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Nancy Bailey's Education Website

Revive, Rally and Recover Public Schools

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Hillary Clinton, Zip Codes, and School Equality

April 17, 2016 By Nancy Bailey 4 Comments

The point often made during debates by Sec. Hillary Clinton is that children should not get a poor education based on their zip code. Most of us would agree about poverty and its harmful effects on children in school. But the zip code message was co-opted a long time ago by those who want to […]

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Bernie Sanders, Counseling Services, Detroit, discipline, Hillary Clinton, libraries, Online Instruction, Over-Testing, Poor Schools, poverty, private schools, Punishing Schools, recess, Rich Schools, Rundown School Facilities, School Nurses, Strictness, teachers, the arts, Wealthy Schools, Whole Curriculum, Zip Codes

The Lopsided Curriculum: Where are Science, Social Studies and the Arts?

March 19, 2016 By Nancy Bailey Leave a Comment

Little children are like sponges, soaking up knowledge of the world around them every minute. So when they start formal education, how much science, social studies and the arts do students in elementary school get? Teaching these subjects used to be important. Learning in these areas sent some of us into our future professions. We […]

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Art, Common Core, Drama, high-stakes testing, Lopsided School Curriculum, music, PARCC, SBAC, science, social studies, the arts

What Happens to Artists Who Aren’t Good Readers?

February 10, 2016 By Nancy Bailey 5 Comments

Imagine children in public schools today, who do not read well, but who are undiscovered, gifted artists. They are continually drilled in reading and get few opportunities to express themselves artistically. In some schools, if a student does not test well in reading they do not get to be in the band, or they are […]

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: artists, dyslexia, reading, reading difficulties, the arts, the Goertzels's studies

Some Good Education News from 2015

December 31, 2015 By Nancy Bailey 1 Comment

Writing about education is interesting, but it can also be depressing. Sometimes it feels like being a hamster on one of those wheels. So as we close out 2015, here is a list of some good news that happened in 2015. If you have something to add, let me know! Happy New Year! These are […]

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: charter schools, Chicago Teachers Union, ESSA Act, For-Profit Colleges, Hillary Clinton, Michigan Task Force, New York and Common Core, parents, Pediatricians and Special Education, Politicians, public schools, recess, special education, St. Jude, State of Washington, students, Success Academy, Teacher Education, teachers, testing, the arts

My Dream About EDUCATION and the Democratic (or Republican) Debate

October 14, 2015 By Nancy Bailey 4 Comments

I fell asleep last night during the democratic debate and I dreamt this is how it all unfolded. The scary part was there were no answers to the questions  about education when I woke up. In my dream Anderson Cooper said: America’s democratic public schools, how we treat and instruct the next generation, our children, […]

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Common Core, Democratic Debate and Education, early childhood education, ELL, Higher Education, privatization, special education, teaching, the arts, Virtual Education

Mindfulness Training—Help or Cover-up in Education-Reform Affected Schools?

July 28, 2015 By Nancy Bailey 2 Comments

There’s mindfulness for teachers and mindfulness for students. There’s mindfulness in the UK and mindfulness in the USA. You can find groups that will train teachers and students about mindfulness around the world. But is mindfulness being used to push students and teachers to be robotic? Is it meant to cover up the problems in […]

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: education reform, high-stakes testing, Mindfulness, recess, retention, socialization, students, teachers, Technology, the arts

The Every Child Achieves Act and the Arts: Fal-De-Ral and Fiddle-Dee-Dee

July 17, 2015 By Nancy Bailey 6 Comments

Rogers and Hammerstein’s Cinderella songs are flipping through my head as I ponder the re-authorization of NCLB, or the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, and more specifically music and the arts. In my own little corner in my own little world I can be whatever I want to be. On the wings of my fancy […]

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Cinderella, Every Child Achieves Act, music, No Child Left Behind, the arts

The End of the Road for PUBLIC SCHOOL Teachers? I Don’t Think So!

March 28, 2015 By Nancy Bailey 10 Comments

Is it the end of the road for public school teachers? It seems like a bad sign when a respected teacher wins an award for teaching, and during a conversation afterwards on CNN, tells young people to go into teaching only if they enter the private sector. Last week Main teacher Nancie Atwell became the […]

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Collaboration, Common Core, Guidance Counselors, high-stakes testing, Librarians, PTA, Public Relations, special education, Student Teachers, support staff, teaching, the arts, Value Added Assessment

Art Charters v. Traditional No Art Schools

December 22, 2014 By Nancy Bailey 4 Comments

Why are the arts removed from traditional public schools while at the same time charter schools are given carte blanche to create art schools? The New York Times has an article about Voice Charter School where students sing and “outperform” their peers…. Academically, students at Voice did significantly better than the city average on New […]

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: charter schools, public schools, the arts

Quality Teachers for Poor Students: Another Missed Opportunity to Address Real Change

July 11, 2014 By Nancy Bailey 3 Comments

This past week President Obama sat down to a lovely salmon dinner with a few teachers with inspirational stories, to discuss his new program to get excellent teachers for children in poor school districts. The problem of poor children in school is critical. Educational Week reported last fall that almost half the students in America […]

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: charter schools, Class Sizes, Common Core, community, Education Schools, Flunking, gifted and talented, Health Care, high-stakes testing, poverty, Preschools, Quality Teachers, School Buildings, schools, the arts, Wrap-Around Services

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