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Nancy Bailey's Education Website

Revive, Rally and Recover Public Schools

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Why the Education Reformers Worry about Special Education

March 30, 2014 By Nancy Bailey 9 Comments

Posted on November 12, 2013 with updated changes by Nancy Bailey I heard someone, a parent or teacher, blurt out at an informal education meeting that education reformers are afraid of special education. I think that person is right. Many of those currently in charge of condemning public schools don’t understand anything about students with […]

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Andrea Rediske, Common Core, education reform, Ethan's Bill, Florida, high-stakes testing, privatization, special education, Students with Disabilities

High-Stakes Testing, Common Core and Students with Disabilities—What Now?

March 27, 2014 By Nancy Bailey Leave a Comment

Originally Posted on October 28, 2013 by Nancy Bailey I changed the title of this old post to include high-stakes testing because it reminded me of the word “appropriate” and the situation in Florida surrounding The Ethan Rediske Act. I think it is important to revisit some of these court cases. What meaning do they […]

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: appropriate, Common Core, high-stakes testing, students with disabilties, The Ethan Rediske Act

Platooning—Another Weird Education Word and Common Core Strategy for Elementary School

March 11, 2014 By Nancy Bailey 27 Comments

Since I already have a list of weird education words here’s a new one to add. How many of you have heard of “platooning”—which, in reference to education, means moving elementary students, subject-to-subject, teacher-to-teacher, to meet the new Common Core State Standards? Instead, of one primary teacher, students move around—subject to subject. This idea has […]

Filed Under: Popular Featured Tagged With: Common Core, Early Elementary, first grade, high-stakes testing, kindergarten, Platooning, Rocketship Charter Schools, Teach for America, Weird Words

Could it End High-Stakes Testing?—The Bizarre Practice of Irrelevant Testing of Students with Severe Disabilities

March 4, 2014 By Nancy Bailey Leave a Comment

Could the odd practice of using high-stakes testing to test students with severe disabilities put an end to America’s obsession with high-stakes testing overall? There is nothing that speaks to individual differences more than students like Ethan Rediske. America may have lost Ethan, but his mom, Andrea Rediske, and Orange County Public School board member […]

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Andrea Rediske, assessment, Common Core, Florida Deparment of Education, high-stakes testing, irrelevant testing, Mrs. Pamela Stewart, Rick Roach, special education, students with severe disabilities

Do Americans Love Their Children?—Yes! Many of them DO!

February 14, 2014 By Nancy Bailey 2 Comments

“Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres. Love never fails.” (New International Version) A while back I was talking with a friend about school problems, and she surprised me by saying “America doesn’t love its children!” I was taken aback. I’d never […]

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: art and music, class size, Common Core, guns, high-stakes testing, homelessness, hunger, infant mortality, lead poison, love, Momma Bears, parents, poverty, public schools, special education, teachers, TREE, Valentine's Day

The Soulless Practice of Using Students with Disabilities to Fire Teachers—Remembering a Better World

February 8, 2014 By Nancy Bailey 7 Comments

How’s this for compassion in the new public school accountability world? By now most people have read about the Ethan Rediske situation in Orlando. The 11 year old, blind, with brain damage and cerebral palsy, as he lay dying in a Hospice, was required to take an alternative version of the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test […]

Filed Under: Special Education Tagged With: developmental disabilities, FCAT, Florida, high-stakes testing, institutions, Orlando, public schools, Sunland

It’s What President Obama Didn’t Say about Education in the State of the Union Address….

January 29, 2014 By Nancy Bailey 4 Comments

The president, of course, could not speak about all the following disputes in one State of the Union Address. But the problem is he rarely speaks about these issues with the American people. There is little, if any, discussion or debate. The president might be surprised to find not everyone approves of his education policies. […]

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: college and careers, Common Core State Standards (CCSS), crumbling school infrastructure, Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA)student privacy and safety, high-stakes testing, innovation, Rae to the Top, school closures, special education, Teach for America, the arts, Universal Pre-K

So Long Zero Tolerance—Now is the Time to HELP Troubled Kids—Modern Family Thinks So

January 16, 2014 By Nancy Bailey Leave a Comment

With all the bad news in education, it is good to see the Obama administration taking steps to address zero tolerance http://www2.ed.gov/policy/gen/guid/school-discipline/index.html. They are finally attempting to put to rest the outrageous arrests and suspensions involving innocent or misguided children—looking at all of them as criminals. This will help improve public schools. This should stop […]

Filed Under: Teaching Tagged With: high-stakes testing, homework, Modern Family episode, Obama administration, pressure, troubled children, Zero Tolerance

Shunning Gifted Students in America—Isn’t it Time to Pay Attention?

January 2, 2014 By Nancy Bailey 31 Comments

All children are gifted one way or another. But because labels are still used to identify children, when I say gifted you immediately know I am referring to children who have high IQs. They intellectually function ahead of their peers on the bell-shaped curve—sometimes far ahead. They also might have learning disabilities along with being […]

Filed Under: Common Core Tagged With: Accelerated Placement (AP), class size, Common Core, Council for Exceptional Children, credentialed gifted teachers, cut-off point, disadvantaged students, education policy, education reform, gifted associations, gifted programming, gifted students, high-stakes testing, Internation Baccalaureate (IB), IQ, lack of services, regular class, self-contained classes, states, twice exceptional

If You Feel Like Grandma Who Got Run Over By a Reindeer—Don’t Despair!

December 21, 2013 By Nancy Bailey Leave a Comment

If your child is doing well and you are happy about public school you probably don’t need to read any further. If your house is decorated well enough to win a Martha Stewart contest, and your Christmas dinner was cooked and frozen in neat Zip Lock bags and Rubbermaid containers weeks ago, then you can […]

Filed Under: Common Core, Special Education Tagged With: children with disabilities, Christmas, Common Core, community, high-stakes testing, hope, opting out of the test, public schools, support, Teach for America

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