Archive for the ‘News that matters’ Category

How to stop a bully

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

The July 23, 2010 op-ed page in the New York Times offers an article from two professors at Williams College in Massachusetts (Engel and Sandstrom). They cite a new state law and the fact that many other states are taking similar measures. Their research finds that in order to combat bullying, schools need to make it an essential part of the curriculum. They tell us we need to teach kids to be “good to each other” without giving them rational for doing so. I believe that bullies ultimately suffer for their behavior and that being kind is in one’s own self interest. Yes, it is selfish to be kind to others. What goes around, comes around. This goes against the idea of being good for goodness sake, which is the sense I get from this article. Let me know what you think.

Here is the link to this article.

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March Madness – UPDATED 4/1/2010!

Friday, March 19th, 2010

Updated 4/1/2010 after announcement of round one winners (Start with slide 15 for update.) I couldn’t help but notice how the current madness associated with the Race to the Top finalists and the Obama Administration’s blueprint for reauthorization of NCLB are analogous to the other madness associated with March. Don’t forget that the secretary of education was a basketball player. Thanks to information from the New York Times, Education Week, and my own thinking, I have a humorous (I hope) and factual take on the current status. Let me know what you think (dgreen@stny.rr.com).

Click here to see Dr. Doug’s March Madness..

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Good men are hard to find.

Monday, February 15th, 2010

Women have been outperforming men in school for some time. Now the numbers are in and their better performance in schools is paying off in the work place. In terms of pay and employment, women have made big gains at the expense of men. According to an article by M. P. McQueen in the February 12, 2010 “Wall Street Journal”, by 2007, women were earning 35% more bachelor’s degrees and 66% more associate’s degrees than men. While women still make less than men, they are catching up as their pay increased 5.3% last year compared to 3.4% for men. These numbers are even more unbalanced for blacks where women earn 92% more bachelor’s degrees and have a 13.3% unemployment rate compared to 17.6% for black men.
Steady increases among women with college degrees over the past two decades seems to be paying off in the current economy as women for the first time surpassed the number of men holding payroll jobs. “Men have traditionally needed less education, because guys could get good jobs in construction without a master’s in Education and women couldn’t, so education substitutes for that,” said Claudia Goldin, a Harvard University economist.
Women started catching up by the 1960s, and by the 1980s they were earning more bachelor’s degrees than men, and a growing share of graduate and professional degrees. Woman earn more college degrees in all fields except the physical sciences, math, engineering, business and economics. I think the message here is that males can either work harder in school or work harder to find a good woman who can bring home the bacon.

Click here for the McQueen article.

It would be funny if it weren’t true.

Sunday, December 27th, 2009

An article in the NY TImes (12/27/2009) sites a department of Education estimate that in order to apply for part of the $4 billion in federal Race to the Top grant money, a state will need to spend 681 hours to fill out the application. If you haven’t seen the application it is available below. I can’t imagine anyone reading it all without being compensated, but a quick scan is likely to be amusing or depressing depending on your personality.

Click here to see the article..

Click here to see the Race to the top application..

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Obama vs. Bill Gates – Place Your Bet

Friday, November 27th, 2009

These two heavyweights are both trying to improve education by throwing money at the problem. The Obama administration’s $4 billion “Race to the Top” fund will go to the states that can convince government raters that they have the best reform agendas. The feds are also spending $350 million to help create common assessments for the nation that will replace the individual tests that states currently create and use to rate schools as required by federal No Child Left Behind (NCLB) legislation.
Meanwhile, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is donating $350 million in the next ten years to answer the question: “What, exactly, makes a good teacher effective.
With the federal government spending over twelve times as much as the Gates foundation, you would think that they would show more dramatic and significant results. Since it is too soon to tell, all we can do is place our bets. What do you think. Email your pick to me (dgreen@stny.rr.com) and I will post the results. After I get your votes I will post a detailed rational for who I think will win and why.

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