Teaching and Learning Report – A+ presents a report from the Task Force on Teaching and Student Achievement titled "Teaching and Learning: Meeting the Challenge of High Standards."


Working Toward Excellence Newsletters
– The WTE newsletter is published quarterly; each issue focuses in-depth on a specific issue in education. The newsletter is available online or via mail at no charge.


Alabama Reading Initiative

  • Evaluation of the Alabama Reading Initiative – Final Report (275K) By Edward Moscovitch, December, 2001
  • Executive Summary of ARI Third Year Evaluation (an online version of the Powerpoint presentation given by the evaluator to the Alabama State Board of Education at its February 2002 work session)
  • Download 'Closing the Gap' report –A+ and the Alabama Best Practices Center present Closing the Gap: How the Alabama Reading Initiative Is Transforming Reading Instruction For All Students (April 2001). This report celebrates gains made by 81 Alabama schools during the first two complete school years of the Alabama Reading Initiative's implementation.
  • Alabama Reading Initiative Promotes High Quality Professional Development – The Alabama Reading Initiative (ARI) offers a unique state model for how teacher learning can lead to extraordinary gains in student learning. The program has yielded significant increases in reading scores and in the number and diversity of books read. The initiative has also created substantial changes in how teachers teach, which has resulted in fewer discipline problems and special education referrals.


PARCA
– Links to the Public Affairs Research Council of Alabama (PARCA) for
related school research:

  • What schools in Alabama are high performing? Read more about the Public Affairs Research Council of Alabama study which examines student performance in grades 3-8 in Alabama schools.
  • Do new teachers in Alabama feel prepared to teach in today's classroom? What supports are provided to them and how helpful are those supports? Read responses from a questionnaire distributed to all first- and second-year teachers in Alabama's public schools during the spring of 2000.
  • All new teachers in Alabama are evaluated every year during their first three years of teaching. How do new teachers measure up, according to their principals? Review information on the numbers and types of novice teachers employed by Alabama school systems in 1999 and on the ratings they were given by the principals who eavluated them throught the Alabama Professional Education Personnel Evaluation (PEPE) Program. The Public Affairs Research Council's report organized PEPE data from 1999 to assist those who are intrested in bringing about imprvement in teacher preparation, teacher practice and the recruitment and selection of teachers.

State Commission Reports

  • The Road to Academic Excellence, The Report of the Governor's Commission on Instructional Improvement and Academic Excellence – Read the report of a Commission which worked for 15 months studying and developing recommendations about ways that the state could improve public education for students in these specific areas: curriculum and instruction, teacher preparation, professional development, educational leadership, assessment and accountability, at-risk students, parental involvement and technology.
  • Alabama Success Initiative – The Alabama Success Initiative report was developed by the Task Force on Eliminating Social Promotion and Retention. This report highlights a comprehensive strategy that, when implemented, should help all students be more success in school. Key components include: pre-school, professional development for teachers and administrators, intervention strategies, benchmarks and parental involvement. The ultimate goal, over time, is the elimination of both social promotion and retention.


Recently Released Reports of Interest

  • TestTalk — What Tests Can and Cannot Tell Us
    The October 2002 issue of "TestTalk," published by the Center on Education Policy, provides useful information on assessment that will help deepen your understanding about both the strengths and limitations of testing.
  • Louisiana Staff Development Council Report on High-Performing, High-Poverty Schools (32K PDF FILE) *
    What role does staff development play in assisting schools with a high percentage of children in poverty to attain exemplary academic achievement? Review a study led by Dale Hair and published by the Louisiana Staff Development Council that highlights professional development practices in 12 high performing, high poverty schools in Louisiana.
  • Teacher Voices
    Discover what Alabama teachers have to say about instructional leadership and professional development issues by reading Alabama Teachers, a report on the 2001 Education Dialogue Forums.
  • The Core Business of Principals (423K PDF FILE)
    School principals have a primary role in shaping the instructional culture and academic performance of students, says this report by the Consortium for Policy Research in Education. "Instructional Leadership in a Standards-based Reform" examines the shifting responsibility of school principals from managerial tasks to the core business of schooling, based on research among principals implementing the America's Choice reform model. The standards-based model emphasizes organizational support for instructional improvement and the building of instructional capacity through ongoing school-based professional development.
  • The Alabama Early Learning Commission Report
    The Governor's Alabama Early Learning Commission, consisting of 12 of the state's prominent business leaders and formed in November of 2000, has created a plan to aid Alabama's children ages birth to five. The report makes recommendations in five different areas, outlining the costs and projected beneficial outcomes of each. The sections include organization of services, childcare, health, parenting, and public awareness. To view the entire report, please visit.
  • Why Change is So Challenging for Schools: An Interview with Peter Senge
    Read an interview of MIT senior lecturer and systems thinking expert Peter
    Senge by Dennis Sparks, President of the National Staff Development
    Council. Senge contends that schools can change if educators really desire
    it. Change can happen by creating solutions instead of merely eliminating
    problems.
  • Reduce Your Losses: Help New Teachers Become Veteran Teachers – This report, released in June 2001 by the Southern Regional Education Board (SREB), examines the
    reasons behind the sobering statistic that, within the first five years, nearly half of new teachers quite teaching in the state where they began their careers.

* The Louisiana Staff Development Council's Project Advance is in no way connected with Project Advance at Syracuse University.

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