Category: Tech


ICF to support federal education efforts (AP)

FAIRFAX, Va. – Consulting and technology services provider ICF International has been awarded a five-year contract worth nearly $33 million to support federal education efforts.

The Fairfax-based company said Wednesday that it will lead the Institute of Education Sciences’ Regional Education Laboratory through the U.S. Department of Education.

ICF says it will focus on helping the Education Department with research in dropout prevention, teacher effectiveness, rural education, and early childhood education. The company says it will provide assessment of needs, maintenance and refinement of research alliances, as well as other support for all 10 Regional Education Laboratories throughout the U.S.

ICF to support federal education efforts
(AP)

48 Catholic schools in Philly to close, reorganize (AP)

PHILADELPHIA – The Archdiocese of Philadelphia plans to shutter about a quarter of its Roman Catholic high schools and close or combine nearly 30 percent of its elementary schools mainly because of rising costs and low enrollment, officials said Friday.

The moves spurred by an internal, yearlong analysis of the struggling school system will displace almost 24,000 students and leave the region with four fewer high schools and 44 fewer elementary schools at the beginning of the next academic year.

“We can’t afford to fool ourselves,” Archbishop Charles Chaput said at a news conference. “We need an honest response to serious losses that have been happening year after year in some of our schools. And this will continue to happen if we do nothing.”

The system’s current enrollment of 68,000 students is the same number the archdiocese served in 1911. It also represents a 35 percent drop in the student population since 2001.

Smaller families, shifting demographics, an increase in charter schools and Catholic schools’ rising tuition have combined to siphon off many students. The archdiocese already had closed 30 schools during the past five years, leaving 178 schools in the city and four surrounding counties.

The closures announced Friday will reduce that number dramatically.

“It’s extremely sad,” said Rita Schwartz, president of the local chapter of the Association of Catholic Teachers. “Right now, there is a grieving process going on in 44 elementary schools and four high schools.”

Officials estimated about 1,700 teachers and 85 administrators would be displaced and have to reapply for positions in newly consolidated schools. Superintendent Mary Rochford estimated that about 300 teachers could be out of jobs once the dust has settled.

The planned closures are technically recommendations made by the archdiocese’s Blue Ribbon Commission, a 16-member task force of church officials and laity created in December 2010 by Chaput’s predecessor, Cardinal Justin Rigali.

Officials stressed at the time that the commission’s goal was not necessarily to come up with a list of schools to close but to devise a comprehensive plan to ensure high-quality, affordable and accessible religious education.

On Friday, Chaput indicated that he would accept the commission’s recommendations, barring any major factual errors in the group’s 37-page report.

Catholic education nationwide has suffered for years from the double whammy of rising costs and dwindling enrollment, forcing tuition hikes that make the schools increasingly unaffordable.

In Philadelphia, the commission’s analysis revealed that the average parish subsidy to schools had grown from $255,000 to $320,000 over the past 10 years. It also showed that elementary school tuition rates fell $1,500 short of the actual cost of educating each child.

Tuition varies among Catholic schools in Philadelphia, but the mean annual elementary tuition in the U.S. is $3,383, according to the National Catholic Education Association. The mean annual high school tuition is $8,787.

The commission’s report also set forth strategies for sustaining the Catholic system for future generations. Philadelphia has the second-highest enrollment among dioceses nationwide, just behind Chicago, according to the education association.

The group called for the establishment of a philanthropic education foundation to help underwrite operations; for benefactors to consider sponsoring troubled schools; and for supporters to push for voucher legislation at the state Capitol.

“These recommendations are not about reshuffling the deck chairs on the Titanic,” said commission member H. Edward Hanway. “Implemented well, these recommendations will fundamentally reposition our schools, making them academically stronger as well as financially more stable, better able to compete and grow — yes, grow — in the years ahead.”

Chaput, who was just installed as archbishop a few months ago after Rigali retired, said he was told the commission’s proposals could mean the archdiocese might go 10 to 15 years without more school closings.

He also stressed that Catholic school closings affect educational choices for families of all faiths. Especially in troubled urban neighborhoods, Catholic schools are often seen as a safer and more enriching alternative to failing public schools.

Mayor Michael Nutter issued a statement Friday that read in part: “Let’s not forget that we are one city, and we’re all in this together.”

Theresa Keel, who has children at both a Catholic elementary and a high school in the Philadelphia suburbs of Montgomery County, described the day as very emotional even though her daughters’ schools will stay open. She said students at Lansdale Catholic cried and prayed in school on Friday.

“As you can imagine, the relief is palpable when you hear it’s not your school,” Keel said. “But that’s tempered by the knowledge that for many other people, it’s their worst fear come true.”

Some parents are especially upset their 11th-grade children won’t get to graduate from schools they’ve spent years attending, Keel said. And students worry about beloved younger teachers who might lose their jobs to displaced colleagues with more seniority, she said.

“It’s affecting everyone, even if your school is still there,” Keel said.

Nationwide, Catholic schools have lost more than 587,000 students since 2000, according to the National Catholic Education Association. At least 1,750 schools have closed.

___

Associated Press writer Patrick Walters contributed to this report.

___

Online:

Blue Ribbon Commission report: www.faithinthefuture.com

___

Follow Kathy Matheson at http://www.twitter.com/kmatheson

48 Catholic schools in Philly to close, reorganize
(AP)

Charter school benefits from Huntsman focus on NH (AP)

PEMBROKE, N.H. – Students at a New Hampshire charter school got a lesson in politics Tuesday from Republican presidential hopeful Jon Huntsman.

The former Utah governor visited the Strong Foundations charter school Tuesday to distribute iPads the school recently purchased at a discount from a Utah company called iSchool Campus. The company offered 200 iPads plus computers and a new wireless network to the school in part because it wanted to capitalize on publicity generated by Huntsman’s presidential campaign. The company’s founder, Tom Pitcher, has donated $2,000 to Huntsman’s campaign, and he promoted both his company and Huntsman at the school.

The two stopped by a fifth-grade classroom where students were writing on their iPads about their Christmas gifts and using an online thesaurus to replace overused adjectives. Briefly interrupting that lesson, Pitcher asked the students to search the Internet for information about Huntsman instead.

Earlier, Pitcher told parents, students and school officials that Huntsman was a “born leader” who had helped high tech companies thrive in Utah. And he had Huntsman sign the back of an iPad he presented to a third grader and her mother, saying that “iPad Moms” could become this election cycle’s “soccer moms.”

Huntsman, who is skipping Tuesday’s Iowa caucus, is counting on a strong finish in New Hampshire’s Jan. 10 primary to keep his campaign afloat. He told students that his grandfather had been a teacher and principal who hoped his children and grandchildren would follow in his footsteps.

“You always have to have a fallback position,” said Huntsman, a former ambassador to China. “You can always go into politics.”

With all eyes on Iowa, Huntsman said he had no regrets about focusing almost exclusively on New Hampshire. He’s had the state to himself for most of the last week but that will change Wednesday when candidates start arriving from Iowa.

“We’ll obviously look at the results, and we’ll remember them for about seven hours, and then people will be focused on New Hampshire,” Huntsman told reporters.

“This will be the ballgame here, because this is a primary. This will be a broadband turnout … and it will be a result that speaks to the issue of electability.”

Huntsman had several other stops in New Hampshire before ending the day with his 150th public event in the state, a town hall meeting in Peterborough.

Charter school benefits from Huntsman focus on NH
(AP)

Huntsman enjoys final day with NH to himself (AP)

PEMBROKE, N.H. – As he enjoyed one last day of having New Hampshire to himself, Republican presidential hopeful Jon Huntsman said his “consistent, predictable core” is just of the many things that differentiate him from front-runner Mitt Romney.

Asked by a reporter in Lebanon, N.H., to compare himself to Romney, Huntsman strung together all the criticisms he’s been sprinkling into his speeches in the last week. He started by saying simply, “I can get elected.”

“The issue is going to be trust in the 2012 election cycle. People want to know your core. They want to know you have a consistent, predictable core,” he said. “I haven’t been on three sides of all the issues. I ran a state that was No. 1 in job creation as opposed to No. 47. I’ve lived overseas four times. … The kind of experience I bring is unlike anyone else in the race.”

Huntsman, a former Utah governor and former ambassador to China, is skipping Tuesday’s Iowa caucus and counting on a strong finish in New Hampshire’s Jan. 10 primary to keep his campaign afloat. Though all eyes were on Iowa, he said he had no regrets about his decision.

“We’ll obviously look at the results, and we’ll remember them for about seven hours, and then people will be focused on New Hampshire,” Huntsman told reporters in Pembroke.

“This will be the ballgame here, because this is a primary,” he said. “This will be a broadband turnout … and it will be a result that speaks to the issue of electability.”

In Pembroke, Huntsman gave students at the Strong Foundations charter school a lesson in politics when he helped distribute iPads the school recently purchased at a discount from a Utah company called iSchool Campus. The company offered 200 iPads plus computers and a new wireless network to the school in part because it wanted to capitalize on publicity generated by Huntsman’s presidential campaign.

The company’s founder, Tom Pitcher, has donated $2,000 to Huntsman’s campaign, and he promoted both his company and Huntsman at the school.

The two stopped by a fifth-grade classroom where students were writing on their iPads about their Christmas gifts and using an online thesaurus to replace overused adjectives. Briefly interrupting that lesson, Pitcher asked the students to search the Internet for information about Huntsman instead.

Earlier, Pitcher told parents, students and school officials that Huntsman was a “born leader” who had helped high-tech companies thrive in Utah. And he had Huntsman sign the back of an iPad he presented to a third grader and her mother, saying that “iPad Moms” could become this election cycle’s “soccer moms.”

Huntsman was ending his day with his 150th public event in the state, a town hall meeting in Peterborough.

Huntsman enjoys final day with NH to himself
(AP)

Seven states win federal education competition (AP)

WASHINGTON – Seven states won a share of $200 million in federal “Race to the Top” money to improve K-12 education programs, the Education Department announced Thursday.

The winners are Arizona, $25.1 million; Colorado, $17.9 million; Illinois, $42.8 million; Kentucky, $17 million; Louisiana, $17.5 million; Pennsylvania, $41.3 million; and New Jersey, $37.9 million.

The Obama administration has awarded billions of dollars in such competitions to encourage changes in education that it favors. The seven states competing in this round were all runners-up last year, and the Education Department has said it wants to encourage them to finish and carry out many of the changes proposed in their earlier applications.

Competing states committed to make changes such as improving principal and teacher evaluation systems and turning around under-performing schools. They also were asked to show specifically how they would improve science, technology, engineering and math instruction.

Education Secretary Arne Duncan said the money was driving dramatic improvements.

“We’ve had broken teacher-evaluation systems in many places, unfortunately for five, or six or seven decades,” Duncan said. “You’ve seen more effort there and more movement in a short amount of time than in a long time prior to that, and many states are using Race to the Top resources to do that.”

Two other states, South Carolina and California, were also eligible. South Carolina opted not to compete, while California submitted an incomplete application, the Education Department said.

Last week, nine states were announced as winners of a share of $500 million in grants under a similar competition focused on improving early learning programs.

Duncan also said federal officials are monitoring states to ensure that they follow through on their plans to improve schools with Race to the Top money. For example, he said he has warned Hawaii that it’s in danger of losing funding.

“We’re going to look for some pretty significant improvements early in the new year,” Duncan said. “There’s not a hard-and-fast date. If we see things turning around, that would be fantastic. If we don’t see things turning around, then we’ve got some tough decisions to make.”

____

Online: Education Department http://www.ed.gov/

Seven states win federal education competition
(AP)

7 states win federal education competition (AP)

WASHINGTON – Seven states won a share of $200 million in federal “Race to the Top” money to improve K-12 education programs, the Education Department announced Thursday.

The winners are Arizona, $25.1 million; Colorado, $17.9 million; Illinois, $42.8 million; Kentucky, $17 million; Louisiana, $17.5 million; Pennsylvania, $41.3 million; and New Jersey, $37.9 million.

The Obama administration has awarded billions of dollars in such competitions to encourage changes in education that it favors. The seven states competing in this round were all runners-up last year, and the Education Department has said it wants to encourage them to finish and carry out many of the changes proposed in their earlier applications.

Competing states committed to make changes such as improving principal and teacher evaluation systems and turning around under-performing schools. They also were asked to show specifically how they would improve science, technology, engineering and math instruction.

Education Secretary Arne Duncan said the money was driving dramatic improvements.

“We’ve had broken teacher-evaluation systems in many places, unfortunately for five, or six or seven decades,” Duncan said. “You’ve seen more effort there and more movement in a short amount of time than in a long time prior to that, and many states are using Race to the Top resources to do that.”

Two other states, South Carolina and California, were also eligible. South Carolina opted not to compete, while California submitted an incomplete application, the Education Department said.

Last week, nine states were announced as winners of a share of $500 million in grants under a similar competition focused on improving early learning programs.

Duncan also said federal officials are monitoring states to ensure that they follow through on their plans to improve schools with Race to the Top money. For example, he said he has warned Hawaii that it’s in danger of losing funding.

“We’re going to look for some pretty significant improvements early in the new year,” Duncan said. “There’s not a hard-and-fast date. If we see things turning around, that would be fantastic. If we don’t see things turning around, then we’ve got some tough decisions to make.”

____

Online: Education Department http://www.ed.gov/

7 states win federal education competition
(AP)

75% of Worldwide Cellphone Users Send Text Messages [STUDY] (Mashable)

Mobile phones are universally popular — and so is text messaging. Cellphone users in 21 countries were surveyed on their mobile habits and 75% replied they send text messages.
A Pew Research Center Global Attitudes Project study, published Tuesday, examined worldwide use of digital communication tools such as mobile and social networks. Not surprisingly, the research found the young and well-educated are the most likely to adopt new technologies. Those under 30 who hold college degrees are most likely to use many mobile functions and social networks.

[More from Mashable: AT&T Losses Mount as T-Mobile Acquisition Pursuit Ends]

Only one-half of the respondents send photos or videos, and just 23% use the Internet.

While these behaviors may be assumed most popular in wealthy countries, texting is most popular in Kenya and Indonesia, the two poorest nations included in the study. Sending photos or videos is most popular in Japan (72% reported the behavior), followed by Mexico (61%), Spain (59%) and Egypt (58%). Using mobile data still seems to be a behavior of wealthier countries, most popular in Israel (47%), Japan (47%) and the U.S. (43%). You can see the complete results in the table below.

[More from Mashable: 6 Simple Tips to Optimize Your Mobile Website]

The study also looked at the popularity of social networking, which corresponds with wealthy nations where Internet access is more common. Social networking is most popular in Israel (53%) and the U.S. (50%), trailed slightly by Britain (43%), Russia (43%) and Spain (42%). However, Internet users in poorer nations use social networks at equal if not higher rates than those in richer countries.

The study, conducted between March 21 and May 15, surveyed between 700 and 4,029 mobile users per country by telephone or in person in the U.S., Britain, France, Germany, Spain, Lithuania, Poland, Russia, Ukraine, Turkey, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Israel, China, Indonesia, Japan, Pakistan, Mexico and Kenya.

Do you text, send photos and videos, or use the Internet from your mobile phone? Do your behaviors reflect those of your country?

Image courtesy of Flickr, JayB.Stevens2010

This story originally published on Mashable here.


75% of Worldwide Cellphone Users Send Text Messages [STUDY]
(Mashable)

Virtual schools booming as states mull warnings (AP)

DENVER – More schoolchildren than ever are taking their classes online, using technology to avoid long commutes to school, add courses they wouldn’t otherwise be able to take — and save their school districts money.

But as states pour money into virtual classrooms, with an estimated 200,000 virtual K-12 students in 40 states from Washington to Wisconsin, educators are raising questions about online learning. States are taking halting steps to increase oversight, but regulation isn’t moving nearly as fast as the virtual school boom.

The online school debate pits traditional education backers, often teachers’ unions, against lawmakers tempted by the promise of cheaper online schools and school-choice advocates who believe private companies will apply cutting-edge technology to education.

Is online education as good as face-to-face teaching?

Virtual education companies tout a 2009 research review conducted for the U.S. Department of Education that showed K-12 students did as well or better in online learning conditions as in a traditional classroom.

But critics say most studies, including many in that 2009 review, used results from students taking only some — but not all — of their courses online. They also point out wide gaps in state oversight to ensure students, and not their parents or tutors, are actually completing tests and coursework.

Still, virtual schooling at the K-12 level is booming. For example, one of the nation’s largest for-profit online education providers, Virginia-based K12 Inc., saw its earnings more than double in the first quarter of this year, fueled in large part by a 42 percent enrollment spike.

“Online learning is the future of American education. Precisely because it’s so transforming, it’s threatening to the established institutions,” said Terry Moe, a political scientist at Stanford University who studies the online school boom.

The conflict has boiled over in Colorado, which expects to spend $85 million this year educating some 14,200 students online. The state’s online school industry is growing by double digits a year, bankrolled by a state government that pays private companies to teach students as young as kindergarten entirely via computer with limited oversight.

Online schools aggressively court new students in Colorado, where they are paid the same as brick-and-mortar schools. But so far the results have been discouraging.

A 2010 report by the state Department of Education showed below-average test scores, dropout rates near 50 percent in some cases and a student-to-teacher ratio as high as 317 to 1 at one school. Still, enrollment grew more than 12 percent between 2008 and 2009, and Colorado’s online schools get paid for an entire school year even if a student drops out after Oct. 1, the date the state tallies student enrollment.

“I know there are millions of dollars being bled from the system that have no accountability tied to them,” said Democratic Senate President Brandon Shaffer, whose requested an audit of online schools but was blocked by Republicans.

“If you’re the person bringing this up, you’re labeled anti-choice, anti-reform,” Shaffer said.

An October report by the University of Colorado-based National Education Policy Center said school-choice advocates are pushing states to rush headlong into virtual K-12 education despite limited data.

“These online school providers are raking in hundreds of millions of dollars, and the product they’re putting out is just horrible,” said Gene Glass, author of the CU report and a vocal critic of public funding for online schools. But he said legislators see online schools as a cost-saver so states are moving forward.

Idaho and Florida passed laws in the last year requiring high school students to take at least one course online. Ohio lifted a moratorium on new “e-schools,” and Utah passed a “virtual voucher” law allowing high school students to choose which courses to take online and which to take at a brick-and-mortar school.

Virtual learning can fill an important void for some students.

In Mims, Fla., 14-year-old Celestial McBride was homeschooled by her mother after third grade because the family traveled frequently. Now she takes courses from the public Florida Virtual School, where she studies at her own pace and expects to have a college-level associate’s degree by the time she’s 16.

“I think you learn faster online,” said McBride, who attends virtual “clubs” including the school’s student newspaper, published online, of course.

“In a regular classroom, you could always have the kid who’s a disruption,” she said. “Online, there’s no disruption.”

McBride’s mom, Nancy McBride, said that taking classes online allows her children to travel without falling behind.

“The misconception is that the teacher isn’t there. Not true. The teacher’s right there, and they’re involved with my kids at every step,” she said

Jazmyn Styles, a 17-year-old senior at Pike High School in Indianapolis, said she takes online courses during the summer to free up time during the regular school year for college credit courses and internships.

She said she’s in regular contact with her online teacher through Skype, instant messaging and email.

“I like working at my own pace. Because when you’re in a normal classroom, the teacher can only work as quickly as the slowest student,” she said.

What about the teachers?

Kristin Kipp, a high school teacher at Colorado’s Virtual Academy in Jefferson County, said she worried about connecting with students one-on-one when she switched to an online setting, but found that she got to know her students more through their steady stream of texts, emails and phone calls.

Kipp said teachers need to be proactive to maintain regular communication with students to help them succeed.

“My constant message in an online classroom is, `I see you, I know you’re there,’” she said. “So kids are constantly getting messages from me saying, `Hey your grade went up 5 percent this week. Congratulations, keep up the hard work.’”

The nation’s largest industry group for online schools, the Washington-based International Association for K-12 Online Learning, says states would be foolish to apply the brakes to online school expansion. Group CEO Susan Patrick pointed out that about one in three college students now take some courses online, and about 50 percent of workforce training is believed to be done online.

“The world has moved online, no question,” Patrick said. “You have to ask, when did face-to-face learning become the gold standard for education?”

At the same time, the group says states need to do a better job overseeing online schools.

“You absolutely must have accountability, and in some cases, it’s not there,” Patrick said.

That’s starting to change. The Utah law that expanded students’ online school options also set new compensation rules for online schools — they get half the money up front, but the rest only for those students who finish the courses. Florida also pays only for completed courses, not by students enrolled. Oregon set up a task force to come up with better governance for virtual schools, and Washington passed a 2009 law setting up an agency within the Department of Education to vet applicants wanting to set up online schools.

Wisconsin earlier this year became the first state to require 30 hours of additional training for online teachers.

“The majority of teachers still haven’t learned to do this, and online education is a distinct skill,” said Dennis O’Connor, who teaches online education for graduate students at the University of Wisconsin-Stout.

O’Connor, who teaches his Wisconsin graduate students from his home in San Diego, embraces online learning but notes, “There’s no proof one way or the other at this point if a total online learning experience is a good thing or a bad thing,” O’Connor said.

Moe, the Stanford professor, said that states holding back on virtual education are ignoring reality.

“Twenty years from now, a typical child will be going to a hybrid school,” he said. “They’ll be going to a physical location, but computers will do 80 percent of the teaching.”

___

Follow Kristen Wyatt at http://www.twitter.com/APkristenwyatt and Ivan Moreno at http://www.twitter.com/IvanJournalist

___

Online:

National Education Policy Center online schools brief: http://nepc.colorado.edu/publication/online-k-12-schooling

International Association for K-12 Online Learning: http://www.inacol.org

Virtual schools booming as states mull warnings
(AP)

UC Berkeley’s Middle Class Bid; Ivy League Early Admits (The Atlantic Wire)

Today in academia: Berkeley's middle class bid, Ivy League admit numbers, Penn State's big donation, Riverside's protest rules, and Virginia Tech's parental notification policy.

UC Berkeley’s Middle Class Bid; Ivy League Early Admits
(The Atlantic Wire)


Google‘s charitable branch, Google.org, released a list Wednesday of its 2011 non-profit grant recipients, who received a combined $40 million. The list highlights the search giant’s work promoting STEM and girls’ education, empowering through technology, and fighting slavery and human trafficking.

[More from Mashable: Top Tech Companies To Work For in 2012: Facebook Beats Google, Apple]

The above video highlights the company’s work in those four key areas.

Through the work of 16 non-profits, the science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) education grants will affect 3 million students in the U.S. Google says 2.4 million jobs will be created in these areas in the next six years, making them a key area for education.

[More from Mashable: Google+ Adds Hangout Option for Status Updates]

The seven girls’ education non-profit grant recipients work in the developing world, impacting 10,000 students in Africa, Central Asia and Southeast Asia, among other places.

The 15 technology empowerment grant recipients use social media, mobile networks and open source programming to improve access to information. The grants will be used to bring technology access to unconnected communities in the developing world.

Google’s final group of grants were given to nine non-profits, helping to free 12,000 of the 27 million slaves in the world. The non-profits partner with governments to document and eliminate slave traders, and educate and give therapy to former slaves.

Including these grants, the company’s philanthropic projects give $115 million to non-profits annually. Its giving totals more than $1 billion each year when in-house programs like Google Grants and Google Apps for Education are considered.

Do you think Google should be limiting its areas of focus to these for areas or should it open its grant-giving to other areas?

This story originally published on Mashable here.

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