Archive for the ‘School Closings’ Category

PostHeaderIcon Best Hockey Betting Tips Web-Site

Are you on the search for an excellent sports betting site? If that’s correct you have come to the right place. sports betting spot is an unusually well-known sports betting website over the internet. Not all the hockey betting guide online resources are dependable. That is why it is very important that we select the proper online sports betting site like SportsBettingSpot which is a really popular sports betting website over the internet because as mentioned earlier, not all the sport bets websites are honest a least when compared to Sports Betting Spot.

Sportsbettingspot.com provides sports betting tips, hockey betting information, football betting guide, basket ball betting guide, baseball betting guide among other sports betting information. Sportsbettingspot.com also provides sports betting information, baseball betting tips, basket ball betting guide, football betting tips, hockey betting news and so on.

So, if you are looking for sports betting news, basket ball betting information, hockey betting reviews, baseball betting news, football betting news do not hesitate to go to SportsBettingSpot.com today. Not all the sports betting web pages are authentic. That is why it is important that we select the most ideal best betting tips site like SportsBettingSpot.com which provides top notch baseball betting reviews, football betting information, sports betting information, hockey betting news, basket ball betting guide and so on.

PostHeaderIcon Aunt invited to go to the festival

Do you have an aunt? aunt was the sister of your mother, or aunt also was a wife of your mother’s younger brother. Sometimes some people think auntie is a talkative woman, angry, and like a little arrogant. You are wrong if you are also thinking the same thing about the figure of aunt. And I will tell you all about my experience with my aunt. At that time my aunt asked me to go to the V festival seatwave. He is very happy and enthusiasm to attend the festival. Because the festival is very lively and very useful. There my aunt had a good laugh, but my aunt gradually began to feel tired and fussy, and in the end we both go home.

However, before we bought the home in 2010 T in the Park festival tickets in advance. Because the next day me and my friends will attend the Festival Tickets. In order not to run out of tickets, I bought the first ticket for the next day. I got home, my aunt told me everything that happened in experience festival was to my father and mother. That day me and my aunt very happy, because we can spend time together. And rarely even never at all we spend time together. You want to spend your holiday time with your families as well? you can come and buy tickets in advance to get into.

PostHeaderIcon Houston Schools New Teacher Merit Pay Program. Will It Help or Hinder?



Measurement of student achievement through rigorous statewide testing has been a standard in Texas for many years. Houston schools implemented its first merit pay program for teachers in the year 2000.

Houston Schools believe the old program had too low incentives and unanimously passed the new model in January, making it the largest merit pay program in the nation. Officials believe the new program ties teacher rewards more closely to student improvement and to individual teacher efforts. Though no research has been done on the impact of such programs on improved student achievement, other programs have been tried in New York, Denver and Kentucky with varying success.

Houston business leaders, who have a stake in graduating future employees who are high achievers, support the new Houston schools’ $14.5 million program.

Houston schools teacher incentives are based on three components:

• The first component is based upon the amount of improvement of a school’s overall test scores, as compared with scores of 40 other schools across the state with similar demographics;

• The second compares student progress on the Stanford 10 Achievement Test and its Spanish equivalent to students in similar Houston schools classrooms; and

• The third component compares student progress on the statewide Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills test to similar Houston schools classrooms.

About half of the 12,300 teachers in the Houston schools are eligible to receive rewards in all three categories, possibly earning a total of $3,000 each. The 305 Houston schools principals are eligible to earn as much as $6,000 each, if they have the best achieving teachers. Each of the Houston schools’ 19 executive principals and five regional superintendents are eligible for as much as $25,000.

With 210,000 children, Houston schools is the largest district in the state, and its new program isn’t without opposition.

Teachers unions are typically against teacher merit pay programs, and the Houston Federation of Teachers is no exception. The union represents 40 percent of the Houston schools teachers and believes across-the-board raises and a higher starting wage for new teachers would be more successful in raising student achievement scores. Houston schools start new teachers at $36,050 (lowest in the ten major districts in Texas), and the current Houston schools teachers’ wages are at the lowest end of the nation’s schools.

Many teachers have complained that the program bypasses arts teachers and others with subjects not covered by the testing process. The program excludes special education, preschool and kindergarten teachers, who are the backbone in improving academic achievement in children from low-income families. Additionally, many teachers believe that it forces them to teach to the testing requirements rather than focus on real academic achievement.

The new program also has opened old wounds and raised tensions over the previous merit pay program and its effect upon testing results, which laid the groundwork for a recently exposed cheating scandal. The Texas Education Agency investigated the Houston schools and other districts in 1999 due to suspicious testing results. Houston schools admitted last year that evidence of cheating had been found at four schools and testing irregularities were found at seven others. Eventually, six teachers were fired and several principals were demoted or reprimanded, leaving the city frustrated and bruised by the merit pay program and its ensuing results.

Though the Houston schools’ new teacher merit pay program sounds good in theory, it seems that in practice it is expanding the same old problems encountered with the previous program.

This information on Houston schools is brought to you by www.schoolsk-12.com.