Weekly News Roundup: August 9

Monday, 9 August 2010 20:42 by Interns

Editor's Note: This is our weekly news roundup of education-related events nationwide and in our launch regions, compiled by one of our amazing interns.  

National:
+ Why You Should Be Skeptical about Standardized Test Scores (Washington Post)
+ Poll: Language Barrier A "Risk" For Latinos in Schools  (USA Today)

Bay Area:
+ 85 Days To Decide: Democrats Roll Dice With Education Aid (Fox News)
+ State School Board Adopts Common Core Standards (San Francisco Gate)
+ Who's to blame for Schwarzenegger's Mess? (Los Angeles Times)

Chicago
+ Quinn Banks on Federal Cash for Illinois Schools  (WBEZ)
+ Illinois Textbook Costs Going Up (
Chicago Tribune)

 
New Orleans:
+ The Best Thing Ever for New Orleans (New Leaders for New Schools)
+ New Orleans: Education and Research (
City Data)

New York City:
+ Education Reformers vs. "New Reformers" (Washington Post)

+ Charter Schools Get Only Part of State Per Pupil Aid (Buffalo News)
+ Education System Needs to Train Job Skills (Helium.com)

+ Proficiency should mean college ready--and an acceptance letter (Washington Post)
+ Education Department Deals Out Big Awards (New York Times)  

+ Routes to better schooling (News Observer)

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Ivan Guzman: An All-Music Post

Sunday, 1 August 2010 19:01 by Ivan Guzman

Editor's Note: By giving donors complete creative control over gifts geared towards high-need K-12 students, The Generation Project hopes to facilitate personal connection between donors and the kids they are helping.  As part of that effort, we let some of the students that we hope to affect to use this blog to write about their lives, their schools, and anything else they find interesting. Our hope is that by posting kids' own words, we can give you, the donor, some insight into the interests and passions of the students you would be affecting with your gifts. To highlight the kids' own words, their posts are uncensored and unedited and represent the views of the kids and adolescents that authored them, NOT The Generation Project. 

This post was written by Ivan Guzman, a 17-year-old from the Bronx.  Read more about Ivan here, and see his archives here. 

What's up folks? It's been a while, such a while that I am now 17 years old. It's been such a while that the last time I wrote not only was I 16, but Lindsay Lohan was a free woman and the Gulf Coast wasn't a wasteland of oil and lost money.  Speaking of the oil spill, I'm not going to write about that, it's been written about to death and I don't think you need my opinion. If you know me or have read my previous posts then you can guess what I think about it. Also, I've developed writer's block when it comes to writing about politics. That's why in this post I'm writing all about music.

Recently, three hip-hop albums were released that caught my attention. One of those were due to hype, another because of how good it was, and the last because it was surprisingly good. The three albums are Thank Me Later by DrakeRecovery by Eminem, and Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son Of Chico Dusty by Big Boi (one-half of OutKast).

Thank Me Later
Thank Me Later was possibly the most anticipated hip-hop album of the year (a distinction that now arguably belongs to Kanye West's upcoming album, which is a different post for a different time). Honestly, I could write an entire post on this album, but I'll keep it as brief as I can because I have two more albums to write about. Let's start with the positives, Drake is a good rapper. Is he the best? No. However, he's very witty and has a knack for making even the simplest things sound very catchy ("hey, hey, hey"...how can you not sing along to that?).  Also, his producers went to work on this album. Most of the beats on this album will have you either nodding your head, or will at least grab your attention. Drake also doesn't get overshadowed by anyone on his album, which I thought was going to happen for certain. If anyone stole the show here, it was his producers and whomever made the beats for most of the songs on the album.

Now for the negatives, and this is the biggest problem I have with Drake as a rapper overall: he is incredibly shallow. Almost every verse on Thank Me Later somehow ends up back at the same topics that most rappers talk about: money, women, and how great they are. Even a song like The Resistance--with a potentially very interesting theme of how fame has caused Drake to have little time left for his friends--just deviates back to the regular old rap topics.

Now, Drake's buzz guaranteed that he was going to sell a respectable amount, just because people wanted to see what the guy was about, but Drake needed his own Lollipop (the Lil Wayne hit that propelled him to sell 1 million in his first week). Wayne's buzz combined with a mega-hit made his sales blow up. But Drake's hit single, Over, didn't have the same effect.   Over wasn't a bad song or anything, it just didn't catch on with everyone like Lollipop did. Over simply wasn't the song that the teenage girls were going to listen to, although the pure hip-hop fans enjoyed it. On the other hand, Find Your Love was a song that girls did squeal at, while the pure hip-hop fans just shook their heads and walked away. In the end, Drake just didn't have that one song that brought everyone together like Lollipop did.

Also, I think all truly great albums have a great ending. Thank Me Later left a bad taste in my mouth with the song Thank Me Now. For all the positives and negatives, the album went platinum. The best song is Show Me A Good Time, the worst is Shut It Down.

Recovery
When I listened to Eminem's previous album, Relapse, I found only one song that had true replay value to me, Beautiful. I figured Eminem's best days were behind him and he was just going to be an angry, cursing, recovering drug addict who would make pop culture references because he could. That's why my expectations were considerably low for Recovery. However, just listen to the opening song Cold Wind Blows and you'll see that Eminem is not only back, he may be better than ever. On just about every song you can find at least three punch-lines that will make you laugh out loud. Lyrically, it's the best album I've heard all year.

Recovery is almost the opposite of Thank Me Later in that Eminem's topics on the album are deep and personal. From his drug use to the death of his best friend, Eminem spills his guts on just about every song in the album. Also, when the tracklist for the album was first released I nearly did a double take when I saw that Pink and Rihanna were going to be on the album and I wondered who Kobe was. After listening to all three on the album they all do great jobs (all on hook-singing duty). Rihanna steals the show in Love The Way You Lie, while Kobe and Pink do their jobs very well (Talkin 2 Myself and Won't Back Down, respectively).  Eminem's producers also did a wonderful job on the album (Won't Back Down has a "volume down" gimmick that is genius).

As for negatives, there aren't many. Lil Wayne provides the best guest appearance on the album in No Love. It's so good that he basically makes Eminem's verse forgettable, he steals the show completely. It's almost like payback since Eminem did the same thing on Lil Wayne's song, Drop The World. Also, a bonus track named Session One (featuring 3/4ths of Slaughterhouse) left me wondering why it wasn't on the actual album. He should've put Session One in place of W.T.P. which seemed like a song he only put on the album as comic relief, which wasn't at all necessary on this album.

Other than that, I couldn't think of any other negatives on the album. So far, it's my favorite album of 2010. The best song is Going Through Changes, the worst is (you guessed it) W.T.P.

Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son Of Chico Dust
When I think of Outkast,I think of the coolness that is Andre 3000, and the gangsta that is Big Boi (A.K.A. Sir Lucious Left Foot, Daddy Fat Sax, and a few other aliases he has, I've lost track).  On this album, I expected to hear a lot of the usual hip-hop talk (the same I mentioned earlier with Drake), and that's what I got.

However, I have never had such a good time listening to all of the usual hip-hop talk. The beats on Sir Lucious Left Foot are electric. When you put the album on from the first minute it's head-nodding time. The songs just make you want to dance. They instantly make you cooler. The hooks give me goosebumps. It's like you're instantly injected with adrenaline when you play a song like Shutterbug or Shine Blockas.

However, the album's biggest positive might also be its biggest negative.  Throughout the entire album, I didn't really care about what Big Boi had to say. He doesn't say much, his topics range from how great he is to how we all counted him out while he was gone (BTW, I didn't count him out, I just didn't know he was gone and frankly didn't really care).  

Big Boi gets overshadowed by every guest but Gucci Mane (which is like saying a Major League Pitcher threw a fastball faster than Jamie Moyer, it ain't much). Vonnegutt provides an electric hook on Follow UsJanelle Monae does the same on Be Still, and B.o.B. follows suit on Night NightYelawolf (who I didn't know before this album) provides a show-stealing guest verse on You Ain't No DJ. It's the same with all the guests, they all steal the show from Big Boi. Not only do the beats and guests steal the show from Big Boi, but the skits in between songs do as well. Basically, every song I liked on the album I didn't like because of Big Boi. Unless this is a compilation album of different artists (a la We Are Young Money), that's a major problem. I was going to say this album needed Andre 3000, but that would've just made the biggest problem worse.

It's a great album to me, just not because of Big Boi. The best song is Shutterbug, the worst is Hustle Blood.

That's enough of me. I hope you enjoyed this little change of pace, I certainly had a lot of fun doing this. See you on the next one.

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On The NAEP And Books. Interesting Books.

Thursday, 20 May 2010 13:05 by Eli Savit

The most recent National Association of Educational Progress (NAEP) reading test results were released today, and the results are decidedly mixed.  First, some bad news: nationally, just 33% of fourth graders, and 32% of eighth graders, scored at or above a "proficient" level on the reading test.  The results were even worse for low-income students.  Only 17% of low-income fourth graders and 16% of low-income eighth graders scored at or above a "proficient" level.

The good news?  Fourth grade reading scores in some urban school districts--notably New York City--have risen over the past several years, and that trend continued in 2009.  Troublingly, though, this success has not spilled over into middle school.  Even in New York, eighth grade reading scores have remained depressingly low.

Why has success in urban elementary schools not translated into success at the middle school level?  One theory is that urban schools are doing a relatively good job teaching kids how to read in the early grades--promoting, for example, intensive phonics instruction and basic reading strategies.  But once kids have the basics down, urban schools are not doing a very good job teaching students how to read "deeply."  Instead, urban schools tend to focus on reading strategies--explicitly teaching kids, for example, how to "look for the main idea," how to "ask questions while reading" and so forth.  

There are two potential problems with this strategy: first, if students are focused on reading strategies as opposed to the substance of the text, they may feel bored by what they're reading--and by reading generally.  Second, as a number of commentators over at the Core Knowledge blog have argued, real literacy requires more than just these basic "reading skills."  To make sense of a novel, a newspaper article, or any other complex text, the reader typically requires a modicum of background content knowledge.  (For example, imagine reading "Huck Finn" without knowing that African Americans were, at one point, enslaved in the American South).  But, as we've noted on this blog before, content simply isn't being sufficiently taught in American secondary schools.  

Completely eradicating the "content instruction gap" in American schools may require changes in the secondary school curriculum.  But there is an immediate impact you can make as an individual.  If you're on this site looking for ways in which you can make a real impact, consider donating sets of books that are both engaging and help teach kids about...you know...stuff.  Literacy teachers are always looking for engaging texts for their students, and there are a number of books geared towards young adults that touch on historical or scientific themes.  

And don't worry if you don't have specific titles in mind!  If you want to, say, fund a teacher's purchase of interesting historical fiction, you can just create a gift earmarked for "historical fiction."  The classroom teacher who claims your gift can select the specific titles.

ON DETROIT:
The NAEP results were particularly disheartening for Detroit, one of the four major cities The Generation Project currently serves.  Detroit students' reading scores--like the math scores released in December--were the worst in the 40-year history of the test.  Incredibly, not a single Detroit fourth-grader--in a city of nearly 1 million people--scored at an "advanced" reading level.

These are trying times for Detroit and the Detroit Public Schools.  As state revenues fall, the city shrinks, and schools close, many Detroit students and schools are left in need of even the most basic supplies.  Please consider designing a gift for Detroit through The Generation Project. 

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Ivan Guzman: Taxes, Debt, Defense Spending, Kid Cudi, and the AL East

Sunday, 25 April 2010 09:07 by Ivan Guzman

Editor's Note: By giving donors complete creative control over gifts geared towards high-need K-12 students, The Generation Project hopes to facilitate personal connection between donors and the kids they are helping.  As part of that effort, we let some of the students that we hope to affect to use this blog to write about their lives, their schools, and anything else they find interesting. Our hope is that by posting kids' own words, we can give you, the donor, some insight into the interests and passions of the students you would be affecting with your gifts. To highlight the kids' own words, their posts are uncensored and unedited and represent the views of the kids and adolescents that authored them, NOT The Generation Project. 

This post was written by Ivan Guzman, a 16-year-old from the Bronx.  Read more about Ivan here, and see his archives here. 

Hello, folks.  Sorry it's been so long since my last post but when schoolwork calls, boy does it call.

Today I'm jam-packing this post with so many topics, your head might explode. (So that was a warning.  If you read the rest of this post your head might explode). In this blog post, I'm touching on politics, sports, gender-based double standards, and music. I'll also make a confession to anyone who has read one of my blog posts.

I'm going to kick it off with politics. This part was inspired by an episode of Real Time with Bill Maher I just watched, so if there are glaring similarities between my points and Maher's, it's because I was inspired by Bill himself. If you're a conservative, I could already see your eyes rolling at the thought of anything Maher's ever said, but hear me out (mostly because I, a liberal, still listen to your side no matter how ridiculous people look dressed up in Revolutionary War costumes).

Now, it's no secret that I'm not a big fan of the Tea Party protesters we've seen rise to fame lately, mostly because I think they have major holes in their arguments. Not tiny holes, I mean BIG holes. Those holes got bigger after I watched Maher's show earlier today.  Tea Party members want fewer taxes and reduction of the national debt, right? Simply put Tea Partiers, you can not have your cake and eat it too. (Trust me, I've watched many sitcoms, it's not realistic). If you want to lower our debt, your taxes will go up. If you want to pay Uncle Sam a little less come tax time, the debt will stay where it's at, or get even bigger. That's just the way it is. Listen, I'd like to be able to take two girls to the next school dance, but much like your wishes, it's not very realistic.

This brings me to my next point. If we want to cut the budget, we should cut defense spending. America spends more than every country in Europe (including Russia), Asia, Australia, and Latin America COMBINED on defense. This leaves me wondering, in defense of what? A terrorist organization that promises attack after attack, yet after 9/11 we've either stopped them or they haven't done anything? I know the counterargument is going to be: well, they haven't done anything because we've spent so much money on defense. Hundreds of billions of dollars on defense still seems like overkill to me, though, especially because most of that money over the past few years hasn't gone to stop terrorism, it's gone to invade countries we have absolutely no business being in (other than oil of course).  

Anyway, if we're spending this much on defense how come we haven't made light-sabres yet? Or jet-packs?

This will be my final point on the Tea Party members. These people might look like the Average Joes on television, but they are just the usual conservative foot soldiers who try to sell others on stuff that won't even benefit them. Meanwhile, the puppet masters reap the political benefits in the shadows (yeah, those same puppet masters who reaped the benefits during the Bush years).

Switching gears now, I want to talk about music. I'm a huge fan of Hip-Hop, I grew up with it here in New York City. Lately, there's been a bit of a renaissance in Hip-Hop. Many would call it just the natural flow of time, with older stars getting...well...older,  while new stars are being made. I am partial to a guy from Cleveland by the name of Kid Cudi. You might know him from his hit "Day N Nite" off his first album "Man On The Moon: The End Of Day". I really like Cudi mostly because he's not afraid to be different from other hip-hop artists. For example, he's not afraid to bare his soul on a song like "Soundtrack 2 My Life". He shows himself to be human and just like you, while many other rappers would rather portray themselves as superhuman. Simply put, I'm a big Kid Cudi fan.

Also, as you all found out in my last post, I'm a massive Green Day fan. Green Day just helped open up their own Broadway play based on their 2004 album "American Idiot". The play is the same title as the album and from what I've heard and read, it's fast, loud, and action-packed. Sounds like Green Day to me. So congrats to Green Day for having your own Broadway play, you continue to give those Gilman folks a reason to hate your guts.

On to sports. Baseball season just got started and I have very high hopes for my defending World Champion New York Yankees. I'm going to keep this short and sweet: we will win the East again. The Rays and Sox aren't nearly as good as us, and as usual I don't even have to mention the rest of the division. We've got the offense. As far as pitching is concerned, the only starter who really scares me is Javier Vasquez.  Yeah, I know he was 4th in the Cy Young Award voting last year, but New York isn't for everybody and Vazquez proved that it wasn't his cup of tea in 2004. Plus, he finished 4th in Cy Young voting in the National League, where the pitcher bats ninth and way more teams rely on small-ball than in the American League. The A.L. is just tougher, go ask Roy Halladay. On a final note, what's up with Andy Pettite's strong start? It's like he's trying to show everyone he's not washed up.

Finally, one long overdue political point that may be a bit blunt: if Scott Brown was a woman and had nude pictures in some magazine years ago, he wouldn't have won that Massachusetts Senate race. It's true that nothing was really showing in Brown's Cosmo photos, but if Brown was a woman the criticism would have been through the roof. It also drives me crazy that the right can use sex appeal way more effectively than the left.

Now my confession.  If you've read my older posts you'd know that I'm a politics nut, a huge Yankees fan, and a massive Green Day fan. Today you find out something new about me. I am (and have always been) a huge wrestling fan. I've loved professional wrestling for as long as I can remember. I was a huge W.C.W. fan in the 90s, even though I was about 5 when the Monday Night Wars got going, and to this day I am still a massive wrestling fan. I love talking watching it, talking about it, and reading about it. Boy, does that feel good.

Finally, if you like what I write here, you should read about my wacky real-life antics on Twitter. Follow me at twitter.com/iMgDuDe25. Signing off folks, I look forward to the next one.

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Weekly News Update: November 16

Monday, 16 November 2009 17:23 by Brendan Campbell

Editor's Note: This is our weekly news roundup of education-related events nationwide and in our launch regions, compiled by one of our amazing interns.  

National:
+ Selling lessons online raises cash and questions (New York Times)
+ How well do students research today? (The Answer Sheet)
+ Top-ten university presidents (Time Magazine) 
+ Will a longer school day help close the achievement gap? (Christian Science Monitor)
+ Should parents be required to volunteer at their student's school (The Answer Sheet)
+ Cash for grades in one North Carolina middle school (USA Today), the principal has since quit (New York Times)
+ Strapped for cash, state colleges are accepting more out of state students (Washington Post)
+ States compete for federal school dollars (New York Times)
+ Do colleges favor male applicants? (NPR)
+ Crazy college traditions (The Answer Sheet)
+ After criticism, the Obama administration is praised for final rules on education grants (New York Times)
+ Why it's important to read to your child (The Answer Sheet)

Chicago
+ 25 students arrested for middle school food fight (New York Times)
+ Chicago changes criteria for admission to magnet, selective schools (Chicago Tribune)
+ CPS gets $50,000 from NFL (Chicago Tribune)

D.C. Metro:
+ Not eager to march to Rhee's drum (Washington Post)
+ Prince George schools to salvage computer system (Washington Post)
+ Sidwell Friends deals with the dark side of limelight (Washington Post)
+ Teacher has a gift for making math add up (Washington Post)

Detroit: 
+ 13 school districts eligible for possible aid (Detroit Free Press)
+ In search of the ugliest schoolyard (
Detroit News)

New York City:
+ Two year colleges, swamped, no longer welcome all (New York Times)
+ Study of Harlem Children's Zone finds gaps closing (Education Week)
+ School of One listed at top 50 inventions of the year (Time Magazine)

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