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Local School Topics

We've organized this category into four geographic subcategories to make it easier for you to peruse these archival articles.

View the most popular articles in Local School Topics:

Chicago Schools: Hybrid High Schools

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Chicago Schools: Hybrid High Schools
Learn about the new schools slated for Chicago Public Schools that will combine high school and college training, similar to a tech school in New York.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel and the Chicago Public School board have been getting plenty of flack in recent weeks on their decision to lengthen the school day across the city. To ensure the additional hours students spend in the classroom pay off, the mayor has also recently unveiled his new model of a high school hybrid that allows participating students to earn their high school diploma and a college degree simultaneously. This new model will initially be placed at five high schools around the city, but if it is successful, it could be used as an example for other schools around the country.

High School Ready and College Bound

According to a report in the , the new school will offer students the opportunity to complete high school and move to a community college degree, all in a single location. The schools will allow students to work at their own pace, but the expectation is that most students will take a full six years to complete the program. Areas of study will primarily focus on those pertinent to current industries, such as math, science, and engineering. However, English literacy and comprehension will also be stressed within the program.

This video highlights changes in the Chicago Public Schools.

An article in the explains how this program will be a boon not only to students who want

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Hawaii Schools: Competitive Surfing

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Hawaii Schools: Competitive Surfing
Surfing is now becoming a sanctioned sport in Hawaii high school athletics, and we report on the new addition and how it might change the face of athletics in the state.

High school athletics are an important part of many students鈥 lives, teaching them important life lessons such as hard work, perseverance and time management. In Hawaii, sports are an integral part of the high school culture, with a district that boasts more than 40 sanctioned sports and a number of championship seasons under their belts. Now the state will have one more sport to add to their repertoire 鈥 the state recently announced plans to make surfing a sanctioned sport in high schools across the islands.

According to a report at ESPN, the governor of the state, Neil Abercrombie, made the announcement in Waikiki, in the company of Lt. Governor Brian Shatz, Department of Education superintendent Kathryn Matayoshi, and Board of Education member Keith Amemiya. Women鈥檚 world surf champion Carissa Moore was also in attendance at the announcement.

Origins of Surfing

Hawaii has traditionally been considered the birthplace of surfing since the royalty of the islands used to surf across the waves as an expression of courage and competition. Today, the sport has become big across the globe, and competition has brought surfing to a new level of performance and acceptance. People come from around the world to test out Hawaii鈥檚 surfing opportunities for themselves, whether for recreational or competitive purposes.

鈥淗awaii is the birthplace of surfing,鈥 Governor Abercrombie told the crowd on Waikiki, and ABC News when the announcement was made. 鈥淔rom Duke Kahanamoku to the thousands of residents and visitors who surf both recreationally and

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Teacher Strike Forces Cancellation of Classes in Tacoma

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Teacher Strike Forces Cancellation of Classes in Tacoma
Stay updated on the latest on the teacher strike in Tacoma, including reasons for the strike, the court ruling and predictions on the outcome.

School districts nationwide have been dealing with smaller budgets and fewer resources since the economy came to a grinding halt just a few short years ago. In most cases, this meant less to go around for teachers and administrators. In Tacoma, Washington, teachers have determined that the proposed cuts by the school district simply didn鈥檛 鈥渃ut it鈥 as far as they were concerned. To make their disapproval of the pending changes plainly known, the Tacoma teachers union called a strike, which is now in its second week of the brand new school year.

The Strike Unfolds

As the district grappled with various issues before the start of this school year, some of the decisions that were made did not go over well with the teachers who work in Tacoma. There are three basic issues on the table: teacher pay cuts, increases in class sizes, and the way the district wants to handle teacher transfers. All of these issues are still in discussion, and no agreement has been reached on any of them.

According to the News Tribune, teachers who request transfers have their requests processed based solely on teacher seniority. The district has proposed that future decisions entail seniority, teacher evaluations, and assessments. Adding the additional criteria ensures that the most effective teachers in the district will get the first pick of teaching assignments. The union has argued that this process would be subjective and unfair to teachers who have worked in the district for many years

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Public Schools Slated to get Modernization Money if Obama鈥檚 Plan Passes

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Public Schools Slated to get Modernization Money if Obama鈥檚 Plan Passes
President Obama鈥檚 recent address included infrastructure funding for renovating schools. We鈥檒l look at the plan overall and some of the states that would benefit from the plan.

People in America need jobs. Students need modernized school buildings that promote learning. President Obama put the two together in his recent job package, asking Congress to approve billions of dollars for infrastructure projects 鈥 including modernizing and repairing schools across the country. However, asking for money and actually getting funding are two very different things in today鈥檚 polarized political climate overshadowed by grave concern for the current state of the country鈥檚 economy.

How School Modernization Could Help America

According to a report at , school modernization is touted by the current administration as good for education and beneficial to the economy. Vice President Joe Biden鈥檚 former chief economist Jared Bernstein asserted that school modernization is a 鈥渟mart way to get a lot of people who really need jobs back to work, fix a critical part of our institutional infrastructure, save energy costs, provide kids with a better, healthier learning environment, and do so in a way that everyone can see and feel good about each morning when they drop their kids off at school.鈥

This video from the National Education Association makes the point that Education Support Professional workers say "Safe and healthy schools mean better learning and working conditions for students and school employees".

There is data to support the idea that students learn better in updated facilities. Valerie Strauss in her column, 鈥淎nswer Sheet,鈥 provides studies that show

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Chicago Schools: Longer School Days Coming

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 Chicago Schools: Longer School Days Coming
Learn about Mayor Emanuel鈥檚 decision to lengthen what are now the shortest school days in the country 鈥 and its pros and cons.

Chicago Public Schools are well known for having the shortest school days in the country. New Mayor Rahm Emanuel has plans to change that fact 鈥 sooner rather than later. Emanuel has announced plans to extend the Chicago school day by as much as 90 minutes, bringing the district up to par with the rest of the public schools nationwide. However, a decision to add a significant amount of time to a school and work day isn鈥檛 boding well with everyone who will be impacted by the decision.

Looking at CPS Track Record

The call for more time in school stems from the current problems the school district faces. According to a recent report at the , academic growth among Chicago public school students has been stagnant at best. More than 150,000 students are currently attending underachieving schools in the city, while a little more than half of all high school students are making it all the way to graduation.

CPS also released numbers that show less than one-third of all eighth-graders hit benchmarks for college readiness in reading and only 20 percent made or exceeded the benchmarks in math. By the same token, just under eight percent of high school juniors in the Chicago school system achieved college readiness benchmarks in all four areas on the state鈥檚 most recent PSAE tests. Chicago schools also stated that the city falls well below the state in hitting benchmarks; Chicago currently holds at 19

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Local School Topics