IDEA Blog

Pathways to Healing After a School Shooting

Neola Young

I’m a self-proclaimed news junkie. Every morning, I begin by scanning through major news sites online, by poring over Facebook and Twitter posts, updating myself with what’s going on in the world. This continues throughout the day, just as it did on Monday, when I saw BREAKING NEWS cross my Twitter feed with a statement about a shooting at a high school in Chardon, Ohio. My heart immediately sank and started racing, wondering about the students and staff. My mind and heart next went to the place and time it always does when I read or hear about another school shooting: October 1, 1997, at Pearl High School in Pearl, Mississippi.

I was 16 years old the day Luke Woodham entered my high...

Read full article

Posted on Mar 11, 2012 - 04:04 PM by Neola Young

Opportunistic Parasites in Our Schools

Kristan Morrison
This weekend, my husband was at a bar watching an ACC basketball game.  He struck up a conversation with a fellow watcher and found out that this guy was a doctoral candidate in education.  He further found out that this man supported his graduate studies by being a "coach" to teachers in schools that were facing NCLB-related sanctions.  Under NCLB, as many of you know, if enough students in a given school do not make Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP), then that school undergoes increasing sanctions  (see this chart for the levels of sanctions).  
 
One of the sanctions that kicks in very early on is that a school must develop an improvement plan in consultation with parents, school...

Read full article

Posted on Feb 17, 2012 - 06:09 PM by Kristan Morrison

We Are the Present: Why Youth Voices Are Necessary

Neola Young

When we pretend that children are just adults in hatching, waiting to become real participants in the world, we don’t merely take away their agency and lose out on their wisdom; we deny that they are already full participants in the world, on the front lines of the most critical struggles in modern history.

Photo courtesy of Manauvaskar Kublall

Read full article

Posted on Jan 27, 2012 - 12:57 PM by Neola Young

Evaluating Our Values

Neola Young

Articles are written every year bemoaning the fact that young Americans are woefully ignorant about civics. Here’s a radical theory to consider: Young people don’t know civics because we don’t teach them civics! We made a decision in that moment with those twelve boys that practice with writing a brief constructed response was of higher value than becoming competent, prepared, participatory citizens. Does that decision mesh with your own values?

Read full article

Posted on Jan 27, 2012 - 12:53 PM by Neola Young

My Love/Hate Relationship with Educational Numbers

Kristan Morrison A few months back, I wrote about how my college was going through the NCATE accreditation process. The outcome of that long event was a report about how we are doing. One area in which we were “dinged” was in our assessments of our graduate programs. This report finding means that as director of one of our biggest graduate programs, I am now under the gun to create quantitative assessments to determine the effect our Master's program has on its students (are we teaching them anything, are their dispositions and behaviors changing toward sought-after ends as a result of our program, etc?).

While such info can certainly be useful in some ways, I cringe at how there is an assumption...

Read full article

Posted on Jan 11, 2012 - 02:59 PM by Kristan Morrison

What will happen to education in 2012?

Neola Young

What can we expect in the world of public education in 2012? (For a good review of what happened in 2011, check out this link.) I’ll start by considering three nagging questions.

1. Will this be the year that some school districts say ‘No mas!” to No Child Left Behind’s harsh rules?

2. Will we have that long-awaited national conversation about the goals of public education?

3. And will political leaders rise up against the excesses of for-profit education, so effectively documented in the New York Times (December 13, 2011), where we learned that the school superintendent of one for-profit charter chain that enrolls 94,000 students is paid $5,000,000 a year? (By contrast, Dennis Walcott, who is responsible for over one million New York City public school students, earns $213,000 a year.)

Read full article

Posted on Jan 05, 2012 - 01:08 PM by Neola Young

That’s What We Do in Pre-K

Nancy Flanagan

I do know that responsibilities are not things into which one is commanded or shamed, rewarded or punished: that’s called obedience. Responsibility emerges only from the unalienable right to pursue happiness. I am the parent of a teenager now, not legally an adult, but no longer a child. I’ve noticed that the more rights she assumes, the more responsibly she behaves. That’s what we do in a democracy.

Read full article

Posted on Dec 26, 2011 - 02:27 PM by Nancy Flanagan

Gender Bullying in the Classroom

Neola Young

Allison was biologically a girl but felt more comfortable wearing Tony Hawk long-sleeved T-shirts, baggy jeans, and black tennis shoes. Her parents were accepting and supportive. Her mother braided her hair in cornrows because Allie thought it made her look like Will Smith(tm)s son, Trey, in the remake of The Karate Kid. She preferred to be called Allie. The first day of school, children who hadn•€(tm)t been in Allie(tm)s class in kindergarten referred to her as •he.”

Read full article

Posted on Dec 21, 2011 - 02:59 PM by Neola Young

The Independent Project

Nancy Flanagan

The Independent Project is an alternative student driven school-within-a-school that was started at Monument Mountain Regional High School by a student. Research by Mihalyi Csikszentmihalyi on engagement suggested that if students have more control over what they are learning, they will be more engaged,
excited, and committed to their studies.

Read full article

Posted on Dec 15, 2011 - 01:47 PM by Nancy Flanagan

The Best and Worst Education News of 2011

Nancy Flanagan

Here’s my humble attempt to identify the best and the worst education news that occurred during the past 12 months. I hope you’ll take time to share your own choices in the comment section.

I’ll list the ones I think are the best first, followed by the worst. However, it’s too hard to rank them within those categories, so I’m not listing them in any order.

Read full article

Posted on Dec 13, 2011 - 06:25 PM by Nancy Flanagan

Page 3 of 34 pages  <  1 2 3 4 5 >  Last »