
NYC Considers Plan to Put 1,200 Former Teachers Back in the Classroom
NY Daily News // February 6, 2014Half of the 1,200 teachers were removed for wrongdoing or received "unsatisfactory" ratings.
Read MoreHalf of the 1,200 teachers were removed for wrongdoing or received "unsatisfactory" ratings.
Read MoreNew York City Schools Chancellor Carmen Fariña defended the Common Core curriculum in a meeting with a group of PTA presidents earlier this week.
Read MoreTyniera Hogan, a public school parent of two, discusses how the Common Core standards will help her children succeed in college.
Read MoreNew York State is on the verge of pausing the Common Core standards. The moratorium would be a step backwards in improving America’s education system.
Read MoreRecently, the Rhode Island State Investment divested pension funds from Third Point LLC, a hedge fund owned by StudentsFirstNY board member Daniel Loeb. The decision is believed to be influenced by the American Federations of Teachers, a teachers union that has previously clashed with Loeb.
Read MoreIf Mayor Bill de Blasio does not continue the plans to open or expand 30 charter schools in New York City, more than 5,600 students could lose their opportunity at a better education.
Read MoreA recent study from the National Bureau of Economic Research indicates that the quality of a high school can predict how well its students will perform in college.
Read MoreNew York teachers, parents, and students have expressed resistance to the rollout of the Common Core standards and its associated curriculum. As a result, Governor Andrew Cuomo and lawmakers are working to get corrective action passed into law to improve the transition into the Common Core.
Read MoreWhen the full Regents exam data is released later this spring, it will likely show that only a quarter of New York City students are prepared for college.
Read MoreStudentsFirstNY launched a citywide campaign to urge local leaders to come to an agreement on a new teacher evaluation system.
Read MoreThe New York Daily News reports on our poll that found that 80% of NYC voters support a new teacher evaluation system based on both classroom observations and test scores.
Read MoreGotham Schools reports on the StudentsFirstNY parent and student rally for teacher quality this past weekend.
Read MoreStudentsFirstNY has stepped in to rally parents around the issue of improving teacher evaluations.
Read MoreIn a New York Daily News Op-Ed, StudentsFirstNY's Executive Director Micah Lasher discusses failing results of the UFT-run charter school and what it means for the credibility of the union's philosophy going forward.
Read MoreDespite the efforts of the United Federation of Teachers (UFT) to encourage politicians to shun StudentsFirstNY, its parent organization, the New York State United Teachers, has endorsed Jeff Klein.
Read MoreThe United Federation of Teachers is apparently scared of and threatened by the challenges StudentsFirstNY poses to the New York political world.
Read MoreThe formation of New Yorkers for Great Public Schools is just the teachers unions’ latest effort to derail meaningful reform in our schools.
Read MoreStudentsFirstNY Executive Director Micah Lasher talked to Fox 5 News about the inappropriateness of a union chief’s use of the term “blood libel.”
Read MoreNew York City Schools Chancellor Carmen Fariña defended the Common Core curriculum in a meeting with a group of PTA presidents earlier this week.
Read MoreIf Mayor Bill de Blasio does not continue the plans to open or expand 30 charter schools in New York City, more than 5,600 students could lose their opportunity at a better education.
Read MoreNew York teachers, parents, and students have expressed resistance to the rollout of the Common Core standards and its associated curriculum. As a result, Governor Andrew Cuomo and lawmakers are working to get corrective action passed into law to improve the transition into the Common Core.
Read MoreA recent study from the National Bureau of Economic Research indicates that the quality of a high school can predict how well its students will perform in college.
Read MoreWhen the full Regents exam data is released later this spring, it will likely show that only a quarter of New York City students are prepared for college.
Read MoreIn an opinion piece, New York State Education Commissioner John B. King honors Martin Luther King’s fight for true equality of opportunity. John B. King acknowledges the tremendous progress in racial equality over the last 50 years and further encourages the fight for educational equality.
Read MoreCharter schools in New York City have proven to be a successful option for parents and students. With over 50,000 students on charter school wait-lists, Mayor Bill de Blasio and Schools Chancellor Carmen Fariña have a duty to serve those families.
Read MoreNew York City Mayor Bill de Blasio is wasting no time fulfilling a campaign promise to effectively stop charter school growth.
Read MoreIn Exclusive Interview with NYC Schools Chancellor, Fariña talks about the impact teacher quality has in the classroom.
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