How unions are spinning Seattle's revolving door of leadership
Commentary: When schools and police have problems, the leaders are replaced. But the true problem lies in the influence of unions.
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Commentary: When schools and police have problems, the leaders are replaced. But the true problem lies in the influence of unions.
READ MORE | 20 COMMENTS
Commentary: One of the nation's biggest teachers' groups has just attacked Democrats for Education Reform. Is the party itself pushing people who want to improve schools into the Republican camp?
READ MORE | 39 COMMENTSLegislators are looking at taxes and political realities as they face a big question: How they can move beyond rhetoric about honoring teachers and meet a court mandate for better funding of schools?
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The House wants a requirement that students perform community service to graduate.
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Guest Opinion: Facing demands for school funding, legislators are looking for other savings. But homeless kids need a place to live.
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After less-than-staggering results from its last "Excellence for All" plan, Seattle Schools sets out to refine things.
READ MORE | 4 COMMENTSQuick action would position the Democrats to start negotiations with the Republican-dominated Senate on priorities for the next two years.
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Can the Legislature re-purpose state timber trust fund from school construction to general operating purposes?
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New information and the march of time are putting pressure on lawmakers to face education budget questions.
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Can the Our Schools Coalition, a group of community members and education reform advocates, change the face of teachers' contract negotiations?
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The mayor talks about talking on police reform. Tim Eyman for Legislature? No thanks, he says.
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The state justices have opened the way for the Legislature to do what is right: Devote more money to the education of children.
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Michelle Rhee brings her take on education reform to Seattle.
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After a series of disappointments, the district is trying to rebuild community ties. Some parents are finding it hard to get back that trusting feeling.
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Guest Opinion: The MAP test, a standardized test required by Seattle Public Schools, wastes student time and district money. It's time to drop it.
READ MORE | 8 COMMENTSThe latest from news outlets and blogs around the Northwest and beyond, chosen by Crosscut editors.
Nicholas Lemann looks at StudentsFirst, her reform organization, and finds it's really RheeFirst.
"Attending to multiple streams of information and entertainment while studying, doing homework, or even sitting in class has become common behavior among young people—so common that many of them rarely write a paper or complete a problem set any other way. But evidence from psychology, cognitive science, and neuroscience suggests that when students multitask while doing schoolwork, their learning is far spottier and shallower than if the work had their full attention."
With winks and nods, the legislature has allowed local levies to rise to up to 34% of school funding. If the state finds a new $1 billion, shouldn't it also reduce dependency on local levies?
Schools are increasingly failing to rectify the advantages wealth brings to families.
Three sweeping conservative bills kicked off the discussion, and then legislators went to work on a modified bill that made it through the Legislature and Gov. Inslee will support.
Republicans, liberals, Hollywood notables, and global corporate executives are among those who gave to the Coalition for School Reform, hoping to elect a reform slate for the school board.
"Teaching requires a professional model, like we have in medicine, law, engineering, accounting, architecture and many other fields. In these professions, consistency of quality is created less by holding individual practitioners accountable and more by building a body of knowledge, carefully training people in that knowledge, requiring them to show expertise before they become licensed, and then using their professions’ standards to guide their work. By these criteria, American education is a failed profession."