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Room for Debate: The Risk of Playing Down Racism

By Imani Perry | Originally Published at The New York Times. MARCH 12, 2014 The My Brother’s Keeper initiative is a response to a terrible social reality. Black boys and men are suffering mightily in this nation. The cause is important. However, this endeavor raises serious concerns. [...]

Room for Debate: The Risk of Playing Down Racism2016-11-25T17:40:20-05:00

Rocketship’s Rich Patron, Reed Hastings, Drops a Bombshell: “Get Rid of School Boards”

Photograph; Reed Hastings, Credit: James Duncan Davidson/O’Reilly Media, Incorporated Dr. Raynard Sanders, is an education expert. In New Orleans he is known for having and sharing the true story. When asked about “The New Orleans Miracle” his response is there is none. The host of New Orleans [...]

Rocketship’s Rich Patron, Reed Hastings, Drops a Bombshell: “Get Rid of School Boards”2016-11-29T17:38:12-05:00

Teaching Students, Missionary Zeal, and the Cult of Personality

By Paul L. Thomas, Ed.D. | Originally Published The Becoming Radical. March 9, 2014 As a teacher educator, I now spend much of my spring visiting schools and observing my seniors who are learning to teach in extended field experiences (my university’s version of student teaching). What [...]

Teaching Students, Missionary Zeal, and the Cult of Personality2016-11-29T17:38:13-05:00

Why Religious Fundamentalists Are So Excited About Voucher Schools

(Photograph Credit; .sho ck via Shutterstock) By Dan Arel | Alternet. March 24, 2014 Two new Republican proposals could be a boon for the prospects of publicly funded religious education. It is no secret that Republicans dislike public education. They view it as a burden on [...]

Why Religious Fundamentalists Are So Excited About Voucher Schools2016-11-29T17:38:13-05:00

I Opted My Kids Out of Standardized Tests. Then My Education Began.

Photograph; She's smiling because she knows taking the test may very well be easier than opting out. |Photo by iStock/Thinkstock By Lisa T. McElroy | Originally Published at Slate. March 6, 2014 Then I learned a thing or two. Deciding to opt my two daughters out [...]

I Opted My Kids Out of Standardized Tests. Then My Education Began.2016-11-29T17:38:13-05:00

SAT Reboot 2016: “Nonsense It All Is”

Photograph by Angel Franco/The New York Times By Paul L. Thomas, Ed.D. | Originally Published at The Becoming Radical. March 6 , 2014 In the often cited scene near the end of Notting Hill when Anna Scott stands in William Thacker’s shabby book store and asks him [...]

SAT Reboot 2016: “Nonsense It All Is”2016-11-29T17:38:13-05:00

Charter School Leader Pushes Kids to Become Her Personal Lobbyists

[Image adapted from Anosmia on flickr] By David Sirota | Originally Published at Pandodaily. March 6, 2014 Charter schools have long been loved by the private sector, and the rich. And for good reason. They are technically public schools, and so they receive lots of public money, [...]

Charter School Leader Pushes Kids to Become Her Personal Lobbyists2016-11-29T17:38:13-05:00

What Is Implicit Bias, And How Might It Affect Teachers And Students? (Part One)

Image: Racial Stereotypes retrieved from tumblr By Esther Quintero | Originally Published at Shaker Blog. April 4, 2014 This is the first in a series of three posts about implicit bias. Here are the second and third parts. The research on implicit bias both fascinates and disturbs [...]

What Is Implicit Bias, And How Might It Affect Teachers And Students? (Part One)2016-11-29T17:38:13-05:00

The PTSD Epidemic in Our Most Violent Neighborhoods

Joshua Cintron, 10, prays during funeral services for his cousin, Naisha Pearson, at St. Luke's Church in the Bronx. Pearson, 10, was shot and killed by a stray bullet at a neighborhood Labor Day picnic in a Bronx park when a fight between two men erupted in [...]

The PTSD Epidemic in Our Most Violent Neighborhoods2016-11-29T17:38:13-05:00
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