Tuesday, December 20, 2011

DISAPPEARED NEWS

This story was evidently decided by those who choose our news, not to be worth reading.



"Early learning aid denied based on state's weak plan." 

And they did so well last year, winning it. What could have happened to have them fall so far?

From this:

"The visit to Honolulu focuses on Hawaii's progress in building strong state-wide capacity to implement, scale up, and sustain proposed plans as well as the state's efforts to turn around its lowest achieving schools."

to scoring 135 out a possible 300, and coming in last among the states.



Wednesday, July 20, 2011

SOME STATES CAN'T KEEP IT UP

As schools struggle, officials seek relief from NCLB


Jul 16, 2011 – Sixty-two percent of Hawai'i's 286 public schools didn't meet the new, higher federal No Child Left Behind progress requirements, according.

Jul 16, 2010 – And nearly half of Hawaii's schools reached annual progress goals under No Child ... though it fell short of meeting annual NCLB progress goals. .... that as Congress considers reauthorizing the pass-fail testing systems ...



Jul 16, 2010 – And nearly half of Hawaii's schools reached annual progress goals under No Child Left Behind requirements, compared with 36 percent last ...



PRELIMINARY STSTUS:

Awards will go to the states leading the way in implementing comprehensive early learning education reform. If Hawaii wins, it is eligible for up to $50 million, a cap based on the state's share of the national population of children in the target age group who come from low-income families.
The state team is executing Hawaii's nearly $75 million Race to the Top grant, awarded by the Department in August 2010 to support the state's comprehensive ...