For generations now, we’ve heard that the goal of education (and life) is to do better than our parents. Families moved from high school dropout to high school graduate to first generation college going. Families shifted from blue collar to white collar. Each step along the way, parents wanted to see their kids do better, to know their children would have it a little easier raising their family, paying their mortgage, and generally getting on with life.
A Columbus Week Lull
Friends of Eduflack know that the Eduwife and I have spent the past year filling out every form, dealing with every interview, participating in every process, handling every setback, and jumping through every regulatory and legal hoop to bring our baby daughter home from Guatemala. Anna Patricia is now a year and two weeks old. Last evening, the Eduflack family got the phone call we’ve been waiting for for nearly eight months. Next week, mama, dada, and Anna need to show up at the U.S. Embassy in Guatemala City to get Anna’s visa. By this time next week, the three of us will be on a plane home, with Anna firmly implanted as the little princess of our little family.
Meeting the Education Needs of the Hispanic Community
When we discuss education reform, the issue of urban education is usually one of the top discussion points. But in most corners, urban education translates into the education of the African-American community. We look at the achievement gap, and it is usually how black students measure up against white students. Even recent efforts to boost high school graduation rates and college-going rates that focus on underserved populations seem to focus first on the African-American community.
Tallying Graduation Rates in the Old Dominion
Yesterday, the Virginia Department of Education released it latest data on on-time graduation rates. This is the latest trend in data collection, as states across the nation begin to enforce the graduation formula proposed by the National Governors Association (and signed onto by all 50 states).
The Obama Education Platform
As many of us have known for much of the past two years, U.S. Sen. Barack Obama is all about change. His approach to education reform is no different. It is a diverse strategy, like his base of supporters, and reflects a message of change from some of the traditional Democratic education planks.
tion wise, and what are remaining unanswered questions may be.
A College-Ready Culture
Thanks in large part to the funding and attention provided by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, much of the past five years in education reform has focused on improving high schools. We’ve seen programs large and small looking for ways to improve rigor and relevance of high school instruction. We’ve looked at small schools. We’ve tried to tackle the high school dropout rate and the issue of dropout factories. We’ve even looked at career education and career academies. Lots of great ideas that have worked in a lot of well-meaning communities. But much of it steps along the path of finding a high school improvement model that can truly be implemented at scale.
The McCain Education Platform
My friends (sorry, can’t resist), despite popular opinion, U.S. Sen. John McCain does indeed have a comprehensive education platform, and it is a plan that clearly reflects the collective experiences and perspectives of the senior staffers advising the McCain-Palin campaign on education policy.
– Encouraging alternative certification methods that open the door for highly motivated teachers to enter the field
– Providing bonuses for teachers who locate in underperforming schools and demonstrate strong leadership as measured by student improvement
– Providing funding for needed professional teacher development
nformation on postsecondary choices
Let the Debate Begin
As promised yesterday, today we begin the presidential education debate. First, a few of the ground rules. To compare the two campaigns’ education platforms, we will be looking at campaign websites only. Good friend and new media guru Geoff Livingston has said if you aren’t on the Web, you might as well be dead. The Internet is now our go-to source for information and data; it is where we turn when we need to learn something. So we’re just looking at what each candidate has put up on their official website. If it isn’t important enough to post on the Web, then it needn’t be part of this debate. So stump speeches, surrogate talking points, and the rest are important, so if you have them, submit them as comments and I’ll post them immediately.
Educating Ourselves on the Candidates’ Education Platforms
I admit it, I am a gadget freak. When the latest cell phone (I use a second generation iPhone) or laptop (currently working off the MacBook Air with the SSD) or TV comes out, I usually want it. Eduwife has to talk me off the ledge, as we discuss whether I really need it and whether Eduson has a high chance of breaking it should I get it (for the record, he has broken three of my cell phones in the last year and a half, including that first-generation iPhone just last month).
The Mind as an Education Tool
Eduflack is a true disciple of the science of education. Over the years, though, I’ve heard many people describe instruction as more art than anything else. At a National School Boards Association national conference years ago, I actually got into an argument with an attendee who tried to explain to me that it was wrong to try and force kids to learn to read at any age. His thought, they will eventually come along to the issue. Instead, we should be encouraging them to play guitar or yodel or do whatever feels good, and once they were focusing on what they were enjoying, they may soon decide that reading could be a joyful activity as well. Reading will come in time, through wishful thinking and pockets full of rainbows.
