Tuesday, December 30, 2014

Sunday, December 7, 2014

Snowball Cake Recipe - Kraft Recipes

Snowball Cake Recipe - Kraft Recipes

Friday, November 14, 2014

Women who have sex before marriage are like ‘filthy dishrags,’ California pastor roars

Women who have sex before marriage are like ‘filthy dishrags,’ California pastor roars

Sunday, October 19, 2014

Plfugerville ISD announces location of fourth high school KVUE 8:33 p.m. CDT October 17, 2014

Friday, October 3, 2014

Colorado Board of Education member: Teach kids the U.S. ended slavery voluntarily!

Colorado Board of Education member: Teach kids the U.S. ended slavery voluntarily!

Houston Chronicle 4 hrs · Newsweek names the best schools in Houston.

Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Friday, September 19, 2014

Keep military gear out of Texas schools By Brennan Griffin, Sept. 18, 2014

Thursday, September 11, 2014

In Utah, Teachers Can Carry Guns Into School and Not Tell Anyone By Zoë Schlanger Filed: 9/11/14 at 1:46 PM | Updated: 9/11/14 at 2:59 PM

http://www.newsweek.com/utah-teachers-can-carry-guns-school-and-not-tell-anyone-269923

Briefing - Providing testimony for Social Studies textbook adoption at t...

Is the Drugging of Foster Kids the New Norm? Sep. 8, 2014 11:00am http://www.theblaze.com/contributions/is-the-drugging-of-foster-kids-the-new-norm/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=story&utm_campaign=ShareButtons

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Wednesday, September 10, 2014

I am ME! 我係周耀輝

Dalea Lugo Political Blogger :: Annise Parker, Office of the Mayor | City of Houst...

Dalea Lugo Political Blogger :: Annise Parker, Office of the Mayor | City of Houst...: Post by Annise Parker, Office of the Mayor | City of Houston .

NCISD rolls out district-wide Chromebooks New Caney Independent School District rolled out the first installment of some 10,772 Chromebook devices Tuesday at Porter High School. YOURHOUSTONNEWS.COM

Vaccines-Calling the Shots

Use a Facebook Group to Fight Crime in Your Neighborhood | News 92 FM | Official Site for Houston News, Traffic, Weather, Breaking News

Use a Facebook Group to Fight Crime in Your Neighborhood | News 92 FM | Official Site for Houston News, Traffic, Weather, Breaking News

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

MSNBC (05-21-10) Texas School Board Rewrites History Textbooks With A C...

The Texas Textbook Wars | by Jeff Riggenbach

Texas and Textbooks

Alief ISD Uses Technology To Make It Easier To Get Answers | News 92 FM | Official Site for Houston News, Traffic, Weather, Breaking News

Alief ISD Uses Technology To Make It Easier To Get Answers | News 92 FM | Official Site for Houston News, Traffic, Weather, Breaking News

La candidata demócrata a la gubernatura de Texas, lanza libro autobiográfico 'Forgetting to Be Afraid' en donde habla muchas cosas íntimas como mujer, como hija, madres y sus dos abortos que tuvo que realizar por razones médicas y humanas

Tx Freedom Network @TFN Sep 4 ALERT: Testify at hearing on social studies textbooks - Sept. 16.

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The Case for Vaccinating Your Kids, in One Alarming Chart Eileen Shim's avatar image By Eileen Shim 7 hours ago

The Case for Vaccinating Your Kids, in One Alarming Chart Eileen Shim's avatar image By Eileen Shim 7 hours ago


Dalea Lugo Political Blogger :: How Texas Inflicts Bad Textbooks on Us Gail Collin...

Dalea Lugo Political Blogger :: How Texas Inflicts Bad Textbooks on Us Gail Collin...: http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2012/jun/21/how-texas-inflicts-bad-textbooks-on-us/

Monday, September 8, 2014

Dalea Lugo Political Blogger :: (function(d, s, id) { var js, fjs = d.getElements...

Dalea Lugo Political Blogger :: (function(d, s, id) { var js, fjs = d.getElements...: Post by PBS .

Last Week Tonight with John Oliver: Student Debt (HBO)

In School Finance Battle, Legal Fees Accumulate

In School Finance Battle, Legal Fees Accumulate

If the Texas school districts that are challenging the constitutionality of the state’s school finance system ultimately prevail in their lawsuit, a result could be billions of dollars in extra funding from the state’s coffers for public education.

And more than $8.5 million would also go from the state to the four teams of lawyers representing them. Late last month, state district Judge John Dietz of Austin ruled in the districts’ favor, saying the Texas school finance system leaves school districts without the resources to meet the state’s academic standards. Among the evidence he cited in his findings was the “dismal” performance of poor and English language-learning students in Texas compared with their peers; the 100,000 students not on track to graduate high school on time and the high remediation rates of students who go on to college. The state plans to appeal the ruling.

Dietz also ordered the state to pay for the plaintiffs’ legal tab, which has surpassed $8 million, along with additional costs as the case goes through the appeals process.

The award came over protests from the state, which raised a number of objections, including paying for travel costs for lawyers and witnesses coming to Austin from across Texas. The trial, which lasted a total of 55 days and involved more than 90 witnesses, ended in early spring.

But Dietz said it was “equitable and just” to award the fees, which did not include time spent by the districts’ legal teams on public relations or legislative matters unrelated to the litigation. Dietz said that travel expenses were not excessive.

“The litigation involves districts from across the state with different interests and perspectives. It is entirely predictable and necessary that plaintiffs’ counsel would be drawn from across the state,” he said in his ruling.

The total cost to the state in the litigation — which followed lawmakers cutting almost $5.4 billion from public education in 2011 — is unclear. The sum that Dietz awarded comes on top of the state’s own expenses in defending the lawsuit, which a spokeswoman for the Texas attorney general’s office said the state had not calculated.

But if the state ends up paying the districts’ legal fees, that money would probably go back into the districts’ local budgets. Though arrangements vary among the four groups of districts that are parties in the lawsuit, their lawyers said they intend to return any money they receive from the state to cover their costs.

“If we ever do recover our fees, we simply refund the districts,” said David Thompson, a Houston attorney representing the largest group of school districts in the case.

When school districts joined Thompson’s lawsuit, which includes about 80 from across the state, he said each agreed to pay a dollar per student, with a cap at $65,000, annually for two years.

School districts that joined a separate coalition in the lawsuit, led by the Equity Center, a research and advocacy group that represents low-property-wealth schools, were also asked to contribute a dollar per student.

But that included the caveat “that any amount, including zero dollars, would be acceptable if that’s what a district needed to do,” said Wayne Pierce, the director of the Equity Center. That initial collection was enough to cover the first round of the trial that began in October 2012, Pierce said, but not the second session that Dietz called after the 2013 legislative session.

At that point, Pierce said, the group asked districts to make a second contribution of 50 cents per student. Now, he said, the group should have enough to cover the expected appeal.

Disclosure: J. David Thompson is a partner in Thompson & Horton, which is a corporate sponsor of The Texas Tribune. The Equity Center was a corporate sponsor of The Tribune in 2010. A complete list of Texas Tribune donors and sponsors can be viewed here

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at http://www.texastribune.org/2014/09/08/school-finance-battle-legal-fees-accumulate/.

Friday, August 29, 2014

JIHADI HIGH: This High School Has Now Produced Two Dead American Terrorists Minnesota has given America several homegrown terrorists in recent years. Two... DAILYCALLER.COM

Thrift Shop Algebra Parody

Monday, August 25, 2014

To combat sleep deprivation in students, researchers advocate later school start | The Rundown | PBS NewsHour

To combat sleep deprivation in students, researchers advocate later school start | The Rundown | PBS NewsHour

In Court Filing, Perry Lawyers Challenge Indictment

In Court Filing, Perry Lawyers Challenge Indictment

Lawyers for Gov. Rick Perry challenged his indictment in legal filings Monday, calling the charges unconstitutional and asking the courts to throw them out.

Perry was indicted this month, accused of coercing a public servant and abusing his official capacity of governor when he threatened to veto $7.5 million in state funds to the public corruption unit of the Travis County District Attorney's office if District Attorney Rosemary Lehmberg refused to step down after her April 2013 drunken driving arrest.

“Continued prosecution of Governor Perry on the current indictment is unprecedented, insupportable and simply impermissible,” the attorneys wrote in their brief. “This court should not hesitate to dismiss both counts of the indictment and bar the prosecution, immediately if not sooner.”

In the brief signed by David Botsford, one of a half-dozen lawyers hired by the governor, Perry’s team contends the indictments violate constitutional provisions for the separation of powers and protecting free speech, and the brief said that the charges are vague, overbroad and improperly applied.

The governor’s defense team promised a challenge last week; the court said at that time that the prosecutor will have a week to respond.

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at http://www.texastribune.org/2014/08/25/perry-lawyers-challenge-indictments-court-filing/.

"Unsung Hero" (Official HD) : TVC Thai Life Insurance 2014 : โฆษณาไทยประ...

Changes This Year as Houston-Area Kids Go Back to School | News 92 FM | Official Site for Houston News, Traffic, Weather, Breaking News

Changes This Year as Houston-Area Kids Go Back to School | News 92 FM | Official Site for Houston News, Traffic, Weather, Breaking News

Changes This Year as Houston-Area Kids Go Back to School | News 92 FM | Official Site for Houston News, Traffic, Weather, Breaking News

Changes This Year as Houston-Area Kids Go Back to School | News 92 FM | Official Site for Houston News, Traffic, Weather, Breaking News

Teachers turn to online crowdfunding to help supply classrooms By Jennifer Radcliffe August 24, 2014

Bean Bag Chairs Recalled After Two Suffocate | News 92 FM | Official Site for Houston News, Traffic, Weather, Breaking News

Bean Bag Chairs Recalled After Two Suffocate | News 92 FM | Official Site for Houston News, Traffic, Weather, Breaking News

Malala: Children around the world should fight for education

Malala: Children around the world should fight for education

Can online courses replace a campus education?

Can online courses replace a campus education?

Saturday, August 23, 2014

Free cancer screenings offered by Memorial Hermann Northeast Hospital during first-ever Community Cancer Screening - Your Houston News: News

Free cancer screenings offered by Memorial Hermann Northeast Hospital during first-ever Community Cancer Screening - Your Houston News: News

Lone Star College System recognized as a top producer of associate degrees - Your Houston News: News

Lone Star College System recognized as a top producer of associate degrees - Your Houston News: News

18 Candidates File for Five AISD Races by: Katherine Haenschen Sat Aug 23, 2014 at 11:00 AM CDT

Monday, August 4, 2014

Texas’ public school disaster: How segregation and cuts are gutting the system

Texas’ public school disaster: How segregation and cuts are gutting the system

BetterLesson built for the Common Core Over 5,000 complete Common Core-aligned lessons from our 130 Master Teachers. Introducing a brand new, free resource from the BetterLesson team featuring the highest quality Common Core-aligned lessons created through our Master Teacher Project.

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With Uncertainty, Schools Prepare for New Arrivals

With Uncertainty, Schools Prepare for New Arrivals

Federal officials along the border have scrambled in the last few months to house and care for tens of thousands of unaccompanied minors from Central America crossing the border into the United States.

With many of those children remaining in Texas, public school administrators face the challenge of providing an education for them when schools open later this month. Though the first day of classes is only weeks away, education officials say Texas school districts have not been told how many youths they will need to enroll, complicating efforts to prepare for their arrival.

“I think the message from the point of view of the school districts is that they know how to do this. They can serve these kids,” David Anderson, a lawyer with the Texas Education Agency, said of school administrators during a legislative hearing on Tuesday. “But they need to know the numbers ahead of time.”

When law enforcement officials detain unaccompanied minors who have crossed the border illegally, they have 72 hours to place them in a program within the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement. While there, the children typically stay in one of about 100 short-term facilities set up by the federal government. The average stay is about 35 days. During that time, federal case workers attempt to track down relatives or other caregivers, like foster parents, to sponsor the children as they go through the legal system. Once they are placed with sponsors, they can go to public schools in their communities.

“The front end about where do you place these kids is going to be one of the real shocks to the system in September and coming months as kids enroll in school,” said Margie McHugh, the director of the Migration Policy Institute’s National Center on Immigrant Integration Policy. “Trying to find their prior academic records and do assessments so they can be appropriately placed is in and of itself a herculean effort for local schools, and it’s going to require local school districts to be very fast on their feet.”

Since October, the Department of Homeland Security has referred about 52,000 minors to the unaccompanied alien children program, a spokesman said. About 96 percent remain in the United States as their legal status is determined. Since January, about 4,200 of the 30,000 children placed with sponsors have settled in Texas — more than in any other state.

It could cost the state up to $9,200 for each child who stays for the entire school year, Anderson said Tuesday.

But districts will not know how many migrant children they will serve until the school year begins. Because Texas enrollment is growing by about 80,000 students each year, Anderson said, most districts plan for additional children. Depending on a district’s size and the number of new students, additional staff, like bilingually certified teachers, may be needed, he said.

“We just don’t know those numbers,” he said. “We don’t know how many are in custody of the federal government. School districts will be enrolling students over the next three weeks, and we’ll either be surprised or not.”

Annette Garcia, a spokeswoman for the state education service center that serves school districts in several counties on the border, said there had not been much discussion among the districts about how to handle an increase in immigrant children.

“I think it’s still a wait-and-see approach to see where we are,” she said. “Will the children remain here. Will they be sent to other parts of the state, other parts of the country for processing? It is still in the we-don’t-know stages.”

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at http://www.texastribune.org/2014/08/04/uncertainty-schools-prepare-new-arrivals/.

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

The day I left my son in the car

The day I left my son in the car

Dalea Lugo Political Blogger :: S Teacher Removed From Classroom For Showing Black...

Dalea Lugo Political Blogger :: S Teacher Removed From Classroom For Showing Black...: http://jezebel.com/i-had-not-even-thought-of-this-but-totally-what-some-1584481941

Political fight simmers over school lunch menu changes

Political fight simmers over school lunch menu changes

S This Preschooler's Commencement Speech Has Life All Figured Out 9,901g1 kellyfaircloth Kelly Faircloth ProfileFollow Kelly Faircloth Filed to: BATMAN BATKID PREDATOR Thursday 10:40am


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S Brace for the Backlash to the Reading Rainbow Kickstarter! 68,773g851 kellyfaircloth Kelly Faircloth ProfileFollow Kelly Faircloth Filed to: READING RAINBOW KICKSTARTER LEVAR BURTON PBS Thursday 2:20pm

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New report details chronic teacher absences Report finds 16 percent of teachers nationwide missed 18 days or more Author: Jenelle Shriner, News Executive Producer Published On: Jun 03 2014 06:37:44 AM CDT Updated 38 m

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Feds Urge Parents to Stop Using 'Nap Nanny' After Sixth Death June 3, 2014 By ABC NEWS via GOOD MORNING AMERICA

http://abcnews.go.com/US/sixth-baby-dies-recalled-infant-recliner/story?id=23970287

Texas Students Receive Fewer Disciplinary Tickets

Texas Students Receive Fewer Disciplinary Tickets

New court data show that the number of tickets written by public school police officers for student misbehavior has fallen 71 percent since new laws designed to reduce the procedure went into effect late last year.

Until the new laws, students who caused disruptions on school buses or in classrooms, who trespassed, or who possessed drugs or alcohol on school grounds could be ticketed with a Class C misdemeanor.

The reforms — authored by state Sens. Royce West, D-Dallas, and John Whitmire, D-Houston — took effect Sept. 1 and were attempts to decriminalize student behavior. West’s measure was designed to stop ticketing at school for anything but traffic violations. Whitmire’s measure specifically eliminated "disruption of class" and "disruption of transportation" from the education code.

From Sept. 1 through Dec. 31, there were 515 Class C misdemeanor tickets issued for education code violations, compared to 1,805 for the same four-month period in 2012, according to David Slayton, administrative director of the Texas Office of Court Administration.

“The full intent of the bills was to keep kids out of court,” Slayton said. “There were a lot of kids going to court for minor offenses.”

Slayton’s findings will be released at Tuesday's Senate Committee on Jurisprudence hearing, which will also feature invited testimony from school administrators and police on how the laws are faring.

Many school police officers, like George Dranowsky, chief of the East Central ISD Police Department in San Antonio, believe the reforms have gone too far.

“In my opinion, it’s created other problems,” Dranowsky said. “It’s tying law enforcement hands to enforce laws and assist school administration.”

Dranowsky said the laws leave victims of school violence defenseless. While school police can no longer ticket immediately, they can file a complaint with the local prosecutor’s office. But the complaint has to be accompanied by an affidavit from an eyewitness. Once submitted, it’s up to the local prosecutor to decide whether a Class C citation is issued. 

“Let’s say a kid pushes another kid, there’s a fight, that’s assault," Dranowsky said. "It’s a Class C misdemeanor."

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at http://www.texastribune.org/2014/06/03/texas-students-see-fewer-tickets-issued/.

Saturday, May 17, 2014

Share the Buzz | WEG | Whole Foods Market

How to save the world’s bees before it’s too late

How to save the world’s bees before it’s too late

Business:Location:Search Auto Dealers Auto Repair Bar Carpet Cleaning Child Care Chocolate Coffee Dentist Doctor Florists Furniture Golf Course Gym Hair Salon Hotels Insurance Jewelry Landscaping Locksmith Movers Pizza Plumbing Realtor Remodeling Storage Browse all » Crime 66-year-old substitute teacher on the mend after being laid out by student

http://www.khou.com/video/crime/66-year-old-substitute-on-the-mend-after-being-laid-out-by-student-259621981.html

Teen found dead at Hyatt North Houston Hotel After Prom - Houston weather, traffic, news | FOX 26 | MyFoxHouston

Teen found dead at Hyatt North Houston Hotel After Prom - Houston weather, traffic, news | FOX 26 | MyFoxHouston

S Father Files Restraining Order Against 5-Year-Old Bully 24

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Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Texas Republican Greg Abbott Tries to Bury His Court Fight With 600 School Districts in the Past By: Adalia Woodburymore from Adalia Woodbury Wednesday, April, 30th, 2014, 9:41 pm

http://www.politicususa.com/2014/04/30/texas-republican-greg-abbott-bury-court-fight-600-school-districts.html

S Fifth Graders Perform Hilarious Synchronized Swimming Routine

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Teen commits suicide after being bullied

Teen commits suicide after being bullied

Davis Calls For Reduced Emphasis on Standardized Testing by Alexa Ura April 30, 2014

Davis Calls For Reduced Emphasis on Standardized Testing

*Editor's note: This story has been updated with comment from a spokeswoman for Greg Abbott.

In her fourth education reform proposal, Democratic gubernatorial candidate state Sen. Wendy Davis says she wants to reduce the weight standardized testing carries in the state’s education system and emphasize more local control of educational accountability measures.

In the proposal, which was announced at San Antonio College on Wednesday, Davis indicated that she would direct the Texas Education Agency to revamp its state accountability system to consider “quality of education” metrics, rather than only focus on test scores. Her plan also calls for local alternatives to standardized tests to give school administrators and parents more control of the frequency and types of assessments used in local school districts.

"Teachers know that a student's success is measured not by one test on one day, but by growth over the year,” Davis said in a statement. “My proposal will help ensure genuine local control that empowers schools to teach more and test less.”

Davis, who in 2011 filibustered to try to block $5.4 billion in spending cuts lawmakers eventually made to public education, has attempted to make education a key issue in the governor’s race. Though some of those funds were restored in 2013, Davis said in her latest policy proposal that more action by state lawmakers is needed to reform the current education system. She vowed that she would designate “standardized testing as an emergency matter for priority consideration by the Texas Legislature” to make schools “more than test-prep factories.”

Davis’ proposal to redesign TEA’s state accountability system draws from a bill she filed in the 2013 legislative session that would have revised the Texas Education Code to include teacher retention and class sizes as school performance indicators. She also said she would sign into law legislation that would create alternatives or review current testing models, including House Bills 2824 and 2836, which were passed by the Legislature last session but were ultimately vetoed by Gov. Rick Perry. The bills would have allowed the Texas High Performance Schools Consortium to pilot an alternative accountability system with parent and teacher input and would have required exams at lower grade levels to be reworked so that most students could complete them in two hours or less, among other mandates.

Davis’ proposal comes after weeks of hammering her Republican opponent, Attorney General Greg Abbott, for language in his early education policy proposal that appears to call for the biannual testing of pre-kindergarten students to tie additional funding to academic outcomes.

The Abbott campaign has said his plan does not call for standardized tests, and that “suggestions to the contrary are absurd.” But Davis has continued her attacks, saying that Abbott's plan flies in the face of concerns by parents and educators about the state's reliance on standardized testing.

Abbott spokeswoman Amelia Chasse said Davis' plan imitated Abbott's latest education policy proposal, which he revealed last week. It calls for providing school districts and parents with increased control of students' education by tossing out state mandates and regulations.

"Parts of Sen. Davis’ plan read a lot like a Cliff’s Notes version of the policy proposals Greg Abbott has been promoting for months, except hers lacks any substance or detail," Chasse said. "Greg Abbott's plan ensures genuine local control that gets away from the one-size-fits-all mandates that have been imposed by Austin."

Davis has indicated that she would direct TEA to challenge the “most draconian provisions” of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act/No Child Left Behind, which she says comes with “rigid” regulations that leave school administrators wary of losing federal funding if they do not follow student accountability guidelines under the law.

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at http://www.texastribune.org/2014/04/30/davis-calls-reduced-emphasis-standardized-testing/.

Sunday, April 20, 2014

Teaching ate me alive

Teaching ate me alive

March 27, 2014 | Julian Vasquez Heilig | 6 Comments Beware: A Hostile Takeover of ALL Dallas Public Schools is Underway

http://cloakinginequity.com/2014/03/27/beware-a-hostile-takeover-of-all-dallas-public-schools-is-underway/

Dress Code For PARENTS Proposed At Florida School The Huffington Post | by Dominique Mosbergen Email RSS Posted: 04/15/2014 6:12 pm EDT Updated: 04/16/2014 2:59 pm EDT

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/04/15/parent-dress-code-broward-county_n_5155057.html?ncid=fcbklnkushpmg00000063

Dalea Lugo Political Blogger :: CRIME US college students studying abroad prime ta...

Dalea Lugo Political Blogger :: CRIME US college students studying abroad prime ta...: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2014/04/20/american-college-students-studying-abroad-targets-for-espionage-recruitment-fbi/?intcmp=latestnews

Five Offenses That Can Land Kids (But Not Adults) In Jail Truancy, running away from home, and 'incorrigibility' can lead to kids getting locked up Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/five-offenses-that-can-land-kids-but-not-adults-in-jail-20140324#ixzz2zRxmLWjm Follow us: @rollingstone on Twitter | RollingStone on Facebook

http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/five-offenses-that-can-land-kids-but-not-adults-in-jail-20140324

27 Embarrassing Things That Can Happen When Substitute Teaching Is 60 bucks really worth this???

http://www.buzzfeed.com/saraashleighr/27-embarrassing-things-that-can-happen-when-substi-bhoz

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Happy 2nd Birthday Grumpy Cat! - Friskies® Party Mix Cat Treats

Student: 'It's disgusting. This is not VEISHA'

Jeb Bush: Illegal Immigration Is an 'Act of Love'

The Truth About High School Drug Stings: Are Undercover Cops Invading Your Campus? tv Posted: 04/09/2014 4:19 pm EDT Updated: 04/09/2014 4:59 pm EDT


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/04/09/high-school-drug-stings_n_5120395.html?utm_hp_ref=teen

Texas Mulls Adding Mexican-American Studies Course AP | by WILL WEISSERT Posted: 04/08/2014 10:54 am EDT Updated: 04/08/2014 11:59 am EDT


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/04/08/texas-mexican-american-course_n_5111110.html

Why Mexican-American Studies Matter The Huffington Post | by Roque Planas Email RSS Posted: 04/08/2014 5:10 pm EDT Updated: 04/08/2014 5:59 pm EDT

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/04/08/what-is-mexican-american-studies_n_5113102.html

Utah Mom's Facebook Check May Have Saved Son From Shooting Plot The Huffington Post | by Ed Mazza Email RSS Posted: 04/08/2014 4:18 am EDT Updated: 04/08/2014 10:59 am EDT

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/04/08/utah-mom-facebook_n_5109174.html

Girl, 11, Shot Dead by 2-Year-Old Brother

Girl, 11, Shot Dead by 2-Year-Old Brother

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

School District Holds First Official Integrated Prom (And Yes, You Are Reading This In 2014) The Huffington Post | by Rebecca Klein Email RSS Posted: 04/02/2014 10:22 am EDT Updated: 04/02/2014 10:59 am EDT

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/04/02/wilcox-integrated-prom-2014_n_5072414.html?ncid=fcbklnkushpmg00000063

Dalea Lugo Political Blogger :: School Warns Parents About 'Eraser Challenge' Game...

Dalea Lugo Political Blogger :: School Warns Parents About 'Eraser Challenge' Game...: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/03/31/eraser-challenge-connecticut-school_n_5064561.html?utm_hp_ref=mostpopular

FOX 26 Houston Father furious about fight in classroom as teacher stood and watched (Full Video) http://www.myfoxhouston.com/video?clipId=10007824&autostart=true


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College royal flush: Long Island high school senior accepted at all 8 Ivy League schools Published April 01, 2014Associated Press


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Oklahoma poised to become second state to repeal Common Core Eric Owens Education Editor Read more: http://dailycaller.com/2014/04/02/oklahoma-poised-to-become-second-state-to-repeal-common-core/#ixzz2xlkcpQ57


http://dailycaller.com/2014/04/02/oklahoma-poised-to-become-second-state-to-repeal-common-core/

Film Explores Difficult Road To College For 'First Generation' Students (VIDEO) VOXXI | by John Benson Posted: 04/01/2014 2:11 pm EDT Updated: 04/01/2014 2:59 pm EDT

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/04/01/first-generation-film-_n_5070989.html

First Census Of Mexico's Schools Finds Problems AP Posted: 04/01/2014 11:14 am EDT Updated: 04/01/2014 11:59 am EDT

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/04/01/mexico-schools-census_n_5069781.html?utm_hp_ref=mostpopular

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Schools on Their Own to Avoid Double-Testing Math by Morgan Smith March 26, 2014

Schools on Their Own to Avoid Double-Testing Math

After some eighth-grade students in Texas public schools finish their state math exams in May, they could have to sit back down soon after and take another one.

Federal and state officials are in talks to work out a conflict between testing requirements under the state’s new high school graduation standards and federal education law. Currently Texas school districts are left with two options for the roughly 23 percent of eighth-graders — about 86,000 students last school year — who take algebra I before they reach high school. The districts could either ignore federal law, which could subject them to penalties, or test them twice — once in algebra I to fulfill state requirements and once under the eighth-grade-level math assessment used for federal accountability purposes.

The 2013 Texas Legislature unanimously passed legislation reducing the number of state assessments students must take to graduate from 15 to five. Only one exam in math is required — algebra I, which many students take in ninth grade. That means if students take algebra I before they reach high school, they could graduate under Texas law without taking another a state standardized test in math. But under federal accountability measures, a student must be tested in math every year from grades three through eight, as well as at least once in high school.

State efforts to reach an agreement with the U.S. Department of Education on aligning those two mandates have failed so far. This month, the Texas Education Agency announced that the federal government had denied its request for a "double-testing" waiver for students who took algebra I in eighth grade. TEA Commissioner Michael Williams said he submitted the waiver because double-testing was not “instructionally appropriate” or a “valid evaluation of mathematics.”

To keep districts from deciding against offering algebra at the middle school level to avoid testing-associated complications, he said this year the state would only count results of the algebra I exam in its calculations of ratings.

“Such a move would seriously disadvantage students who move quickly through the mathematics curriculum in grades K-8 and would benefit from taking advanced coursework in middle school,” Williams said of middle schools potentially ending algebra 1 courses. “Should a Texas district or charter elect to make such a move, this stalls students’ academic progress and provides them with one less opportunity to take an advanced mathematics course or another relevant upper-division course in high school.”

The TEA’s March recommendation to not double-test students was a reversal of its instructions to school districts before the start of the school year, when Williams said he “reluctantly” recommended that they test students taking algebra I in eighth grade twice to fulfill the requirements — advising districts that they should either plan on administering multiple exams or “understand the potential federal accountability consequences of testing these students only on algebra I.”

Further complicating the situation, shortly after the TEA said the federal government had rejected the state’s waiver application, the U.S. Department of Education issued a statement clarifying that it had not actually denied it — and was working with the state to “find a solution” that would ensure “that Texas students taking Algebra in middle school are also being assessed on higher-level math content in high school to help prepare them for college and a career.”

“There is certainly confusion among parents and even among students,” said Drew Scheberle, the senior vice president of education at the Austin Chamber of Commerce, who frequently testifies at state hearings on assessment and accountability issues. “I have friends and colleagues who tutor kids say, ‘I am getting requests for students in algebra I to be tutored in eighth-grade math so that they can take a test.’”

The Austin Independent School District is among the school districts in the state, including its largest, Houston ISD, that have decided to follow the TEA’s recommendation to only offer a state exam in algebra I for eighth-grade students taking the advanced math course.

When contacted by The Texas Tribune, TEA spokeswoman Lauren Callahan said in an email that state talks with federal officials were still underway.

She said the agency advised districts that the waiver would not be granted in March because they were preparing to begin testing in early April, but that to date, the federal education department had not provided a “formal declination of approval” for the waiver.

Because the state had not received a formal response, Callahan said, there was also “no clear indication” of the consequences districts might face if they ignore federal testing requirements.

“The choice to double-test middle school students taking algebra I is now strictly a local decision,” she said. 

Disclosure: The Austin Chamber of Commerce was a corporate sponsor of The Texas Tribune in 2010 and 2011. (You can also review the full list of Tribune donors and sponsors below $1,000.) 

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at http://www.texastribune.org/2014/03/26/schools-their-own-avoid-double-testing-math/.