Tag Archives: Wall Street Journal

SUNY Official Resigns Over Charter Issue

Professor Says School Policy Is Unclear

By Lisa Fleisher

A prominent academic has resigned from the State University of New York Board of Trustees amid what he called the increasing political tension over the shifting role of charter schools across the state.

New York University professor Pedro Noguera, who held a powerful position on the 17-member board that approves charter schools, said Wednesday he believed the schools had evolved beyond their original mission: offering an alternative to failing public schools in impoverished neighborhoods.

Instead, he said, many have become unnecessary rivals to established suburban and improving urban schools.

Mr. Noguera said he met with SUNY Chancellor Nancy Zimpher and Board of Trustees ChairmanH. Carl McCall in December to express his concerns but didn’t receive a clear answer. He had been appointed to the board by former Gov. David Paterson in 2008 and was chairman of the committee that made recommendations to the larger board over whether to approve individual charter schools.

“It’s not clear to me what’s the larger strategy here, other than the political one,” he said. “What I see happening is a deliberate attempt to create competition between public and charter schools, but it’s an uneven playing field.”

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Christie Pledges School Aid Battle

New Jersey Governor Seeks to Remake Supreme Court in Effort to Change Education Funding for Poor and Urban Districts

By HEATHER HADDON

TRENTON—Gov. Chris Christie plans a new challenge to a court-ordered state education funding formula that has provided billions of dollars in extra funding to poverty-stricken schools within the so-called Abbott districts.

While he didn’t discuss specifics of how he would continue the fight, Mr. Christie said in an interview with The Wall Street Journal that he would nominate two state Supreme Court judges this spring who won’t “grossly” overstep their powers—as he argues the court has by ordering more school funding.

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New Scrutiny for President of Kean University

Dr. Dawood Farahi

Dr. Dawood Farahi

The federation, which represents 480 professors, professional staff and librarians, has accused Mr. Farahi of falsely stating that he published “over 50 technical articles in major publications”—including journals that the union claims don’t exist.

The union also alleged that Mr. Farahi, who is originally from Afghanistan and has strong political ties in Union County, lied about serving as an acting dean at Avila University in Kansas City, Mo., from 1976 to 1983. A representative at Avila couldn’t be reached for comment.

“False claims of academic achievements on official documents seriously jeopardize the academic integrity, the reputation and the accreditation of Kean University,” said James Castiglione, a physics professor and president of the teacher’s union, in a Nov. 29 letter to the board.

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States Fail to Raise Bar in Reading, Math Tests

By STEPHANIE BANCHERO

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The report shows huge disparities among the standards states set when their tests are converted to the NAEP’s 500-point scale. In eighth-grade reading, for example, there is a 60-point difference between Texas, which has the lowest passing bar, and Missouri, which has the highest, according to the data. In eighth-grade math, there is a 71-point spread between the low, Tennessee, and the high, Massachusetts.

The eight states that tightened standards between 2007 and 2009 were Indiana, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Mississippi, South Dakota, West Virginia, Georgia and New Jersey. New Jersey also lowered its standards on one test.

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