Dominican Today Forum » Living in the DR » General Info » Education in DR: its sad state and what to do to address it
#121 - Posted 4 June 2010, 12:39 PM
Location: United Kingdom, Dominican Republic
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RE: Education in DR: its sad state and what to do to address it
Quote:
Atabey previously said:


4-day school weeks gain popularity across US
AP



The cafeteria of Hunt Elementary School in Fort Valley, Ga., is seen empty on Monday, May 17, 2010. The school is in Peach County, one of more than 12 AP – The cafeteria of Hunt Elementary School in Fort Valley, Ga., is seen empty on Monday, May 17, 2010. The …



By DORIE TURNER, Associated Press Writer Dorie Turner, Associated Press Writer – 2 hrs 19 mins ago

FORT VALLEY, Ga. – During the school year, Mondays in this rural Georgia community are for video games, trips to grandma's house and hanging out at the neighborhood community center.

Don't bother showing up for school. The doors are locked and the lights are off.

Peach County is one of more than 120 school districts across the country where students attend school just four days a week, a cost-saving tactic gaining popularity among cash-strapped districts struggling to make ends meet. The 4,000-student district started shaving a day off its weekly school calendar last year to help fill a $1 million budget shortfall.

It was that or lay off 39 teachers the week before school started, said Superintendent Susan Clark.

"We're treading water," Clark said as she stood outside the headquarters of her seven-school district. "There was nothing else for us to do."

The results? Test scores went up.


So did attendance — for both students and teachers. The district is spending one-third of what it once did on substitute teachers, Clark said.

And the graduation rate likely will be more than 80 percent for the first time in years, Clark said.

The four days that students are in school are slightly longer and more crowded with classes and activities. After school, students can get tutoring in subjects where they're struggling.

On their off day, students who don't have other options attend "Monday care" at area churches and the local Boys & Girls Club, where tutors are also available to help with homework. The programs generally cost a few dollars a day per student.

Experts say research is scant on the effect of a four-day school week on student performance. In fact, there is mostly just anecdotal evidence in reports on the trend with little scientific data to back up what many districts say, said University of Southern Maine researcher Christine Donis-Keller.

"The broadest conclusion you can draw is that it doesn't hurt academics," said Donis-Keller, who is with the university's Center for Education Policy, Applied Research and Evaluation.

Many districts that have the shortened schedule say they've seen students who are less tired and more focused, which has helped raise test scores and attendance. But others say that not only did they not save a substantial amount of money by being off an extra day, they also saw students struggle because they weren't in class enough and didn't have enough contact with teachers.

The school district in Marlow, Okla., is switching back to a five-day week after administrators decided students were not being served well by attending school only four days. The 440-student district tried the shorter week the spring semester this year to save $25,000 in operation costs.

"It was harder on the teachers. We were asking the kids to move at a quicker pace," said district Superintendent Bennie Newton. "We're hoping the four-day week won't come into play next year."

The move by Peach County in Georgia gets mixed reviews.

Parents like Heather Bradshaw worry that their children are getting shortchanged on time with teachers.

"I don't feel like they're having the necessary time in the classroom," said Bradshaw, a single mother with a fourth-grade son at one of the county's three elementary schools. "The schedule has slowed him down."

Other parents prefer the shorter schedule and don't mind the hassle of finding a babysitter one day a week.

"It makes the children's weekend a little better, so they get more rest," said LaKeisha Johnson, who sends her fourth-grade daughter to the Boys & Girls Club on Mondays.

The trend of four-day school weeks started in New Mexico during the oil crisis of the 1970s and has been popular in rural states where students have to commute a long way. Other districts have used it as a way to try to fix schools with a long history of poor student performance by shaking up the schedule and giving children more time to study outside of school.

Georgia, Oklahoma and Maine have changed their laws in the last couple of years to allow districts to count their school year by hours rather than days, allowing for a four-day week if needed. Hawaii schools were off every other Friday this year for schools to save money, giving them the state with the shortest school year in the country.

From California to Minnesota to New York, districts — mostly small, rural ones with less than 5,000 students — are following the trend, hoping to rescue their bleeding budgets.

For Peach County, the four-day week was enough of a success that the school district is trying it again next year, Clark said. The move saves $400,000 annually and is popular among teachers and students because they get extra rest, she said

"Teachers tell me they are much more focused because they've had time to prepare. They don't have kids sleeping in class on Tuesday," she said. "Everything has taken on a laser-light focus."

Stupid Americans again - in Germany and England many schools have 6 day weeks and there is talk of extending the school week.
S.
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#122 - Posted 4 June 2010, 12:47 PM
Location: Dominican Republic, No Spin Zone
Join date: October 2009
Member #: 3809
Posts: 10122
Send Message
RE: Education in DR: its sad state and what to do to address it
Quote:
abc200 previously said:

Quote:
Atabey previously said:


4-day school weeks gain popularity across US
AP



The cafeteria of Hunt Elementary School in Fort Valley, Ga., is seen empty on Monday, May 17, 2010. The school is in Peach County, one of more than 12 AP – The cafeteria of Hunt Elementary School in Fort Valley, Ga., is seen empty on Monday, May 17, 2010. The …



By DORIE TURNER, Associated Press Writer Dorie Turner, Associated Press Writer – 2 hrs 19 mins ago

FORT VALLEY, Ga. – During the school year, Mondays in this rural Georgia community are for video games, trips to grandma's house and hanging out at the neighborhood community center.

Don't bother showing up for school. The doors are locked and the lights are off.

Peach County is one of more than 120 school districts across the country where students attend school just four days a week, a cost-saving tactic gaining popularity among cash-strapped districts struggling to make ends meet. The 4,000-student district started shaving a day off its weekly school calendar last year to help fill a $1 million budget shortfall.

It was that or lay off 39 teachers the week before school started, said Superintendent Susan Clark.

"We're treading water," Clark said as she stood outside the headquarters of her seven-school district. "There was nothing else for us to do."

The results? Test scores went up.


So did attendance — for both students and teachers. The district is spending one-third of what it once did on substitute teachers, Clark said.

And the graduation rate likely will be more than 80 percent for the first time in years, Clark said.

The four days that students are in school are slightly longer and more crowded with classes and activities. After school, students can get tutoring in subjects where they're struggling.

On their off day, students who don't have other options attend "Monday care" at area churches and the local Boys & Girls Club, where tutors are also available to help with homework. The programs generally cost a few dollars a day per student.

Experts say research is scant on the effect of a four-day school week on student performance. In fact, there is mostly just anecdotal evidence in reports on the trend with little scientific data to back up what many districts say, said University of Southern Maine researcher Christine Donis-Keller.

"The broadest conclusion you can draw is that it doesn't hurt academics," said Donis-Keller, who is with the university's Center for Education Policy, Applied Research and Evaluation.

Many districts that have the shortened schedule say they've seen students who are less tired and more focused, which has helped raise test scores and attendance. But others say that not only did they not save a substantial amount of money by being off an extra day, they also saw students struggle because they weren't in class enough and didn't have enough contact with teachers.

The school district in Marlow, Okla., is switching back to a five-day week after administrators decided students were not being served well by attending school only four days. The 440-student district tried the shorter week the spring semester this year to save $25,000 in operation costs.

"It was harder on the teachers. We were asking the kids to move at a quicker pace," said district Superintendent Bennie Newton. "We're hoping the four-day week won't come into play next year."

The move by Peach County in Georgia gets mixed reviews.

Parents like Heather Bradshaw worry that their children are getting shortchanged on time with teachers.

"I don't feel like they're having the necessary time in the classroom," said Bradshaw, a single mother with a fourth-grade son at one of the county's three elementary schools. "The schedule has slowed him down."

Other parents prefer the shorter schedule and don't mind the hassle of finding a babysitter one day a week.

"It makes the children's weekend a little better, so they get more rest," said LaKeisha Johnson, who sends her fourth-grade daughter to the Boys & Girls Club on Mondays.

The trend of four-day school weeks started in New Mexico during the oil crisis of the 1970s and has been popular in rural states where students have to commute a long way. Other districts have used it as a way to try to fix schools with a long history of poor student performance by shaking up the schedule and giving children more time to study outside of school.

Georgia, Oklahoma and Maine have changed their laws in the last couple of years to allow districts to count their school year by hours rather than days, allowing for a four-day week if needed. Hawaii schools were off every other Friday this year for schools to save money, giving them the state with the shortest school year in the country.

From California to Minnesota to New York, districts — mostly small, rural ones with less than 5,000 students — are following the trend, hoping to rescue their bleeding budgets.

For Peach County, the four-day week was enough of a success that the school district is trying it again next year, Clark said. The move saves $400,000 annually and is popular among teachers and students because they get extra rest, she said

"Teachers tell me they are much more focused because they've had time to prepare. They don't have kids sleeping in class on Tuesday," she said. "Everything has taken on a laser-light focus."

Stupid Americans again - in Germany and England many schools have 6 day weeks and there is talk of extending the school week.
S.

Why do They say Gringo Education is so Bad?8 Scientists Share $3 Million in Prizes from Norway
8 Scientists Share $3 Million in Prizes
By DENNIS OVERBYE
Published: June 3, 2010


Scientists competing to build humongous telescopes, elucidate the machinery by which brain cells signal each other and manipulate individual atoms and molecules into submicroscopic structures were among the winners of one of the richest prizes in science, the $1 million Kavli Prize, announced Thursday by the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters.

Get Science News From The New York Times »
The prizes, one each in astrophysics, nanoscience and neuroscience, are awarded every other year. This year, eight scientists will share the money, $3 million in all, which comes from the Kavli Foundation, set up by Fred Kavli, a Norwegian-American physicist, entrepreneur and philanthropist.

The astrophysics prize will be divided three ways between Jerry Nelson of the University of California, Santa Cruz; J. Roger P. Angel of the University of Arizona; and Raymond N. Wilson, formerly of the European Southern Observatory in Garching, Germany.

Dr. Nelson, a physicist-turned-astronomer, builds giant telescope mirrors — like those in the 10-meter-diameter Keck telescopes on Mauna Kea, Hawaii, currently the largest on the planet, and the Thirty Meter Telescope, which the California Institute of Technology and its collaborators now hope to build there — out of small segments. Dr. Angel, on the other hand, casts monolithic mirrors up to 8 meters in diameter in a rotating furnace, and seven of them would be the heart of a proposed 25-meter telescope known as the Giant Magellan to be built in Chile.

Dr. Wilson pioneered the use of a technology known as adaptive optics, in which computers take the twinkle out of starlight, correcting the shapes of telescope mirrors to cancel the distortions caused by atmospheric turbulence, allowing ground-based telescopes to achieve images as detailed as those recorded by the Hubble Space Telescope.

The neuroscience prize will also be shared three ways, by Thomas Südhof of the Stanford School of Medicine, Richard H. Scheller of Genentech and James E. Rothman of Yale for work on the molecular basis of nervous transmission.

In the 1980s, Dr. Südhof and Dr. Scheller decoded the genes that control the functioning of tiny bubbles of fluid called vesicles, which send neurotransmitters across the synapses between cells. In particular, they found that a protein that senses calcium acts as a switch for transmission. Dr. Rothman investigated how the vesicles involved in a wide range of physiological activities are generated and fuse together..

The prize for nanoscience will go to Donald M. Eigler of I.B.M.’s Almaden Research Center in San Jose, Calif., and Nadrian C. Seeman of New York University for developing the ability to indulge in architecture and engineering on the smallest scales imaginable.

In 1989, Dr. Eigler succeeded in picking up a single atom and moving it precisely to a different location. Among his subsequent achievements was spelling out the letters “IBM” using 35 xenon atoms. Dr. Seeman invented a field known as structural DNA nanotechnology. He builds robots out of DNA by programming strands of it to stick together into complicated shapes, including cubes, a truncated octahedron and a walking DNA biped for use as nanorobots or in a DNA computer.

The prizes were announced Thursday morning as part of the World Science Festival in a live transmission from Oslo. The winners, who found out their good fortune in a 5:30 a.m. phone call Thursday, will get their prizes in a ceremony in Oslo in September.
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#123 - Posted 4 June 2010, 12:49 PM
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RE: Education in DR: its sad state and what to do to address it
the above and all the Nobels won by Americans still shows the preeminence of a Yankee education ABC attended the LGM school of nonsense
Edited on 6/4/2010 12:50 PM by Blutarsky.
al capo di tutti capi de los trolls
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#124 - Posted 4 June 2010, 2:29 PM
Location: United Kingdom, Dominican Republic
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RE: Education in DR: its sad state and what to do to address it
Quote:
Blutarsky previously said:

the above and all the Nobels won by Americans still shows the preeminence of a Yankee education ABC attended the LGM school of nonsense

These guyrs had education and first degrees mostly outside the US.
Just now the World needs houses for Hatians etc.and sustainablity not -fancy new telescopes - there are enough already.
S.
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#125 - Posted 4 June 2010, 4:27 PM
Location: United States
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RE: Education in DR: its sad state and what to do to address it
Quote:
abc200 previously said:

Quote:
Blutarsky previously said:

the above and all the Nobels won by Americans still shows the preeminence of a Yankee education ABC attended the LGM school of nonsense

These guyrs had education and first degrees mostly outside the US.
Just now the World needs houses for Hatians etc.and sustainablity not -fancy new telescopes - there are enough already.
S.


Those fancy new telescopes will feed, house and provide medical care for more people than all the free housing for Haitians will ever do.
Proof of dreadlocks Bigotry.
"....... what did Cubans do to deserve preferential treatment?......and treat Black people in the most racist of ways.......... the Cubans are just a bunch of uberracist savages."
: I WILL NOT ANSWER ANY POSTS BY THE BIGOTS KNOWN AS DREADLOCKS & iNGLE23
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#126 - Posted 4 June 2010, 4:46 PM
Location: Dominican Republic
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RE: Education in DR: its sad state and what to do to address it
Quote:
abc200 previously said:


Stupid Americans again - in Germany and England many schools have 6 day weeks and there is talk of extending the school week.
S.

Darn slow learners, I guess they just need more time....is that what happened to you ABC?
Wrongdoers eagerly listen to gossip; liars pay close attention to slander.
Proverbs 17:4


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#127 - Posted 4 June 2010, 4:51 PM
Location: United States, El cuarto bate
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Posts: 10627
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RE: Education in DR: its sad state and what to do to address it
Quote:
abc200 previously said:

Quote:
Atabey previously said:


4-day school weeks gain popularity across US
AP



The cafeteria of Hunt Elementary School in Fort Valley, Ga., is seen empty on Monday, May 17, 2010. The school is in Peach County, one of more than 12 AP – The cafeteria of Hunt Elementary School in Fort Valley, Ga., is seen empty on Monday, May 17, 2010. The …



By DORIE TURNER, Associated Press Writer Dorie Turner, Associated Press Writer – 2 hrs 19 mins ago

FORT VALLEY, Ga. – During the school year, Mondays in this rural Georgia community are for video games, trips to grandma's house and hanging out at the neighborhood community center.

Don't bother showing up for school. The doors are locked and the lights are off.

Peach County is one of more than 120 school districts across the country where students attend school just four days a week, a cost-saving tactic gaining popularity among cash-strapped districts struggling to make ends meet. The 4,000-student district started shaving a day off its weekly school calendar last year to help fill a $1 million budget shortfall.

It was that or lay off 39 teachers the week before school started, said Superintendent Susan Clark.

"We're treading water," Clark said as she stood outside the headquarters of her seven-school district. "There was nothing else for us to do."

The results? Test scores went up.


So did attendance — for both students and teachers. The district is spending one-third of what it once did on substitute teachers, Clark said.

And the graduation rate likely will be more than 80 percent for the first time in years, Clark said.

The four days that students are in school are slightly longer and more crowded with classes and activities. After school, students can get tutoring in subjects where they're struggling.

On their off day, students who don't have other options attend "Monday care" at area churches and the local Boys & Girls Club, where tutors are also available to help with homework. The programs generally cost a few dollars a day per student.

Experts say research is scant on the effect of a four-day school week on student performance. In fact, there is mostly just anecdotal evidence in reports on the trend with little scientific data to back up what many districts say, said University of Southern Maine researcher Christine Donis-Keller.

"The broadest conclusion you can draw is that it doesn't hurt academics," said Donis-Keller, who is with the university's Center for Education Policy, Applied Research and Evaluation.

Many districts that have the shortened schedule say they've seen students who are less tired and more focused, which has helped raise test scores and attendance. But others say that not only did they not save a substantial amount of money by being off an extra day, they also saw students struggle because they weren't in class enough and didn't have enough contact with teachers.

The school district in Marlow, Okla., is switching back to a five-day week after administrators decided students were not being served well by attending school only four days. The 440-student district tried the shorter week the spring semester this year to save $25,000 in operation costs.

"It was harder on the teachers. We were asking the kids to move at a quicker pace," said district Superintendent Bennie Newton. "We're hoping the four-day week won't come into play next year."

The move by Peach County in Georgia gets mixed reviews.

Parents like Heather Bradshaw worry that their children are getting shortchanged on time with teachers.

"I don't feel like they're having the necessary time in the classroom," said Bradshaw, a single mother with a fourth-grade son at one of the county's three elementary schools. "The schedule has slowed him down."

Other parents prefer the shorter schedule and don't mind the hassle of finding a babysitter one day a week.

"It makes the children's weekend a little better, so they get more rest," said LaKeisha Johnson, who sends her fourth-grade daughter to the Boys & Girls Club on Mondays.

The trend of four-day school weeks started in New Mexico during the oil crisis of the 1970s and has been popular in rural states where students have to commute a long way. Other districts have used it as a way to try to fix schools with a long history of poor student performance by shaking up the schedule and giving children more time to study outside of school.

Georgia, Oklahoma and Maine have changed their laws in the last couple of years to allow districts to count their school year by hours rather than days, allowing for a four-day week if needed. Hawaii schools were off every other Friday this year for schools to save money, giving them the state with the shortest school year in the country.

From California to Minnesota to New York, districts — mostly small, rural ones with less than 5,000 students — are following the trend, hoping to rescue their bleeding budgets.

For Peach County, the four-day week was enough of a success that the school district is trying it again next year, Clark said. The move saves $400,000 annually and is popular among teachers and students because they get extra rest, she said

"Teachers tell me they are much more focused because they've had time to prepare. They don't have kids sleeping in class on Tuesday," she said. "Everything has taken on a laser-light focus."

Stupid Americans again - in Germany and England many schools have 6 day weeks and there is talk of extending the school week.
S.

Kids need to learn and at the same time enjoy their childhood and spend time with their family... They could become a snooze... Did that happen to you abc200??? parents sent you to boarding school?
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#128 - Posted 4 June 2010, 5:25 PM
Location: United Kingdom, Dominican Republic
Join date: August 2008
Member #: 1307
Posts: 10609
Send Message
RE: Education in DR: its sad state and what to do to address it
Quote:
xwill7 previously said:

Quote:
abc200 previously said:

Quote:
Atabey previously said:


4-day school weeks gain popularity across US
AP



The cafeteria of Hunt Elementary School in Fort Valley, Ga., is seen empty on Monday, May 17, 2010. The school is in Peach County, one of more than 12 AP – The cafeteria of Hunt Elementary School in Fort Valley, Ga., is seen empty on Monday, May 17, 2010. The …



By DORIE TURNER, Associated Press Writer Dorie Turner, Associated Press Writer – 2 hrs 19 mins ago

FORT VALLEY, Ga. – During the school year, Mondays in this rural Georgia community are for video games, trips to grandma's house and hanging out at the neighborhood community center.

Don't bother showing up for school. The doors are locked and the lights are off.

Peach County is one of more than 120 school districts across the country where students attend school just four days a week, a cost-saving tactic gaining popularity among cash-strapped districts struggling to make ends meet. The 4,000-student district started shaving a day off its weekly school calendar last year to help fill a $1 million budget shortfall.

It was that or lay off 39 teachers the week before school started, said Superintendent Susan Clark.

"We're treading water," Clark said as she stood outside the headquarters of her seven-school district. "There was nothing else for us to do."

The results? Test scores went up.


So did attendance — for both students and teachers. The district is spending one-third of what it once did on substitute teachers, Clark said.

And the graduation rate likely will be more than 80 percent for the first time in years, Clark said.

The four days that students are in school are slightly longer and more crowded with classes and activities. After school, students can get tutoring in subjects where they're struggling.

On their off day, students who don't have other options attend "Monday care" at area churches and the local Boys & Girls Club, where tutors are also available to help with homework. The programs generally cost a few dollars a day per student.

Experts say research is scant on the effect of a four-day school week on student performance. In fact, there is mostly just anecdotal evidence in reports on the trend with little scientific data to back up what many districts say, said University of Southern Maine researcher Christine Donis-Keller.

"The broadest conclusion you can draw is that it doesn't hurt academics," said Donis-Keller, who is with the university's Center for Education Policy, Applied Research and Evaluation.

Many districts that have the shortened schedule say they've seen students who are less tired and more focused, which has helped raise test scores and attendance. But others say that not only did they not save a substantial amount of money by being off an extra day, they also saw students struggle because they weren't in class enough and didn't have enough contact with teachers.

The school district in Marlow, Okla., is switching back to a five-day week after administrators decided students were not being served well by attending school only four days. The 440-student district tried the shorter week the spring semester this year to save $25,000 in operation costs.

"It was harder on the teachers. We were asking the kids to move at a quicker pace," said district Superintendent Bennie Newton. "We're hoping the four-day week won't come into play next year."

The move by Peach County in Georgia gets mixed reviews.

Parents like Heather Bradshaw worry that their children are getting shortchanged on time with teachers.

"I don't feel like they're having the necessary time in the classroom," said Bradshaw, a single mother with a fourth-grade son at one of the county's three elementary schools. "The schedule has slowed him down."

Other parents prefer the shorter schedule and don't mind the hassle of finding a babysitter one day a week.

"It makes the children's weekend a little better, so they get more rest," said LaKeisha Johnson, who sends her fourth-grade daughter to the Boys & Girls Club on Mondays.

The trend of four-day school weeks started in New Mexico during the oil crisis of the 1970s and has been popular in rural states where students have to commute a long way. Other districts have used it as a way to try to fix schools with a long history of poor student performance by shaking up the schedule and giving children more time to study outside of school.

Georgia, Oklahoma and Maine have changed their laws in the last couple of years to allow districts to count their school year by hours rather than days, allowing for a four-day week if needed. Hawaii schools were off every other Friday this year for schools to save money, giving them the state with the shortest school year in the country.

From California to Minnesota to New York, districts — mostly small, rural ones with less than 5,000 students — are following the trend, hoping to rescue their bleeding budgets.

For Peach County, the four-day week was enough of a success that the school district is trying it again next year, Clark said. The move saves $400,000 annually and is popular among teachers and students because they get extra rest, she said

"Teachers tell me they are much more focused because they've had time to prepare. They don't have kids sleeping in class on Tuesday," she said. "Everything has taken on a laser-light focus."

Stupid Americans again - in Germany and England many schools have 6 day weeks and there is talk of extending the school week.
S.

Kids need to learn and at the same time enjoy their childhood and spend time with their family... They could become a snooze... Did that happen to you abc200??? parents sent you to boarding school?

Seeing some of the idiot posters we have here time with family was a complete waste of time.
Would have been better off leaning Greek! Generation has trashed the planet and seems to be only good at designing telescopes. According to aC these can be used as houses or perhaps attract aliens that build the houses.
aC sees himself in a world of little green men called cp1919 with bleeping every second or so - how exciting. - S. Worked at Cambridge for a while great excitement when the discovery of pulsars was made .
S

S.
Edited on 6/4/2010 5:31 PM by abc200.
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#129 - Posted 4 June 2010, 5:30 PM
Location: United States, El cuarto bate
Join date: March 2009
Member #: 2300
Posts: 10627
Send Message
RE: Education in DR: its sad state and what to do to address it
Quote:
abc200 previously said:

Quote:
xwill7 previously said:

Quote:
abc200 previously said:

Quote:
Atabey previously said:


4-day school weeks gain popularity across US
AP



The cafeteria of Hunt Elementary School in Fort Valley, Ga., is seen empty on Monday, May 17, 2010. The school is in Peach County, one of more than 12 AP – The cafeteria of Hunt Elementary School in Fort Valley, Ga., is seen empty on Monday, May 17, 2010. The …



By DORIE TURNER, Associated Press Writer Dorie Turner, Associated Press Writer – 2 hrs 19 mins ago

FORT VALLEY, Ga. – During the school year, Mondays in this rural Georgia community are for video games, trips to grandma's house and hanging out at the neighborhood community center.

Don't bother showing up for school. The doors are locked and the lights are off.

Peach County is one of more than 120 school districts across the country where students attend school just four days a week, a cost-saving tactic gaining popularity among cash-strapped districts struggling to make ends meet. The 4,000-student district started shaving a day off its weekly school calendar last year to help fill a $1 million budget shortfall.

It was that or lay off 39 teachers the week before school started, said Superintendent Susan Clark.

"We're treading water," Clark said as she stood outside the headquarters of her seven-school district. "There was nothing else for us to do."

The results? Test scores went up.


So did attendance — for both students and teachers. The district is spending one-third of what it once did on substitute teachers, Clark said.

And the graduation rate likely will be more than 80 percent for the first time in years, Clark said.

The four days that students are in school are slightly longer and more crowded with classes and activities. After school, students can get tutoring in subjects where they're struggling.

On their off day, students who don't have other options attend "Monday care" at area churches and the local Boys & Girls Club, where tutors are also available to help with homework. The programs generally cost a few dollars a day per student.

Experts say research is scant on the effect of a four-day school week on student performance. In fact, there is mostly just anecdotal evidence in reports on the trend with little scientific data to back up what many districts say, said University of Southern Maine researcher Christine Donis-Keller.

"The broadest conclusion you can draw is that it doesn't hurt academics," said Donis-Keller, who is with the university's Center for Education Policy, Applied Research and Evaluation.

Many districts that have the shortened schedule say they've seen students who are less tired and more focused, which has helped raise test scores and attendance. But others say that not only did they not save a substantial amount of money by being off an extra day, they also saw students struggle because they weren't in class enough and didn't have enough contact with teachers.

The school district in Marlow, Okla., is switching back to a five-day week after administrators decided students were not being served well by attending school only four days. The 440-student district tried the shorter week the spring semester this year to save $25,000 in operation costs.

"It was harder on the teachers. We were asking the kids to move at a quicker pace," said district Superintendent Bennie Newton. "We're hoping the four-day week won't come into play next year."

The move by Peach County in Georgia gets mixed reviews.

Parents like Heather Bradshaw worry that their children are getting shortchanged on time with teachers.

"I don't feel like they're having the necessary time in the classroom," said Bradshaw, a single mother with a fourth-grade son at one of the county's three elementary schools. "The schedule has slowed him down."

Other parents prefer the shorter schedule and don't mind the hassle of finding a babysitter one day a week.

"It makes the children's weekend a little better, so they get more rest," said LaKeisha Johnson, who sends her fourth-grade daughter to the Boys & Girls Club on Mondays.

The trend of four-day school weeks started in New Mexico during the oil crisis of the 1970s and has been popular in rural states where students have to commute a long way. Other districts have used it as a way to try to fix schools with a long history of poor student performance by shaking up the schedule and giving children more time to study outside of school.

Georgia, Oklahoma and Maine have changed their laws in the last couple of years to allow districts to count their school year by hours rather than days, allowing for a four-day week if needed. Hawaii schools were off every other Friday this year for schools to save money, giving them the state with the shortest school year in the country.

From California to Minnesota to New York, districts — mostly small, rural ones with less than 5,000 students — are following the trend, hoping to rescue their bleeding budgets.

For Peach County, the four-day week was enough of a success that the school district is trying it again next year, Clark said. The move saves $400,000 annually and is popular among teachers and students because they get extra rest, she said

"Teachers tell me they are much more focused because they've had time to prepare. They don't have kids sleeping in class on Tuesday," she said. "Everything has taken on a laser-light focus."

Stupid Americans again - in Germany and England many schools have 6 day weeks and there is talk of extending the school week.
S.

Kids need to learn and at the same time enjoy their childhood and spend time with their family... They could become a snooze... Did that happen to you abc200??? parents sent you to boarding school?

Seeing some of the idiot posters we have here time with family was a complete waste of time.
Would have been better off leaning Greek! Generation has trashed the planet and seems to be only good at designing telescopes. According to aC these can be used as houses or perhaps attract aliens that build the houses.
aC sees himself in a world of little green men called cp1919 with bleeping every second or so - how exciting. - S. Worked at Cambridge for a while great excitement when the discovery of pulsars was made was made.
S

S.

If the kids do good in school then they could play alittle play station and eat some junk food...They have to earn it first
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#130 - Posted 4 June 2010, 5:40 PM
Location: Dominican Republic, No Spin Zone
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RE: Education in DR: its sad state and what to do to address it
The yodeling moron says ......." Worked at Cambridge for a while great excitement when the discovery of pulsars was made was made "...........at best you were a janitor at Cambridge when you appeared there they said " Delivery's at the rear " what a poseur in American that is " Bullshitter "
al capo di tutti capi de los trolls
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