January 2008

The Price We Pay

Teachers College Prof. Henry Levin and Clive Belfield of Queens College (formerly of TC) are getting attention for “The Price We Pay: Economic and Social Consequences of Inadequate Education,” an interesting book they edited that tries to calculate the costs to the economy of school failure. It’s worth checking out because part of it tries [...]

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WashPost Jay Mathews on Dropout Solutions

I admire the way Jay Mathews, the Washington Post’s education columnist and reporter, takes on the real stuff of education and does so in a plain-spoken, non-wonky, real-world way that is always interesting. Good example is a column he did focusing on Levin and Belfield’s new book (see previous entry). A book on the economics [...]

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Cuff him, Dano!

Missed this big New York story in the Daily News last Thursday. Seems that a week earlier a 5-year-old boy threw a tantrum in a Queens elementary school, was taken to the principal’s office, and then was handcuffed by the school’s safety officer and taken to a nearby psych ward. The child’s babysitter was at [...]

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Parents Behaving Badly?

I completely understand why the story of expelled preschoolers won’t die. ABC News did a version of it earlier this week. But many of the stories go too far and, guess what, sensationalize it. A few years ago a Yale researcher was gathering data about various early childhood settings and discovered a small but significant [...]

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Lively Discussion of Full Day Kindergarten on Bay Area Blog

Katy Murphy of the Contra Costa Times writes a blog called “The Education Report” about happenings in the Oakland (CA) Unified School District. The hook for an item she posted on full day kindergarten was a letter written by a parent whose son attends a public elementary in the (very) pricey neighborhood of Montclair, up [...]

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Covering Obstacles To Pre-K

(Virginia Governor Tim Kaine during State of the Commonwealth address Jan. 9) David Harrison of The Roanoke Times did a good job Sunday pointing out the obstacles to expanding pre-kindergarten programs in Virginia. These are issues well worth exploration by reporters. Harrison found problems filling slots and finding space for pre-kindergarten classes in two areas [...]

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Graduating from Pre-K…to what?

A new research brief on the Web site of the Foundation for Child Development highlights an important issue that suggests a number of good questions to be asked. The report is from the Association for Children of New Jersey and is called “Embracing the Big Picture: The State of New Jersey’s Road Toward a PK-3 [...]

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Welcome New Bloggers to EarlyStories

The very able Liz Willen, associate director of the Hechinger Institute and a former award-winning reporter for Bloomberg News, and the tech-savvy and creative Zaira Zafra, also of the Hechinger Institute, will begin gracing EarlyStories with their presence. More views the better, I say.

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Mississippi Editorial Writers Push Pre-K Spending

Editorial writers in Mississippi in recent weeks have been pushing for increased spending on statewide early childhood education, noting that while Mississippi has the highest percentage of working mothers with children, it’s the only Southern state that doesn’t provide state money for pre-kindergarten. A Jan. 5 editorial in the Clarion-Ledger noted that many pre-K programs [...]

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Allies in Alabama

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