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Estados Unidos: Vermont Education Secretary Urges Shrinking Schools to Cut Staffing

Vermont / 29 de noviembre de 2017 / Por: EmmaJean Holley / Fuente: http://www.vnews.com/

Barbara Griffin is an elementary school reading teacher without an elementary school — or at least, not a regular one. Like many school staff in rural Vermont, Griffin splits her time between locations, in her case Westshire Elementary School, in West Fairlee, and Samuel Morey Elementary School, in Fairlee, both part of the Rivendell Interstate School District.

The two schools’ shared staff also includes art and music teachers, physical and occupational therapy providers, a librarian, a guidance counselor and a school nurse. Despite these shared resources, Westshire Elementary School was reported as having a student-to-staff ratio of 3.18-to-1, the lowest in the Vermont side of the Upper Valley, in a spreadsheet released by the Vermont Agency of Education last month.

“We’re already bare-bones,” said Griffin, who as a Title I reading teacher works with struggling, often low-income students. “It’s very frustrating, because I don’t think these ratios are an accurate reflection of what the situations in Vermont schools really look like. … The number doesn’t tell the whole story.”

Westshire isn’t the only school feeling the pinch. As enrollment in Vermont schools continues to shrink, school systems are facing pressure to adjust their staff numbers accordingly, lest per-pupil costs go through the roof.

But even in a state with the lowest student-to-teacher ratio in the nation, and almost one staff member for every four schoolchildren, some Upper Valley educators feel this task is easier said than done — and some, like Griffin, are questioning the validity of student-to-staff ratios as a measure of how well schools are managing their resources.

Because small schools can reduce staff by only so much, and can hang on to only so many students, raising ratios may require a hard look at some of the educational values that many Vermonters hold dear, but that may not be financially sustainable, Vermont Secretary of Education Rebecca Holcombe acknowledged in the Oct. 4 memo, which included the spreadsheet.

“In Vermont, we love small,” she wrote. But unless ratios improve at the statewide level, “we will be bearing very high education costs that are unlikely to contribute to better student outcomes.” She noted that the push to cut staff is especially strong right now, because the Legislature used a large amount of one-time money to reduce property taxes last year, contributing to a $50 million gap in next year’s budget that will likely result in a 7- to 9-cent increase in the statewide property tax rate, VtDigger reported last month.

Holcombe said in her memo that similarly small, rural states “spend less (on education) and see better results” than Vermont does. But Nelson Fogg, principal at Hartford High School, wondered whether “this ratio business” was more about the state’s financial concerns than about what’s best for students and schools.

“It feels to me like a bit of a math equation. They have to find the ($50 million), and so someone very smart figures out that increasing the number of students per teacher allows us to shave X millions of dollars,” Fogg said. “But this doesn’t necessarily take into account the reality of schools. It may be the reality of budgets, which is closely aligned, but that very  smart person isn’t here for the day-to-day.”

Most Upper Valley schools have a student-to-staff ratio that’s higher than the statewide level of 4.25-to-1, according to the Agency of Education spreadsheet. The spreadsheet comprises K-12 enrollment and staffing data from the 2016 and 2017 fiscal years, and shows student-to-teacher and student-to-staff ratios for all Vermont public and publicly funded nonprofit independent schools.

Teacher ratio counts, like student enrollment counts, are K-12 only; staff ratios include both teaching and non-teaching school staff, but exclude pre-K teachers, maintenance and security, student transportation, food service, enterprise operations, community services operations and facilities acquisition and construction.

Randolph Elementary School was reported as having the highest student-to-staff ratio on the Vermont side of the Upper Valley, at 9.3 students for every one staff member at the school. This ratio is up slightly from 9.12-to-1 from the 2016 fiscal year — but Layne Millington, superintendent of Orange Southwest Supervisory Union, stressed that this isn’t because Randolph is necessarily doing anything special: Instead, he attributed its relatively high ratio to its relatively high enrollment.

“I think there’s a bit of an unfounded belief in Vermont that all schools have the ability to control these ratios, and that is simply not true,” he said in an email last week. “I believe that schools with larger enrollments have some control, but smaller ones do not.” Randolph Elementary School’s enrollment, reported at 284 in the 2017 fiscal year, dwarfs schools like the 80-student Westshire School in West Fairlee, and the 60-student Albert Bridge School in West Windsor, whose ratios are 3.18-to-1 and 4.92-to-1 respectively.

Schools with more students have an advantage when it comes to ratios, simply because “each staff member is physically able to serve more students,” Millington said in an email last week, adding that in some cases, cutting staff is next to impossible.

He described a hypothetical high school with 50 students, all of whom must fulfill certain requirements before graduating. Each of their required classes needs a teacher who’s been specially trained in that area: “If … we have to teach them math, English, social studies, health/wellness, science and foreign language, then we’ll need at least six teachers,” he said. This would bring the imaginary high school’s student-to-teacher ratio to 8.3-to-1.

But staffing doesn’t stop here. Schools’ “typical special education needs,” Millington said, call for at least two special educators, bringing the student-to-staff ratio down to 6.25-to-1. Add in a librarian, a guidance counselor, an administrative assistant and the principal, and this hypothetical high school’s ratio drops to just over four students per staff member — which also happens to be Vermont’s statewide level.

“You just can’t do it with fewer teachers,” said Jean Wheeler, principal of Oxbow High School in Bradford, Vt. “Right now, we couldn’t cut any more core subject staff.”

Though Oxbow’s student population was reported as 337 in the 2017 fiscal year, it’s also a seventh-through-12th grade facility, and requires more staff than a ninth-through-12th grade school to meet the needs of all ages served.

“There are challenges when it comes to making sure we are staffing both ends of the spectrum,” she said in a phone interview. Though Oxbow’s 4.1-to-1 student-to-staff ratio is on the lower end for the Upper Valley, and just under the statewide level, Wheeler said that in the case of schools like Oxbow, a diversified student body calls for a more diversified — and therefore larger — staff.

“On the positive side,” Millington said, should a small school’s enrollment grow, “we can absorb quite a few students before we’d have to hire more faculty.” But this scenario is unlikely for most schools, he said, given the past two decades of shrinking class sizes.

For this reason, he suspects that there may be “only one logical conclusion” when it comes to raising ratios on a large scale, and that’s to consolidate small schools into larger ones — an issue that comes with its own set of controversies in part because, as Holcombe pointed out, Vermont loves small.

Holcombe seems to have reached a similar conclusion as Millington, with her memo suggesting that schools look at merging as a way to boost their ratios and use educational funding more judiciously: “In some cases, the entire student body could fit in a neighboring school seven minutes away on a paved road, without incurring additional cost, and we could still maintain student-to-teacher ratios that are less than half the national average,” she said.

She also recommended that schools reevaluate the necessity of some of their support staff, and special education paraprofessionals in particular, whose numbers have been inching upward alongside special needs rates among students. Holcombe cited research that suggests students with disabilities do better when they learn directly from their teachers rather than from the paraprofessionals who work with students one-on-one, a practice that also brings up per-pupil spending significantly.

“A lot of the time, our support staff numbers are dictated by human need,” Wheeler said of Oxbow High School. “Some students still need that one-on-one.”

Still, Wheeler said Oxbow has, as of this year, started moving toward a special education model similar to the one Holcombe recommended, in which students with special needs remain in-classroom when possible, often with assistance devices rather than personal aides.

Relying too heavily on paraprofessionals to do the work of classroom teachers might, in fact, “be reducing access of our children with disabilities to high quality teaching,” Holcombe said in the memo. “We need to take a disciplined look statewide at the use of special education paraprofessionals, and ask if we are using them in appropriate ways.”

But several Upper Valley administrators expressed discomfort with the idea of reducing the kinds of support available to students with special needs.

“The state is suffering an epidemic in terms of student trauma,” Millington said, adding that this epidemic has been “manifesting itself in an explosion of students with significant emotional disabilities, who need high levels of service to be able to exist within our schools and access the curriculum.” He feels that the increasing number of support staff across the state is largely in response to the rising number of children who receive support for emotional disturbances and behavioral issues, which are often tied to traumatic experiences.

Instead of the state pressuring schools into downsizing their special education staff in the interest of financial efficiency, Millington would prefer to see the causes of student trauma “addressed through programs at the state level that seek to prevent the trauma from happening in the first place,” so that over time, these top-down initiatives would reduce schools’ special education costs, he said.

Tom DeBalsi, superintendent of Hartford School District, was also dubious about reducing special education staff, despite its potential to save on payroll costs.

“That’s kind of a tough one because … we happen to have a lot of kids with a lot of big needs,” he said in a phone interview. Since he started working in Upper Valley schools in the 1990s, “the number of kids in special ed just keeps increasing, and their needs just become more and more intense.” He pointed to chronic societal stressors, such as poverty and substance abuse, as factors that can impede a student’s ability to thrive in a traditional classroom setting.

All five schools in the Hartford School District — Dothan Brook School, Hartford High School, Hartford Memorial Middle School, Ottauquechee School and White River School — saw declines in student-to-staff ratios between the 2016 and 2017 fiscal years. These ratio drops were minor, and make sense to DeBalsi given the slightly lower enrollment at each of these schools. While he attributed these declines to the “natural fluctuations” in class sizes from year to year, he acknowledged that in any given year, “we don’t always see the ratios we want.”

The Hartford School Board had long discussed saving money by consolidating the town’s elementary schools, which would have involved closing the Ottauquechee and White River schools and expanding the Dothan Brook and middle schools. These conversations went back and forth until 2012, when the School Board opted instead to invest more resources into the high school, where the most money was being lost, in the hopes of drawing in more tuition-paying students from out of town. The high school’s enrollment has still declined since then, though, from 600 students in 2012 down to 479 in the 2017 fiscal year.

But DeBalsi wanted to clear up the notion that schools can simply cut staff in a way that’s proportional to enrollment drops: “You lose X number of kids, you cut a teacher. It doesn’t really work that way,” he said, and posed a hypothetical scenario of his own: “If you lose two students in fifth grade, and one in fourth grade, and three in eighth, and two kindergartners, well, what do you do? It’s a tough situation, I’ll tell you.”

Mostly, he said, the district has been using attrition to manage staff numbers, meaning that when a staff member stops working at the school, they might not be replaced. Holcombe has encouraged schools to embrace this strategy, and DeBalsi prefers it to laying off staff. He still feels badly about cutting four teachers at the high school a few years ago — a business teacher, an industrial arts teacher, a foreign language teacher and a behavioral support staff member.

“That was real hard,” he said. “You never want people to lose their jobs.”

Toward the end of the memo, Holcombe said some schools seemed to have reported incorrect data, which would throw off their ratios and potentially skew district averages.

Bethel Elementary School was one school where this is likely to have happened, according to Principal Owen Bradley, who expressed puzzlement over the numbers reported in the Agency of Education spreadsheet in a phone interview last week.

The data suggest that Bethel has the second-lowest student-to-staff ratio on the Vermont side of the Upper Valley, at 3.61 students per staff member — less than half of their relatively high student-to-staff ratio, 7.5-to-1, reported in the 2016 fiscal year. The elementary school’s reported numbers of full-time equivalent workers also sharply increased for both teachers and staff, from 11.5 to 25.25 and from 19.5 to 37.35 respectively.

Multiple school officials said this was impossible, since enrollment had not gone down dramatically enough to account for the ratio changes, nor did the school make any major adjustments to its staffing.

Whitcomb Junior and Senior High School, which shares a building with Bethel Elementary, reportedly saw a slightly higher student-to-staff ratio, as well as a reduction in full-time equivalents, between the 2016 and 2017 fiscal years.

Bradley chalked up the anomaly to a “human error on our end,” possibly a case of double-reported data, which he intends to investigate and correct.

“All that aside, though, we all know we still have the lowest ratios in the country,” he said. “We’re more like the Grey Mountain state now.”

Since Bethel and Royalton voters agreed to form a new consolidated school district, administrators from both communities have been discussing ways of reducing per-pupil costs, including cultivating higher student-to-staff ratios.

Holcombe’s memo urged all Vermont schools to double-check their data as it appears on the Agency of Education’s spreadsheet of statewide student ratios, and to consider their ratios in regards to administrators, teachers and staff, especially support staff.

“We realize these questions are not a solution,” she said, “but a first step.”

All the same, Westshire Elementary School Principal Tammy MacQueen wrote in an email that, regardless of what the school’s ratios are, staffing will continue to reflect student needs, not student numbers.

“It’s our responsibility to offer a free and appropriate public education for all students and sometimes additional services are required to help them be successful. That’s where the student to staff ratio can be deceiving. If a school has a high population of special education students, they are responsible and required by law to give those children the services and supports they need to access the general curriculum.

“I believe our job is to give them the tools they need to be successful academically and socially and if that means we need to hire more people to support them, then we should do that,” she said. “Every single person in our building is working hard for kids, and that is what matters.”

EmmaJean Holley can be reached at ejholley@vnews.com or 603-727-3216.

Fuente noticia: http://www.vnews.com/Student-staff-ratios-in-Vermont-schools-continue-to-drop-13788078

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Nigeria: Change Should Begin With Education

Nigeria/November 21, 2017/Source: http://allafrica.com

The Federal Executive Council [FEC] held a special retreat in Abuja last Monday on the challenges of education in Nigeria. The retreat had the theme: «Education in Nigeria: Challenges and Prospects.» President Muhammadu Buhari declared it open while Vice President Yemi Osinbajo and most ministers were present. The decision to hold the retreat was first made in June at a FEC meeting chaired by then Acting President Osinbajo. Minister of Education Malam Adamu Adamu said at the time that «[FEC] members agreed that the falling standards in education are so serious that we will need a ministerial retreat to look at all the issues…Initially, we had prepared a blueprint but FEC felt the issue is beyond that because there are crises in all the areas of education, in out of school children, in technical education and training, in ICT, in all the areas you can think of.»

The minister increased the areas of educational malaise when he spoke at the 2017 Convergence Education Summit in Abuja last week. He said, «The education sector is plagued with so many challenges. Some of the challenges include dearth of qualified technical teachers, dilapidated and inadequate classrooms, lack of tools and equipment for technical and vocational education, poor data for educational planning and administration. Others are dearth of critical ICT infrastructure and services, low access to tertiary education due to insufficient institutions, multiplicity of curriculum-related issues, problem of out-of-school children and poor funding, among others.» The list looks very long but the minister actually left out other areas such as poor quality of teachers in many states, high drop-out rate, inability of many parents to pay their children’s exam fees, widespread malpractice in exam administration, the problem of fake certificates and sexual abuse, among others.

President Buhari’s opening speech at the retreat was overshadowed by a remark he made about Kaduna State Governor Nasir el-Rufai’s plan to sack 21,780 teachers who failed a basic competency exam. Most newspapers seized on that remark and had screaming headlines that «Buhari backs el-Rufa’i’s plan to sack teachers.» This was unfortunate because the Kaduna controversy is but a flash in the pan when it comes to tackling the major problems devilling education in Nigeria.

In his speech at the retreat, Minister of Education Malam Adamu Adamu called for a state of emergency to be declared in education. He said «all change must begin with education because if we get education right, other areas of our national life will be right and they will fall in line.» This is true indeed but what is the solution? The minister said, «What is needed is vastly improved funding accompanied by a strong political will.» He said while the Buhari administration has the will, what it «must now do is to make the funds available.» Both are easier said than done. The APC administration’s political will to solve the deep-rooted problems of the education sector is yet to be proved. As for funding, Malam Adamu said among sub-Saharan African countries, Nigeria commits far less to education as a percentage of its budgets than smaller and less endowed nations in the region.

«From 1999 to date,» the minister said, «the annual budgetary allocation to education [in Nigeria] has always been between four per cent and 10 per cent.» He said none of the E9 or D8 countries other than Nigeria allocates less than 20 per cent of its annual budget to education. It is true that for a developing country such as Nigeria, all sectors of the socio-economy are yearning for greater attention. If however we believe, beyond mouthing slogans, that education is the sector with the greatest multiplier effect for national development, then we must up our game and greatly increase spending in education at all levels to address the myriad of problems that have already been identified.

That assertion has caveats, however. The education sector is not spared from the national malaise of corruption. It cannot be said that this country has got real value for the amounts we invested in education, less though they are compared to other countries. The anti-corruption campaign being waged in other sectors must also be waged vigorously in the education sector, otherwise pumping in more money could be an exercise in futility.

It was not said after the FEC retreat whether it accepted the minister’s prayer to declare a state of emergency in education. In case it decides to do so at a later date, the elements in this declaration and the timelines for achieving specific targets should be made clear to all Nigerians so that we can all monitor compliance. Besides, the problems of education in Nigeria cannot be tackled by the Federal Government alone. In fact, state and local governments have a greater role to play in education than the Federal Government. The sectors the latter are mainly responsible for, i.e. primary and secondary education, are the ones that have suffered the greatest quality deterioration and are more badly affected by other problems. Needless to state, the Federal Government’s heavy investment in tertiary education can hardly achieve desired results if the two lower tiers of education are in crises.

That is why last week’s ministerial retreat should be followed up by a wider stakeholders’ summit involving the other tiers of government as well as non-government actors in the sector, local and international. At the end of it, a comprehensive yet simple blueprint of action with reasonable timelines should be produced and widely circulated in the country. At that point the President should bring his full moral authority to bear to get all actors to key into the program and bestow on it the political will and resource infusion. Hopefully within a few years the country will begin to reap the fruits of such concerted action.

Source:

http://allafrica.com/stories/201711190024.html

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EEUU: Texas special education programs enrollment surges

EEUU/November 11, 2017/Source: http://www.kten.com

Special education programs in Texas have seen a sharp increase in enrollment.

The Houston Chronicle reports that more than 477,000 students received special education services in the 2016-17 school year, an increase of about 14,000 students from the previous school year.

Data from the state’s Public Education Information Management System says almost 9 percent of Texas students use special education resources.

The Texas Education Agency had enacted a cap in 2004 requiring school districts to limit special education services to no more than 8.5 percent of students. The agency removed the cap last year after a newspaper investigation found thousands of students with disabilities didn’t have access to necessary services.

An agency spokeswoman says districts must identify and provide all special education services to students who need them.

Source:

http://www.kten.com/story/36815032/texas-special-education-programs-enrollment-surges

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India: Viewing Education Through a Lens Broadens Perspective

India/November 07, 2017/

Traveling abroad always forces me to respect my access to education in a much more profound manner. Recently, I took a trip to Ladakh, India, a three-day journey from just about anywhere in the U.S., to volunteer at the Siddhartha School, a private institution that values a strong academic curriculum and a culture of giving and compassion in India.

The school, which encompasses children from early childhood through grade 10, was started by the Buddhist monk, Khen Rinpoche Lobsang Tsetan, in his hometown of Stok, Ladakh, to give area children “access to a rich, thoroughly modern education that is in harmony with their Himalayan heritage and their cultural traditions.”

Siddhartha School itself lays in a shallow valley 11,000 feet above sea level, nestled tight in a ring of massive snow-capped Himalayan mountains, high on the Tibetan plateau. The surrounding land is parched and dusty except for the oases of farmland and trees created by thorough irrigation.

There were no other schools accessible to the children of this mountainous region in 1995 when Khen Rinpoche founded the school. Rinpoche took it upon himself to establish the Siddhartha School, turning down an invitation in 2000 from the Dalai Lama to become the Abbot of Tashi Lhumpo Monastery to instead work with local children.

Only 20 students enrolled in the school’s inaugural year, but as time went on and the school grew, Khen Rinpoche started a sponsorship program to help those who were unable to pay for tuition, transportation, or both. Sponsors enable children to attend the school for approximately $360 per year. Some students attend the school and live in the hostel for $400 annually. There are now 400 students at the Siddhartha School and half of them are sponsored.

During my two week stay in Ladakh, I interviewed students who needed financial help. In addition, I interviewed students that already had sponsors so that they could thank them. For the students that had sponsors,  I noticed that, despite their shyness and the language barrier, they wanted to make it clear that nothing meant more to them than being supported. One of the children our family sponsors wrote in the school newspaper that the day he was sponsored was the happiest day of his life.

When I was filming and taking photos for the sponsorship program, I found that almost every student, when asked what he or she enjoyed doing most, said approximately the same four things. The students all loved school, their teachers, reading in the newly constructed and furnished library, and playing soccer. I was humbled by how fondly they all spoke of getting the opportunity to learn and attend school.

When I was taking photographs of the students, I was most challenged by getting them to become comfortable enough with my camera to ignore it. The students had certainly seen cameras before, however, they were definitely not accustomed to seeing a young white male with one. Regardless, they were always glad to smile.

One afternoon I headed down to the boys’ hostel with an American friend who was also volunteering at the school. He had been visiting the school for six years in a row and was very close to all the boys in the hostel. We decided to create a video about where the boys were from and how they came to the Siddhartha School. The video never really took shape, however the project provided me with the opportunity to make friends with all of the boys living in the hostel. They taught me some rudimentary phrases in Ladakhi that became incredibly useful throughout the following weeks. Once the proverbial ice had been broken, I found it much easier to take photos that more accurately represented them and their school.

For me, the relationships that I established while photographing these children were much more rewarding than the photos themselves. In my limited experience, the story from which the photograph emerges is always what sets the photo apart. To me, photography is a medium through which I can explain things that I couldn’t with words.

For a photograph to be meaningful, it must evoke a feeling or establish a connection; the observer should be able to identify the story behind what made the image possible. The photographer should be able to write a comprehensive back story about the picture. How photographs make the viewer feel is very important for capturing their attention and drawing them into the story behind the image.

This step is akin to the first sentence of a paper because it must convince the viewer that it’s worth reading. The story of the photo, and how the photographer tells it, is far more important than the photo itself, even if the story is very simple. To hold the interest of the viewer for longer than the amount of time it would take to see a photo and then scroll past it on social media is as much an art as photography itself.

The most moving part of my trip was the connection I felt as I photographed the students, along with just getting to be so far from home. If schools could create programs that allowed students to travel abroad for shorter periods of time, more young people could experience the world as I have, learning from the stories they find along their journey.

Miles Lipton is a junior at Waynflete School.

Source:

http://mainepublic.org/post/viewing-education-through-lens-broadens-perspective#stream/0

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India: Education a big hurdle, hunt for right job bigger

India/November 07, 2017/By: Ardhra Nair/Source: https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com

Pune: From making education accessible to opening up the job market, activists say a lot needs to be done to improve the quality of life of persons with disabilities.

Though securing an education in itself is a big hurdle for people with disabilities, finding a job is even tougher. Public sector jobs have a quota for persons with disability, but it’s difficult to find emplyment in the private sector.

Makarand Vaidya, who needs help to walk, used to work as a marketing and strategy professional. «Government policies need to improve. Schools, colleges and workplaces too need to go beyond the regulations and extend help to disabled people,» he said.

«Only a few among the top-notch corporates hire disabled people. Mid-level companies, and even small and medium industries, are not very receptive to the idea of giving jobs to people with disabilities,» Vaidya added.

Akash Pawar, a BCA student who works at a computer centre, said, «It is tough to get an education if you are disabled. There are no toilets designed to accommodate your wheelchair, neither at school and nor at the workplace. I had learnt computers at this centre. Since I am really good with computers, the owner lets me work here. Otherwise, it is extremely hard to get a job even if you can prove that you are good.»

Kalidas Supate, manager of Kamayani Udyog Kendra (KUK), claims to have found jobs for nearly 600 disabled people. He said, «We have been holding job fairs for the disabled for the past five years or so. We advertise in the media and the HR departments of many companies contact us. Over 40 big firms had come for hiring.»

He added, «Companies that had hired our candidates have given us feedback. They said the visually challenged and hearing/speech-impaired candidates who were recruited in the IT and hospitality sectors, work twice as much as the regular employees.»

KUK also runs a training institute, which helps impart skills to the challenged workforce.

Source:

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/pune/education-a-big-hurdle-hunt-for-right-job-bigger/articleshow/61536774.cms

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EEUU: School board needs to act on special education

EEUU/November 07, 2017/By: 

I was upset and sad when I read The Frederick News-Post’s article about the parents, teachers, and others blowing the whistle on Frederick County Public Schools’ special education department.

The dozens of people who spoke out aren’t outliers or disgruntled complainers. Their stories show a pattern. Special education advocates have been trying to call attention to that pattern for years. The system seems to have ignored or dismissed them.

If we believe special education parents and teachers (and I do), FCPS managers are skirting and possibly breaking state and federal special education laws through what they do and what they fail to do. That would also violate our ethical and moral obligations to children who need special education services. And that would also mean that hardworking teachers are being pressured to act as unwilling accomplices — all at the expense of children, families and taxpayers.

 If the allegations in the article are true, FCPS is mismanaging our county’s special education services. System-wide problems require system-wide solutions. Here’s what I think we should do as a start.

First, the Board of Education should set up a safe way for people to come forward so we can really understand the scope of the problems we face. Whistleblowers clearly fear school system retaliation. We need to know why. It’s time to listen to parents and teachers.

Second, the Board of Education should undertake an independent audit of FCPS’ special education department. How many of the county’s 4,000 Individual Education Plans are legal and valid? How many special education students are receiving services as legally required? How many teachers are being asked by FCPS to provide more daily hours of special education services than there are hours in the day? If there isn’t a systemic problem, then a full and publicly transparent audit will show that.

We need to thank the parents and teachers who are speaking out for special education students and families. The best way to do that is to act.

Source:

https://www.fredericknewspost.com/opinion/letter_to_editor/school-board-needs-to-act-on-special-education/article_9aa10033-ec80-5de4-93ca-5130c564bd89.html

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Estados Unidos: New School expands outdoor education program

Watsonville / 01 de noviembre de 2017 / Fuente: https://register-pajaronian.com

During the last school year, 15 students from New School Community Day School participated in the school’s first Outdoor Science and Character Development program.

The four-day program was so successful that the school expanded it this year to include all the school’s high schoolers and to run seven days.

The Environmental Outdoor Science and Character Development Program was created as a way to offer outdoor education to the students, but also to offer team-building and self-confidence-building activities.

It includes partners from the Watsonville Environmental Science Workshop and Growing Up Wild Adventure Camp, the City of Watsonville Public Works & Utilities Department and Watsonville Wetlands Watch.

It was funded by a Watsonville Rotary Community Grant.

The curriculum allows the teachers to apply Next Generation Science Standards to community projects, such as adopting Watsonville Slough.

“Today, I learned about trust,” said senior Sandy Aguado. “And we had a lot of fun.”

New School Intervention Teacher and 13-year Pajaro Valley Unified School District veteran Emily Halbig said that the program is ideal for students who rarely get to experience the natural areas that surround them.

“One student mentioned to me at the end of the day that his anxiety level had lowered and he was feeling much calmer and happier,” Halbig said.

“Today may have been my best day as a teacher,” she said of this year’s program.

Scheduled activities for the coming weeks include hiking above Eureka Canyon, scientific illustration, water testing, restoration and cleanup of Watsonville Slough, interpreting collected data and presentations of student findings.

The final day of the program will include the Cliffhanger High Ropes Course.

The program, which runs once a week, was created by teacher Bryan Love, along with Growing Up Wild, a Watsonville organization that connects young people to nature.

“The importance of our Outdoor Science & Character Development program is that it engages our student population with Next Generation Science Standards and pro-social skills practice through experiential learning activities,” Love said. “Now with our partnership with the City of Watsonville Public Works and Utilities, our students are able to directly apply the environmental awareness they gain through the program to our adoption practices in Watsonville Slough.”

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Fuente noticia: https://register-pajaronian.com/article/new-school-expands-outdoor-education-program

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