Tara Cass jumped the line to become a public school principal — and took with her some tips she learned at a charter school during an unconventional leadership training program.
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Melissa Bailey |
Jul 4, 2014 9:58 am
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The state should have done its homework before allowing the charter organization known as FUSE to take over low-performing public schools, a Republican gubernatorial candidate said during a New Haven campaign stop.
A teacher who is dying of an autoimmune disease pours her energy into an after-school ballet program that transforms young girls’ lives. A student wakes up at 4:30 a.m. every day to get on a public bus in search of a good education. A gay teacher comes out of the closet during a social justice lesson. A refugee from Burundi finds her strength and rhythm in music class.
These stories — often lost in the national debate over how to fix American public schools — can be found in a new e‑book published by the New Haven Independent Press.
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Melissa Bailey |
Jun 24, 2014 8:33 am
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Michael Sharpe, the man Rev. Eldren Morrison chose to help open a charter school in New Haven, has left his position in a cloud of deceit. Morrison said he’s sticking with that man’s model of schooling.
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Melissa Bailey |
Jun 20, 2014 10:20 am
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Rev. Eldren Morrison, who’s about to open a new charter school in New Haven, came out Friday in support of the embattled charter management organization he has hired to help him.
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Melissa Bailey |
Jun 18, 2014 8:22 am
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Before joining the “Dream Team,” rookie teacher Mark Cofrancesco would sometimes catch students “zoning out” after he launched into 40-minute lectures. Now he’s got a new game plan.
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Melissa Bailey |
May 13, 2014 11:48 am
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Three years after it hired a New Jersey-based company to “turn around” Clemente Leadership Academy, the school system is bringing the school back in-house.
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Melissa Bailey |
May 8, 2014 8:40 am
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Teachers have until May 16 to decide whether they want to stay at one of the city’s most challenging schools as it enters its next chapter — with a new twist on how to rebuild.
When students start taking Common Core exams, the results will “expose that we have a middle-class crisis in this country,” predicted a local charter school network CEO.
Crowds from Stamford and Bridgeport stormed Hartford Wednesday to oppose new charter schools in their communities. New Haven’s proposal for a new charter school, meanwhile, sailed through with not a peep of opposition.
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Ann Policelli Cronin |
Apr 2, 2014 12:57 pm
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Ann Policelli Cronin, a one-time Connecticut Outstanding English Teacher of the Year who has received national awards for middle and high school programs she designed and implemented, originally wrote this opinion article for the Connecticut Mirror. Click here and here for previous articles on Common Core.
Imagine …
The NCAA Basketball Championship is based solely on free-throw shooting. Team practices are spent doing repetitive exercises of shooting from the foul line. All college players take the same free-throw shooting test. Their scores determine the excellence of the team, expertise of the coach and quality of the school. The team with the highest score becomes the national champion.
As a result of this new competition, the game of basketball is lost. The game, in which quick thinking, collaborative efforts and a whole array of athletic abilities are integral to the success of a team, is not played. The players begin to forget what it was to play 40 minutes of basketball. The coaches stop thinking about ways to develop talents of individual players and stop strategizing about how to make the team as a whole more successful. The fans forget about that long-ago game of basketball and enthusiastically cheer for their favorite foul shooters and compare them to foul shooters on other teams and in other countries.
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Melissa Bailey |
Mar 28, 2014 12:06 pm
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In her debut appearance on a different kind of school board, Mayor Toni Harp was welcomed as a champion for charter schools — and opened her pocketbook for a requisite donation to the cause.
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Melissa Bailey |
Mar 26, 2014 8:22 am
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More truancy officers. A full-time social worker. A “restorative justice” room for kids who get in trouble.
The school system rushed to put those pieces into place at Lincoln-Bassett School in the wake of a state audit revealing “serious concerns” about the education there.
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Melissa Bailey |
Mar 14, 2014 8:25 am
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Students “wander” and “run” in the hallways. Classes have a “low level of rigor.” And staff is divided as to whether a new principal is rescuing or wrecking a neighborhood school.
John Donahue’s Honors English 4 was on a roll, tackling “Waiting for Icarus” by Muriel Rukeyser and other college-level poems. Then the class had to stop and switch to a strictly scripted version of Gateway Community College’s remedial English class.
When the new syllabus took effect, the class’s collective heart sank. The thought-provoking poems were replaced by “tedious” basics.
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Melissa Bailey |
Feb 26, 2014 1:03 pm
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Twenty teachers lost their jobs in the latest round of job evaluations, as the schools began pushing out not just the lowest-performing teachers, but those who failed to improve to “effective” over three years.
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Melissa Bailey |
Feb 21, 2014 12:00 pm
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Modern-day school reformers are focusing too much on standardized tests and too little on kids’ hearts and minds, a legendary Yale child psychologist said as he prepares to advise the president.
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Melissa Bailey |
Feb 19, 2014 8:50 am
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Mandy Bonz juggles 27 English-language learners in her 1st-grade classroom. As part of a new emphasis on early literacy, Superintendent Garth Harries suggested making classes like hers smaller — and expanding the size of under-enrolled classes in middle and high school.
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Melissa Bailey |
Feb 14, 2014 1:22 pm
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Flanked by Frankie the Falcon and some grown-up cheerleaders, hundreds of students in grades pre‑K to 8 took the stage in a school-wide dance performance aimed at motivating kids to go to college.