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  • 2
    days
    ago

    America's best high schools: 1,000 that make the grade

    By Sevil Omer, msnbc.com

    Seth Tooley has no problem talking up his alma mater -- The Gatton Academy of Mathematics and Science in Bowling Green, Ky.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    “It’s not your average high school,” said Tooley, 22, a 2008 graduate of the academy, a public high school for juniors and seniors based at Western Kentucky University.

    Tooley now studies science at Western Kentucky but also helps the Gatton Academy by answering telephone calls to the front office. “The students here are learning on a higher level, a ground-breaking level, and that makes all the difference," he told msnbc.com. "When they say students are working on the latest research with leading experts in the field, it's true.”

    Editors at Newsweek & The Daily Beast agree, naming The Gatton Academy of Mathematics and Science as the best public high school in America.


    The annual rankings by Newsweek & The Daily Beast highlight the 1,000 public high schools nationwide that have proven to be the most effective in turning out college-ready graduates.

    The Top 15 are:
    1. The Gatton Academy of Mathematics and Science in Kentucky, Bowling Green, Ky. 
    2. The School for the Talented and Gifted Magnet, Dallas
    3. Basis Scottsdale, Scottsdale, Ariz.
    4. School of Science and Engineering Magnet, Dallas
    5. Basis Tucson, Tucson, Ariz.
    6. Jefferson County International Baccalaureate School, Birmingham, Ala.
    7. Signature School, Evansville, Ind.
    8. Stanton College Preparatory School, Jacksonville, Fla.
    9. Suncoast Community, Riviera Beach, Fla.
    10. Thomas Jefferson for Science and Technology, Alexandria, Va.
    11. City Honors School at Fosdick-Masten Park, Buffalo, N.Y.
    12. School for Advanced Studies, Miami 
    13. Andrew Carnegie Vanguard, Houston
    14. Uplift Education North Hills Preparatory School, Irving, Texas
    15. Pine View School, Osprey, Fla.

    For the complete list of 1,000 schools, and more educational insights, click here to go to thedailybeast.com/besthighschools.

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    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    271 comments

    I'd love to know what percentage of committed families there are amongst these schools.I suspect a very high percentage

    Show more
    Explore related topics: best, america, schools, usa, academy, education, high, gatton
  • 4
    days
    ago

    25 years after bullying, Facebook poem prompts Class of 1987 to make amends

    Ahead of their 25-year high school reunion, former classmates come together to make amends with a woman who was taunted for being poor. KNSD-TV's Tony Shin reports.

    By msnbc.com's Sevil Omer and NBCSanDiego.com's Tony Shin

    A woman says a  Facebook poem she posted about bullying has brought pleas for forgiveness from former classmates who tormented her at a California high school 25 years ago.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Now, some of those classmates want to make amends and have asked Lynda Frederick, 42, of Rochester, N.Y., to attend her 25th high school reunion in Escondido, Calif., on July 27, compliments of the Orange Glen High School Class of 1987.

     “I am nervous,” Frederick told msnbc.com on Friday. “I am looking forward to seeing them, even knowing that what has happened has happened. I have forgiven those who have hurt me in the past.”


    See NBCSanDiego.com's report on Frederick and the Class of 1987

    Frederick said she received phone calls, emails and Facebook messages from former classmates after she posted a poem on the Orange Glen High School Class of 1987 Facebook page.

    In her poem, she wrote:

    that little girl who came to school with the clothes she wore the day before
    instead of asking why.. you picked on her
    the little girl who had to walk to school while others rode the bus
    instead of asking why.. you picked on her
    the little girl who had bruises and was dirty
    instead of asking why.. you picked on her
    the little girl who was always crying
    instead of asking why.. you picked on her

    “They’re all apologizing now for how I was treated,” Frederick said. “I had one man call me up and we talked for an hour on the phone. He cried and cried. I kept saying, ‘You can’t fix yesterday, so let’s fix today.’”

    Frederick said she posted the poem on the Facebook page as a way to send a message to her peers about how bullying affects victims.

    “It never leaves you,” Frederick said. “I wanted people to know that for the one who is doing the bullying, it could just be a phase, but for the person who is being bullied, it stays with you all your life.”

    Lynda Frederick, second from right, says she was bullied 25 years ago in high school. She's pictured with her sons and daughter.

    'I cried'
    Lisa Wallace was among the Facebook users to read it.

    "This poem touched me so bad I could not sleep. I cried," Wallace told NBCSanDiego.com.

    Kristi Malone remembered Frederick and how brutal kids had been to the bespectacled brunette.

    "Looking at her being bullied horribly and thinking, ‘I feel so bad for her,’" Malone told NBCSanDiego.com. "But never thinking in my head that I could stand up for her, and not once did anyone back her up."

    Other classmates have read the poem and many have said they feel overwhelmed by guilt.

    "Just people in tears, like 'How could we have done this to her,' Malone said. They "were just crying, saying 'Why did I do that?'"

    After graduation, Frederick said, she packed up her belongings and headed to New York state to begin anew.

    "I needed to get out, to get away,” Frederick told msnbc.com.

    Watch the Top Videos on msnbc.com

    Today, Frederick has three children, 22-year-old Eric, 20-year-old Bryson and 14-year-old Amanda, who is currently dealing with bullying issues at school, she said.

    "She’s overweight and doesn’t wear the trendiest clothes and it’s been very difficult,” Frederick said. “I tell her to look at the people and say, ‘If you don't like what I'm wearing, if you don't like the way I look, then don't look.’"  

    She said she hopes her daughter’s classmates will change their behavior.

    Organizers for the Orange Glen High School Class of 1987 reunion have collected more than $800 to Frederick an airline ticket to California for the event.

    She has accepted and plans to stay for a week. She said she is looking forward to seeing everyone, no matter what happened in the past.

    "She really is my hero because she succeeded through all of this," Wallace said.  "I look up to her."

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    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

    418 comments

    I was severely, brutally, and continuously bullied throughout elementary school. It's refreshing to see people owning-up to it and making amends in adulthood. In my case, though, sometimes teachers and other adults would take part in the bullying themselves, or just watch and laugh.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: education, bullying, bully
  • 5
    days
    ago

    Millions of students chronically absent, study finds

    By Sevil Omer, msnbc.com

    Up to 15 percent of children in the U.S. are chronically absent from school, making them much more likely to fail and eventually drop out, a new national study shows.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    As many as 7.5 million students nationwide miss a month of school each year, with absenteeism highest in kindergarten and in high school, according to Johns Hopkins University researchers.

    An estimated 10 percent to 15 percent of students are "chronically absent" from school and miss enough class time to be considered a "severe risk" of not finishing high school. In urban and rural areas, where students may be poor and come from families with little education, the figures are as high as one-third of students, the study shows.


    In Maryland, chronic absentee rates for poor students were "more than 30 percent, compared to less than 12 percent for students from more affluent families," according to the research.

    "Because we don’t measure or monitor the problem, we generally don’t act on it," Robert Balfanz, director of the Everyone Graduates Center at Johns Hopkins, said in a statement. "Left untreated, the problem will likely worsen achievement gaps between rich districts and poor districts and curtail the positive effects of promising current and future reforms."

    Balfanz is one of the Johns Hopkins researchers who worked on the study. Vaughan Byrnes, a research associate, co-authored the report.

    According to the study, Balfanz says only six states track chronic absenteeism: Georgia, Florida, Maryland, Nebraska, Oregon and Rhode Island. Several states, including California and New York, do not gather individual data needed to calculate chronic absenteeism, the study found.

    The U.S. Department of Education doesn't track the problem; it only requires states to monitor daily attendance, according to the study.

    A student is considered chronically absent if he or she misses at least a month of school in a year, or about 10 percent of school days.

    Because of the limited data, Balfanz said the study was only an "educated guess" about the scope of the problem.

    "Even so, the research shows that we must address the attendance problem if we're going to have the kind of broader school improvement we want and our students deserve," said Marie Groark, executive director of Get Schooled, a nonprofit group that funded the study. "When you think about it, missing one or two days a month doesn't seem like much but it adds up over time. Then, that becomes a problem and that problem has a consequence."

    The Get Schooled Foundation is an educational nonprofit campaign focused on boosting graduation rates. It is partially funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

    60 comments

    Many countries actually restrict enlistment in public schools to the most aggressive learners and students who really want to get an education. In America, it's normal for many kids to 'flunk out' because they have no values or incentives. Unfortunately, there's not much that can be done except just …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: missing, education, school, high, drop, truancy, absenteeism, outs
  • 5
    days
    ago

    Police: High school cheerleaders suspended for hazing incident in Utah

    By Sevil Omer, msnbc.com

    Nine Utah high school cheerleaders are accused of smearing peanut butter on a new squad member who has a peanut allergy during the hazing of a dozen younger girls, police officials say.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Ogden Police Lt. Scott Conley said the nine cheerleaders at Ogden High School have been suspended in the May 4 incident. A separate investigation will determine if any other students provoked the treatment of the girls, he said.

    During the alleged hazing, the cheerleading group was surrounded by at least 30 other classmates, mostly boys, Conley told msnbc.com.


    “I don’t have the exact number of how many were watching, but in this age of cellphones someone was recording it,” Conley said.

    Conley said investigators were trying to determine if the incident fits the crime of hazing, a misdemeanor offense. Parents of the victims have refused to press charges, but Conley said it was not up to them to decide and that the investigation continues. He said the teens involved are minors and the case would be handled in juvenile court.

    Conley said nine senior class cheerleaders invited 12 incoming members to an Ogden home for a pizza party, but took the younger girls to a local park to celebrate earning a position on the squad. There, the senior cheerleaders blindfolded the girls and ordered them to do push-ups, sit-ups and other exercises while covering them with ketchup, mustard, flour and peanut butter, he said.

    “During the course of all this, the blindfolded cheerleaders were also squirted with a liquid that was initially reported as being urine,” Conley said. “But we haven’t been able to determine that, but now some are saying that the liquid was pickle juice.”

    Watch the Top Videos on msnbc.com

    Conley said the girl with the peanut allergy suffered a reaction and was treated, but has recovered.

    School officials said the senior cheerleaders were suspended for between one to five days, depending on their involvement.

    "We want all of our students to know that we want them to not only get an education in our district, but also enjoy other activities, and have a great, whole school experience," Ogden School District spokeswoman Donna Corby told the Salt Lake Tribune. "In my opinion, this has clouded the experience for our incoming sophomores, and I feel badly about that."

    Attempt by msnbc.com to contact Corby was unsuccessful on Thursday.

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    453 comments

    They were actually very, very lucky the gal with the peanut allergy didn't die! Some have an allergy so severe that they can't even come in physical contact with it, let along ingest it.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: education, suspension, hazing, cheerleaders, utah, bullying
  • 6
    days
    ago

    18-year-old becomes New York state's youngest elected official

    NBC New York

    By Ida Siegal, NBCNewYork.com

    An 18-year-old high school senior has won a seat on his Long Island school board, becoming the youngest elected official in New York state in a campaign that took a last-minute twist over accusations of stolen information.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    In a record turnout Tuesday, Josh Lafazan was elected to the Syosset school board, winning by more than 2,000 votes.

    Ahead of the election, the high school senior and class president faced accusations that his father stole sensitive records from the school. 


    Read NBCNewYork.com's story on Lafazan's victory

    A robo-call message to Syosset parents ahead of the election stated: "Jeffrey Lafazan unlawfully removed district records that contained the names and addresses of residents. He removed the records without permission and ran away."

    Josh Lafazan called it "an obvious smear-campaign tactic, a last-minute Hail Mary thrown by the school district administration."

    Still, the controversy appeared to have mobilized young voters to the polls Tuesday, resulting in a record turnout.

    Jeffrey Lafazan, meanwhile, said his wife has returned the documents to the school.

    He maintains he did not know he was not allowed to take the records, which contained the names of voters who requested absentee ballots. 

    There were five candidates on the ballot for three slots on the board.

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    4 comments

    He removed the records without permission and ran away. Well the attack ads sound childish definitely

    Show more
    Explore related topics: education, school, long, board, island, lafazan
  • 12
    May
    2012
    10:00pm, EDT

    Third-graders asked to reveal secret on New Jersey standardized test

    New Jersey education officials say they will no longer use a standardized test question that asked third-graders to reveal a secret and write about why it was difficult to keep.


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    The question appeared on the writing portion of some versions of the New Jersey Assessment of Skills and Knowledge given to third-graders this past week. And it drew criticism from some parents, who thought it was inappropriate.

    The state Department of Education said the question was reviewed and approved by it and a panel of teachers. It said Friday the question was only being tried out and would not count in the students' scores.


    See the story at NBCNewYork.com

    But after further review, Department of Education spokesman Justin Barra said, the question won't be included in future tests.

    "We've looked at this question in light of concerns raised by parents, and it is clear that this is not an appropriate question for a state test," Barra said, adding that about 4,000 students in 15 districts had the question.

    Marlboro dentist Richard Goldberg was among the parents who had raised concerns about the question.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on msnbc.com

    Goldberg said he was appalled when he asked his twin 9-year-old sons about the standardized tests they were taking and they told him about the question. He said he felt it ventured into topics that would best be kept quiet and it could raise some serious complications, so he wasn't surprised to hear the state decided to eliminate it from future tests.

    "I got a lot of feedback from parents who also were outraged" about the matter, Goldberg told the Asbury Park Press newspaper. "All of a sudden now you have thousands and thousands of children possibly revealing things that now these people have to report, when the purpose of the exam was to see what the children's critical reading skills were."

    This article includes reporting by NBCNewYork.com and The Associated Press.

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    271 comments

    Really? Not that my kids have anything to hide but how could any educator believe this is a question that would be a good measure to a child's critical reading skills? And it was approved by the DOE and a panel of teachers as well? Did they take the test too or merely skim it? Ridiculous. The only c …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: education, featured, schools, students, school-testing
  • 11
    May
    2012
    6:17pm, EDT

    Stop electric shocks on disabled students, ex-teacher's aide says

    NBC New York

    By Sevil Omer, msnbc.com

    A former teacher’s aide who says he used electric shocks on teens with special needs to control behavior is demanding that state officials ban the practice at a Massachusetts school.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    As of Friday afternoon, more than 228,000 people had joined an online campaign condemning the Judge Rotenberg Education Center in Canton, Mass., for administering electric shock treatments to its students with developmental disabilities.

    Greg Miller said he launched the petition drive on Change.org last week after a 2002 video surfaced showing a Rotenberg student being shocked 31 times. 

    “Support has been immense,” said Jonathan Perri, a senior campaigner at Change.org. “A lot of people from around the world have been signing the petition, watching the video. They can’t believe this is happening in Massachusetts.”

    The Rotenberg center's unorthodox methods have been subject of lawsuits and media scrutiny, including an investigation by NBCNewYork.com, which first reported on the shock treatments in 2006. 


    Rotenberg school officials have said that the electric shock treatments are approved by physicians and that parents are involved in the care of their children.

    A receptionist answering calls at the Rotenberg center said she would refer messages from msnbc.com to a publicist handling media inquires. Separate telephone calls to the media representative went unanswered. 

    Video of shock therapy shows life inside school for disabled kids

    In the video showing him being shocked repeatedly, then-18-year-old Andre McCollins begs for relief. Miller said he worked at the center from 2003 and 2006, and during that time, he administered electric shocks to students with disabilities “so many times, I lost count.”

    Charles Krupa / AP

    Cheryl McCollins holds an umbrella as Greg Miller wheels petitions against shock treatments up the Statehouse steps, to be delivered to lawmakers on Wednesday.

    The student's mother, Cheryl McCollins of New York, sued the school, alleging malpractice. During court proceedings, the judge allowed the video to be played as evidence, according to NBC News. A settlement was announced April 24, but its terms were not disclosed.

    Since then, the video has been prominently displayed on Miller's page on Change.org, a popular website for social activism.

    Miller said he has not met Andre McCollins, but Cheryl McCollins, who now lives in New York, was the first to sign Miller's petition. She wrote:

    My son Andre McCollins was subjected to this torture at JRC. As a parent, I was not prepared for the inhumane manner in which they treated people. I expected logic and some form of reason to be applied to the students in addressing behaviors that were considered inappropriate. Parents are not told "corrective measures" particularly a painful shock is applied without any warning or concern for what triggered the targeted behavior. What was dangerous about keeping his coat on. THIS INSANITY HAS TO STOP.

    'Bee sting'
    In a video on the school's website, Matthew Israel, the school's former executive director, describes the use of the electric shock method, likening the procedure as the equivalent of a bee sting.

    “It's not a bee sting. It is inhumane and it is torture,” Miller told msnbc.com.

    According to Miller, students at the center wear electrodes on their bodies that are attached to a small device carried around in a staff member’s fanny pack. When the student acts out or violates a behavior, a staff member administers a shock, he said. A student could receive up to 30 shocks for a number of offenses, including standing up from a chair without permission, he said.

    “I want to put an end to this practice all together in Massachusetts and help these students,” Miller said. “Not only should the school stop shocking students, Massachusetts legislators should ban the use of shocks altogether.” 

    'Extraordinarily disturbing'
    On Wednesday, Cheryl McCollins and Miller hand-delivered boxes of petitions to Massachusetts lawmakers, including Democratic House Speaker Robert DeLeo. Attempts by msnbc.com to reach McCollins for comment was unsuccessful.

    State Sen. Brian Joyce, a Democrat from Milton, Mass., criticized the state for allowing the practice to continue. “It is extraordinarily disturbing and only strengthens my resolve to stop this barbaric practice that takes place in my district,’’ Joyce said in a statement on his website.

    Charles Krupa / AP

    Cheryl McCollins holds an umbrella as she is embraced by Emily Titon, who is autistic, while petitions against shock treatments are loaded onto a hand cart, to be delivered to lawmakers, outside the Statehouse in Boston.

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    60 comments

    What the hell is wrong with people? No one stops and thinks, "Why are we torturing disabled kids?"

    Show more
    Explore related topics: education, school, electric, autism, shocks, change-org, rotenberg, disabilies
  • 11
    May
    2012
    11:20am, EDT

    Kentucky students accused of taking video up teacher's dress

    By Sevil Omer, msnbc.com

    Police have charged two Kentucky high school seniors with video voyeurism, alleging that one held a cellphone under a teacher’s dress, recorded a video and then posted it online.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Police say Eugene Cain and Devon Ewing, both 18, recorded the video at Doss High School in Louisville, reported WAVE3.com, the website for the NBC News affiliate in Louisville. The incident occurred Wednesday, according to WLKY-TV in Louisville.

    Police say Ewing asked the teacher for help on an assignment and when she bent over, Cain held Ewing's cellphone under her dress and started recording video, WAVE3.com reported.


    “One distracted the teacher in the classroom while the other one positioned himself to hold a camera with video capabilities underneath her skirt,” Jefferson County Sheriff’s Department Lt. Col. Carl Yates told WLKY-TV.

    Police say the two students later posted the video on YouTube and spread the word about where it could be found, WAVE3.com reported. A student alerted school officials, police say.

    "They certainly violated this teacher, taking that cellphone video and posting it. It's very embarrassing for her. We are sorry it happened. But, the students have to serve the consequences for that and learn a lesson," Jefferson County Public Schools spokeswoman Lauren Roberts told WAVE3.com.

    Sherry Powell has two children who attend Doss High School.

    "As a parent, I have mixed emotions on it," WAVE3.com quoted Powell as saying. "Only in that the students were absolutely wrong. This is a very serious nature. It was very hurtful. The flip side to that is, I wish they could've taken care of it between the principal, the student, the teacher, the parents and got some type of very harsh accountability for such a serious thing."

    If convicted of the felony offense, the students could face a maximum sentence of up to five years in prison.

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    653 comments

    I wish they could've taken care of it between the principal, the student, the teacher, the parents Huh? These are high school seniors. Practically adults. They are accountable for what they did.

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    Explore related topics: education, teachers, dress, voyeurism, videotaping
  • 10
    May
    2012
    6:01pm, EDT

    Pier collapses under teens headed for prom in Wisconsin

    A Wisconsin prom photo has become memorable for all the wrong reasons after the dock a group of high school students were using for a prom photo collapsed, sending the teens plunging into the water below. TODAY's Natalie Morales reports.

    By Sevil Omer, msnbc.com

    Teens at one Wisconsin high school made a big splash at their prom -- a wooden pier collapsed during  a photo shoot, sending them into a lake.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    "It's completely unexpected. It doesn't even happen on TV, and all of a sudden here it is happening to us," Matt Timm, a student from Kettle Moraine High School in Wales, Wis., told WISN-TV. "I heard, like, one crack, and then the whole thing collapsed from under us."

    The teens had gathered at Lac La Belle, a 1,154-acre lake in southeastern Wisconsin, for a photo session before the big dance, according to WISN-TV in Milwaukee, Wis.


    “The person behind was like, 'Everyone on, get on’,” junior Jacqueline Rosch told WISN-TV. 

    What Rosch and other couples didn’t expect was complete collapse of the wooden pier. Soaking wet, the teens were pulled from the water without any injuries, according to WISN-TV.

    Anne Mccormack / Courtesy WISN TV Milwaukee

    “It was akin to [watching] a car accident,” Kathy McCormack, a mother who was there photographing her daughter, told ABC News. "You heard the screams coming off the dock and it was like they were falling one after the other in slow motion into the lake.”

    With a little hustle and a lot of help from fans, clothes dryers and hair dryers, the teens made it to prom with a memorable story to share.

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    52 comments

    I have said it before and I'll say it again "Peer pressure on our kids is really a problem"!!!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: education, photo, wisconsin, teens, prom, pier-collapse, kettle-moraine
  • 10
    May
    2012
    3:52pm, EDT

    US 8th grade science scores up ... but by just a bit

    By Sevil Omer, msnbc.com

    Eighth-graders across the country slightly improved their basic science skills over the past two years, but about seven out of 10 still were not considered “proficient” on a national test, and experts worried about what the results said about American competitiveness.


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    Two-thirds of eighth-grade students performed at or above a "basic" achievement level on a national science assessment test, suggesting at least a "partial mastery of the knowledge and skills needed for proficient work," according to The National Assessment of Educational Progress.

    "We didn't know what to expect with a test like this," said Stephaan Harris, spokesman for the National Assessment Governing Board, the independent board that sets NAEP policy. "Overall, there was improvement and gains."


    The average eighth-grade score increased two points, from 150 in 2009 to 152 in 2011, according to the NAEP. The test is scored on a 300-point scale. The assessment was released Thursday.

     Among assessment findings:

    • 32 percent of students performed at or above "proficient" and 2 percent performed at an "advanced" level, Harris said. The NAEP defines "proficient" as showing "solid academic performance.”
    • Black and Hispanic students showed more improvement than white students, narrowing but not eliminating the achievement gap, Harris said. Hispanic students scored a five-point gain, while black students scored three points higher compared to 2009 results.  
    • The gender gap remained unchanged, with male students scoring five points higher on average than female students.

    Read the NAEP's complete Science 2011 findings

    "The gains are encouraging, but the racial and gender gaps show a cause for concern," David Driscoll, chairman of the National Assessment Governing Board, said in a statement. "In order to compete in globally competitive and expanding fields like technology and medicine, we must make sure we give our students the tools necessary to excel in an important subject area."

    Gerry Wheeler, interim head of the National Science Teachers Association, described the gains as "minuscule," according to The Associated Press.

    "When you consider the importance of being scientifically literate in today's global economy, these scores are simply unacceptable," the AP quoted Wheeler as saying Thursday.

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    More than 120,000 eighth-graders from 7,300 schools nationwide participated in the exam last year. According to the assessment analysis, of the 47 states that participated, 16 showed a small increase in their science scores over 2009's results. Most states stayed flat, the study showed.

    The assessment also found that students who performed daily hands-on science activities scored higher on average than students who performed them less frequently. The 2011 science assessment test measured knowledge and abilities in physical science, life science, and earth and space sciences.

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    25 comments

    Yeah blame the educators... Bunch of slackers.. Putting in more time than ever.. Trying to keep up with technology.. Societal behavioral problems and every other piece of baggage that the students bring..

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    Explore related topics: science, education, featured, scores, test, naep
  • 9
    May
    2012
    8:12pm, EDT

    Florida teacher suspended for making students wear 'cone of shame'

    By Isolde Raftery, msnbc.com

    A Florida high school teacher was suspended for allegedly making her students wear a wide-brimmed, plastic dog collar as a form of discipline, the Tampa Bay Times reported.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    In a stern letter sent to Zephyrhills High School science teacher Laurie Bailey-Cutkomp, Superintendent  Heather Fiorentino wrote that she would recommend Bailey-Cutkomp be fired.

    "I am very concerned that you used this collar to punish and embarrass students in front of their peers," Fiorentino wrote.


    Bailey-Cutkomp allegedly gave students the option of wearing the collar or sitting at the tardy table if they arrived late to class. Eight students ended up wearing the collar, the superintendent said.

    Read Superintendent Fiorentino's letter

    Fiorentino described the cone as a “collar used to prevent animals who have had surgery from licking their wounds” and said the collar was inspired by the popular Pixar movie, “Up,” in which a pudgy golden retriever named Dug is forced to wear a “cone of shame.”

    Bailey-Cutkomp had shown the movie to her class on the days before and after spring break, Fiorentino wrote. Bailey-Cutkomp had told administrators she did so because attendance is typically low on those days and she did not want her students to fall behind.

    Dug, a golden retriever mix from the Pixar movie, "Up," was forced by other dogs to wear a dog collar, which he called "the cone of shame."

    When students expressed interest about the cone of shame after seeing the movie, Bailey-Cutkomp, who has a veterinary background, explained that its proper name is an Elizabethan collar. (The name is a nod to Elizabethan times, during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I of England, when the monarch and her subjects wore fashionable “ruffs,” or puffy, lacy collars around their necks.)

    Administrators found out about the cone of shame after students posted photos of each other wearing the dog collar to Facebook.

    “When asked how you selected students to wear the collar,” Fiorentino wrote in her letter, “you explained that you initially used it to redirect student behavior.”

    Bailey-Cutkomp did not immediately reply to a message requesting comment sent to her work e-mail.

    Related story: Cops say girl, 12, made to wear diaper in public after 'F'

    Bailey-Cutkomp’s use of the dog cone is a variation of the dunce cap, which was a large piece of paper fashioned into a cone and placed on a child’s head. Children who had greater difficulty learning or paying attention were most often deemed the dunces.

    Typically, the child was then made to stand in the corner of the classroom as a form of humiliation.

    The dunce cap went out of fashion in the 20th century, according to wisegeek.com, and modern educators find there are few, if any, benefits to public humiliation.

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    40 comments

    Oh no, god forbid someone gets embarrassed, this teacher must be hitler's equivalent, what an evil person trying to use shame as a form of disciplining when we all know that everyone should be treated like theyre special. What a bunch of wusses we're raising in this country.

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    Explore related topics: education, florida, teaching, discipline
  • 6
    May
    2012
    5:12pm, EDT

    At one school district, the motto is BYOT - Bring Your Own Technology

    Two years ago, Forsyth County School District outside Atlanta launched a technology program, encouraging students to BYOT – bring your own technology. NBC's Rehema Ellis reports.

    By Craig Stanley, NBC News

    iPhones, Nintendos and Kindles — devices synonymous with "fun" — are taking a new role in the classroom, thanks to a new trend in education called Bring Your Own Technology – or BYOT.

    BYOT programs — like the one at Georgia’s Coal Mountain Elementary School — encourage students to bring in their own personal mobile technology — including iPads, Kindle Fires, netbooks — even gaming devices — to use during class.

    “It’s really a simple thing,” says Tim Clark, District Technology Specialist for Forsyth County School District. “Kids have technology in their pockets and [are] taking them to school, but trying to hide them from teachers and from their parents. What we’re trying to do is have the kids take them out of their pockets and use [them] for instruction.”


    Technology can be incorporated into lessons in various ways — serving as a research tool, providing access to educational games and allowing students to create multimedia presentations. Clark says students who don’t have their own devices, or opt not to bring them, can use district-owned laptops and electronic resources.

    He says the program encourages participation and interaction because “it’s not a solitary type of activity where every child is buried in their device … it increases collaboration. It increases communication with the teacher. The teacher sees immediate feedback from the student’s work and the students are able to overcome other difficulties.”

    Tracey Abercrombie, a fifth grade teacher at Coal Mountain, has been impressed with the program in general and praises the difference it has made with her special education students. “I’ve got one [student] who has trouble getting [information],” Abercrombie says. “He can get the ideas formed but there’s a bit of difficulty getting them out verbally. There’s something about typing it, having it come up on that screen. All of a sudden the barrier is gone.”

    Clark says incorporating students’ personal devices in the classroom not only enhances learning, but teaches responsibility. “All of this is putting the responsibility on the shoulders of the students and [we’re] also trying to teach them and guide them to use their devices more effectively…not only taking care of their device and being careful not to drop it, but also wanting to make sure they know where it is at all times so it’s not stolen. [Using] it appropriately so they don’t post inappropriate pictures, so they don’t text inappropriate message to each other.”

    Those involved with the program say students aren’t the only ones with something to gain from BYOT. For example, Clark says teachers “can learn alongside their students instead of having to determine all of the ways that their students should learn … they get to ask questions and discover all these new uses of the devices themselves."

    Abercrombie agrees and has seen her teaching style change since the program began.

    “I thought my role was give them all the knowledge that I’ve got about something and use that textbook and my knowledge together," Abercrombie said. "Now I realize that’s not my job at all. My job is to facilitate them. My job is to point them in the right direction, give them the tools they need and — wow — they can do so much more.”

    Before launching BYOT in Forsyth County Schools, teachers and administrators explained the program’s structure and ground rules to parents and students. At first, Kara Laurie, who has two children at Coal Mountain Elementary, was apprehensive about allowing her kids to bring their devices to school. She says her initial reaction was that it “was a horrible idea … I had the normal parent concerns, you know, are things going to get broken? Are they going to get lost or stolen? And what about those kids that don’t have technology that they could take to school?”

    But as the program got underway, she saw “how much the kids were able to do with it in the classroom. I found that it was a phenomenal idea.”

    “We had to sit down as a class, as a team, and really define our rules because [the students are] used to using it any way at home,” Abercrombie says. “They’re used to … putting everything on Facebook, so we had to have a little talk about … different ways to use these devices in school.”

    Amy Anderson, another parent of two, was comforted by the district’s approach to the program. Her fourth grader uses a netbook in class, while her first grader has a Nintendo 3DS. “The administration "set some very clear ground rules at the beginning and we had to sign an agreement as parents and they had to sign an agreement as students that they would only stay on,” Anderson recalls. The students "have to be on the school network which has all of the filters. If they don’t abide by those, if they use them when they are not supposed to, if they use them incorrectly, then they lose that privilege of being able to bring it in.”

    In 2010, seven schools in Forsyth County School District began BYOT programs. This year, all 35 of the district’s schools are participating. While it is a relatively new idea, BYOT already exists in schools across the country, in states like Texas, Minnesota and Ohio.

    Clark says the district has received positive feedback, along with interest in the program.

    “I’m receiving messages from other districts that would like to come and see the implementation of bring your own technology in their schools … we recently held a tour of BYOT in our district … we had over 100 visitors on that tour. They were not only other districts, but also vendors wanting to understand how it’s impacting [the students].”

    As far as student reaction, Clark says “the students love it…[they] have their devices, they’re learning how to use them in a more responsible way, and they’re being critical thinkers and very creative with their devices in ways that they never would have used them on their own.”

    137 comments

    Well, as a college teacher, I find that technology in the classroom is distracting. Students don't know how to listen anyway, they hear and do what they want in between watching their cell phone messages, calls, all interrupting.

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    Explore related topics: technology, education, texas, rehema-ellis
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