From CNN.com
Education chief favors longer school year
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Those lazy days of summer may become a thing of the past if the new secretary of education has his way.
Education Secretary Arne Duncan suggests giving incentives to teachers whose students perform well.
Arne Duncan, the Cabinet secretary charged with overhauling America's educational system, is studying programs that keep kids in school longer to boost their academic achievements.
"When I go out and talk about that, that doesn't always make me popular with students. They like the long summers," Duncan said in an interview Wednesday with CNN conducted in the Education Department's library.
But Duncan said American students are "at a competitive disadvantage" because the United States has shorter school years than other countries such as India and China.
"It doesn't matter how poor, how tough the family background, socioeconomic challenges," Duncan said. "Where students have longer days, longer weeks, longer years -- that's making a difference."
More time in school is one of several ideas under consideration as Duncan settles into his new role.
The lanky former college basketball player and father of two speaks quickly, with remarkable energy in the face of daunting challenges.
Thirty percent of high school students drop out before graduation, and another 50 percent won't finish college, according to Education Sector, a nonprofit think tank.
For Latino and African-American students, the numbers are more dramatic. About half of them will graduate from high school, the Washington-based group said.
As school administrators struggle with dropout rates, they also are confronting drastic budget cuts amid national economic uncertainty. Districts are slashing jobs and putting off plans to repair crumbling school buildings.
"What's going on, state after state, due to this tough economy, is devastating educationally. And we can't afford to get worse now. We have to get dramatically better," said Duncan, former chief of Chicago Public Schools.
President Obama and lawmakers have directed billions of dollars to the Department of Education through the stimulus package, and they propose to send more in the 2010 budget Obama announced Thursday.
Duncan said some of that money will provide schools with immediate relief to keep teachers.
"Thanks to the stimulus package, we have the chance to save literally hundreds of thousands of teacher positions. This is a huge, huge deal," he said, citing a University of Washington study that suggests 600,000 teachers could be lost this year without drastic intervention.
"We're going to be able to avert maybe not all of those cuts but a huge percentage of those, and that's very very important," he said.
But the new funds may be only enough to keep a crisis at bay, said Kevin Carey of Education Sector. State and local shortages are forcing schools to make do with much less.
"The economic situation is hurting school budgets," Carey said. "The stimulus package that just passed will help that somewhat, but there still isn't a whole lot of new money to pay teachers more, reduce class sizes, reduce high school dropout rates."
Duncan also suggested giving incentives to teachers whose students perform well, an unpopular idea with teachers' unions. And he said school systems may need to make tough decisions about teachers who don't perform at par.
"If teachers aren't making it, we want to support them and help them develop, but ultimately if it's not working, our children deserve the best," Duncan said. "They probably need to find something else to do."
Duncan also is pushing for new benchmarks that would use international standards to compare American students with those overseas.
He faults No Child Left Behind for standards that he said don't accurately monitor some children's progress.
"When you're told you're meeting those standards, you think you're doing OK. You're really not," Duncan said.
"Our children are not competing for jobs down the block or in the district or in the state -- they're competing against children in India or China, and they need to know how they stack up."
Carey said Duncan's efforts to meet Obama's education goals are an immensely complicated task.
"There are 50 states, there are 14,000 school districts, 90,000 schools, and Secretary Duncan is responsible for every one of them. But they all have their own ideas, their own funding sources, their own local leadership," Carey said.
Duncan said he feels "a real sense of urgency" to implement national education reform.
"Our children in this country have one chance at education. One chance. We can't wait. We can't wait seven or eight years. We'll lose a generation of kids," Duncan said. "And so we have to get better; we have to get better now."
Saturday, February 28, 2009
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From Feb. 23rd BCCT:
Morrisville Council
215-295-8181
When: Tuesday, Feb. 17.
Issue: Approve Nov. 17 meeting minutes; pay bills; approve $298.60 tax refund for tax parcel 24-011-010; certificate for $3,847 payment to A.M. Mechanical Contracting Inc. for library boiler placement; pay request for curb and sidewalk replacement project to L.C. Costa Contractors Inc.
Vote: Approved 8-0 by Nancy Sherlock, Kathryn Panzitta, David Rivella, Rita Ledger, Eileen Dreisbach, Stephen Worob, Jane Burger and Edward Albertson.
Issue: Permit George Mount and Ronald Scheese to attend 11th annual workshop on flood protection in Wilkes-Barre.
Vote: Approved unanimously.
Issue: Advertise responsible contractor ordinance.
Vote: Approved unanimously.
Issue: Appoint Philip Frigerio to the Morrisville Municipal Authority.
Vote: Approved 7-1. Rivella voted no.
Issue: Appoint Suzanne Zukowski as alternate member of the zoning hearing board.
Vote: Approved 5-3. Sherlock, Panzitta and Rivella voted no.
Issue: Accept resignation of Dan Jones from Landmark Towns of Bucks County's board of directors.
Vote: Approved unanimously.
Issue: Resolution establishing a record retention and disposition schedule.
Vote: Approved 6-2. Sherlock and Rivella voted no.
Issue: Confirm submittal of two grants to Congressman Patrick Murphy's office regarding pre-emptive devices, which change traffic lights at intersections for emergency vehicles.
Vote: Approved unanimously.
Longer school year?
Consider instead the movement toward a four day school week!
Supported by the National Conference of State Legislatures: here.
and reported on in TIME: here.
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