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Judge Rejects Challenge to Minnesota Teacher Tenure Laws

October 27, 2016

By Beatrice Dupuy | StarTribune

“A Ramsey County judge on Wednesday dismissed a lawsuit challenging Minnesota teacher tenure laws, rejecting its arguments that the laws protect ineffective teachers and deprive low-income and minority students of a high-quality education.

The suit, filed in April by national and local education reform groups, argued that state laws shield veteran teachers from layoffs even when they perform poorly. Senior teachers receive notice if their job is in question and a hearing to defend themselves against termination, whereas teachers with less seniority lack those protections.”

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Filed Under: In the News

Judge Dismisses Parents’ Lawsuit Challenging Minnesota Teachers Union Protections

October 27, 2016

By Christopher Magan | Pioneer Press

“A lawsuit from four Minnesota parents that claimed the state’s teachers union rules protect bad teachers and perpetuate the state’s achievement gap has been thrown out by a Ramsey County judge.

District Judge Margaret Marrinan ruled late Wednesday that the case against Gov. Mark Dayton, state Education Commissioner Brenda Cassellius, St. Paul Public Schools and three other districts did not show Minnesota’s teachers union protections were directly connected to the academic achievement gap or students of color receiving ineffective teachers.”

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Filed Under: In the News

The Urgent Moral Case for Replacing Persistently Failing Schools

October 16, 2016

The Daily Beast

“At a time when social mobility, income inequality and joblessness for the under-educated dominate the national discussion, it is notable that our Presidential candidates have largely avoided talking about elementary and secondary education. In America today, a child raised in a family with earnings in the bottom quartile nationally is six times less likely to graduate from college than is a child whose family earns in the top quartile. Important as it is that candidates address the effect of college debt on low-income students, the odds for poor kids will not improve without change in the elementary and secondary schools that equip students for college in the first place.”

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Filed Under: In the News

In a Tumultuous Presidential Campaign Season, a Rare Spotlight on Education Issues

October 14, 2016

Chalkbeat NY

“A senior policy advisor to the Hillary Clinton campaign channeled the Democratic presidential candidate at an intimate question-and-answer session on Thursday hosted by Teachers College at Columbia University.

Christopher Edley, Jr. — a former U.C. Berkeley School of Law dean and expert in civil rights and education policy — talked about charter schools, early childhood education, and how to better serve English Language Learners.”

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Filed Under: In the News

Number of NYC Public School Teachers Collecting Full Pay Without Full-Time Jobs Down 21%

October 13, 2016

New York Daily News

“The number of city school teachers receiving full pay without having a full-time assignment at a school has dropped 21% over the last three years, the city Education Department said Thursday.

Officials said there are currently 1,304 teachers in the active teacher reserve pool, down from 1,668 in October 2013.

Teachers can be placed in the so-called ATR pool if they worked in schools that are downsized or their subjects have been cancelled. But the pool also includes teachers who received unsatisfactory ratings or committed wrongdoings.”

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Filed Under: In the News

Survey: New Yorkers Support Improving, Not Repealing the Common Core Standards

October 6, 2016

City & State New York

“A new survey conducted by High Achievement New York, a pro-Common Core group, found that New Yorkers strongly support improving rather than repealing the Common Core education standards, and want state leaders to change the name of the controversial standards.

The survey found that 53 percent of respondents would rather improve the current standards, while 26 percent want to repeal the standards and 45 percent of respondents supported changing the name. The poll surveyed nearly 500 respondents from across the state.”

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Filed Under: In the News

Infographic: No Child Left Behind v. the Every Student Succeeds Act

October 4, 2016

Educators 4 Excellence Blog

After years of trying to reauthorize the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), Congress and President Obama passed the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) in December 2015. Here are some of the key differences between the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act of 2001, the last amendment to ESEA, and ESSA.

See Infographic Here

Filed Under: In the News

Tisch Backs State’s Draft Learning Standard Revisions, Calling Changes ‘Quite Normal’

September 30, 2016

By Keshia Clukey | Politico New York

“ALBANY — The state education department’s draft revisions to the Common Core-aligned learning standards maintain the standards’ strength, former state Board of Regents Chancellor Merryl Tisch told POLITICO New York, but the true test for how the state’s education program develops will be in the state’s changes to assessments and teacher evaluations.

‘I never expected, nor could I think the state of New York tolerate, a review of the standards that walked away from what we know are the basic principals of rigor in order for our children to compete in the global economy, which is getting tougher by the minute,’ she said in a recent interview.”

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Filed Under: In the News

David Boies: Lawyers Who Lead by Example 2016: Lifetime Achievement

September 20, 2016

By Phil Albinus | New York Law Journal

“Not every attorney has been portrayed by Ed Begley Jr. in an HBO film, by George Clooney on the stage and by himself in the series finale of a popular TV drama.

But David Boies, the chairman of Boies, Schiller & Flexner, is not your everyday lawyer. If there was a groundbreaking case in the past three decades, there’s a good chance that Boies was involved.

In 1993, Boies recovered $1.2 billion from companies that sold junk bonds to savings and loan associations when he served as counsel to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. From 1998 to 2000, he successfully represented the U.S. Department of Justice in its antitrust case against Microsoft.”

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Filed Under: In the News

Did one Connecticut judge just change the conversation about education inequality?

September 13, 2016

By Jennifer Alexander | The Hechinger Report

“‘Schools are for kids.’

In that one short statement, Connecticut Superior Court Judge Thomas Moukawsher delivered a harsh rebuke to anyone who has forgotten that simple truth.

His ruling reminded all of us that our state has a constitutional obligation to fulfill a right of the highest importance: a great public education. In a court ruling that was mainly about how much we should be spending on education, Judge Moukawsher went deeper into the issue because money alone cannot and will not solve our persistent educational shortcomings.”

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Filed Under: In the News

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  • About Us
    • Our Mission
    • Our History
    • FAQ
    • Contact Us
  • Teacher Quality Lawsuits
    • New York Lawsuit (Wright v. New York)
    • Minnesota Lawsuit (Forslund v. Minnesota)
    • New Jersey Lawsuit (HG v. Harrington)
    • Permanent Employment
    • Other Initiatives
  • Legal Filings
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    • HG v. Harrington Legal Filings
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