Friday, December 16, 2011

Governor's News Service: "Season of Service"


Governor's Education News Service
Department of Education and Department of Military and Veteran Affairs
collect more than 125,000 holiday cards from students for US military
service men and women as part of Governor Christie's "Season of Service"

For Immediate Release:
Contact:
Justin Barra
Allison Kobus
Dec. 16, 2011
609-292-1126

Trenton, NJ -As part of Governor Christie's "Season of Service," the
Department of Education and Department of Military and Veteran Affairs
announced today that they have collected more than 125,000 holiday cards
from across the state for U.S. military service members. Acting
Education Commissioner Chris Cerf and Col. Mark Preston from the
Department of Military and Veterans Affairs collected letters and
participated in a "Holiday Greetings to the U.S. Military" school
assembly today at Greenwood Elementary School in Hamilton Township.

"These cards and letters are incredibly meaningful to our service
members stationed overseas and they provide an opportunity for us to
show our appreciation for their service to our country," Acting
Commissioner Cerf said. "Just a couple of weeks ago, we asked schools
across the state to consider participating in the holiday cards and
letters project. The overwhelming response we received from our school
children is a heart-warming demonstration of patriotism and
volunteerism, showing that New Jerseyans truly care and support our
friends and neighbors in the U.S. Military."

"The holiday season is especially difficult for those service members
who are unable to spend it with their loved ones," said Brig. Gen. James
J. Grant, Department of Military and Veterans Affairs. "Although nothing
can extinguish the pain of being away from family during this time, our
troops will find comfort in the children's holiday cards and know that
Americans recognize their selflessness and commitment to our nation's
security."

The Season of Service was inspired by 8-year-old Aiden McManus, a New
Jersey Hero who has been devoting his time and hard-earned money to feed
the homeless and those in need in Burlington County. Nearly 1.5 million
New Jerseyans are already positively influencing communities across the
state by volunteering their services through local groups, houses of
worship and civic organizations.

In addition to the event today, Acting Commissioner Cerf has
participated in several public service events in the month of December.
On December 15, Acting Commissioner Cerf tutored high school students in
Irvington as an example of ways that community members across the state
can give back to their public schools. On December 2, Acting
Commissioner Cerf participated in a holiday coat drive in Trenton.

In addition to the Mercer County assembly, Holiday Greetings to the U.S.
Military events are taking place in six schools around the state with
members of the State Board of Education.

Concurrent Event - Bergen County

Municipality, County - Woodcliff Lake, Bergen County
School - Woodcliff Middle School
School - Dorchester Elementary School
Events -assembly
NJDOE Representative - NJ State School Board Vice Chair Ilan Plawker

Concurrent Event - Essex County

Municipality, County - West Orange, Essex County
School - Gregory School
Event -assembly
NJDOE Representative - NJ State Board of Education Member Dorothy
Strickland
NJDMAVA Representative - LTC. John Langston

Concurrent Event - Warren County

Municipality, County - Oxford Township, Warren County
School - Oxford Central School
Event -assembly
NJDOE Representative - NJ State Board of Education Member Jack Fornaro


Associated Event - Hunterdon County

Date and Time - Monday, Dec. 19, 2011, 2:30 to 3 p.m.
Municipality, County - Annandale, Hunterdon County
School - North Hunterdon Regional High School
Address - 1445 State Route 31, Annandale, NJ 08801
Event - Military personnel will attend Interact Club meeting, members
consist of over 400 students

Associated Event - Union County

Date and Time - Monday, Dec. 19, 2011, 10 a.m.
Municipality, County - Kenilworth, Union County
School - Warren G. Harding Elementary School
Address -426 BOULEVARD, KENILWORTH, NJ 07033-1529
Event -assembly
NJDOE Representative - NJ State School Board Member Jack Fornaro

NJ Department of Education Violence and Vandalism Report for 2009 - 2011


Trenton, NJ - The Department of Education today released the Violence
and Vandalism Report for the 2009-2011 school years. The report is
produced each year to transparently share self-reported incidents of
violence, vandalism, weapons, and substance use and possession from
districts. To support districts as they work to reduce incidents of
Harassment, Intimidation, and Bullying, the department also provided
additional guidance to aid districts in implementing the new law,
P.L.2010, Chapter 122, known as the Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights Act.

You may access it here:
http://www.state.nj.us/education/news/2011/1216vandv.htm

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Will the Confucius Classroom make Englewood Students College and Career Ready?

On December 1, 2011, a special meeting of the board of education was called. While the community at large waited impatiently for our board of education to comply with orders from the State Department of Education, EPSD was  preparing to embark on yet another experiment in which our children will be the guinea pigs.

Glenn Garrison, the board member in charge of the facilities committee gave a presentation summarizing his trip to China. The presentation seemed out of place in a board meeting. It was more like something to be presented to the Department of Commerce. He was very impressed with himself though. After the meeting, I questioned him about the feasibility of burdening the little ones in pre k and kindergarten with 3 languages. Once again, I strongly suggested that children should learn to read and write in English. Mandarin has been in the curriculum for over 2 years and the literacy scores have fallen tremendously. Mr. Garrison was clearly NOT concerned with this. He suggested that children should be able to read and write before attending school. He suggested that their parents should teach them. He also made it quite clear that he was not concerned with those that did not learn to read before first grade. This blogger is quite disgusted with Mr. Garrison's lack of interest in closing the achievement GAP that the Governor's Task Force has been set to investigate ways to close.

What will the Confucius Classroom do to help close the Achievement Gap? Will students read and write more efficiently? Will Math scores go up? Will students learn to be deep, critical thinkers? Will more students be college and career ready?

Will the program pay for itself? Will the Confucius Classroom mirror the national ones or will Englewood work the magic that it does so well and Englewoodize it? This process generally renders a program ineffective. We have examples of that here waiting to be evaluated.

How many programs do we currently have? How many of them have been assessed for effectiveness?

If you feel that your head has been involuntarily thrust into sand, rest assured, it is not your imagination. The sands of deceit have risen above our heads. Our district does not have a leader and the folks at the helm are desperately chasing flying dollars. Few are focused on the bottom line. What are the children learning?Children must learn to read and write in English. The tests are given in English. These test results chart the very lives of our children.

Which programs are working? Which ones are not working? Why do we insist on piling on more new programs that require new high priced teachers when we do not know how well the ones that we have already bought into are working? Perhaps we should invest in more calculators and make sure each board member has one and knows how to use it.

It is becoming more and more difficult to listen to board members lie outright about taxpayer money. People, we pay the salaries of the Mandarin teachers. The money from the Chinese government does not cover all costs. As you can see from the agreement they do send in materials such as books, software and other supplies, but the salaries are left to us. Why is there no freeze on hiring?



RESOLVED, the Board of Education approves the acceptance of funds from the Asia Society Partnership for Global Learning to be used for the Confucius Classroom.  Program Description Amount               
Project IMAGE– Mandarin Language Immersion Program  (Confucius Classroom) $10,000.00
Page 5 of 16 October, 11, 2011 agenda. (Ten thousand dollars would not pay half of 1 teacher's salary.)

Asia Society: Partnership for Global Learning (Website)
The Model Agreement (standard form)



                                   How are the children?

Thursday, December 8, 2011

2 Public Hearings of the Achievement Gap Task Force:


The Department of Education announces 2 December public hearings of the
College and Career Readiness Task Force - one in the north and one in the south

Trenton, NJ -The Department of Education today announced that the
College and Career Readiness Task Force will hold two public hearings in
December. 

  • One will be conducted on Tuesday, December 13, 2011 at 5:00 p.m. in the Student  Community Center-Davidson Room at the County College of Morris. 
  • The second will be held Thursday, December 15, 2011 at 5:00 p.m. in the New Campus Center at the Richard Stockton College of New Jersey.

The purpose of the hearings is to gather input from the public on
educating students to the level of college and career readiness. The
public input will inform the recommendations in the task force's final
report which is due to the NJ Department of Education by December 31,
2011.

The College and Career Readiness Task Force is a group of K-12 and
higher education practitioners and business community representatives
that have two main responsibilities: clearly articulating the knowledge
and skills that students should master to be "college- and career-ready,"
and ensuring that New Jersey has the appropriategraduation requirements
and high school assessments in place to evaluate the mastery of these readiness standards.

Input from the public should address these critical questions that the
task force is charged with answering for the NJDOE in its final report:


1. What does college and career readiness mean?
2. What is the appropriate way to assess this level of student
    achievement?
3. What graduation requirements should be required, including
    comprehensive examinations and end-of-course assessments?
4. What process, benchmarks and timelines should be established to
    guide transition from the current system to the new system?

The Career and College Readiness Task Force will accomplish this 
charge by doing the following:

* Evaluating the degree to which the New Jersey High School
   Proficiency Assessment (HSPA) and Alternative High School
   Assessment (ASHA) are appropriately gauging college and career readiness;

* Reviewing how other states are defining and evaluating college
   and career readiness;

* Recommending specific educational standards, course offerings,
   learning outcomes, graduation requirements, college entrance and
   placement requirements, and workforce readiness requirements;

* Identifying the means of measuring success for schools and
  districts including assessment tools to measure school completion and
  college entrance readiness that can be relied on by P-12, higher
  education and employers as a valid indicator of student readiness. The
  review will include recommendations concerning a new comprehensive
  exam and end-of-course assessments;

* Identifying data needs related to NJ demographics, school
   learning outcomes, completion and assessment, college entrance,
   retention and graduation, and demonstrated national best practice
   aligning school and college completion; and

* Establishing a state-level transition plan and timelines for moving from the existing system to the new system  
   including:

  • establishing a structure and process to support implementation of the school/college completion agenda;
  • engagement of appropriate constituencies, including teachers,college faculty, business leaders and others;
  •  identifying the need for professional development; and field-testing the new assessments.

http://www.state.nj.us/education/news/2011/1208gap.htm

The New Jersey School Board's Closing the Achievement Gap Task Force

 Trenton, N.J. - New Jersey State Board of Education President Arcelio
Aponte today announced that the board's Closing the Achievement Gap Task
Force has held initial meetings and soon will hold regional public
hearings to gather input on how to best address the state's academic
achievement gap.

The 10-member task force, which stems from the State Board's annual
retreat in June, was created to examine why many poor and minority
students in New Jersey do not score as well on state standardized tests
as their more-affluent and white counterparts.

"It is the State Board of Education's mission to help provide every
child in New Jersey with an excellent education regardless of their
race, ethnicity, socioeconomic group or sex," President Aponte said. "I
am confident that the State Board's Closing the Achievement Gap Task
Force will produce proven and practical methods that school districts
across the state can use to help all students achieve at high levels."

In 2010, black students in the fourth grade statewide scored
approximately 30 percentage points lower on NJASK in language arts and
mathematics than white students. The gap was slightly larger between
economically disadvantaged and non-economically disadvantaged students
on the grade four language arts NJASK, while the gap in math was
approximately 25 percentage points.

The task force's charge is to provide the State Board and policymakers
with recommendations for a statewide strategy to close the academic
achievement gap by addressing proven correlatives of poor academic
achievement. It will examine the themes of access; culture/climate;
expectations; and strategies.

"Closing the achievement gap and ensuring that all students, regardless
of zip code, graduate from high school ready for college and career is a
top priority of the Department," said Acting Commissioner Chris Cerf.
"I commend the State Board for taking this challenge head on, and look
forward to the results of this work."

The task force members include:
* James Boatwright - Former Director of Academic Support, The
   College of New Jersey;
James Boatwright pictured center in the suit and tie.
* Dr. Gloria Bonilla-Santiago - Rutgers Board of Governors
   Distinguished Service Professor; Director of the Center for Strategic
   Urban Community Leadership; and Board Chair of the LEAP Academy
   University Charter School;
Dr. Gloria Bonilla-Santiago

For your information: http://youtu.be/2TlFDg3Fje4,    http://youtu.be/jdTgCqFt_ok,  Outstanding Woman Magazine, LEAP Academy Ground Breaking
                         
Richard E. Constable, III is Governor Christie's Nominee for Commissioner of the Department of Community Affairs,  On the Job Training Initiative

* Robert L. Copeland - Superintendent, Piscataway School District;
Robert L. Copeland

* Silvia Correa-Abbato - Assistant Superintendent, Union City
   School District;
Silvia Correa-Abbato


* Dr. Stephen Jose Hanson - Professor, Psychology Department,
   Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey;
Dr. Stephen Jose Hanson
Dr. Hanson is also Director of Rutgers Brain Imaging Center


* Carlos R. Moreno - Director of School Reform & Innovation - New
   Jersey, Big Picture Learning;
Carlos R. Moreno

* Dr. Michael Nettles - Senior Vice President and Edmund W. Gordon
   Chair of Policy Evaluation and Research Center, Educational Testing
* Dr. Dorothy Strickland - Member, N.J. State Board of Education
   and Professor Emerita, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Dr. Dorothy Strickland

Support for the task force is being provided by ETS, the Department of
Education and the Office of the Acting Secretary of Higher
Education/Commission on Higher Education.

The task force expects to hold multiple public hearings around the state
in the near future.