
Is Long
Students around the U.S. took the new version of the SAT for the first time this weekend. The revised exam includes
a timed essay that extends the testing period to four hours. 03/15/05
- Mercury Fading
from Science Labs
As awareness grows about the health risks of mercury, and the potential costs of cleaning up mercury spills,
more schools are removing the metal from science labs and school fixtures and tools. 03/14/05
- State Challenges NCLB
The Texas education commissioner plans to continue challenging an NCLB limit on the number of students with
disabilities who can take an alternative assessment test, even if it means risking federal funds. 03/11/05
- Reading
Leads to Feeding
Students at Edna C. Stevens School in Cromwell, Connecticut, raised $15,000 for Heifer International by collecting
pledges for every hour of non-required reading they did. A special education teacher proposed the effort. 03/10/05
- Test
Prep, Paperwork Taking Teachers' Time
Teachers' mandatory paperwork and test preparation take up the equivalent of two class days every week, according
to a poll conducted by the United Federation of Teachers. 03/09/05
- Schools Test
Healthier Lunches
Six schools in Orlando, Florida, are part of a study by a research center founded by The South Beach Diet
author. Researchers want to know if school cafeterias can serve more nutritious food, if kids will eat it, and
if their health will improve. 03/08/05
- Flat Stanley Turns
10
Flat Stanley, the paper globe-travelling storybook character, is celebrating his tenth birthday this year. Mailing
Stanley around the world has helped thousands of students learn about different people and places. 03/07/05
- Teachers Refuse
to Give Homework
Teachers in the Berkeley, California, school district are refusing to assign written homework or grade assignments
on their own time because they have not had a pay raise in two years. 03/04/05
- Targeting H.S. Literacy
As state and federal officials look at ways to improve high school students' performance, one issue that needs
addressing is literacy, experts agree. In many cases, students don't read well enough to understand their textbooks.
03/03/05
- Schools
Mull Charging for Field Use
Citing increasing maintenance costs and growing number of community groups using school athletic fields, some
Long Island, N.Y., school districts are considering charging community groups a fee to use the fields. 03/02/05
- Governors
of 13 States to Raise H.S. Standards
The governors of 13 U.S. states plan to form a coalition to upgrade high schools by implementing higher standards
and more rigorous courses and examinations. The 13 states enroll one-third of all U.S. students. 03/01/05
- State Lawmakers
Call for NCLB Changes
After a ten-month-long study, a bipartisan group representing all 50 U.S. state legislatures called for major
changes in the No Child Left Behind Act, calling the law unconstitutional and impractical.02/28/05
- Closing
Schools Can Hurt Communities
Dozens of U.S. cities are weighing whether to close schools in an effort to save money. But studies show that
closing schools can damage communities in the long run. 02/25/05
- Educators
Defend Upward Bound
The Bush administration's plans to eliminate the Upward Bound program, which helps low-income, first-generation
teens enroll in college and succeed once they get there, is drawing criticism from educators. 02/24/05
- Students Trace
African Heritage
A Philadelphia African history teacher has offered to pay for one student to take a DNA-based genealogy test
that could help the student trace his or her African ancestry. 02/23/05
- Getting
Dads Involved at School
Dad's Clubs, likes the ones in San Diego, California, schools, get fathers involved in classroom and afterschool
activities, re-enforcing to students the importance of school. 02/22/05
- Shielding
Teachers from Field Trip Suits
Britain's education secretary proposed regulations that would protect teachers from being sued if an accident
occurred on a school field trip, provided the teachers had followed all the required procedures. 02/21/05
- No Change In H.S. Graduation Rates
A study by the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research shows that the U.S. high school graduation rate changed
little from 1991 to 2002, going from 71 percent to 72 percent. 02/18/05
- Why New Teachers
Quit
Claudia Graziano, a journalist who became a high school English teacher, quit midway through her first year.
Her research shows that lack of administrative support and workplace conditions are the top reasons for teachers'
quitting. 02/17/05
- High
Schools Could Get Laptops
Connecticut Governor M. Jodi Rell is proposing that the state allocate $15.5 million to buy laptop computer
for high school English classes. The laptops would be stored in the schools. 02/16/05
- Spellings
May Be Flexible on NCLB
New U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings has indicated she is willing to be flexible with state and
local education officials on some of the more stringent requirements of the No Child Left Behind Act. 02/15/05
- Teen Charged With
Rigging Teacher's Computer
A student at Clements High School in Sugar Land, Texas, was charged with rigging a keystroke-recording device
onto a teacher's computer in order to steal test answers. The teen could face jail time if convicted. 02/14/05
- Pluses of National
Certification
Teachers in some states who earn certification from the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards can
look forward to more money, more prestige, and the chance to stay in the classroom. 02/11/05
- Teachers
Rebel Against New Model
A teaching model that limits lessons to ten minutes and calls for using most of the 40-minute period for student
group work with minimal adult participation is sparking a rebellion among some New York City teachers. 02/10/05
- Spellings
to Continue Stress on Testing
New U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings is making it clear that testing is going to continue to be
a critical part of the No Child Left Behind Act, and wants to expand testing to the high school level. 02/09/05
- U.S.
Budget Cuts Funds for Schools
President Bush is proposing a 1 percent reduction in federal education funding for 2006, for a total of $56
billion, and shifting $4.7 billion to different education programs. 02/08/05
- Fingerprint System Praised
A cafeteria payment system installed in middle schools in Akron, Ohio, that identifies students from their fingerprints
has led to more students who qualify for free and reduced-price lunches eating lunch. 02/07/05
- Job
Fitness Test for H.S. Students
New York is expected to become the first state in the U.S. to issue a "work readiness" certificate to high school
students who pass a voluntary test measuring their ability to succeed in entry-level jobs. 02/04/05
- State Weighs Obesity Report Cards
A Texas state senator is proposing a state law requiring schools to weigh students, compute their body mass
index, and send that information home to parents on student report cards. 02/03/05
- Students:
First Amendment Goes "Too Far."
More than one in three U.S. high school students in a study said the First Amendment "goes too far" in the freedoms
it guarantees, and almost half said government censorship of news is not necessarily bad. 02/02/05
- Spellings
Vows to "Stay Course"
Margaret Spellings, the new U.S. secretary of education, said during her swearing-in Monday that she plans to
"stay the course" on President Bush's education reform plan. 02/01/05
- K-12 Lit Unappealing
for Boys
Among the reasons boys read fewer books than girls could be that textbooks and literature assigned in the elementary
grades do not reflect boys' interests. Studies show boys prefer adventure tales, war, sports, and historical
nonfiction. 01/31/05
- More Taking,
Passing AP Exams
More students in every U.S. state are passing at least one Advanced Placement exam, according to a study. A
score of 3 or better on a 5-point scale is considered the mastery level. 01/28/05
- Loss
of Playtime Worries Educators
The increased emphasis on academics in pre-school and kindergarten is squeezing out playtime, which is a necessary
part of young children's learning, some educators say. 01/27/05
- New Ed Secretary
Confirmed
The appointment of Margaret Spellings, the new U.S. secretary of education, was confirmed last week. Spellings,
a long-time advisor to President George W. Bush, replaces Rod Paige, who resigned. 01/26/05
- Schools Hold
"No Name-Calling Week"
Middle schools across the U.S. this week are participating in "No Name-Calling Week." The program is centered
around the novel, The Misfits, about four middle school students who are constantly taunted. 01/25/05
- Student Sues to End
Summer Homework
A Wisconsin high school student has filed suit to end summer homework assignments in the state. The student
and his family say summer assignments cause unnecessary stress.01/24/05
- School
Considers Breathalyzers
The Vernon, Connecticut, board of education is considering using Breathalyzers at school events, after reports
that some students were intoxicated at school functions. 01/21/05
- Can Delaying
First Grade Be Beneficial?
Enrolling children in first grade later rather than sooner may help build self-esteem, according to a new study.
Parents should consider deferring school entry if their child will be among the youngest in first grade. 01/20/05
- Educators Create New Look for P.E.
Creative teachers in Wisconsin and Connecticut have developed physical education programs that keep all kids
active and are fun. 01/19/05
- School
for Immigrants Opens
The recently opened Newcomers Charter School in Houston offers flexible scheduling and intensive instruction
in English to help immigrants earn high school diplomas while they continue working. 01/18/05
- Evolution
Stickers Have to Go
A federal judge ordered the Cobb County, Georgia, school board to remove stickers from biology textbooks that
warn readers that evolution "is a theory, not a fact." The board also cannot distribute any more of the stickers.
01/17/05
- Teachers
Blast Merit Pay Plan
A proposal by California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to tie teacher pay raises to performance rather than tenure
has spurred criticism from the state's teacher unions. The governor also is seeking to trim the education budget.
01/14/05
- Bush Outlines Plans for High
Schools
President Bush has begun a push to require high school students to take annual mathematics and reading tests,
just as elementary and middle school students are mandated to do by the federal No Child Left Behind Act. 01/13/05
- School
Reopens in Some Tsunami-Hit Areas
Two weeks after a devastating tsunami, schools in Indonesia and Sri Lanka reopened Monday, and tried to give
children some sense of normalcy. Only about 25 percent of students showed up for school. 01/12/05
- Truants
Face School or Jail
An Orange County, California, court truancy program gives chronic truants the choice of attending school or
spending time in jail. The court monitors the progress of students who return to school. 01/11/05
- Schools
Try to Keep Pace With Technology
While schools still are behind most segments of society in using technology, students are benefiting from technology
use and want more exposure, according to a U.S. report. 01/10/05
- School
Lesson Helps Girl Save Tourists
A 10-year-old British girl vacationing with her parents in Thailand was able to save 100 other tourists on a
beach because she told her mother she recognized the warning signs of a tsunami from a lesson at school. 01/07/05
- Top
Students Get More Days Off
A revised Texas state bill allows school districts to cut the number of school days for students who score well,
or are expected |