Nancy E. Bailey's Blog, page 29

September 7, 2019

The Need for School Psychologists at this Critical Time

Public schools provide support staff that help teachers consider the whole child. This includes the role of the school psychologist. These professionals are the experts that make a school and school system complete. They provide children and teens the mental health support they need. Since the corporate school reform march to privatize public education, those […]
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Published on September 07, 2019 06:47

September 1, 2019

Gifted and IDEA: Charter Schools Won’t Solve the Gifted Debate

Even though gifted is listed as a special education category, under the Individuals with Disabilities Act (IDEA) it has never been adequately addressed in most places. Intellectually advanced students are complex, not always easy to understand. They need and deserve school support. Much debate surrounds gifted education. But charter schools will not be a sufficient […]
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Published on September 01, 2019 09:27

August 28, 2019

Is NCLB’s Reading First Making a Comeback?

Reading First was President George W. Bush’s signature reading program, the cornerstone of No Child Left Behind. With a $6 billion price tag (a billion per year for six years), it promised “scientific proof” it would have every child reading by third grade. States had to apply for federal grants. Reading First centered around phonics. […]
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Published on August 28, 2019 08:16

August 24, 2019

11 Problems Facing Students as They Return to School

If you support our students, the next generation, and a democratic public education system that we all own, it’s tough to watch the changes corporate reformers have caused in schools. They’re not the ideas that most parents and teachers support, so we wonder why they’re implemented. Most of the problems that exist in public schools […]
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Published on August 24, 2019 07:14

August 22, 2019

The Technology Cheating Problem Is Still a Problem

While many were appalled at the celebrity college entrance scandal, there’s another scandal that gets minimal attention. Students cheat with technology! Cheating has always been a problem in school but with technology it runs rampant. In the classroom, teachers curtail cheating by supervising students in person. They learn about students and become familiar with their […]
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Published on August 22, 2019 07:46

August 13, 2019

Helping Students, Including Those with Learning Disabilities, With Self-Expression

The most important words a student can hear from their teacher or parent are, “I want to hear how you think and feel about this.” Helping students express themselves through writing is critical in every class at every grade level. Self-expression is so important today that I felt compelled to write about one of my […]
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Published on August 13, 2019 09:40

August 7, 2019

How Dwindling Human Interaction in Public Schools Hurts Us as a Society

Look at the picture above. Is the boy going to pick on the girl, or will he invite her to play with the other children? In today’s impersonal school climate, how do students learn about those around them? When there’s no chance of bringing students together in school, how will children better understand their peers? […]
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Published on August 07, 2019 11:35

August 2, 2019

NCTQ’s “Case Closed” Brain Image Post Plugs Pearson’s RICA Reading Te$t for Teachers. Fails the Smell Test!

Kate Walsh, President of the astroturf National Council of Teacher Quality (NCTQ), a group that pretends it’s for teachers and schools when it’s really about privatization, recently published an article “Case Closed” implying that teachers are “science deniers” when it comes to teaching reading. But Walsh’s brain imaging illustration is taken from a research article […]
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Published on August 02, 2019 05:29

July 30, 2019

Fake Play and Its Dangerous Alignment to Standards and Data

Where does pretending come in? It relates to what philosophers call “counterfactual” thinking, like Einstein wondering what would happen if a train went at the speed of light. ~Alison Gopnik, “Let the Children Play, It’s Good for Them” Smithsonian Magazine. July 2012. There’s a troubling phenomenon happening in early childhood education. It involves aligning standards […]
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Published on July 30, 2019 05:36

July 21, 2019

Force and Flunk, Tougher Kindergarten Lead to Parental Dissatisfaction with Public Schools

When children aren’t reading according to the corporate time frame set by Jeb Bush and his ilk (non-educators who want to privatize public education), parents become dissatisfied, even angry with public school officials and teachers when their children fail. The goal of many corporations is to end public education. They want privatization. To do this, […]
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Published on July 21, 2019 11:24