by Robert Pondiscio
March 12th, 2008
Tags: homeschool
Posted in Educational Policy | No Comments »
California homeschoolers don’t have to worry for now about ending up on the wrong side of the law. State Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O’Connell, the Golden State’s top ed official says his department will not force parents who homeschool to pack their kids off to standard-issue schools. A state court issued a ruling last month that parents who home school their children must have a teaching credential.
It sounds like O’Connell is saying the ruling won’t be enforced. Undoubtedly the state’s 150,000+ homeschoolers will feel better if it’s reversed.
by Robert Pondiscio
March 12th, 2008
Posted in No category | No Comments »
Reports say New York’s governor will resign at 11:30 this morning. Joe Williams at DFER isn’t waiting for the official announcement, waving bye-bye to Spitzer, and greeting the new Governor, David Paterson as “one of the smartest individuals with whom we have ever worked.”
by Robert Pondiscio
March 12th, 2008
Tags: math, textbooks
Posted in Education Practice | 2 Comments »
Proponents of a more traditional, rigorous approach to teaching mathematics should read this piece from the Los Angeles Times about the success a struggling Hollywood elementary school has enjoyed with Singapore Math.
Several Core Knowledge schools have reported strong results from Singapore and Saxon math programs, and the paper does a good job of showing why. Describing what appears to be a standard timed drill (the dreaded “drill and kill” that reform advocates blithely dismiss) the Times smartly reports: “What isn’t obvious to a casual observer is that this drill is carefully thought out to reinforce patterns of mathematical thinking that carry through the curriculum. ‘These are ‘procedures with connections,’ math coach Robin Ramos said, arranged to convey sometimes subtle points. This thoughtfulness — some say brilliance — is the true hallmark of the Singapore books, advocates say.”
As the paper notes, California recently became the first state to include the Singapore series on its list of state-approved elementary math texts, and will subsidize schools’ purchase of the books. “Being on the list puts an important imprimatur on the books,” notes the Times, “because California is by far the largest, most influential textbook buyer in the country.”
Also this week: an anticipated report from the National Mathematics Advisory Panel, which is expected to urge U.S. teachers to promote “quick and effortless” recall of arithmetic facts in early grades. Taken together, it’s a potent one-two punch that coupled with a rising tide of parent activism, may be turning the tide against reform or constructivist math programs like Everyday Math.
A consummation devoutly to be wished.