Florida

Putting Education Reform To The Test

The Secret Lives of Students: “Dear Future Teacher…”

Breakthrough Miami

Teley Laporte, 10, says teachers need to add a little "magic" to their lesson plans.

For today’s installment in our series, The Secret Lives of Students, students write a letter to their future teachers. 

Editor’s note: This post was written by rising middle school students Teley Laporte and Joshua Partridge.

By Teley Laporte, 11

Dear future teacher,

Good listening skills are very important when teaching a group of students.

You should be open to new ideas from students.

You should give quizzes if needed.

Being funny is not that important, but don’t be so strict.

Some kids are very sensitive.

You need to know what’s in style in the kids’ world so you can be familiar with it and have something in common with them.

Make up consequences for when students misbehave.

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StudentsFirst Asks Florida Allies To Hit The Blogs, Win A Gift Card

DouG!! / Flickr

Pick a card, any card.

Bob Sikes over at Scathing Purple Musings got his hands on an email from Florida’s StudentsFirst rep urging allies to get out and comment on blogs.

The email from StudentsFirst regional outreach manager Catherine Robinson says there’s a contest for the best “rapid response” and included links to some recent stories. The winner gets a “gift card to the restaurant or store of choice.”

A copy of the email was passed along to us, and a couple of StateImpact Florida posts with references to the parent trigger were on their recommended commenting list.

The parent trigger was narrowly defeated during the legislative session earlier this year and allies, such as former Gov. Jeb Bush, vow that the bill will be back. StudentsFirst spent a lot of time and effort urging lawmakers to approve the bill this year.

We love reader feedback, so we’ll make this easy. For all our parent trigger stories, click here and comment away.

We’ve already gotten two comments…

Panel Recommends Lowering Passing Score For FCAT Writing, But Will Education Commissioner Agree?

Southworth Sailor/flickr

A team of educators and community leaders gathered this week to set standards for FCAT 2.0 writing.

The panel went through a lot of data before settling on a school grade writing performance level of 3.5. That means students would need to score 3.5 out of a possible 6 to pass.

The recommendation would lower the cut score from a 4. Writing test results plummeted this year because of the passing score of 4 and the tougher grading standards.

The number is used to determine who passes FCAT writing in grades 4, 8, and 10.

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Feedback Loop: Debating Whether Principals Are Issuing Snap Judgments

How much observation is enough to evaluate a teacher? Our readers debate the point.

Is 20 minutes enough time to figure out how well a teacher is doing his or her job?

That’s what Miami-Dade teacher Karla Mats asked after she received a 20-minute observation from her principal — the minimum time required by the district.

Mats was disappointed she was not among the highest-rated teachers and she questioned the 20-minute observation.

StateImpact Florida readers questioned the policy as well.

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Ad Compares U.S. Schools To Pudgy, Flailing Olympic Athlete

The Olympics kick off in London today (yes, soccer kicked off a couple days ago), and former D.C. schools chancellor Michelle Rhee’s StudentsFirst is out with an Olympics-themed ad criticizing the U.S. education system.

The ad shows a chubby man ineptly competing in rhythmic gymnastics while a commentator observes “the once-proud U.S. program has been relying too much on their reputation. I’d say they’re completely unprepared.”

The U.S. education system is that flabby OIympic athlete and needs reform, the ad concludes.

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The Secret Lives of Students: Tips From a 10-Year-Old on How to Be a Better Teacher

Webber J. Charles / Breakthrough Miami

Allison Chan, 10, says her ideal teachers would always use games in class to help students learn.

For today’s installment in our series, The Secret Lives of Students, we hear how one student would improve class learning. 

Editor’s note: This post was written by elementary school student Allison Chan.

By Allison Chan, 10

I would make the teachers at least everyday do different activities that are the lessons that you would learn in class but in an un-boring  way to let the kids have fun. Like, Jeopardy, Hot Potato etc.

TO REVIEW LESSONS

Jeopardy is an educational game that can review the terms that your students have learned in your class. You should do this game around 30 minutes or 40 minutes till class ends. You can start by putting different categories that you have teaches during that class. Then you would put different questions about each category. And DONE!!

Hot Potato is a game that you throw around the room to each student and when the music plays, each person throws it to each student and then when the music stops, the person who has it, needs to answer the question that the teacher gives the student. First you would want to buy a small ball. Then you would make up the question that was covered in the class (ONLY ON THAT DAY). And DONE!! Continue Reading

Report Says ALEC Has Growing Influence In Florida Education Policy

Mladen Antonov / AFP

Protesters carry posters reading "I am Trayvon Martin" during a rally in downtown Washington DC on March 28, 2012. Protesters gathered outside the American Legislative Exchange Council's (ALEC) headquarters to protest against the laws protecting the "justifiable homicide" first approved in Florida.

The conservative-leaning American Legislative Exchange Council has a growing footprint in Florida, particularly education policy, according to a new report by a coalition of liberal-leaning advocacy groups.

From the report’s executive summary:

This corporate‐funded 501(c)(3) organization…has unprecedented access to lawmakers and to the composition of the bills they pass into law. Out of Florida’s 160 state legislators, 60 have had ties with ALEC since 2010 through dues records or records of its task forces where corporate lobbyists vote as equals with legislators on “model” bills behind closed doors.

ALEC’s website says it “works to advance the fundamental principles of free-market enterprise, limited government, and federalism at the state level through a nonpartisan public-private partnership of America’s state legislators, members of the private sector and the general public.”

The groups behind the report don’t see it that way. They include Progress Florida, Florida Watch, People For the American Way, Center For Media and Democracy, Common Cause.

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The Florida Schools Which Raised Their Grade In 2012

R/DV/RS

The grades for which Florida schools are on the way up? Read on...

Yesterday we told you about a Tampa charter school which improved its grade from an F to an A despite tougher state standards this year.

We thought we’d give credit to the other 294 schools (after the state Department of Education corrected the list) which improved their grades as well.

Here they are, by the numbers, with a searchable database after the jump:

3 — The number of schools which jumped from an F to an A.

7 — The number of schools which improved three grades.

55 — The number of schools which improved two grades.

229 — The number of schools which improved one letter grade.

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Judge Says California Parents Can’t Unpull ‘Trigger’ Petition

PeaceOverViolence.org

Former California State Sen. Gloria Romero helped write the nation's first parent trigger law.

A judge has handed parents in a California desert town a major victory in their efforts to force changes at a failing elementary school.

The parents at Desert Trails Elementary in Adelanto are trying to become the first school in the nation to successfully use a ‘parent trigger’ law.

The law says parent can choose how to reform  a low-performing school if a majority of parents sign a petition. They can replace some or all of the staff, turn it into a charter school under private management or even shut it down.

A parent trigger bill was hotly contested in the Florida Legislature last spring. It was also known as the “Parent Empowerment in Education” bill.

The bill was opposed by teacher’s unions and the PTA.

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The Secret Lives of Students: Points For Good Behavior, But Not Enough For Busch Gardens Field Trip

Breakthrough Miami

Woodolph Myrtil, 12, says he feels like a bad student when he doesn't get selected to go on school field trips.

For today’s installment in our series, The Secret Lives of Students, one student writes about being left out of school field trips.

Editor’s note: This post was written by middle school student Woodolph Myrtil.

By Woodolph Myrtil, 12

One problem at my school is that only the Top 200 PBS (point based system) point leaders get to go to Busch Gardens.

PBS points are an effective system where students get “points” for having positive behavior in class.

Such as when you tuck in your shirt when a grown-up tells you to. Or if the whole class goes wild and you’re the only one being calm.

It’s not fair because the people who are not a part of the Top 200 can’t go on the field trip. Also not getting to go on that trip makes my mom think I’m not doing well when I am being a good student. Continue Reading

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