American School Board Journal

Content Posted by American School Board Journal

Schools Struggle with Rising Tide of Homelessness

Building the Perfect School

Computer rooms, identical classrooms, and long hallways flanked by rows of metal lockers are out. Forget about blackboards, institutional cafeterias, and teacher break rooms, too. Even students’ and teachers’ desks are endangered.

Planning for Integration

The Supreme Court's decision on using race in student assignment sets new rules, but it leaves out the necessary tools for success

Children at Risk: The Family

Helping impoverished parents become involved in schools is a challenge, but districts can -- and must -- build a partnership.
Lawrence Hardy

College for All?: Should all high school graduates try to earn a four-year degree?

Susan Black
It's a complex question that carries strong opinions on both sides of the fence. Some politicians, such as Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm, think so. They support using state and federal funds to make college a reality for every high school graduate. Granholm, a Democrat, says sending every high school student in Michigan to college is her “most important strategy” to turn around the state’s floundering economy. She faces a formidable challenge. Michigan’s unemployment rate is among the worst in the nation, and the state ranks among those with the lowest numbers of college graduates.

FIVE REASONS FOR SUPPORTING TEACHER INDUCTION & MENTORING PROGRAMS

Districts spend thousands of dollars to recruit, hire, and train new teachers. Then, after a year or two, they have to repeat the process because those same teachers have left their jobs. How much does this cost? In terms of money, it’s been estimated that each teacher who is recruited, trained, and lost can cost districts up to $50,000. Disruptions in teaching and learning and negative effects on morale are among other costs that can be even more devastating, writes Hal Portner in American School Board Journal.
Contact: Haberman Educational Foundation

The Search for True Grit:

Susan Black
A number of schools are removing unruly and unmotivated students
from the classroom and teaching them in alternative settings. Is this how districts should encourage self-control?

Moment of Truth

Del Stover
A generation after white flight, districts continue to face awkward discussions and painful choices in an attempt to achieve diversity.

School of the Future

Naomi Dillon
Preparing Students for What’s to Come.

Apprenticeships: A Tradition That Works:

Susan Black
Teaching a trade may not be as popular as it once was, but programs continue to promote economic growth and stability.