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Putting Education Reform To The Test

Monthly Archives: August 2012

Many Florida Schools Use Seclusion Rooms For Students With Disabilities

Brady Spencer sits with her son Brendon. Brendon has Asperger's, ADHD, and mood disorders. A few years ago she decided to take him out of his Mantua, Ohio public school, where he would often be sent to the hallway or a spare office during class. He now goes to a charter school for special needs kids.

Editor’s note: We’ve followed up this post answering some questions about the data raised by readers. Florida keeps two sets of seclusion data. State officials say school districts should record incidents of seclusion in both sets of data, but admit that it does not happen. As a result, Florida Department of Education spokeswoman Cheryl Etters said, neither set of data may include all incidents of seclusion.

Ohio schools are locking children away in cell-like rooms, closets or old offices, sometimes without their parents knowledge.

The practice, known as seclusion, is often used to discipline or isolate misbehaving students. Often those students have disabilities.

That’s what our colleagues in Ohio — partnering with the Columbus Dispatch — reported this week in a series of stories.

Ohio districts used seclusion more than 4,200 times in the 2009-2010 school year, according to a federal survey, and 60 percent of those cases were students with disabilities.

There’s no evidence that seclusion helps children, but research shows students have hurt themselves and committed suicide in seclusion rooms.

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Florida Students Party Hard And Get Easy A’s According To Latest College Rankings

chasingfun/flickr

University of Florida in Gainesville is a top party school according to Newsweek.

For those who love higher education rankings, the last week has been a bonanza.

The lists suggest Florida has room for improvement in certain areas — unless you’re looking for a party school that doles out an easy curriculum.

First, we look at Forbes’ annual list of America’s 650 Top Colleges. These rankings focus on quality of teaching, great career prospects, high graduation rates and low levels of debt.

The list includes private and public institutions, and Florida has just one entry in the top 100.

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Students Benefit From More Class Time, If Used Wisely

cbcastro / Flickr

More schools are considering longer days or extending the calendar.

Students who spend more time in class will perform better in class and on standardized tests. But schools must focus on individual student needs, assessment and staff training.

That’s the conclusion of a National Center on Time and Learning report looking at programs in 30 schools which add time to the school day or extend the calendar beyond the traditional 180 days.

Many foreign countries spend more time in class than the U.S., and education experts argue its one reason those countries outperform U.S. students on international exams.

Florida is requiring an extra hour of class time for the 100 schools which registered the lowest scores on the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test. Lawmakers approved the requirement earlier this year.

StateImpact Florida also told you about a Tampa middle school that improved its school grade to an A from an F after requiring after-school math tutoring. Students earning a top score on the FCAT math exam were exempt from the extra tutoring. But Principal Yolanda Capers said most attended anyway.

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Florida School Boards Association President Wants A Conversation About FCAT

Orange County Public Schools

Orange County school board member Joie Cadle is also president of the Florida School Boards Association.

The president of the Florida School Boards Association says the state’s next education commissioner must be willing to work with school boards, parents and educators to improve Florida’s testing and school and district report card system.

Orange County school board member Joie Cadle also told the Orlando Sentinel that school boards should have more control over charter schools – and that the state should not overrule local decisions about which charter schools are approved.

The Sentinel published a Q&A with Cadle today. An excerpt:

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How Common Core Will Change Classroom Approaches

Jacek.NL / Flickr

Florida's Department of Education has held a series of seminars this summer explaining Common Core standards.

Raise your hand if you could use a little extra help explaining the new Common Core State Standards Florida schools will implement in 2014?

We’ve got our hand up too.

Robert Rothman bullet points the ways Common Core will affect classrooms in this month’s Harvard Education Letter.

Here’s a few key changes:

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Florida Students Head Back To Class

Cayusa / Flickr

Some Florida students head back to school today. The majority of districts begin classes on August 20.

The summer has come to an end for Charlotte County school students. Today is the first day of class for the 2012-2013 school year.

Six other districts start this week.

Brevard, Citrus, Lee, Nassau and Walton County schools head back to class on Wednesday. Sumter County schools start classes on Thursday.

The majority of Florida students have just under two weeks of summer break left — most districts begin classes on August 20.

Already looking forward to Christmas break? You can check out the 2012-2013 school calendar for every school district in Florida, after the jump:

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Students Learning English Get Extra Reading Help At Summer Camp

Sarah Gonzalez / StateImpact Florida

Lupita Leon practices reading.

Juan Galvez is going into 4th grade. His parents are from Bolivia and Guatemala, and they only speak Spanish.

When it comes to homework, Juan is usually on his own.

“My mom helps me a little because she knows the math,” said Juan. “But with reading, I’m good. I do it by myself.”

Students learning English in Ft. Lauderdale, such as Galvez, are getting free help with reading this summer.

A six-week camp has been growing steadily since it was founded four years ago. Now, because of changes in Florida testing requirements, these kids are being challenged to learn reading and writing faster.

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A Backpack Keeps Kids — And Their Family — Fed On Weekends

wenourishhope.org

We know that a lot of children depend on schools for their meals through free and reduced-price food programs.

So when school is not in session, these kids may go hungry for much of the day.

It’s a problem big enough that the Florida Department of Agriculture provides a summer food program.  Funds go to schools and parks and recreation programs where children from low-income families can get up to two meals a day.

Community-based food programs serve kids as well, such as the Second Harvest North Florida BackPack program. It focuses on kids in the Jacksonville area who go hungry on the weekends.

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Private Companies’ Big Move Into K-12 Education

Rocketship Education

A Rocketship Education charter school in California. The chain uses DreamBox technology, funded by private equity, to help students learn.

There is a lot to chew on in Reuters’ reporter Stephanie Simon’s look at private equity and venture capital investments in the education market.

The story is the talker of the week among those who fear the worst when Wall Street gets involved with schools.

We’ll highlight two passages from the story.

First, investors are very, very hungry:

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Back-To-School Shoppers Get A Sales Tax Break

NITJ/flickr

Malls around Florida are expected to be crowded this weekend.

Shoppers won’t have to pay taxes on certain items this weekend thanks to Florida’s “Back to School Sales Tax Holiday.” It runs Friday through Sunday.

The event is expected to bring a boost in state revenue.

Shoppers will find tax breaks on school supplies that cost up to $15 and clothing items that cost up to $75.

Stores tend to offer big bargains to coincide with the tax cut, and shoppers wind up spending money on taxable items, too.

“The state actually makes a little bit more money during the period even though there’s a tax break,” said Rick McAllister with the Florida Retail Federation. “It really does have a huge stimulus effect on spending.”

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