Nancy E. Bailey's Blog, page 67

October 28, 2015

“High Expectations” and the Criminalization of America’s Students

By now most of us have seen the video of the resource officer using brute force to yank a female student out of her desk. Appalling, most agree. But this country has been criminalizing students, if not violently, inhumanely and subtly, in their schools for a long time. Why do Americans put up with it? […]
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Published on October 28, 2015 09:54

October 26, 2015

President Obama’s Testing Remarks: What about Students with Disabilities?

The President suddenly cares about children and too much testing. What about all the students with disabilities that have been tested poorly or unnecessarily for years? I shouldn’t say his sudden remarks. As many bloggers pointed out over the weekend, he has a long list of comments against high-stakes tests from the past. His actions […]
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Published on October 26, 2015 11:35

October 23, 2015

Oregon Officials Wonder Why Children Act out: Maybe It’s Because…

They’ve got behavioral problems in Oregon. Kids throwing tantrums, despondence, and there’s plenty of physical aggression to go around. Officials don’t know why. Their data isn’t helping much–and they can’t figure it out–exactly. They know many of the children live in poverty. They might be traumatized due to violence in their lives, and this could […]
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Published on October 23, 2015 09:58

October 19, 2015

Hey Bill & Melinda! Here’s What’s Hard for ELLs

By Linda Chantal Sullivan As I read Nancy Bailey’s blog post, “Challenge to the Common Core King and Queen: Get Involved Really!,” I found myself vigorously nodding my head in agreement. How ridiculous that Bill and Melinda Gates say reforming our education system is the hardest job they’ve ever tackled. I was thinking, “Yeah, you […]
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Published on October 19, 2015 09:38

October 17, 2015

For You Michigan!—You Are WRONG about Retention!

There are some issues, like the loss of recess and retention of third graders, that make no sense at all. I can sometimes understand mistakes, attribute them to people being clueless, but when it comes to retention the research is there. Anyone who knows how to read and puts some time into it will learn […]
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Published on October 17, 2015 05:51

October 14, 2015

My Dream About EDUCATION and the Democratic (or Republican) Debate

I fell asleep last night during the democratic debate and I dreamt this is how it all unfolded. The scary part was there were no answers to the questions  about education when I woke up. In my dream Anderson Cooper said: America’s democratic public schools, how we treat and instruct the next generation, our children, […]
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Published on October 14, 2015 14:53

October 12, 2015

School Reformers Who Blame Public Schools for Eliminating Special Education

I see Washington Post Columnist Jay Matthews as someone who usually cheerleads for privatization of public schools. I take issue with his Sunday Washington Post article “How can a special education student fail finals yet pass? Sadly, it’s easy.” Oh help! Is this not a case of the right hand not being able to find […]
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Published on October 12, 2015 17:19

October 10, 2015

Using Student Journal Writing to Fight Bad School Reform

Every student should have a journal including most students with disabilities and ELL students. Journal writing is one of the best teaching techniques to show students that their voice matters and that their schools are about who they are and what they do. It also teaches students many writing skills. It is a 180 degree […]
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Published on October 10, 2015 14:18

October 8, 2015

Challenge to the Common Core King and Queen: Get Involved Really!

Bill and Melinda Gates say “Working on reforming the U.S. education system is the hardest job they’ve ever tackled — even more difficult and complex than trying to find a cure for malaria.” Their hardest job? Are they kidding? Sitting in an ivory palace pulling school reform ideas off the top of your head is […]
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Published on October 08, 2015 14:07

October 6, 2015

Learning Matters: The Truth about Our Schools—In England and the U.S.

School privatization is happening around the world. It should come as no surprise that many countries have the same draconian reforms foisted on their public schools like the U.S. I find it interesting to learn how other countries run their schools and the similarities and differences between their systems and ours. Learning Matters: The Truth […]
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Published on October 06, 2015 06:18