In
Brief
Testing:
Senate’s Ed. Package
Annual
state tests in reading and math would be required in grades three
through eight and once in high school, under an education package
passed by the US Senate. The vote, a victory for President Bush,
means the bill now goes to a House-Senate conference to hash out
differences. —www.ed.gov
Summer
Food Service Program
Free
breakfast and lunch will be made available at 1,000 locations
throughout the five boroughs through August 31. Sponsored by the
NYC Board of Education’s Office of School Food and Nutrition Services,
the federally funded Summer Food program is available to students
under 19 years of age and to disabled persons regardless of gender,
race, color, religion or national origin. For more information,
call 718-729-6100 or visit www.opt-osfns.org. —NYCBOE
Southern
States Create Exam
Organized
by the Southern Regional Education Board, a group of 12 Southern
states has joined forces to improve algebra instruction and testing
in school. The group is seeking proposals from companies and non-profit
groups to create a set of common test items. —NEGP
Learning
Zone
The Board of Education has established an experimental “Learning
Zone” to provide high-performing schools with the flexibility
afforded to charter schools in return for their increased accountability
for their students’ achievement. The seven-member Learning Zone
Board of Directors will include the Chancellor, heads of the UFT
and CSA and other public and private sector leaders. The Chancellor
will determine school admission to the Zone based on criteria
recommended by the Board of Directors. The first two schools to
enter the Zone in September will be Middle College and International
High School, both in Queens. —NYCBOE
Today’s
Shrinking Libraries
According
to a recently released study by the US Department of Education’s
National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) about the status
of academic libraries, there seems to be a steady decline in the
percentage of total expenditures that institutions have spent
on libraries since 1974. The largest category of expenditures
was current serial subscriptions, accounting for fully half of
the information resources-related expenditures. Visit www.ed.gov/pubs/edpubs.html
for more information. —NCES
Education Update, Inc., P.O. Box 20005, New York, NY 10001. Tel:
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the publisher. © 2001.
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