Online Learning: A Solution to Three Looming Crises in Education

On July 8, the Alliance hosted a webinar on its report, Online Learning: A Solution to Three Looming Crises in Education, along with 50 state profiles. These publications describe how online technology in today's secondary school classrooms can strengthen the teacher workforce, improve student outcomes, and allow states to do more despite flat education budgets. Watch video or download audio from the webinar and read the publications.

Raising the Grade

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Education News from Washington, DC: An Update on Federal Education Spending

072910 Webinar ImageOn July 29, the Alliance for Excellent Education hosted the latest in its series of interactive webinars on what is happening in Washington, DC on education reform. During the webinar, Bob Wise, president of the Alliance and former governor of West Virginia, talked about President Obama's proposed Fiscal Year (FY) 2011 budget increase in discretionary spending for the U.S. Department of Education. If enacted, the increase (7.5 percent) would be the largest since FY 2002—right after NCLB was signed into law.

For much of the year, educators wondered how much of that increase would actually happen. Now, as the weather has heated up, so has action around federal education spending. On July 16, a House of Representatives subcommittee began work on the bill that will fund the U.S. Department of Education in FY11. On July 27, its Senate counterpart began work on its version of the bill.

Topics discussed during the webinar included the likelihood of the U.S. Department of Education receiving President Obama's proposed budget increase; how much the congressional committees allocated for Title I, IDEA, and other education programs; and federal funding that's available to middle and high schools.

Watch complete video from the webinar ...

Find the Lowest-Performing High Schools in Your State

Click on Image for Larger VersionOne in three high school students do not graduate and just 12 percent of the nation‘s high schools produce nearly half of the nation‘s dropouts. Within these lowest-performing high schools (sometimes known as "dropout factories"), just 60 percent or fewer of entering freshmen progress to their senior year three years later.

Prioritizing the Nation's Lowest-Performing High Schools, a recent issue brief from the Alliance for Excellent Education, notes that the lowest-performing high schools are located in every state; in urban, suburban, rural, and small-town America; in large high schools and small. Their one unifying characteristic is that they disproportionately serve our nation‘s poor and minority students.

In an era of diminishing financial resources, it makes good economic sense to target the nation's lowest-performing high schools and focus attention, commitment, and resources on improving them, the brief argues. Directing strategic efforts to turn around these schools could significantly reduce the nation's dropout rate.

"When emergency medical personnel arrive at an accident scene, they immediately deliver treatment to the most severely injured, said Bob Wise, president of the Alliance for Excellent Education and former governor of West Virginia. "Similarly, the nation must focus its attention on the lowest-performing schools with the largest number of ‘victims' in the national dropout crisis. The fact that these schools are so widespread and contribute so greatly to the national dropout crisis dictates making them an essential focus of any federal effort to improve the graduation rate."

While not a graduation rate, a school’s “promoting power” is a good indicator of how well schools are educating their students. See how high schools across the country perform by going to the Promoting Power database. High schools with promoting power less than 60 percent make up the nation's lowest-performing high schools.

  • Last-minute funding for education jobs looks grim
    eSchool News
    July 29, 2010

    A bill that could have saved thousands of teachers' jobs failed to pass in Congress...“At this point, there is no money for education or preserving teachers’ jobs” in the war spending bill, said Bob Wise, president of the Alliance for Excellent Education and former governor of West Virginia.

  • Proposed RCC class ties math to practical applications
    Mail Tribune (OR)
    July 28, 2010

    A $150,000 National Science Foundation grant awarded to Rogue Community College will pay for development of a new math class that answers many a high school student's question: "Why do I need to learn this?"...The country would save about $3.7 billion a year in reduced college expenses if more high school graduates were prepared for college and didn't have to pay for remedial classes to catch up, according to the Alliance for Excellent Education.

  • The No Child Left Behind law: Are the fixes worse than the flaws?
    The Connecticut Mirror
    July 27, 2010

    Parents and teachers don't like it...But that doesn't mean Congress is ready to revamp No Child Left Behind, the education reform law pushed by then-President George W. Bush with bipartisan support in the House and Senate in 2001...And as with the competitive grants issue, critics say, there are serious questions about how such options would work in small towns or even big urban districts. "If you fire 35 teachers at a rural high school, there probably aren't 35 others to come in and replace them," said former West Virginia Gov. Bob Wise, now president of the Alliance for Excellent Education, a policy and advocacy group focused on high school reform.

Voters Want Federal Action on High School Reform, According to New National Poll

Click on the image to view video from the release eventImproving the quality of public high schools through the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act is a voting issue for over eight in ten voters, according to a new national poll released July 14 by the Alliance for Excellent Education.

Additionally, over half of voters say that their decision to vote for a current elected official in the 2010 congressional elections will be affected if Congress takes no action to reform the law currently known as the No Child Left Behind Act.

“The Alliance commissioned this bipartisan poll to gain insight into Americans’ views of the public education system,” said Bob Wise, president of the Alliance for Excellent Education and former governor of West Virginia. “The overwhelming takeaway from the poll is that Americans are concerned about the growing problems with the nation’s high schools and they want President Obama and the Congress to act—this year—to improve them.”

During the webinar on the poll, Alliance President Bob Wise and pollsters Celinda Lake and Christine Matthews, gave a brief presentation on the poll results, followed by a Q&A session with viewers from around the country.

Download the complete summary of findings from the poll ...
Audio and video of the webinar ...

Alliance Offers Recommendations to Congress on ESEA Reauthorization

Image of Gov. Wise on PBS NewsHour 03.17.10On March 15, the Obama administration released its blueprint to overhaul the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, currently known as No Child Left Behind (NCLB). Later that week, Alliance President Bob Wise appeared on the PBS NewsHour to discuss the blueprint.

On March 26, the Alliance made recommendations to the U.S. Congress in reaction to the Obama administration's blueprint. Specifically, the Alliance called for an ESEA reauthorization that would: 1) Codify the goal of graduating all students from high school on time, ready for college and careers; 2) Hold states, districts, and schools accountable for achieving the goal of college and career readiness; 3) Support state- and district-led school improvement systems that are data driven; differentiate reforms and interventions to meet the specific needs of districts, schools, and students; and address the lowest-performing secondary schools; and 4) Strengthen federal investment in secondary schools, including a formula-based funding stream to turn around low-performing secondary schools as proposed by the Graduation Promise Act.

Read more about the Alliance's ESEA recommendations or download the Obama administration's blueprint.

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Thoughts on Education By Bob Wise

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Elements of a Successful High School

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Learn about the Ten Key Elements that every high school should have in place to ensure that all of its students are successful.

 

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