School Reform

School Reform City: Read All About It

by | Jul 3, 2014 11:04 am | Comments (5)

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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Common Core Fails The Foul-Shot Test

by | Apr 2, 2014 12:57 pm | Comments (4)

Melissa Bailey Photo

Brittany Pinkston preps for Common Core at Fair Haven Middle.

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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After Blistering Audit, School Gets “Support Plan”

by | Mar 26, 2014 8:22 am | Comments (5)

Melissa Bailey Photo

Florence Caldwell, a member of Lincoln-Bassett’s turnaround committee, welcomed the changes.

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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State Audit Reveals Troubles At Lincoln-Bassett

by | Mar 14, 2014 8:25 am | Comments (21)

Cora Lewis Photo

Jones-Generette knocking on doors to introduce herself to the neighborhood upon arriving at Lincoln-Bassett.

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.

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Back-To-Basics Switcheroo Slams Honors Class

by | Mar 6, 2014 9:00 am | Comments (15)

Melissa Bailey Photo

Kaira Fernandez.

Second in a series.

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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A “Snowball” Aims At Latino College Gap

by | Feb 14, 2014 1:22 pm | Comments (7)

Melissa Bailey Photo

Giana Palafox, Joanel Felix Torres, Noel Conde, Nereida Lucero Ortega, Freddys Castro, Katherine Gomez, Josiah Alejandro, and Yesenia Lopez.

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.

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