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Nancy Bailey's Education Website

Revive, Rally and Recover Public Schools

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Archives for March 2018

“Duck and Cover Kids,” and the Problems with “Teachers Packing”

March 29, 2018 By Nancy Bailey 2 Comments

By Jim Gifford I recall from my youth the cliché “Duck and Cover”.  This was the catch-phrase created for our nuclear war drills which were designed to prepare all children at school to hide or “duck” under their own desks in order to survive a hydrogen bomb. Yes, survive a nuclear holocaust.  No bombs were […]

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Arming Teachers, Duck and Cover, guns, teachers

Slow Learners in the Age of Hyperlearning

March 26, 2018 By Nancy Bailey 11 Comments

Who decides what slow learning is in this country? Every student deserves a free public education with teachers who understand their educational needs. Not only are corporate reformers slamming slow learners, they’re pushing children to grow up faster than is humanely possible. All our children are expected to be hyperlearners! Slooooowly! There is nothing wrong […]

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Finland, Hyperlearning, Millsv. Bd. of Education, Slow Learning, special education, Texas, Texas Commission on Public School Finance

“Stop, Thieves!” DeVos & Company Drive Deregulation and the End of Public Education

March 22, 2018 By Nancy Bailey 9 Comments

Flopsy, Mopsy, and Cotton-tail, who were good little bunnies, went down the lane to gather blackberries; But Peter, who was very naughty, ran straight away to Mr. McGregor’s garden, and squeezed under the gate! First he ate some lettuces and some French beans; and then he ate some radishes; And then, feeling rather sick, he […]

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Betsy DeVos, deregulation of school mandates, Economist Milton Friedman, licensing professionals, Office of Civil Rights, Overhauling the U.S. Dept. of Education, special education, Texans for Special Education Reform, Texas, United States Department of Education, USDOE

Social-Emotional Learning: The Dark Side

March 19, 2018 By Nancy Bailey 35 Comments

Why would parents and teachers, tired of high-stakes testing in their public schools, wish to sign onto more assessment that tests, tracks, and profiles their child’s behavior online? Good teachers have always built social skills into their classes. Helping children behave and work with each other is second nature to teaching. One can find nice […]

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Autism, Common Core State Stanadards, gifted, Online Social-Emotional Learning, Pay for Success, Psychological Profiling, Social Emotional Learning, Social Impact Bonds, Social-Emotional Standards, special education, testing

In DeVos Interview, Lesley Stahl Went Where Few Journalists Go

March 15, 2018 By Nancy Bailey 3 Comments

It’s been a long time since any journalist has defended public schools with the kind of punch we saw with veteran journalist Lesley Stahl. It was refreshing to say the least. Stahl has a book out about being a grandmother, so maybe she’s got the children of America on her mind more intensely these days. […]

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: 60 Minutes, Betsy DeVos, corporate school reform, Democratic, Fairness in Accuracy in Reporting, Lesley Stahl, public schools

How Do We Stop Bullying? Florida’s New Voucher Scam Doesn’t Ask that Question

March 12, 2018 By Nancy Bailey 9 Comments

Behind bullying behavior we usually find a depressed individual who needs help. We need to understand why a child bullies and get them that help so they will stop bullying. Most people understand how serious the issue of bullying is to children and the country, and how schools should be on the forefront of addressing […]

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: #Rethink Schools, Bullying, Bullying Behavior, Florida's New Voucher Scam, Gov. Jeb Bush, Patricia Levesque, private schools, Retention of 3rd graders, School Choice, vouchers

Worries about Tech and the Chan/Zuckerberg $30 Million Support of “Reach Every Reader”

March 8, 2018 By Nancy Bailey 6 Comments

Reading is essential for learning, yet students across the U.S. are completing elementary school with inadequate reading abilities. So begins the announcement in The Harvard Gazette telling us about the new $30 million grant Chan/Zuckerberg will hand over to Harvard’s School of Education and MIT’s Integrative Learning Initiative (MITili). Learning to read, all of us […]

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: $30 Million Grant to Harvard and MITili, Brick-and-Mortar Schools, class size, Dr. Priscilla Chan, early reading, free reading, Harvard School of Education, Librarians, Mark Zuckerberg, MITili, phonics, phonics vs. whole language, public school teachers, public schools, reading, recess, school libraries, School Privatization, special education, Technology, the arts, whole language

Class Size and Its Impact on Inclusion

March 3, 2018 By Nancy Bailey 14 Comments

Parents want teachers to address their child’s individual needs. Teachers want this too. They want to be able to work with and understand the students they teach. They especially want to help the students in their classes who have exceptional differences. This is difficult to do when class sizes are too large. If elementary teachers […]

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: 3rd Grade Retention, Florida, gifted and talented, IDEA, inclusion, lowering class size, NEPC Study, public schools, Raising Class Sizes, school reform, special education, Tennessee STAR Study

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