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Click here to visit the new home of Politics Daily!New Jersey is but the latest state in the nation to face the music. Today Gov. Chris Christie unveiled his budget for the year ending June 30, 2012. Touting the state's efforts to close a projected $11 billion deficit, Christie declared a "new normal" in New Jersey: We will no longer blindly fund commitments that prior legislators and governors have made ... regardless of whether they were wise, and regardless of whether they yielded programs that even work. This year's budget ... is not a budget that funds each and every program at the same level as last year. Instead, we've done ...
INDIANAPOLIS -- Principal Marcus Robinson strides down the hallway of Indianapolis' Charles A. Tindley Accelerated School, past a wall that proclaims in huge letters "COLLEGE OR DIE." His maroon polo shirt and khakis match the uniforms of middle-schoolers standing in line for the bathroom, their noses buried in books. In a booming voice, Robinson praises them for their diligence then continues with his rounds. He picks up pieces of trash, chastises students who are talking as they switch rooms, and singles out a girl for being too loud, telling her, "I need your leadership." Robinson's ...
It seems like every time I turn over a charter school rock, some unpleasant fact crawls out. That's how I felt after watching "The Lottery," a new documentary about the Harlem Success Academy and its leader, Eva Moskowitz. Like Davis Guggenheim's "Waiting for Superman," this film addresses the failures of the traditional public school system, in this case zeroing in on a New York City public charter school and the challenges it faces. (Guggenheim offers a broader picture of charter schools in the nation's capital and around the country.) Some of the facts spotlighted in "The Lottery" just ...
Part 4 of a four-part series about a small academy at the center of a national battle over the direction of public education in America NEW YORK (June 22) -- As the school year winds down, most of New York City's public school administrations will wrap up this semester with an idea of what they will face next year -- how many students, how little money, how many classrooms. But not the Metropolitan Corporate Academy. The future of the small Brooklyn high school rests at the center of a great debate in New York. On Thursday, MCA was to graduate approximately 35 of its seniors, with no ...
People everywhere envy teachers for the comfortable schedule, reliable benefits, and job security, but teachers are not known for their lucrative compensation packages. A new charter school in New York City is looking to change that by offering six-figure salaries to recruit the best teachers. The school, scheduled to open next fall for 120 fifth-graders, will offer its eight teachers yearly salaries of $125,000 with the potential for additional performance-based bonuses, more than twice the salary for New York City public school teachers and nearly two-and-a-half times the national average ...
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