• Skip to main content

Search

Just another WordPress site

Independent school district

Texas will resume grading public schools based on students’ STAAR test results

May 19, 2022 by www.chron.com Leave a Comment

This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate

8

For the first time since the pandemic began, Texas public schools will be rated based on how students score on the State of Texas Assessments of Academic Readiness — more commonly known as the annual STAAR test.

It’s the latest big step toward normalcy for the state’s 8,866 public schools — which includes 782 charter schools — since the COVID-19 pandemic forced school closures in early 2020.

But this year’s ratings come with a few changes. For this year only, schools will receive an A-C rating. Districts and schools that score D or F will receive a “Not Rated” label instead. Schools who fall in those bottom tiers will also evade possible sanctions from the Texas Education Agency during the 2022-2023 school year.

The news comes as thousands of students in grades 3 through 12 are taking the exam this spring. Last year, students had the option to take the STAAR test and results were not held against them or the district.

The ratings, those letter grades affixed on school buildings across the state, are typically released by the Texas Education Agency in August. But when the coronavirus began appearing in the United States more than two years ago, schools were shut down and as a result, standardized testing school testing was canceled for the year.

The new A-C rating this year will allow districts that still have a D or F from 2019 to have a shot of getting a better grade.

Schools and districts are graded on three criteria: student achievement, student progress and how well the school is closing its learning gaps. Student achievement and progress weigh the most and STAAR results are how the agency measures progress. Students are tested on different subjects: reading, math, science and social students.

“STAAR results allow parents, teachers and schools to see how individual students are performing so they can better support those students moving forward,” Frank Ward, a TEA spokesperson said. “There is extensive evidence that the process of setting reasonable goals for schools and publicly reporting on progress towards those goals improves the kinds of academic supports our students receive.”

Last year, STAAR results showed that the pandemic had a significant impact on student learning with far lower scores than before the pandemic, especially when it came to math. Also, schools that relied more heavily on online class instruction had students who scored significantly lower than those school that were able to open and offer in-person instruction.

There’s fear that this year’s test scores may be impacted again because of pandemic-related school closures and teacher absences that occurred during surges in infection caused by the delta and omicron variants of the coronavirus.

Even though the rating system has been changed this year, not everyone is a fan of the school rating system to begin with.

Matthew Gutierrez, superintendent of the Seguin Independent School District, near San Antonio, believes the STAAR will be helpful to gauge students’ academic level, but the letter grades should’ve been postponed this school year as well because of the continued COVID-19 distruptions. Seguin, along with other districts, had teachers and substitutes out with COVID-19 during the omicron surge this past winter.

“We had students who went days without support from their certified teacher,” he said. “You had situations where you were combining classrooms and having really creative staffing, so it’s not optimal for learning.”

Gutierrez is also concerned about the “Not Rated” label. He said if a district scored an F in 2019 and then a D this school year, that district won’t get credit for that progress.

Monty Exter, a lobbyist with the Association of Texas Professional Educators, said the accountability system coupled with the STAAR test incentivizes schools to teach for the test instead of taking a holistic approach to teaching.

“Teaching people how to test is frankly a completely worthless skill,” Exter said.

Lawmakers and teacher unions called on the state to scrap the exam again for this spring, citing that teachers and administrators are still feeling the effects of the pandemic and the STAAR would put added pressure during another tumultuous year.

“The STAAR test administration is cumbersome and time-consuming,” Zeph Capo, president of the Texas American Federation of Teachers, said earlier this year in a written statement. “Parents and educators share concerns about learning loss and the need to support our children after two years of disruption.”

Disclosure: Association of Texas Professional Educators has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune’s journalism. Find a complete list of them here .

The Texas Tribune is a member-supported, nonpartisan newsroom informing and engaging Texans on state politics and policy. Learn more at texastribune.org.

Filed Under: News, Education Frank Ward, Monty Exter, Matthew Gutierrez, Seguin..., Zeph Capo, Texas, United States, San Antonio, STAAR, The Texas Tribune, Texas Education Agency, resume for high school student, released staar test 6th grade math, resumes for high school students, school based student care, can public schools drug test students, staar tests texas, texas staar tests, texas staar test, texas staar test results, reading 7th grade staar test

Texas former elementary school employee arrested after police find ‘inappropriate’ images at school

May 19, 2022 by www.foxnews.com Leave a Comment

close
Fox News Flash top headlines for May 19 Video

Fox News Flash top headlines for May 19

Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what’s clicking on Foxnews.com.

NEW You can now listen to Fox News articles!

A former elementary school employee in Frisco, Texas, was arrested after police said they found “inappropriate” images at a school.

Ruben Bustillos, 60, was charged with sale, distribution, or display of harmful material to minor, according to FOX 4 Dallas .

The Frisco Police Department said that the arrest came after they found “inappropriate” images at an elementary school, but didn’t elaborate on which school or the kind of images that were found.

AT LEAST 135 TEACHERS, AIDES CHARGED WITH CHILD SEX CRIMES THIS YEAR ALONE

Ruben Bustillos, 60, was charged with sale, distribution, or display of harmful material to minor, according to FOX 4 Dallas.

Ruben Bustillos, 60, was charged with sale, distribution, or display of harmful material to minor, according to FOX 4 Dallas. (Frisco Police Department)

The Frisco Independent School District worked with the police department during the criminal investigation that led to Bustillos arrest.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Anyone with information about the suspect is encouraged to call the Frisco Police Department at (972) 292-6010.

Adam Sabes is a writer for Fox News Digital. Story tips can be sent to [email protected] and on Twitter @asabes10.

Filed Under: Uncategorized best elementary schools in texas, school pledges for elementary school, crockett elementary school el paso texas, elementary school austin texas, top 10 elementary schools in texas, texas elementary school ratings, texas elementary schools ranking, texas elementary school rankings

Attorney General’s Office Won’t Upset Conviction In 1986 Port Huron Murder

May 19, 2022 by detroit.cbslocal.com Leave a Comment

PORT HURON, Mich. (AP) — The Michigan attorney general’s office said it found no new evidence to support a claim of innocence by a man who was convicted of committing murder in 1986 in a Port Huron college parking lot.

Temujin Kensu, Booking photo date: 10/14/2018 | Credit: MDOC

READ MORE: Wynonna Judd To Continue Planned Tour With Guests As Tribute To Late Mother Naomi

Temujin Kensu’s case was examined by Valerie Newman, who heads the conviction integrity unit in the Wayne County prosecutor’s office and has long worked to free people who were wrongly convicted.

Kensu, formerly known as Fred Freeman, is serving a life sentence for the fatal shooting of Scott Macklem.

“We are utterly frustrated because there is no other likely option for him at this point,” said David Sanders, vice president of Proving Innocence, a group that supports Kensu.

Kensu, now 58, insists he was 400 miles away in the Upper Peninsula when Macklem was killed. Alibi witnesses backed him up at trial, but prosecutor Robert Cleland — currently a federal judge — summoned a pilot to suggest Kensu could have committed the murder and then dashed back to Escanaba by private plane.

READ MORE: 2,175 Pounds Of Pot Found In Semi Truck In Detroit

Newman said she had to follow criteria established by the attorney general’s office: Wrongful conviction claims must be backed by evidence that was not raised at trial or during post-conviction appeals.

“I interviewed multiple people myself, with my detective, and conducted an independent investigation. … There is nothing that qualifies as new information supporting the factual innocence claim,” Newman said in a letter Tuesday to the Innocence Clinic at University of Michigan law school, which represents Kensu.

Proving Innocence responded with an angry letter to Attorney General Dana Nessel, saying her office had changed the standard.

“We cannot express the outrage you have generated among all those who believe true justice many times goes wrong in our court system but hoped that the CIU would make a difference,” the group’s leaders said, referring to the conviction integrity unit.

In 2010, U.S. District Judge Denise Page Hood ordered a new trial for Kensu after finding prosecutorial misconduct and other problems with the 1987 trial in St. Clair County. But her ruling was overturned by an appeals court.

MORE NEWS: Police Search For Armed Suspect Who Robbed 16-Year-Old Girl In Detroit

© 2022 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Filed Under: Uncategorized news, ticker, 1986 murder, ag nessel, fred freeman, port huron, temujin kensu, valerie newman, cnmi attorney general office, shreveport attorney general office, kenya attorney general office, vermont attorney general office, bangladesh attorney general office, attorney general office who is, nm attorney general office, laredo attorney general office, trenton attorney general office, weatherford attorney general office

Some Democratic lawmakers see racism in New York redistricting process

May 19, 2022 by www.cbsnews.com Leave a Comment

A new map for New York’s congressional districts has thrown the state’s delegation into chaos, likely forcing incumbents to compete against each other for seats and inviting charges of racism against the man who drew the map and each other.

New York Congressman Sean Patrick Maloney is on the receiving end of much of that ire. It’s his job as the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee chair to help his fellow Democrats win their races. Maloney currently represents the 18th Congressional District, which includes much of Hudson Valley. But when the new map drawn by a court-ordered special master put Maloney’s actual house in the new 17th District – currently represented by freshman Mondaire Jones – Maloney wasted little time before declaring he would run in the new 17th District

A majority of Maloney’s constituents, whom he has represented since he was elected in 2012, still live in the 18th District, while most of Jones’ constituents still live within the bounds of the 17th District (members are not required to live in the district they represent). Maloney is now the only representative who lives within the bounds of the district, which  he was quick to point out on Twitter . But if Jones were to run in the district where his White Plains home is located, he would have to compete against Rep. Jamaal Bowman, a fellow young Black progressive.

Maloney is also leaving an 18th District that became more competitive in the latest map, while the new 17th District slightly favors Democrats.

When a reporter from Punchbowl News reported Wednesday that Maloney’s allies were “spreading the message that Jones would be ideologically better suited to another district,” that didn’t sit well with another one of New York’s younger congressmen — Rep. Ritchie Torres, an Afro-Latino member who represents the Bronx.

“The thinly veiled racism here is profoundly disappointing. A black man is ideologically ill suited to represent a Westchester County District that he represents presently and won decisively in 2020?” Torres wrote on Twitter . “Outrageous.”

Asked about the maps on Tuesday, Maloney told reporters the new map was “a broken process has produced a broken result” but denied that he was mounting a primary challenge against Bowman.

“I’m the only sitting member who lives in the district, which is now New York 17 — which remains a competitive district, by the way — which we have to win in the fall,” he said. “I haven’t had an easy district since I came to Congress, but it’s my home in Putnam County — in fact, the entire county of Putnam County, which voted for Trump by 20 points in 2016 — is in this district. So, from my point of view, I’m just running where I landed.”

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi declined to wade into the debate when asked about it Thursday, though she echoed Maloney’s argument and said he was among the members who had decided to run where their homes are.

She also said his decision to switch to a new district didn’t conflict with his duties as the head of House Democrats’ campaign arm, calling him a “great chairman” and “master” of mobilization, messaging and fundraising.

“He has worked very hard. I’m very proud of the work he’s done,” she said.

The DCCC is exploring options for challenging the new map, which is slated to be finalized Friday. Maloney “continues to fight against this illegitimate process,” said committee spokesman Chris Hayden. “He has proven he can lead the DCCC without his own race interfering, and he will continue to do so.”

After the independent commission that was originally supposed to draw the New York congressional map could not reach a consensus , the Legislature, controlled by Democrats, drew a map that would have created 20 Democratic-leaning seats, four Republican-leaning, and two competitive seats, which could potentially result in a net gain of four seats for Democrats. However, after that map was thrown out by the courts and assigned a special master to redraw the lines, the new map gave Democrats 16 seats that would lean their way, Republicans would have five, and there would be five competitive seats. The current congressional delegation has 19 Democrats and eight Republicans.

Others in the delegation have vented their anger at the court-appointed author of the map, Jonathan Cervas. Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, a member of the House Democratic leadership who now finds himself in the same district as fellow Black Democrat Yvette Clarke, wrote on Twitter that the map “viciously targets historic Black representation.”

“This tactic would make Jim Crow blush,” he wrote, a line he repeated in an ad his campaign unveiled Wednesday evening. Neither he nor Clarke has announced what they’ll do.

Clarke and Bowman both talked about low-income housing communities that would be either split across districts or cut off from other majority-Black communities in a way that would have less voting power to address their specific needs.

“This proposal harkens back to an era in our nation where laws were designed to limit minority representation in our democracy. The practice of ‘cracking’ or diluting the voting power of historically oppressed communities was shameful when carried out by avowed racists in positions of power in previous decades and extremely disappointing when enabled by an out of state, unelected consultant today,” Clarke said in a statement calling on Cervas to revisit his map – which could be finalized for New York’s August primaries by Friday.

New York Law School professor and redistricting expert Jeffrey Wice said one potential path for the proposed map to be overturned by courts is through a focus on how minority populations in certain districts are impacted. Wice noted that the minority populations in districts represented by Torres and Democratic Rep. Adriano Espailliat may have been diluted enough to prevent them from electing their candidate of choice, and this would warrant a Voting Rights Act violation claim.

“The Voting Rights Act and Constitution do not exist to protect incumbents. They protect voters,” he said.

While Ohio Rep. Joyce Beatty, chairwoman of the Congressional Black Caucus, told reporters on Wednesday that “things can always be handled better,” she focused her criticism on the courts, rather than her colleagues.

“I think the bigger picture is what happened in redistricting,” she told reporters. “If you want to talk about something being racially motivated, let’s go look at the court system. Let’s go look at how those judges are put there.” Acting state Supreme Court Justice Patrick McAllister, who ruled the maps needed to be redrawn, is a Republican who was elected to a 10-year term in Steuben County Surrogate’s Court in 2018.

The plight of the delegation’s Black members has drawn far more scrutiny than two of their longest-serving White members, Democrats Jerry Nadler and Carolyn Maloney, who have represented districts encompassing the Upper West Side and Upper East Side, respectively, for decades. The two will now be pitted against each other in the 12th District, which encompasses a wide swath of Manhattan. Both plan to run in that district.

Their plight  creates an opening for another White politician: former New York Mayor Bill de Blasio announced Wednesday that he is creating an exploratory committee to run in Nadler’s old district, the 10th.

Aaron Navarro, Adam Brewster and Ellis Kim contributed to this report.

Rebecca Kaplan

Rebecca Kaplan covers Congress for CBS News.

Twitter

Filed Under: Uncategorized slake new york, pitti new york restaurant, pitti new york, pitti bar new york, bar pitti 6th avenue new york ny, bar pitti 6th avenue new york, skyvector new york, audemars new york, new york missiles

NEET 2022: Why is Tamil Nadu Govt Against National Exam? How Did it Turn Into a ‘People’s Movement’?

May 13, 2022 by www.news18.com Leave a Comment

The Tamil Nadu government is expecting presidential assent on anti-NEET bill that has been sent to the Centre by Governor RN Ravi, proposing that students be admitted to medical colleges based on scores from Class 12.

According to the Tamil Nadu government, the centralized exam conducted only on a single day, puts an enormous amount of pressure on the students, especially from the economically backward and rural background.

To be precise, engineering candidates have both central and state-level exams, while medical aspirants have only one entrance exam for national and state-level college admissions – NEET.

The National Entrance-cum-Eligibility Test (NEET) has been conducted by the National Testing Agency across the country for MBBS and BDS programmes in medical and dental colleges. It is mandatory to have passed the NEET exam for medical college admissions across India.

Why is Tamil Nadu Govt Opposing NEET?

Despite being an exam with over 15 lakh students taking the test almost every year, the competitive exam is not so popular in Tamil Nadu. It is not only DMK (Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam) opposing NEET but all most all the major political parties in Tamil Nadu including AIADMK (All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam), PMK, MDMK, VCK, Tamil Nadu Congress, and movements are against NEET.

On a wider view, Tamil Nadu opposes NEET claiming that there was no culture of entrance exam in the state till 2007. After the introduction of NEET, students started to opt for coaching to crack entrance exams which was injustice for students hailing from rural and economically backward.

Read | NEET PG Not Postponed, Twitter Demands ‘Justice for Doctors’

When the MK Stalin-led DMK government came into power in 2021, a panel headed by retired justice AK Rajan was set up to study the implications of the NEET exam on medical aspirants from the socially backward sections in medical admissions in Tamil Nadu. A state-wide survey has been conducted by the team and report was filed titling ‘Impact of NEET on Medical Admissions in Tamil Nadu’.

The 165-page report of the AK Rajan Committee that was submitted to the state government was released on September 20 last year by the TN government. In this context, in a series of Assembly sessions, a bill has been passed in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly calling for the cancellation of the medical entrance exam- NEET. The AK Rajan report said the state government can immediately take legal action to cancel the NEET exam. Moreover, the report suggested that a separate law can be enacted to repeal the NEET and obtain the approval of the President of India. The enactment of the NEET Cancellation Act will ensure social justice for the vulnerable student communities in admission to medical studies.

The report also pointed that the qualifying exam will take the state back to ‘pre-independence days’ and the state government wants to eliminate it at all levels by following the required legal procedures. It also specified the enrollment of rural students in medical education has been declining since the introduction of the NEET and there will not be enough doctors in the rural hospitals if the NEET exam continues. Ultimately, the healthcare system of Tamil Nadu will be affected badly.

Following the implementation of NEET, in the last four years, there has been an average decline of 11.2 percent share of medical admission among the crucial social categories in Tamil Nadu; it was only after the 7.5 per cent reservation, students from government schools are able to join medical courses, the report said. Apparently, the Tamil Nadu government is strong in its stand saying the NEET favored the rich and elite sections of the society and not the weaker sections. Another argument made by them was regarding the difference in the curriculum of the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) and State Boards.

Speaking to News18, AK Rajan earlier said, “There is a prohibition for the Central government to establish and regulate Universities. Only the state governments have the power to do that. According to the legal amendment brought in 2007, NEET can be exempted from the examination. Modern dental college decision came in 2016, in that, the Supreme Court justice bench consisting of five judges cleared that entry 66 lists and does not include an admission of students into universities. It comes only under entry 25′.

Subsequently, when the Russian-Ukraine war broke months ago, commonly the Ukraine-return Indian students shared their reasons for studying abroad such as expensive tuition fees in private colleges in India and limited alternatives. Most of the students appeared for the NEET entrance exam more than twice, but could not qualify and decided to go abroad to fulfil their dreams to become a doctor. But the dream is now far from complete due to war situation.

Apparently, the death of Karnataka native- Naveen Shekharappa, a medical student of a university in Kharkiv in Ukraine, has triggered opposition to NEET. During March this year, Kannada organizations, ran a Twitter Campaign with the hashtag ‘BanNEET’ .

Following Tamil Nadu, Karnataka also voiced against NEET. Former Chief Minister and JD (S)– Kumaraswamy, in a series of tweets, opposed NEET calling it a ‘death knell’ to the dreams of poor and rural students who want to study medicine. ‘A meritorious rural student like Naveen unable to get a medical seat in the country has exposed the ‘shameless face’ of NEET. His death in Ukraine is a question to the conscience of India’ his tweet read. Meanwhile, Congress leader Siddaramaiah, condemning the BJP government in Delhi, tweeted ‘this was not the right time to debate the adverse impact of the chaos created by Narendra Modi Government’s implementation of NEET to bring uniformity’.

How did the anti-NEET turned People’s Movement?

Over the period of years, not only political parties opposing NEET, the anti-NEET wave turned into People’s Movement from the impact of Ariyalur Anitha’s suicide. On September 1, 2017, she died by suicide because of NEET that created a major controversy in the state. She was amongst the toppers in her district in Class 12. She was the only student in Ariyalur district to score 100 percent marks in Math and Physics in the 12th standard board exam.

In 2021, three NEET aspirants in Tamil Nadu died by suicide over the fear of NEET in weeks gap. This is not the first sequence of students suicide that Tamil Nadu has seen. During September 2020, five students died by suicide in the state just days before the NEET exam was to be held amid the Covid-19 crisis.

For the last few years, students, parents, teachers, and political parties in TN have been protesting to scrape the examination. The Madras High Court in 2020 also stated the NEET exam is discriminatory for poor students from the state. Soon after the declaration of the NEET 2019 result, two students committed suicide in Tamil Nadu.

Moreover, poll promise on scraping NEET from Tamil Nadu played a major role during the Parliamentary Elections in 2019 and the State Assembly Elections in 2021. Except the State BJP, all parties in Tamil Nadu has same ideology on NEET opposition, which is also Tamil Nadu’s Stand.

What is about NEET Exemption Bill?

Last year, after MK Stalin led DMK government came into power, the anti-NEET bill was first introduced in the Tamil Nadu Assembly after a 19-year-old medical aspirant from Salem died by suicide at his home during September, hours before the NEET exam.

Precisely, the NEET Exemption Bill denotes to ensure ‘social justice for the vulnerable student communities from being discriminated against admission to medical programmes’. Moreover, the diverse societal representation in MBBS and higher medical studies, favoring mainly the affordable and affluent sections of the society and thwarting the dreams of underprivileged social groups’.

The Tamil Nadu government believes ‘the only way to ensure a robust public healthcare across the state, particularly the rural areas is that students should be admitted to medical colleges based on the scores from Class 12’.

Meanwhile, AK Rajan reports also pointed that a student from rural or economic backward background will not try to appear for the NEET more than once. While a rich and elite section student will be able to appear more than twice since they are affordable. CM MK Stalin also said that the 19-year-old aspirant who died by suicide was dejected that he could not clear the exam despite appearing twice.

Seeking support for Tamil Nadu government’s fight against the NEET, Tamil Nadu CM Stalin wrote to his counterparts in 12 States during October last year, calling for united efforts to restore the primacy of the States in administering the education sector as originally conceived in the Constitution. His letter was addressed to the Chief Ministers of Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Delhi, Goa, Jharkhand, Kerala, Maharashtra, Odisha, Punjab, Rajasthan, Telangana and West Bengal.

Moreover, the NEET Exemption Bill which was sent to Governor RN Ravi in September 2021 following the death of the Salem student, was returned to the Tamil Nadu government last year. Earlier, the DMK government and the governor had a frequent silent wars and following which the party boycotted an event at Raj Bhawan in April this year alleging delay of several bills passed by the State Assembly, including ‘dispense of NEET’ bill.

Eventually, the state government passed the NEET Exemption Bill for the second time during February this year. Later, Governor RN Ravi has reportedly referred the anti-NEET bill to the Centre for President Ram Nath Kovind’s nod.

However, if President Kovind approves the anti-NEET bill and the Centre passes it, the state government will have the power to hold state-level entrance examinations or considering the Class 12 scores for medical admissions, while the national-level exam will not be the only way to get admissions in medical colleges. On the whole, the Tamil Nadu government, in favor of people and students, called on for the next step as part of struggle for NEET Exemption to jointly take all efforts to insist the Centre for Indian President’s approval for the anti-NEET bill.

Read all the Latest News , Breaking News and IPL 2022 Live Updates here.

Filed Under: Uncategorized neet..., neet 2022, anti neet, ban neet, neet bill, medical college admissions, college admissions, latest neet news, education news, news18 education, ksca umpire exam 2022, 66th national film awards winners tamil

Copyright © 2022 Search. Power by Wordpress.
Home - About Us - Contact Us - Disclaimers - DMCA - Privacy Policy - Submit your story