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RESEARCH
HEADLINES
1.
Are
highly educated teachers worth extra pay?
Dallas Morning News
While it might sound logical to increase teacher pay based on their level of
formal training, studies show there is no link between a teacher's ability
and his or her own education level. "If we pay for credentials, teachers
have an incentive to seek and schools have an incentive to provide easy
credentials," said Arthur Levine, a researcher who once headed Columbia
University's Teachers College. "If, on the other hand, we only pay for
performance, teachers have an incentive to seek and schools have an
incentive to provide excellent training."
2.
Schools neglect high achievers Raleigh
News & Observer (N.C.)
A new study from the N.C. Public School Forum reports that North Carolina's
efforts to raise student achievement in math and reading have taken the
focus away from other subjects and leaves students who are already
high-achievers with too little attention or support.
RESOURCES & EVENTS
3.
2007 PEAK Afterschool Workshop Series

McREL and the National Partnership for Quality Afterschool
Learning are convening the third annual PEAK (Practices that Engage and
Attract Kids) Afterschool Event. In 2007, the event will be held as a series
of three, two-day workshops in Kansas City, MO (February 22–23, 2007),
Wheeling, IL (March 8–9, 2007), and St. Paul, MN (May 3–4, 2007). All three
workshops will offer new ideas for academic enrichment in afterschool
programs and provide in-depth professional development covering six academic
areas: math & science, arts & literacy, and homework & technology. Space is
limited, so register today!
4.
McREL Summer Institutes
In June 2007, McREL will provide a series of intensive, weeklong
Summer Institutes
that will provide educators with practical, research-based strategies for
raising student achievement. The institutes focus on three of the 11
elements of schooling that McREL research, as reported in What Works in
Schools, demonstrates can have a positive effect on student achievement:
NEW FROM McREL
5.
NREL Web site
McREL's
Education and Public Outreach (EPO) team recently created a Web site
for the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), based in Golden,
Colo. The Web site highlights NREL's RnE2EW van, a
customized, propane-fueled vehicle that travels to schools, conventions
and exhibits around the country to educate its visitors about renewable
energy and showcase NREL's research and technology in a fun, engaging
way. The Web site offers a way to learn about renewable energy and
efficiency sciences as well as schedule a visit from the RnE2EW
van.
6.
Winter 2006 Changing Schools
The Winter 2006 issue of Changing Schools
examines how school systems can use research to stop the pendulum of
constant change and begin making real progress toward student success.
Articles feature:
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Key findings from McREL's research on effective superintendents —
and the implications for avoiding initiative "churn" and sticking
with efforts long enough for them to bear fruit
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The results from McREL's Balanced Leadership Profile, which suggest
that principals often view change as more complex and difficult than
teachers, with reasons as to why this may be true
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The results of a recent McREL evaluation study that suggests that
with many improvement efforts, it's often "too soon to tell" how
they're going, especially when seemingly negative results can mean
positive changes are occurring
7.
Does your school need a Technology Audit?
This article describes the features and importance of a
comprehensive technology audit, which is a close examination of how
effectively teachers and schools are integrating technology in their
classrooms. The author explains how a well-designed audit can help
district leaders determine whether their investment in technology is
paying off where it matters the most – with student learning.
REPORT ROUNDUP
8.
Rural School Success: What Can We Learn?
The Journal of Research in Rural Education
This article reports on an exploratory study of the factors perceived by
school personnel to contribute to success in high-performing, high-needs
(HPHN) rural schools. Based on earlier research that identified four key
components of success (leadership, instruction, professional community,
and school environment), this study included 21 central U.S. rural
schools whose assessment scores and free and/or reduced-price lunch
rates indicated they were high-performing but also high-needs.
Interviews and site visits led to case studies, which revealed that,
although schools differed in context, they all reported a supportive
relationship with their community, high teacher retention, and high
expectations for students.
9.
Family Involvement in School and
Low-Income Children's Literacy Performance
Family Involvement Network of Educators (FINE)
This report highlights a study on the impact of a family's involvement
in a child's education on the child's development during elementary
school, specifically on literacy achievement. Researchers worked with
300 low-income families and their children and discovered two primary
findings: 1) An increase in family involvement in school (including
involvement in the home, in the school, and in parent-teacher and
parent-parent communication) predicts an increase in literacy
achievement, and 2) family involvement matters most for children who are
at the greatest risk. In other words, a high level of involvement was
most strongly and positively associated with the literacy achievement of
children whose families were low-income and whose mothers had very low
levels of education.
10.
A New Day for Learning
The Time, Learning and Afterschool Task Force
How can we make sure that all children have the opportunity to reach
their full potential in a competitive society where thinking skills are
the most important asset? The Time, Learning and Afterschool Task Force,
funded by the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, has examined this
question and, in this report, urgently proposes a new learning system
based on organizing learning time more effectively. To do so, the Task
Force suggests that policymakers, educators and communities work
together to:
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redefine student success,
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use knowledge about how students learn best
throughout the day, from morning to night and year-round,
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integrate various approaches to acquiring and
reinforcing knowledge,
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collaborate intentionally across local, state and
national sectors, and provide new leadership and professional
development opportunities.
McREL IN THE
NEWS
11.
Kearney (Neb.) superintendent joins McREL
Board of Directors McREL
Ken Anderson, the superintendent of Kearney Public
Schools (Neb.), has joined McREL's Board of Directors.
12.
Approximately 18 languages spoken in
local schools NWLA
News (La.)
This article about the increasing diversity in northwest
Louisiana schools cites McREL's quarterly newsletter,
Changing Schools, noting that the No Child Left Behind law
requires states to develop English-language-proficiency standards and
implement English-language-proficiency tests.
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