Wednesday, November 28, 2007

ConnCAN in the News

PMS Celebrates Testing Success
By Jeff Mill, The Middletown Press, November 22, 2007

PORTLAND - The major share of the credit for the middle school's success in a recent survey of schools goes to the teachers, school Principal Scott Giegerich said.

The school was rated first in an assessment of "performance gains" among sixth, seventh and eighth-grade students from 2006 to 2007.The school also ranked eighth in ConnCAN's list of "most improved schools.

One of the first things we did was to share data," Giegerich said. "We looked at CMT scores for the last five years and then, as a staff, we identified both areas of strength and areas in need of attention."
Throughout the process, there was an emphasis on sharing and cooperation.

Teachers shared examples of specific approaches with the entire staff, which included math, language arts, science social studies world language and unified arts, Giegerich explained.

News Articles

City School Overhaul Advances
By Rache Gottlieb Frank, The Hartford Courant, November 20, 2007

Hartford's school board took a giant leap Tuesday into what will be the redesigning of most of the school system when it approved initial plans to create four new schools and directed the superintendent to redesign four existing low-performing schools and close one elementary school in order to convert it into a magnet school.

By unanimous vote, the board approved a first reading of a plan to create an Achievement First charter school — New Haven's successful Amistad Academy is an Achievement First school — a second Breakthrough Academy, an International Baccalaureate, similar to the one in East Hartford, and a Montessori elementary school. The board will take a final vote next month.

About 500 teachers wearing pins bearing the word "respect" and parents who feel left out of the redesign process protested in a cold drizzle outside before the meeting, and then moved inside, where they demanded a role.

Other board members promised that parents and teachers will be included in the future. "Change of this magnitude happens in stages. Our work is really just beginning," board member Pamela Richmond said.

Public allowed to place items on BOE meeting agenda
By A.J. O’Connell, The Wilton Villager, November 22, 20007

WILTON — The public has long been able to comment at Wilton's board of education meetings. Now, thanks to a change in the board's bylaws, members of the community are now allowed to place an item on the school board's agenda.

"It's been pointed out that while we conduct our meetings in public, they are not public meetings," said board member Troy Ellen Dixon, who led the revision of the board's bylaws this year.

Academic goals for St. Jude kids tailor-made
By Linda Conner Lambeck, The Connecticut Post, November 19, 2007

MONROE — When parent Lynn Dafcik recently sat down with Marie Cassin, a teacher at St. Jude School, to discuss how son Andrew was doing, there were few surprises.

Dafcik — and Andrew — already knew the goals set for him and even which words in reading still pose a challenge to the 6-year-old.

It was, after all, spelled out in an Individualized Academic Plan developed for Andrew at the start of the academic year, with his mother's input.

The goals for Andrew are based on how well he scores on several tests. This year, every student in pre-kindergarten, kindergarten and the first grade at St. Jude has a plan tailored just for them.

Within three years, students in all 39 schools in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Bridgeport will have a custom-developed learning road map if John Cook, the deputy superintendent of diocesan schools, has his way.

Monday, November 19, 2007

ConnCAN in the News

Portland school ranked No. 1 for mastery test improvement
By Jeff Mill, The Middletown Press, November 17, 2007

Sally E. Doyen got her "report card" this week. Her response? "We're thrilled!" the superintendent of schools said, after learning that the Portland Middle School has been judged a winner by education officials.

The school was ranked number-one in the state for "performance gains" on the 2006-07 mastery test results, Doyen said. What's more, Portland also ranked number eight for most improved, according to an analysis compiled by ConnCAN, a statewide education advocacy and outreach group.

Doyen left no doubt about who deserves the credit for the school's success."This is the result of a lot of hard work on the part of the staff and the students," she said. "We spent a lot of time over the last three years aligning our curriculum and developing both consistent goals and consistent expectations," she added. "And now, we have gotten this wonderful payoff!"

Middle School Honored
The Hartford Courant, November 16, 2007

Portland Middle School was ranked No. 1 by the state in the area of "Performance Gains" for the 2006-07 mastery test results comparisons.

The rating appeared in "The State of Connecticut Public Education," a 2007 report card for elementary and middle schools provided by the Connecticut Coalition for Achievement Now. Portland was also ranked No. 8 in the state for "Most Improved."

Pursue magnet school plan for town
The Stamford Advocate, November 18, 2007

Opponents of the plan to turn New Lebanon School into a magnet program say the Board of Education should apply the brakes until new questions are answered about requirements involving race and school diversity.

But many educators, including those at New Lebanon, where test scores are lagging, believe diversity achieved through magnet schools helps all students to learn. And there is evidence to bear them out, including a recent report by ConnCAN, an education advocacy organization. Among other findings, the report rated Stamford's Rogers Elementary School -- a magnet school -- among the state's top five schools in terms of raising student performance and closing the achievement gap between white and minority, and poor and nonpoor students.

Opinions and Editorials

Money Should Follow City Kids To Suburbs
By Rick Green, The Hartford Courant, November 9, 2007

We've got over 100,000 seats in public school classrooms in suburbs around Hartford and there's room for just 1,000 city kids. One percent. That's so pathetic it's embarrassing to even say.

Our affluent and middle class towns say they don't have space for more than this. Fine, but there are consequences here - be prepared for the day when we can't find enough skilled workers or bunks in our prisons.

As it turns out, there's a reason for this limited success: Most of the money doesn't follow the kid to the suburbs.

"The grant that follows the child is woefully insufficient," said Bruce Douglas, director of the Capitol Region Education Council, which runs Project Choice.

So, for example, the state of Connecticut - which is under a court order to desegregate metropolitan Hartford schools - gives Avon about $2,500 for each of the 41 children it takes. The district, however, spends about $11,000 per child. This is no education crisis, it's a taxpayer rip-off.

One percent. We need a judge, a governor or an education commissioner with the backbone to tackle this.


News Articles

High School May Get Harder
By Arielle Levin Becker and Rachel Gottlieb, The Hartford Courant, November 16, 2007

High school students would be required to pass end-of-course exams, complete a yearlong independent study project and earn 24 credits in specific areas to graduate from any public school in Connecticut under a set of recommendations being considered by the State Board of Education.

The recommendations, put together by a committee that included teachers, school officials and representatives of business and higher education, are part of a high school redesign effort intended to address stagnating test scores, wide achievement gaps and concerns that a growing number of state students graduate high school unprepared for college or the workforce.

It will be years before any recommendations are adopted; state education officials will spend much of the next year soliciting public comment, and the legislature must authorize any changes in graduation requirements.
November 12, 2007

News Articles

State seeking school reform: Proposal urges higher standards
By Eileen FitzGerald, The News Times, November 11, 2007

The state Department of Education unveiled a far-reaching redesign meant to increase rigor -- and the state's reported 75-percent high school graduation rate.

The plan, unveiled during a state Board of Education meeting Wednesday, is called a "work in progress." Officials will seek comments and recommendations during visits across Connecticut before it is adopted.

The proposal calls for the state to write a model curriculum it will offer to schools for voluntary use. Students would have to take and pass more courses to graduate, and the state would create end-of-year exams for five subjects. Students would have performance tests, like labs or research presentations, for other subjects.

The plan also adds a senior project -- such as an internships outside of school -- to the high school graduation requirement. It would test skills beyond academics and provide ways for students to accelerate at a faster pace than they can now.

Day 4 In Sheff Case Reveals Rift
By Rachel Gottlieb Frank, The Hartford Courant, November 10, 2007

Testimony by the state's education commissioner on the fourth day of a hearing on the Sheff vs. O'Neill desegregation lawsuit revealed a testy relationship between Hartford's superintendent of schools and the state Department of Education over state efforts to quicken the pace of desegregation.

State Education Commissioner Mark McQuillan on Friday summarized an exchange of letters that began last summer between him and Superintendent Steven Adamowski in which McQuillan asked Hartford to submit documents showing why several of the city's magnet schools didn't have enough white students and how the district intended to remedy the problem.

Spotty Sheff Enforcement
By Rachel Gottlieb Frank and Magdalene Perez, The Hartford Courant, November 9, 2007

Over the years the state has helped develop a comprehensive plan to desegregate Hartford's schools, spent hundreds of millions of dollars on the efforts, appealed to suburban districts to open their schools to city students and offered training to suburban districts to help city students succeed, state witnesses testified Thursday in the Sheff vs. O'Neill desegregation case.

But cross-examination of those witnesses in Superior Court in Hartford revealed that shifts in management have resulted in spotty results and murky accountability since 2003, when the plaintiffs in the Sheff lawsuit reached a compromise agreement with the state on integration goals.

New Lebanon: A Magnet School in Progress
By Anne W. Semmes, The Greenwich Citizen, November 9, 2007

Now that the Board of Education has unanimously voted on New Lebanon School as the district's fourth magnet school, the focus has shifted to how best to strengthen this elementary Byram school identified by Dr. Betty Sternberg, superintendent of schools, as racially unbalanced.

"New Leb has issues of an achievement gap with its mix of minority and white students," said Colleen Giambo, board chairman. "We will try to address closing this gap."

"There will be a committee of administrators and teachers," she said, to consider the different strategies for closing the gap. "They will go though a similar process of development as happened with other magnet schools in town. Each school is different, with different parental interests. Julian Curtiss has international language instruction and Hamilton Avenue has small classes and a pre-school."

Bard President to Meet With City Over C Grade
By Elissa Gootman, The New York Times, November 9, 2007

One of New York’s most prominent educators, Leon Botstein, the president of Bard College, has joined the chorus of criticism over the City Department of Education’s blunt new A through F rating system for public schools, saying in an interview yesterday that it was “reductive” and “depressing.”

But while most city schools received grades this week, Bard High School Early College, associated with Mr. Botstein’s college, did not. Its grade and those of 22 other schools were reported as “under review” by the department. In fact, Mr. Botstein said, he learned last week that the school had earned a tentative grade of C on a draft copy of the report card — even though its graduates earn not just a high school diploma, but two years’ worth of college credits. And he is holding out hope that the grade will be changed.


Online Newsletters

Reporter Robert Frahm Leaves The Hartford Courant
By Alexander Russo, This Week in Education, November 9, 2007

The list of veteran education reporters who are leaving the newsroom just keeps getting longer. After over 20 years at the Hartford Courant, Robert Frahm recently took a buyout. He follows Dale Mezzecappa, Bob Sipchen, Richard Lee Colvin, Mike Bowler, and others who have left the education beat, most of them due to downsizing.

With an education team that once numbered four, the Hartford Courant (bought in 2001 by the Tribune Company) had cut and lost education reporters until Frahm was all but the last man standing, he said when I met him recently.
November 8, 2007

ConnCAN in the News

In Praise of Schools That Work
By Rick Green, The Hartford Courant, November 6, 2007

Good schools are where more children are learning more - not just the schools where the top achievers already attend.

It's time that we paid more attention to rewarding the achievement at Charter Oak, and others, such as New Beginnings Charter School in Bridgeport, Holmes School in New Britain and East School in Torrington..

"There are only seven other schools in the state that made a bigger jump," said Marc Porter McGee of ConnCan, a business-funded reform group.

Focusing on performance gains, instead of schools with just high test scores, will show us where the real learning is occurring, McGee said. Interestingly, among the top 10 elementary schools, seven are traditional public schools.

The list reveals a striking diversity, which means that it's not about where these schools are, but what goes on inside.

"A great school is a great school, regardless of the demographics," McGee said. "It's not about just moving kids along. It's about making more progress every year."

Report: Achievement gap closing in some Stamford, Norwalk schools
By Alexandra Fenwick, The Stamford Advocate, November 5, 2007

Last month, the Connecticut Coalition for Achievement Now, a New Haven group, released its 2007 report, which rates the progress of elementary, middle and high schools in five categories.

Kendall in Norwalk increased its percentage of Hispanic students scoring within goal range to 63 percent, up from 56 percent last year. At Marvin, it was 58 percent. Kendall Principal Tony Ditrio said he likes accountability but it should be fair.

"I don't mind being judged by those (tests), I just want someone to take into account that traditionally some groups don't do as well as others," he said. "That's where the rubber meets the road and that's why ConnCAN is so important to us. Connecticut is mostly white and affluent and cities that are poor. Those rich communities don't have the issues we deal with. They look at NCLB and it's no big deal. They don't even get scored for half of the subgroups because they don't have enough kids."

No Child Left Behind does not measure subgroups, such as black, Hispanic or low-income students, if fewer than 40 such students are in a school.

"The most important indicator is growth of students' scores in schools," said Marc Porter Magee, ConnCAN director of communications and research. "If you look at a snapshot, schools like Wilton or Greenwich are at the top, but they're not necessarily adding more value. Their students come in at 90 percent and maybe go up to 91 percent. But when you look at a cohort of students, the same class from year to year, some schools are making huge gains year to year and being overlooked."

News Articles

Ohio Goes After Charter Schools That Are Failing
By Sam Dillon, The New York Times, November 8, 2007

Ohio became a test tube for the nation’s charter school movement during a decade of Republican rule here, when a wide-open authorization system and plenty of government seed money led to the schools’ explosive proliferation.

But their record has been spotty. This year, the state’s school report card gave more than half of Ohio’s 328 charter schools a D or an F.

Charter school advocates worry that Mr. Dann’s crackdown may prove popular with Democratic and independent voters nationwide. Ohio’s labor leaders enthusiastically applaud it.

“If chronically lousy charters aren’t closed, the charter movement will continue under assault from its opponents,” said Todd Ziebarth, a policy analyst at the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools.

Free online materials could save schools billions
By Greg Toppo, USA Today, November 7, 2007

Since March, Dixon Deutsch and his students have been quietly experimenting with a little website that could one day rock the foundation of how schools do business.

A K-2 teacher at Achievement First Bushwick Elementary Charter School in Brooklyn, N.Y., Deutsch, 28, has been using Free-Reading.net, a reading instruction program that allows him to download, copy and share lessons with colleagues.

But perhaps the most significant development is at the most elementary level. Last fall, a Florida textbook adoption committee approved Free-Reading, a remediation program for primary-school children that's believed to be the first free, open-source reading program for K-12 public schools. It's awaiting approval by Eric Smith, the state's incoming education commissioner, who could approve it by mid-December.

Florida is one of the top five textbook markets in the USA, so its move could lead to the development of other free materials that might someday challenge the dominance of a handful of big educational publishers.

"This is an important and perhaps powerful initiative," says Adam Newman of Eduventures, an education research and consulting firm in Boston. "Those adoption lists are sort of hallowed ground, so to be approved for one of those is a breakthrough."

Schools chief opens door to coffee talk
By Kate Ramunni, The Connecticut Post, November 6, 2007

Superintendent MaryAnne Mascolo took over the helm of the Seymour Public Schools this year after former Supt. Tom Petruny retired. One of her priorities is to increase communication between administrators and parents, she said.

The meetings, which also feature coffee, muffins and Danish, are held alternately in the mornings and evenings to accommodate parents' schedules, Mascolo said. The December meeting will be held Dec. 8, from 9 to 11 a.m.

Parents are welcome to talk about anything on their minds, she said, though she does ask that if it is something that will need to be researched that she be notified about it before the meeting.

Teamwork among teachers aims to improve learning
By Rachael Scarborough King, The New Haven Register, November 5, 2007

A model for reorganizing the teaching process has educators in two local towns excited about teachers working together to close achievement gaps.

In the North Branford and Guilford school districts, administrators and board of education members have spent a lot of time lately talking about the concept of "professional learning communities."

According to the experts, the system will bring teachers out of their individual classrooms and have them working in groups to instill focus on learning rather than teaching.

Thursday, November 8, 2007

November 5, 2007

Opinions and Editorials

What Every Child Needs
By Ann Hulbert, The New York Times, October 28, 2007

Calling for an overhaul of the current patchwork of uneven preschool programs, UPK proponents invoke neuroscientific evidence of brain growth rather than child-care needs. They cite the long-term economic benefits of an early investment in boosting “cognitive skills” and “school readiness,” especially for low-income children. There is little mention of, say, pretend play in the pitch for government-subsidized pre-K, which supporters argue should be affordable and available (though not necessarily mandatory) for all.

The universal-preschool mission, too often dismissed as nanny-state meddling, capitalizes on the inclusive No Child Left Behind drive to close the K-12 achievement gap: the moment is ripe to reach downward to the post-diaper and pre-backpack stage, where disparities between white and minority students start.

News Articles

Schools: A Shift Of Views On Sheff
By Rachel Gottlieb Frank, The Hartford Courant, November 5, 2007

A decade after the state Supreme Court ordered the desegregation of schools across Greater Hartford in the landmark Sheff v. O'Neill case, the goal of integration remains elusive.

Magnet schools, the cornerstone of the state's plan to bring together white children and children of color using voluntary incentives, have fallen short. Hartford's schools still have a population that is predominantly black, Hispanic and poor.

Now, as the Sheff plaintiffs head back to court Tuesday to demand the state make good on its assurances, advocates of integration are facing increasing skepticism on the part of both state lawmakers and city officials over both the cost - and value - of continuing down the same path.

Shelton receives state grant for school readiness classroom
By Gabriella Doob, The Shelton Weekly, November 2, 2007

The Shelton Board of Education was recently awarded one of four new State Readiness Grants from the Connecticut Departments of Education and Social Services. The grant of $107,000 will go to fund a full-day, full-year preschool program for Shelton children ages 3 to 5.

The purpose of the program is to make affordable preschool available to Shelton families, said Patricia Curran, chair of the School Readiness Council and director of instruction for the Shelton Board of Education.

School board candidates facing big issues
By Christine McCluskey, The Journal Inquirer, November 1, 2007

MANCHESTER - Board of Education candidates have proposed a lot of big ideas over the past several weeks, from an achievement gap task force to report cards for parents, as they hope for a future on a board for which improving student achievement will be more important than ever.
November 1, 2007

ConnCAN in the News - Television

“Dropout Factories”
WTNH News Channel 8
October 30, 2007

“We're the state with the largest achievement gap in the country which means that we have some students that are performing great and some students whose scores place them near the bottom of the nation.”

Marc Porter Magee is director of research for the Connecticut Coalition for Achievement Now, which just published its study of Connecticut schools. He says there are schools like Troup magnet middle school in New Haven that are closing the gap.

“What it takes to turn it around is a school that organizes itself around catching kids up, around reaching every child.”

(Click on “Click for QuickView” to view the television segments.)

E-Newsletters

By Coby Loup, The Education Gadfly, The Thomas B. Fordham Foundation, November 1, 2007

ConnCAN's second annual report on Connecticut's public schools is pretty gloomy. To start, only a third of minority and low-income students are meeting state goals on the Connecticut Mastery Test, compared with two-thirds of middle-class white students. And the gap is widening.

Although pupils in all subgroups made similar gains on the state test in elementary school last year, by middle school low-income and minority students had fallen behind their white peers. In terms of income, Connecticut's 8th-grade gaps in reading and math are the widest in the country.

Thankfully, a few daisies sprout through the weeds. The state's handful of charter schools, for instance, which serve substantially more minority and low-income students than traditional schools, made greater overall gains on the state test last year.

Newspapers

Handful of city schools among Top 10 for student improvement
By Marie Garriga, The New Haven Register, October 30, 2007

Connecticut Coalition for Achievement Now, a nonprofit agency dedicated to closing the achievement gap between poor and "non-poor" students, issued its 2007 Report Card on 1,000 Connecticut Schools and a set of Top 10 lists for schools that raise student achievement.

New Haven’s Amistad Academy and Elm City Preparatory School made their usual strong appearance in the Top 10 lists for middle schools. New Haven’s magnet schools, including Lincoln-Basset International Baccalaureate Magnet School and Troup Magnet Academy of Sciences in New Haven, also won spots.

"A number of outstanding educators in a variety of public schools across Connecticut are blazing a trail and delivering dramatic gains in student achievement," said Alex Johnston, ConnCAN’s executive director. "These Top 10 Schools are a great place to start in looking for broader solutions in the effort to close our state’s achievement gap."

Hamilton Ave. among schools rewarded by town firm for significant achievement
By Wynne Parry, Greenwich Times, October 31 2007

Five Fairfield County elementary schools that have made progress erasing gaps in achievement while pushing all students forward were honored last night at an awards ceremony at Norwalk Community College. The top winner was Rogers Magnet Elementary School in Stamford.

Twenty percent of Rogers students improved their standardized test performance to reach the state's goal range from 2006 to 2007, according to the nonprofit group ConnCAN's school report card.

Hamilton Avenue School has had similar success. Four years ago, it was ranked at the bottom among schools in its district, according to Principal Damaris Rau. Now it is ranked third in the state for most improved elementary, according to ConnCAN.

News Articles


'Parent report card' proposal draws national attention, local opposition
By Christine McCluskey, The Journal Inquirer

MANCHESTER - The parent report card proposal Board of Education member Steven "Moose" Edwards outlined last week gained national attention this morning with a feature on NBC's "Today" show.

The point isn't to punish parents, Edwards says, but to identify the families who could most benefit from school-based assistance programs. An example might be extra tutoring for students whose parents can't help with homework, he has said.

But the proposal has generated strong criticism both in Manchester and elsewhere.

It's "absolutely the worst idea I've ever heard," said Democratic school board member Michael E. Pohl, who also is on the ballot next week. Pohl said a parent report card could be used in a custody battle as evidence against a parent and would be unfair to single parents who have to work more than one job.

Official Proposes Grading Parents: Report Cards Pitched For Moms And Dads
By Jim Farrell, The Hartford Courant, October 29, 2007

He knows the experiment quickly failed when it was tried in Chicago seven years ago, but a school board member in Manchester is nonetheless suggesting that his district institute a parent report card program.

Edwards wants parents and guardians to be evaluated in areas that include whether they ensure that their child gets to school on time, with homework completed, and properly nourished and dressed for the weather.

He said the program would not be punitive, but instead would help the district identify struggling parents who might need support.
October 29, 2007

Opinions and Editorials

Parent-focused Board of Education would be refreshing
By Bill Doak, East Hartford Gazette, October 26, 2007

East Hartford Public Schools have never needed good leadership more. Meetings are racked with bitterness and infighting, tensions at an all-time high, and town schools have never been ranked worse than recently.

This is because the size of the school leadership pie has gotten smaller and smaller. PTOs and PTAs are not producing the school and community leaders like they once did. Board of Education members don't have kids enrolled in the school system, so they are not as immediately aware of what is going on in the rapidly-changing hallways of town schools. Of those running, only Jim McElroy and Dorese Roberts have children in the school system. That's it.

What East Hartford needs - desperately - is quality programs. Quality programs, yes, for the academically talented kid, but quality programs that discover the talents in all.

We need better. The consequence in not electing good leaders? No one is held accountable, standards are ill-defined and the next crop of talented teachers ends up looking anywhere but East Hartford for a job. That, East Hartford, is something we can't allow. And that is how important your vote November 6 is.

News Articles


Education issues spark Torrington debate
By Megan Broderick, The Republican American, October 24, 2007

Torrington High School's 20 percent dropout rate, the need for increased parent involvement in the school system and problems at Torrington Middle School were some of the top issues discussed by Board of Education and mayoral candidates in an education debate Wednesday night.

Consultant begins assessment of East Hartford schools
By Ben Rubin, Journal Inquirer, October 24, 20007

EAST HARTFORD - The state Department of Education this week brought in a consulting group to assess the entire school system, prompted by years of sagging test scores.

The agency will be visiting classrooms and meeting with parents, students, teachers, and administrators in each school system to see what key changes can be made to raise student achievement.

"We really see this as an opportunity to partner with the districts so we can see improvement," Deborah Richards, acting chief of the newly created state education Bureau of Accountability, Compliance, and Monitoring.

More Manchester students attending magnet schools
By Christine McCluskey, Journal Inquirer, October 23, 2007

MANCHESTER - The enrollment of Manchester students in the town's public elementary, middle, and high schools over the past year fell more than projected while enrollment in out-of-town magnet schools jumped by almost 50 percent.

Author: Minority Education Needs Solutions
By Katie Warchut, The Day, October 23, 2007

New London — It's time to stop making excuses when children of color do not achieve, diversity expert Glenn Singleton told an audience of educators and students Monday.

Blaming their families, income, or inability to speak English, he said, is a copout.“Let's talk about race,” Singleton said. “Everything else is just a smokescreen.”

Magnet schools: Attractive enough?
By Andrew Shaw, The Greenwich Time, October 22, 2007

The lack of interest in applying to the magnet school is forcing administrators to consider changes in the program. A committee will examine all facets of the three magnet schools and better monitor student applications. Some advocate not adding more magnet schools until there is a better understanding of what works and what doesn't.

Moms, Dads Urged To Be Stronger Advocates
By Susan Campbell, The Hartford Courant, October 21, 2007

Participants in a Saturday parent advocacy meeting came dressed mostly in their Sunday best, which was fitting because the meeting of the advocacy group CT Parent Power felt like a revival.

CT Parent Power is a 5-year-old grass-roots nonprofit organization, said Tauna Idone, the organization's community coordinator. Members learn to advocate for their children, speak with legislators, rally voters, and encourage other parents to get involved.
October 22, 2007

Opinions and Editorials

Magnet school aid may need adjusting
The New Haven Register, October 21, 2007

A change in how the state distributes local school aid may jeopardize Connecticut's most successful effort to integrate inner-city schools by attracting suburban students.

The result of the changes in the aid formula mean that New Haven could lose $2 million in the 2008 school year and $4 million in the 2009 school year for its magnet school budget. The city could bill the suburban student's home district, but that district as well as New Haven or other magnet host districts will see a 25 percent drop next year and a 50 percent drop the following year in its main state education grant for each student attending a magnet school.

The result may be, as New Haven fears, that suburban districts will no longer send as many students to city magnet schools because of the loss of state aid. As with charter schools that draw their enrollment from public schools, state aid should follow the student. Taxpayers should not pay twice for a student's education.

News Articles

Board Of Education Faces Challenge Of Closing 'the Achievement Gap'
By Elaine Stroll, The Day, October 21, 2007

New London — Twelve candidates from three political parties are seeking two-year terms on the seven-member Board of Education.

The school board will face a number of important issues in the next two years. The biggest, according to current President Alvin G. Kinsall, is “working toward closing the achievement gap.” Besides seeking an overall increase in test scores, Kinsall said, the school board must address a disparity between the test scores of white students and the lower scores of their black and Hispanic counterparts.

The board also must continue work to lower dropout rates and boost retention and graduation rates, said Kinsall and current board member James Pearce.

Teachers haven't heard last of performance pay proposal
By Andrew Shaw, Greenwich Time, October 21, 2007

The arbitration ruling on Thursday that turned down performance pay for some non-tenured Greenwich teachers led to jubilant responses from state teacher unions, but local and state Boards of Education predict the performance pay issue isn't dead yet.

It was teachers, though, who claimed victory in the first performance pay proposal of its kind in Connecticut. Performance pay was lambasted by the Greenwich Education Association for creating what they believe is a corporate culture inside the classroom, although the Board of Education saw it as a means of attracting top teachers by giving bonuses for good work.

Teachers Agree to Bonus Pay Tied to Scores
By Elissa Gootman, The New York Times, October 18, 2007

The Bloomberg administration and the New York City teachers’ union announced an agreement yesterday on a plan that would give teachers bonuses based largely on the overall test scores of students at schools that have high concentrations of poor children.

The plan, negotiated for months, is a major breakthrough for Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, who for years has advocated extra pay to reward high-performing teachers.

In a bow to the union, the bonus money would go to schools for overall performance, and then would be distributed to teachers. The agreement also gave the union something it had long sought: city backing for senior teachers to retire with full pension benefits, five years earlier than they can now.

Special ed teacher certification pushed
By Linda Conner Lambeck, The Connecticut Post, October 18, 2007

BRIDGEPORT — Southern Connecticut State University's program to turn teacher aides here into fully certified special education teachers in a year, at no cost, has yet to reach its full enrollment of 30 participants.

The program is that tough.

Already offered in New Haven and Hartford, the program has yet to attract a full contingent of 30 participants who stick with the program through completion. New Haven has had about 17 complete the program; Hartford, 10.

Panel drops plan to close middle school
By Chris Gosier, The Stamford Advocate, October 19, 2007

The committee, which is exploring ways to reduce overcrowding and socio-economically balance schools, decided yesterday that closing Turn of River Middle School - or any middle school - would not save enough money to justify the disruption to students and families.

The committee also decided merging Westover and Hart magnet elementary schools isn't the best way to balance the two schools' populations.

Those ideas had arisen from the committee's months long discussion about redistricting, or revamping district boundaries so that no schools are crowded and that all have about the same socioeconomic makeup as the entire city.
October 18, 2007

News Articles

School Redesign Procedure OK'd: Questions Remain About Assignment Of Teachers In Affected Facilities
By Rachel Gottlieb Frank, The Hartford Courant, October 17, 2007

The school board approved a plan Tuesday that roughly lays out the process for redesigning schools that consistently perform poorly, but it left vague questions about what will happen to teachers and other staff at schools that go through transformations.

Under the new policy, Hartford schools that perform substantially below the proficient level for two consecutive years without improvement, or fail to make adequate yearly progress under the No Child Left Behind law for five consecutive years, may be redesigned or their buildings may be used for a different purpose.

A Post-Katrina Charter School in New Orleans Gets a Second Chance
By Joseph Berger, The New York Times, October 17, 2007

Despite the heartbreaking destruction it left behind, Hurricane Katrina created tantalizing opportunities, including the chance of a fresh start for a majority of this city’s schools, which had been among the nation’s worst.

The remedy that officials chose was to turn 40 of the roughly 80 salvaged schools over to state-chartered and state-financed groups of business and community leaders, and to let them provide oversight with fewer of the bureaucratic rules that hobble school leaders. Conversion to charters is a free-market strategy that the Bush administration champions, and in Louisiana it backed its belief with $24 million.

Schools can handle racial achievement gap without task force, Republican candidate says
By, Christine McCluskey, The Journal Enquirer, October 15, 2007

MANCHESTER - A Board of Education candidate says his opponent's proposal for a task force on the racial achievement gap is well-intentioned, but bypasses the ongoing efforts of school-system administrators

"I just think that we have a lot of the experts right in our central office," Moran added.

Schools await OK for improvement plan
By Linda Conner Lambeck, The Connecticut Post, October 15, 2007

The state is withholding $2 million from Bridgeport schools until it can show how it will use the money to improve education. Local school officials submitted a plan to the state late last month, and Supt. of Schools John Ramos met with McQuillan last week.

The commissioner has offered to let the district stagger the assessments. Instead of having a consultant critique 18 schools this year, at a cost of $7,000 apiece, the district can do 12 this year and six next year, said Thomas Murphy a state Department of Education spokesman.

Rollback: School Integration Efforts Face Renewed Opposition; Supreme Court Ruling Sways Milton Battle; Off to Private School
By Joseph Pereira, Wall Street Journal, Oct 11, 2007

Last spring, town officials in this affluent Boston suburb changed the elementary-school assignments for 38 streets -- and sparked outrage. Some white families had been reassigned to Tucker, a mostly black school which has historically had Milton's lowest test scores.

Among those reassigned is Kevin Keating, a white parent who is talking to lawyers about going to court to reverse the plan. I "just don't feel good putting [my son] in an inferior school," he says. His ammunition: the U.S. Supreme Court's June ruling that consideration of race in school assignments is unconstitutional. Without the backing of the Supreme Court, Mr. Keating says his effort wouldn't have "much of a standing."

Monday, October 15, 2007

Editorials and Opinions

Invest in state's future via higher education
By, Harold C. Wibling, The News-Times, October 14, 2007

Connecticut is poised to make an historic investment in public education as a 10-year capital plan for the state's largest public university system, recently approved by the General Assembly, awaits final action. Unfortunately, it is innocently caught in an unrelated public squabble between the governor and legislature about what should and shouldn't be included on the state's list of bond authorizations.

At a time when the eroding cohort of 20- and 30-year-olds headline virtually every report about Connecticut's population, CSUS graduates are one group that sticks in our state. Thus, improving the education provided by these institutions is clearly an investment in Connecticut's future, the benefits of which will accrue to every resident.

So, just who are these graduates? They are our future teachers (already, two of every three classroom teachers in Connecticut schools graduates from a CSUS university), small business entrepreneurs and bank presidents, directors of nursing and mechanical engineers, chambers of commerce executives and municipal fire chiefs. In the traditional Land of Steady Habits, they are precisely the people who will keep Connecticut steady, our economy growing and our quality of life second to none.

News Articles

Blurring Lines Among Both Students and Subjects
By, Jay Mathews, The Washington Post, October 15, 2007

In three classrooms along a short corridor at Blue Ridge Middle School in Loudoun County, there were several scenes last week of educational convention turned upside down. Lemmert and colleagues Alisa Gladstone and Amy Wood decided last year to experiment with placing honors, regular and special education students in the same rooms, offering a course that unified social studies and English, and encouraging every child to reach higher than before.

Such innovations are uncommon in U.S. public schools, given the old pressure to conform to tradition and the new one to raise standardized test scores. But plenty of teachers still find that if they are seized by an idea, as Lemmert, Wood and Gladstone were, and can convey that passion to supervisors, they have a chance to see what happens when they go in a different direction.

Making Cash a Prize for High Scores on Advanced Placement Tests
By Jennifer Medina, The New York Times, October 15, 2007

The city is expanding the use of cash rewards for students who take standardized tests with a $1 million effort financed by philanthropists who will pay students who do well on Advanced Placement exams.

High school students who get a top score, a five, on the exams will earn $1,000. A score of four will be worth $750, while a three will earn $500.

The A.P. program is intended to increase the number of low-income, black and Latino high school students in New York who take and pass A.P. tests. In city schools, less than 1 percent of black students pass an Advanced Placement exam, according to city data analyzed by the program.

State Lauds Magnet School
By, Jennifer Masi, The Bridgeport News, October 11, 2007

Multicultural Magnet School in Bridgeport has received a Blue Ribbon honor from the federal Department of Education.
The No Child Left Behind Act's Blue Ribbon School designation is considered one of the most prestigious education awards in the country.

Multicultural Magnet was the only Blue Ribbon award recipient in Connecticut and one of only three in New England. Nationwide, 287 schools were honored with a Blue Ribbon.

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Editorials and Op-eds

High Stakes Flim Flam
By Bob Herbert, The New York Times, October 9, 2007

Not only has high-stakes testing largely failed to magically swing open the gates to successful learning, it is questionable in many cases whether the tests themselves are anything more than a shell game.

If teachers, administrators, politicians and others have a stake in raising the test scores of students — as opposed to improving student learning, which is not the same thing — there are all kinds of incentives to raise those scores by any means necessary.

One aspect of the No Child Left Behind law that doesn’t get enough attention is that while it requires states to make progress toward student proficiency in reading and math, it leaves it up to the states themselves to define “proficiency” and to create the tests that determine what constitutes progress.

That’s absurd. With no guiding standard, the states’ tests are measurements without meaning.

Dumbing Education Down
By, Chester E. Finn Jr., The Wall Street Journal, October 5, 2007

So far, so good. But while NCLB circa 2001 is rigidly prescriptive about the "improvement" part, it's vague about where to set the bar. As a result, a fourth grader living in Hamtramck or Pueblo may be judged "proficient" according to Michigan's or Colorado's low standards, yet fail by a mile to match the attainments of his or her peers in Worcester, Mass., or Columbia, S.C., places with far loftier notions of proficiency.

Yet official Washington seemingly lacks the stomach to take this on. The conventional wisdom is that "national standards and tests" are politically taboo because conservatives don't like "national" and liberals don't like standards and testing. The Gates and Broad foundations are spending tens of millions to overturn that taboo during the upcoming election, but few in the 110th Congress seem to be listening.

Nor is anybody ready to tackle the other part of NCLB's core problem: the quest for universal proficiency. No educator in America believes this can be achieved anytime soon, not with 100% of the kids and by any reasonable standard of proficiency. The truth is that boosting our students' proficiency from today's 35% to 70% or 80% would be a transformative accomplishment. But no politician dares say that, lest he instantly be skewered with "which 20% of the kids don't you care about?"

News Articles

Board member will propose 'achievement gap task force' to address learning disparity
By, Christine McCluskey, Journal Inquirer, October 9, 2007

MANCHESTER - After a recent report on this year's Connecticut Mastery Test scores showed racial achievement gaps persisting in Manchester, Board of Education member Geoffrey R. Luxenberg developed a plan he says he will propose at Wednesday night's board meeting.

Luxenberg wants to create a bipartisan "achievement gap task force" that would meet twice a month for a year, receiving testimony from people from around the state who have been successful in narrowing achievement gaps.

The task force would look for proven ways to address the gaps in all subject areas but with a special emphasis on reading, where the gaps widened at some grade levels

Balancing Act for schools: Stamford to use nonracial factors to ensure diversity
By Chris Gosler, The Stamford Advocate, October 11, 2007

The Board of Education has come up with a new plan for assigning students to schools in response to a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling limiting districts' consideration of race in the process.

Administrators will look at three nonracial factors: Whether a student receives free or reduced-price lunches, lives in income-restricted housing or is learning English.

Racial balance plan OK'd for McKinley
By, Andrew Brophy, The Connecticut Post, October 8, 2007

FAIRFIELD — The state Board of Education has approved a plan designed to reduce the percentage of minority students at McKinley School.

McKinley's minority percentage was 41.25 percent in 2006-07, while the districtwide average for elementary schools was 12.51 percent.

The local Board of Education's plan to reduce McKinley's minority percentage gave parents of all McKinley students the option of sending their children to Stratfield, Dwight or Jennings elementary schools, beginning this school year.

Next fall, the plan allows parents of McKinley students who are not doing well academically to send their children to another elementary school, and it also allows parents of students in other elementary schools who are doing well academically to send their children to McKinley.

Puzzling Racial Gap
By, Robert A. Frahm, The Hartford Courant, October 7, 2007

Most educators agree that poverty is a powerful underlying cause of the achievement gap. But as experts look at places like Bloomfield, some say that race and culture - apart from income - appear to influence achievement in ways that are not always easily understood.

But the achievement gap also occurs among minority students in middle-class and wealthy suburbs.

On a 2005 nationwide reading test, the gap between black and white high school seniors whose parents were college graduates actually was larger than the gap between blacks and whites whose parents had not finished high school.

Why?
ConnCAN in the News

Monitoring Each Student’s Progress Endorsed Over NCLB Strategy
By Audrey M. Marks, The Day, October 5, 2007

Washington — With the No Child Left Behind Act up for reauthorization, New London Superintendent of Schools Christopher Clouet wants Congress to change how education progress is measured without eroding the standards of quality education.

Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn., introduced a bill in April that would assess results by tracking the progress of each student through the school system in addition to calculating how well students do as a whole based on the standardized tests. The number of students in advanced placement courses and the dropout rate also would be considered when judging a school's progress.

The Connecticut Coalition for Achievement Now, an education advocacy group known as ConnCAN, also is endorsing the idea of assessing student progress over multiple years but cautioned that the change shouldn't create more problems with the program.

“We need to be cautious about how we change standards of accountability,” said Alex Johnston, executive director of ConnCAN, in an interview. “We need to be sure we don't create situations where kids can fall through cracks.”

Learning Gaps Sully Our State
By Stan Simpson, The Hartford Courant, October 3, 2007

By now, Connecticut's distinction as the state with the widest academic achievement gap in the country is pretty much common knowledge.

What's not widely known is that the gap between the state's poor and non-poor students and between its white students and their African American and Latino peers is widening.

"If low income students [in Connecticut] did as well as they did in Massachusetts, we'd have the third-smallest achievement gap in the country, instead of the largest," said Alex Johnston, executive director of Connecticut Coalition for Achievement Now, a statewide organization whose mission is to close the achievement gap.

Magnets: Show Us Results
By, Rick Green, The Hartford Courant, September 28, 2007

Standardized test scores show that magnet schools, however much they make us feel good, aren't altering the overall differences in student performance that leave white children far ahead of minority children in reading, math and writing.

"People have taken their eye off the ball, which is achievement," said Mark Porter McGee, research director for the corporate-funded school reform group ConnCan. "Integrating schools is not by itself a solution to the problem."

Editorials and Op-Eds

The Adomski Gambit
The Hartford Courant, October 8, 2007

Controversial though it may have been, a comment by Hartford Superintendent of Schools Steven Adamowski at a state Board of Education meeting last week points to an underlying change in the nature of the Sheff v. O'Neill dilemma.

The focus of resolving the Sheff case has been on racial balance. Almost nothing is said of economic integration, yet that seems to be an increasing part of the problem.

Public policy should embrace both challenges. The interdistrict magnet schools should be going after suburban kids, white and minority.

Segregation Has to End
By, Elizabeth Horton Sheff and Eugene Leach, The Hartford Courant, October 7, 2007

Eleven years ago, the Connecticut Supreme Court stated an urgent truth: "It is crucial for a democratic society to provide all of its schoolchildren with fair access to an unsegregated education." Progress has been fragmentary and slow, but a great many parents, educators and other citizens remain dedicated to achieving the goal.

That's why it is so troubling to learn that Hartford's school superintendent, Steven Adamowski, apparently doubts the validity of the court's mandate.

Education: A Shared Responsibility
By, Staff, The New Haven Independent, October 7, 2007

Every year New Haven seeks additional well-qualified teachers, especially in areas such as math and science. Let's attract, develop and retain these colleagues. We all can be ambassadors in this -- and for the cause of improving the foundational skill of reading, among people of all ages.

The Independent's series on parents' involvement in education is welcome. Everyone, parents or not, can reinforce the high expectations our community should have for ourselves and our educators, as well as for students.

Accountability for tax dollars is a universal concern. Achievement gaps are, too -- urgency is the right word with kids' futures at stake. New Haven students on average have both significant needs and immense potential.

The Worry Behind The Numbers
The New York Times, October 7, 2007

Connecticut passed a milestone recently: it added enough jobs so that more than 1.7 million residents are now employed, a record. About 16,600 jobs have been added since August of last year.

A closer look at the types of jobs that the state has gained inspires more caution than celebration. Nearly half of all the new jobs added to the Connecticut economy since 2000 are low-paying service jobs, including casino workers, security guards, nursing aides and food service workers.

It seems clear that education is the key to the state’s future prosperity. Connecticut must improve its literacy rates and its K-12 educational system, especially in the cities, home to many of its least-educated residents and poorest, most struggling schools. The state must also strengthen its four-year and community colleges, which will play an increasingly vital role in providing the advanced education that is the true foundation of high-paying jobs. It is a big challenge, one that the employment numbers don’t convey.

Get Congress Out of Our Classroom
By Diane Ravitch, The New York Times, October 3, 2007

DESPITE the rosy claims of the Bush administration, the No Child Left Behind Act of 2002 is fundamentally flawed. The latest national tests, released last week, show that academic gains since 2003 have been modest, less even than those posted in the years before the law was put in place. In eighth-grade reading, there have been no gains at all since 1998.

No Child Left Behind can, however, be salvaged if policymakers recognize that they need to reverse the roles of the federal government and the states. In our federal system, each level of government should do what it does best. The federal government is good at collecting and disseminating information. The states and school districts, being closer to the schools, teachers and parents than the federal government, are more likely to be flexible and pragmatic about designing reforms to meet the needs of particular schools.

Our Schools Must Do Better
By, Bob Herbert, The New York Times, October 2, 2007

What’s needed is a wholesale transformation of the public school system from the broken-down postwar model of the past 50 or 60 years. The U.S. has not yet faced up to the fact that it needs a school system capable of fulfilling the educational needs of children growing up in an era that will be at least as different from the 20th century as the 20th was from the 19th.

The first is teacher quality, a topic that gets talked about incessantly. It has been known for decades that some teachers have huge positive effects on student achievement, and that others do poorly. The positive effect of the highest performing teachers on underachieving students is startling.

The second area to be mined for potentially transformative effects is the wide and varied field of alternative school models. We should be rigorously studying those schools that appear to be having the biggest positive effects on student achievement. Are the effects real? If so, what accounts for them?

Education Pitfalls in Standardized Testing
The Wall Street Journal, October 1, 2007

Letters in response to Guy Darst’s September 22 article “Mass Testing”

News Articles


Comment Raises Eyebrows
By Rachel Gottlieb Frank, The Hartford Courant, October 4, 2007

Hartford Superintendent of Schools Steven Adamowski told state officials Wednesday that magnet schools - the cornerstone of ongoing desegregation efforts in the region - are falling short of their goal and that "there is no research to suggest that minority students will do better by sitting next to a white student."

"We're disappointed that it's 2007 and the superintendent wants to debate whether it is a bad thing for Hartford's minority children to be taught in racially segregated schools," said Matthew Collangelo, an attorney with the NAACP Legal Defense Fund who is representing the plaintiffs in the Sheff v. O'Neill desegregation lawsuit.

He said it is the state's job to create both rewards and punishments to encourage what he called suburban "fiefdoms" to engage with Hartford to end racial and economic isolation of city students.

Shake-Up Proposed For Hartford Schools
WFSB, October 3, 2007

HARTFORD, Conn - Superintendent Steven Adamowski offered to the state Board of Education a grim assessment of student achievement, and introduced an ambitious plan for reforms in the school system.

Currently, the Capital City has the greatest achievement gap in the country: Only 30 percent of students make it to their high school graduation.

Adamowski presented the board with two initiatives that would involve change. One option would advocate the state funding a student, not a school, in an all-choice system, meaning that parents can choose where to send their children to school.

A second option Adamowski suggested involves an all-balanced reform that would transform low-performing schools via district intervention, redesign or closure.

College is New Charter School’s Target
By, Linda Conner Lambeck, The Connecticut Post, October, 3, 2007

The city's latest charter school, developed by the creators of Amistad Academy in New Haven, opened Aug. 29.

Principal Debon Lewis said Achievement First Bridgeport Academy has begun to establish a distinctive culture. Students are referred to as scholars.

Grace Mwine, 10, a former Barnum student, said she misses her old school and friends, but is glad she's at the new school. At Barnum, the focus was "on getting us to the next grade. Here, they're focused on getting us to college," she said.

Special Education: When Should Taxes Pay Private Tuition?
By John Hechinger, The Wall Street Journal, October 1, 2007

Today, the U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear arguments to resolve the central question of the case: Must parents of special-education students give public schools a chance before having taxpayers reimburse them for private-school tuition? How the justices respond will have broad implications for school budgets and the movement toward "mainstreaming," or educating disabled children in regular classrooms. Mr. Freston, pledging to donate any proceeds, has said the fight is about principle, not money.
September Archives

ConnCAN in the News

Special Meeting Requested
By Kevin D. Roberts, The Register Citizen, September 12, 2007

WINSTED – School Board members Cheryl Bartley, Raymond Pavlak and Carmelina Connole signed a letter written by Bartley calling for a special meeting to deal with student achievement. By law, a meeting must be held if three of the board's members sign a request for a special meeting.

Bartley was out of town, so Pavlak read the letter to the board. It cited a report from the Connecticut Coalition for Achievement Now, which stated that Pearson Middle School has been given a performance grade of D- for its 2006 report card. The school ranks 126 out of 134 schools, according to the group's Web site.

The board took a vote about adding Bartley's request to the agenda for discussion, but the motion was defeated unanimously. Molinelli said she will speak at a later date regarding the specifics of the special meeting request.

City SAT scores continue to rise
By Maria Garriga, New Haven Register, September 6, 2007

"While average reading and math scores on the SAT test went down nationally and statewide, New Haven’s scores went up," said Catherine Sullivan-DeCarlo, spokeswoman for New Haven public schools. The combined reading and math SAT scores for New Haven went up 4 points over last year, compared with a 6 point decline for Connecticut and a 4 point decline for the nation, the district reported Wednesday.

Nonetheless, average SAT scores in New Haven Public Schools were drastically lower than those across the nation and state. Connecticut posted an average SAT score of 504 in math, 502 in reading, and 503 in writing. Nationally, 2007 SAT test takers scored an average of 509 in math, 498 in reading, and 488 in writing.

"Certainly compared to the steady declines statewide New Haven looks better than many districts but it also has a lot of ground to close to reach the state average," said Marc Porter Magee, research director for Connecticut Coalition for Achievement Now, a research and advocacy nonprofit agency that focuses on the achievement gap between students at urban and suburban schools. "The gain was 3 points over two years, so the average annual gain since 2007 is 1.5 points in math and reading. At the rate of increase, from 2007 it would take New Haven 129 years to reach the state average, or the high school class of 2136."

"If our goal is to close the achievement gap, we can’t be satisfied with modest increases," Magee added.

New state education czar focused on achievement gap
By Maria Garriga, New Haven Register, September 2, 2007

State Education Commissioner Mark K. McQuillan has a bashful smile and a rumpled suit. Don’t let that fool you. McQuillan means business. He means to close Connecticut’s achievement gap, the largest in the country, where low-income urban students often lag several grades behind their more affluent suburban peers.

“At one time Connecticut led the nation,” McQuillan said about why he came to Connecticut. “I did see this as a state in transition. We are building an accountability organization. The department is a vehicle for change.”

“Massachusetts is a state that has really taken seriously the task of raising minority and low income student scores,” said Marc Porter Magee, research director for Connecticut Coalition for Achievement Now, an education research and advocacy group.

News Articles

City Tries to Assess Head Start Program
By Maria Garriga, The New Haven Register, September 17, 2007

Mayor John DeStefano Jr. has requested a report on the effectiveness of the city's Head Start program in closing the achievement gap between urban and suburban students. Superintendent of Schools Reginald Mayo agreed to get the report ready for the mayor, but the request has complications.

Very young children cannot be measured by standardized tests because they may not even understand basic concepts necessary for them to be tested. But educators can and do measure them against child development charts that show how much a child has mastered relative to what should be mastered at his or her age, Tina Mannarino, the city's early childhood education supervisor said.

Critics want changes to No Child Left Behind
By Eileen FitzGerald, The Danbury New Times Live, September 16, 2007

Danbury Associate Superintendent William Glass would like the reauthorization of No Child Left Behind to allow schools the chance to fail in one area of student achievement without being a failure overall and to require improvement but not the absolute increases demanded now.

"It never made sense to have students in special education who have special needs or those who are just learning English to be tested at the same level as their peers,'' Glass said. "Hispanics can be just learning the language. They could be high-achieving in reading and math in their own language but not achieve at proficiency yet in English.''

Connecticut children leading different lives
By Randy James, The Republican American, September 16, 2007

Thanks to strong school performance and high average incomes, a new report ranks Connecticut third in the nation for children's health and well-being.

But away from the state's picturesque towns and wealthier enclaves, the lives of young people are strikingly different. In terms of educational achievement, health, poverty and even plans for the future, the state's 835,000 children live in remarkably different worlds.

Experts give numerous explanations for Connecticut's disparities, including the fact that a small number of residents earn extravagant salaries in finance and other specialized fields requiring high levels of education. Meanwhile, formerly dependable, low-skill jobs continue to dwindle.

Statewide, more than half of urban children live in low-income families — those earning twice the poverty level or less — according to the Connecticut Kids Count project. In the state's suburbs, by contrast, the figure is just 15 percent.

Weston schools reformat reading program
By Terry Castellano, The Weston Forum, September 14, 2007

Weston’s Reading Intervention Program (RIP), available to assist children in grades kindergarten through three, has been reformatted for this school year and utilizes a three-tiered approach.

“The reformatting of the Reading Intervention Program came about after looking at research into ‘best practices’ — what programs and instruction have been shown to provide the best results in education,” said Jerry Belair, assistant superintendent of schools. “Students in need of intervention will now receive more time in reading instruction; they will attend regular classroom reading instruction as well as receive additional instruction during the school day.”


Amistad Plans Schools in Hartford
By Allan Appel, The New Haven Independent, September 12, 2007

Patricia B. Sweet, director of external relations at Achievement First, the umbrella organization that operates Amistad Academy and Elm City Prep, reported that the group has received approval from the state's Department of Education to operate both an elementary and a middle school in Hartford.

"We of course need to line up the funding," Sweet said in a telephone message, "but, yes, Amistad is excited to be part of the revival of the Hartford public school system that is under way through the leadership of the new superintendent Steven Adamoski."

Sweet said that subject to receiving necessary funding from the state and other sources, the new Hartford-based Amistads could be operating as early as next September.

At Weston High School Sophomores 'strong' on CAPT
By Terry Castellano, The Weston Forum, September 12, 2007

Last year’s Weston High School sophomores were described as having a “strong showing” on the 2007 Connecticut Academic Performance Test (CAPT) by Jerry Belair, assistant superintendent of schools.

With more than 99% of the class participating in the testing, Weston scored in the top 10 school districts across the state on each of the four sections of the CAPT. Particularly impressive was Weston’s score on the science section, where 84.5% of the sophomores scored at or above goal, the largest percentage of test-takers to do so statewide.

Looking at the numbers, 79% of Weston students scored at or above goal in mathematics, 76.5% at or above goal in reading, and 82% at or above goal in writing.

School board discusses recruiting minority teachers
By:Christine McCluskey, Journal Inquirer, September 11, 2007

MANCHESTER -Interim Human Resources Director William Brindamour told the Board of Education that of the 45 teachers newly hired for this school year, five, or about 11 percent, are members of minority groups.

Almost half of all Manchester students are members of minority groups. Board members have expressed concern that these students need more role models from their own backgrounds in the schools.

And while teachers throughout the school system receive training on how to work effectively with students from different backgrounds, school officials say more diverse staffs would be another step toward the goal of this training - improving education for minority students.

Groton Board Backs NCLB-improvement Bill
By Katie Warchut, The Day, September 11, 2007

A majority of Board of Education members Monday followed hundreds of school districts across the country in supporting proposed legislation to improve the federal No Child Left Behind Act.

U.S. Rep. Don Young, R-Ark's proposal has provisions that would make sure students tested in more than one subgroup aren't counted multiple times; change subgroup sizes based on school size; give schools a one-year deferral for not making “progress” if only a small number of students fail to score as proficient; and allow different groups to have different rates of increase to reach 100 percent proficiency.

Groton is one of the state's school districts that has been designated as “in need of improvement,” but is on hold this year because it was able to make the required benchmark of progress.

Gianacoplos said it's unfortunate that the district has lost important preschool programs because NCLB sanctions required Groton to redirect funding for professional development.

Most Ledyard Students Below State Reading Average On CAPT
By Jenna Cho, The Day, September 12, 2007

Ledyard — Students here performed below the statewide average in both reading and writing on the CAPT.

Statewide, 45.6 percent of students on average met the state goal in reading. In writing, 49.5 percent of the students here met the state goal, while 52.9 percent statewide met the goal.

Female students in Ledyard significantly outperformed their male counterparts in reading and writing. In reading, 45.6 percent of girls met the state goal, but just 24 percent of boys met it. In writing, 58.9 percent of the girls met state goal, while only 37.7 percent of boys did..

Ed chief says scores show work needed
Bill McDonald, Connecticut Post, September 10, 2007

MILFORD — "We went up in science and reading and down in writing and mathematics," said Law Principal Janet Garagliano, of CAPT test scores that were made available to the district Aug. 30.

"Overall, I'm happy with the scores, but there is room for improvement," said Foran Principal Michael Cummings. Foran's results showed 90.6 per cent proficient in mathematics, 95.1 in science, 85.4 in reading, and 87.2 in writing. Law's proficiency results were: mathematics, 78.8 percent; science, 89.4; reading, 80.

Merit Pay for Teachers Draws Debate
By Nancy Zuckerbrod, The Associated Press, September 10, 2007

The head of the nation's largest teacher's union and a top House Democrat had a testy exchange Monday over the inclusion of merit pay in an updated version of the No Child Left Behind education law.

California Rep. George Miller, chairman of the House education committee, criticized National Education Association President Reg Weaver for rejecting the merit-pay proposal.

The proposal would give bonuses, worth up to $10,000 in most cases, to "outstanding" teachers. The proposal doesn't spell out who would be eligible for the extra money but says raising student test scores must be a factor.

Weaver said that level of detail should be bargained locally, not spelled out by Congress. The NEA has long opposed linking individual student scores to teachers' pay, though many local teachers unions across the country are agreeing to such proposals.

The Greatest Education Lab
By Walter Isaacson, Time Magazine, September 6, 2007

Paul Vallas, the man who took over the troubled school systems of Chicago and then Philadelphia and upended them, stood before a crowd of New Orleans parents in a French Quarter courtyard earlier this summer and offered a promise. "This will be the greatest opportunity for educational entrepreneurs, charter schools, competition and parental choice in America," he said. Call it the silver lining: Hurricane Katrina washed away what was one of the nation's worst school systems and opened the path for energetic reformers who want to make New Orleans a laboratory of new ideas for urban schools .

Mixed Test Results for city’s sophomores
By Chris Gosler, The Stamford Advocate, September 10, 2007

The latest Connecticut Academic Performance Test results show that a quarter to a third of Stamford students met the state goal. In math, 27 percent of students met the goal, and 26 percent in science. In reading, 34 percent of students met the state standard, and 35 percent in writing.

In Stamford, the percentage of students making goal is down at most schools and in most subjects. In one of the biggest drops, students making the writing goal dropped 44 percent to 33 percent at Stamford High School. Stamford fell below the rest of the state in the percentage of students meeting goal this year. Statewide, that figure ranged from 44 percent to 53 percent, depending on the subject, and tended to dip slightly from 2006 to 2007.

Superintendent Joshua Starr said part of the reason is that Stamford is more diverse than other districts. Stamford should be compared to other urban school systems, he said.

State’s Largest Pre-K Gets Underway
By Allan Appel, New Haven Independent, September 10, 2007

Traci Turner-Moore is the education coordinator of the new Pre-K program at the rebuilt Celentano School. New Haven's citywide Pre-K effort -- the state's largest -- begins its first full week Monday. Some 2,100 little people, like three-and-a-quarter year-old Thea and Edmund Bassett, attending 8:30 to 12:30 classes in programs around the city.

The demand for Pre-K slots in general is high throughout the city, particularly in the East Rock area. So the space in the observatory building, which used to be spillover classroom space for the Celentano K-8, was converted to Pre-K use. Turner-Moore said the program has a waiting list.

States Investing More In Pre-K Education
By Julia Silverman, Associated Press, September 5, 2007

Nearly a million children now attend state-funded preschool, up more than a third from five years ago. States are investing $4.2 billion in such programs, an increase of 75 percent since 2005, according to Pre-K Now, a Washington, D.C.-based advocacy group.

The movement has been buoyed by research showing that the programs are cost-effective, a lure for businesses, and may lead to higher standardized test scores.

Aging state creates unique problems
By Pam Dawkins, Connecticut Post, September 6, 2007

The state's economic development goals, she said, include sustainable growth, more diverse economic development opportunities, an improved quality of life and expanding the state's presence in the global marketplace. Traditional business concerns of regulatory oversight and the cost of being here must be balanced against other concerns, such as sprawl, high housing costs and clogged transportation systems.

The cost of doing business remains the key concern for 76 percent of respondents. However, the availability of qualified workers and rising payroll costs - a lack of trained workers is creating a tighter labor market, so businesses are paying higher wages and benefits to recruit and retain workers - are also troubling survey respondents.

"That is going to be the number one challenge," said Peter M. Gioia, a CBIA vice president and economist, of the lack of qualified, skilled workers. He spoke during the same session as Rodriguez.

Not only do businesses need skilled workers to keep themselves growing, Gioia said, but a shrinking pool of consumers means businesses who sell products or services here will have smaller customer bases.

Consultant to evaluate city schools
By Linda Conner Lambeck, Connecticut Post, September 5, 2007

HARTFORD — A consulting firm with British roots stands to collect up to $825,000 in state Education Cost Sharing money — earmarked for the state's neediest school districts — to make suggestions officials hope will boost student learning and test scores.

Trevor Yates, a vice president for Cambridge, said the firm's work at Columbus has led to improvement in students' reading test scores.

Supt. of Schools John Ramos said Thursday that the Cambridge work is solid and could offer new insights in addition to validating work the district is doing. "We have a good handle on what the issues are. A lot of it is about being empowered to get the work done in a district that is constantly in a tailspin," he said.

'Soul-Searching' Over Test Results—Bloomfield Jolted By Decline In Students' Scores
By Robert A. Frahm and Steven Goode, Hartford Courant, September 1, 2007

"Every adult working in this school district needs to do some soul-searching, including me," Superintendent of Schools David Title said after reviewing results that found that nearly two-thirds, or 65 percent, of 10th-graders failed to meet the high school's proficiency standard on the math portion of the test, for example. Last year, 43 percent missed the proficiency mark.

Title said the low scores, in part, may reflect a chronic achievement gap that finds many minority students in Connecticut and across the nation lagging behind white students in subjects such as reading and math. Minority students, most of them black, account for more than 90 percent of Bloomfield High School's enrollment.
August Archives

ConnCAN in the News


Achievement gap keeps widening
By Maria Garriga, New Haven Register, August 31, 2007

Half of Connecticut’s 10th-graders reached state goals on the 2007 Connecticut Academic Performance Test, the Department of Education reported Thursday, and the achievement gap dividing Hispanic and black students from their white and Asian peers loomed larger than ever.

“I’m shocked. These are some of the lowest scores I’ve ever seen,” said Marc Porter Magee, research director for the Connecticut Coalition for Achievement Now, a research and advocacy group that focuses on the achievement gap in schools.

“In the Connecticut Mastery Tests, usually about 30 percent of African-American and Hispanic students reach goal. Generally speaking, students lose ground over time so that students in elementary grades get higher scores than students in high school,” Magee said.

Magee said that in some of the major cities, barely any black or Hispanic students reached state goals.

News Articles

Teaching To Make A Difference
By Rick Green, Hartford Courant, August 28, 2007

It's no secret the best graduates don't choose teaching. Emily Barton, a 2004 Yale graduate who oversees teachers working in Connecticut, told me Teach for America is beginning to change career choices for young graduates. This alone is reason enough to support Teach for America.

"We see people making very different career choices as a result of this," Barton said, noting that two-thirds of Teach for America participants stay in education and 200 have risen to become school principals, including Christopher Leone at Hartford's Pathways to Technology Magnet School.



Schools Fall Short Of Federal Standards
By Robert A. Frahm, Hartford Courant, August 30, 2007

Almost one-third of all public schools in Connecticut landed on a federal government academic warning list today -- a number that is expected to grow even larger as federal standards continue to get tougher, state officials said.

Some schools already have made substantial reforms. Among them is Jumoke Academy, a Hartford charter school that met federal goals for the second year in a row and, as a result, was one of only eight schools to be removed from a list of schools targeted for improvement under the federal law.

Jumoke saw significant improvement over several years after extending the school day, adding Saturday and summer school classes and hiring more experienced teachers, said Michael Sharpe, the school's chief executive officer.

SAT Achievement Gap Stays Wide
By Robert Frahm, Hartford Courant, August 29, 2007

Record numbers of black and Hispanic high school students in Connecticut and elsewhere are taking the SAT college entrance exam - but some are also looking for colleges that no longer require the test.

In part, that is because many continue to lag far behind white and Asian students, according to annual results released Tuesday by the College Board.

Both state and national results showed a slight decline this year in most scores, with the achievement gap for black and Hispanic graduates remaining one of the nation's most difficult problems in education.

Fifth-Graders Get “Amistadized”
By Allan Appel, New Haven Independent, August 29, 2007

"Welcome to one of the best performing schools in the state of Connecticut," so Amistad Academy director Matt Taylor greeted some of the fifth graders and their parents who reported for their first-day at the award-winning charter school. In smart t-shirts and khakis, some as crisp as the fine 7:15 a.m. air, the kids lined up for what staff calls "Amistadization."

That is, a half day's orientation on how to wear the uniform (shirt always tucked in, belt buckle facing front); how to recognize and respect all teachers and address them (always Mr. or Ms.); how to stand in lines (always straight, never "snakes"); how to address staff and each other (always with direct eye-contact); and, most importantly, to learn what is expected of them during the coming year.

Average SAT Scores Fall in Nation, Connecticut
Staff and Wired Reports, Norwich Bulletin, August 29, 2007

In Connecticut, average scores among the approximately 29,000 public school students who took the SAT declined for the second consecutive year in reading and math, and also dipped in writing.

About 80 percent of Connecticut's public school students took the exam, placing it fourth in participation nationwide.

"While our strong participation rate demonstrates a growing number of students with aspirations for college, we are concerned about the decline in scores," state Education Commissioner Mark K. McQuillan said.

Congressman Offers Revisions to ‘No Child’
By Jay Mathews, Washington Post, August 28, 2007

The leading House Democrat on education issues proposed revisions yesterday to the No Child Left Behind law that would ease the penalties for public schools that barely miss academic testing targets but tighten another rule that has helped the District and Virginia.

The proposal would allow states to use more than annual tests in reading and math to rate schools; give credit to states for students who are projected to reach proficiency within three years; and require states to test certain students with limited English skills in their native language. For some schools that fall only slightly short of academic targets, the proposal would also lift requirements to provide after-school tutoring and let students transfer to better schools.