On Board Online May 23 2016
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| On Board Online Extra • June 3, 2016 By Eric D. Randall, Editor-in-Chief, and Cathy Woodruff, Senior Writer Should some students be able to graduate this month if they have passed all of their Regents-level courses, even if they did not pass all of the Regents exams currently required for a diploma? That idea is likely to be considered by the state Board of Regents when the board meets on June 13 and 14. Regent Roger Tilles of Long Island says changes are needed to ensure high-performing special education students aren't unfairly denied diplomas. He is optimistic that a new approach will be devised in the next two weeks. |
| On Board Online • May 23, 2016 James R. Rickabaugh Reprinted with permission from The Board ©2016 by The Master Teacher®
Schools and education are steeped in tradition. The general organization and operation of schools today remain very similar to what our students' grandparents experienced. Yet, the world has changed dramatically and the pace and scale of change continues to grow each decade. |
| On Board Online • May 23, 2016 By Alan Wechsler When it comes to this year's presidential candidates, some New York state school board members don't know whom to support. If anyone. "It's a very difficult year for me. It's probably the first time since I've been able to vote that I don't have someone that I want to support," said Marissa Joy Mims, a member of the Fayetteville-Manlius Central School District Board of Education near Syracuse. |
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| On Board Online • May 23, 2016 By Eric D. Randall Who's your idea of a cool geek? Bill Nye the Science Guy? Neil deGrasse Tyson, the astrophysicist? How about David Pogue, who will be speaking at NYSSBA's 97th Annual Convention & Educational Expo in Buffalo in October? |
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Timothy G. Kremer Why do people often feel favorable about their local communities but have serious doubts about the condition of the state as a whole? Call it a matter of love and contempt. There is no shortage of complaints about poor government decisions that emanate from distant places like Albany or Washington, D.C. But support for locally-controlled initiatives, as evidenced by the recent budget votes, remains quite strong. |
| On Board Online • May 23, 2016 By Paul Heiser Voters across the state approved almost all school spending plans when they went to the polls on May 17. Of the 676 budgets put before voters, 662 budgets passed - an approval rate of 98.5 percent. Ten budgets were defeated, and the results of three budgets were not known when On Board went to press. |
| On Board Online • May 23, 2016 By Cathy Woodruff With no guarantees that state lawmakers will act to avert a state aid penalty for school districts that fail to get new teacher and principal evaluation systems in place by Sept.1, the Board of Regents has again tweaked regulations for implementing evaluations in an effort to help districts more easily reach agreement. "We're trying to get people through something that is difficult," Education Commissioner MaryEllen Elia told the Regents as she and staff members outlined the rule changes. |
| On Board Online • May 23, 2016 By Cathy Woodruff In a decision declaring the method used to calculate a so-called growth score for a Long Island teacher to be "indisputably arbitrary and capricious," a state judge cited the findings of an array of experts who decried the approach as flawed, unreliable and open to bias against some teachers. Acting State Supreme Court Justice Roger D. McDonough declined to prescribe an alternative to the state's "value-added" growth model, and he did not rule on the use of growth scores, which are tied to student test results, in general. |
| On Board Online • May 23, 2016 By Cathy Woodruff An appellate panel has upheld a lower court's dismissal of a challenge to New York's property tax cap. But New York State United Teachers, which brought the lawsuit with several parents and voters, is poised for a likely appeal to the state's highest court, seeking a green light to move forward with the case against the cap. In a majority opinion for the Appellate Division's Third Department in Albany, Justice Eugene P. Devine rejected NYSUT's contention that the property tax cap (and a related provision known as a tax "freeze") adopted by state lawmakers is unconstitutional and that it denies equal protection under the law for school children. |
| On Board Online • May 23, 2016 By Cathy Woodruff For the first time, school districts that are field-testing material for New York's future grade 3-8 exams have the option to administer the tests by computer, and more than a third of participating schools are doing so, according to the State Education Department. In total, students in 905 schools around the state will use computers to take this year's field tests, said Peter Swerdzewski, assistant commissioner in SED's Office of State Assessment, Standards and Curriculum. |
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On Board Online • May 23, 2016