Foreign-born workers make up about 15 percent of the U.S. work force today, up from 10 percent in 1994, according to a new report, The role of immigrants in the U.S. labor force, from the Congressional Budget Office. About half of those workers have been in the United States since some time before 1994, with 40 percent coming from Mexico and Central America and 25 percent coming from Asia.
NEWS DAY | Extending unemployment benefits and MN / Bulls-eye on Target politicking / Who is Shirley Sherrod?
Minnesota unemployed will get less help from the benefit extension passed yesterday by the Senate, writes MN 2020’s Senta Knuth, because Minnesota has a comparatively lower unemployment rate. One of the give-backs to Republicans in Congress was the agreement that states with lower unemployment would get 13 fewer weeks from the extension. Continue reading
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NEWS DAY | MN, metro housing costs / Ready for Rail? / Plugging the leaks
Housing costs more than half the paycheck for approximately 22 percent of Minnesotans who rent and about ten percent of those who own their homes, according to a new report from the Minnesota Housing Project. The report gives a county-by-county analysis, including the news that most people across the state have to pay more than the “affordable” 30 percent of income on housing: Continue reading
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Immigration notes, 7/20/2010
Just a few links to recent articles of interest:
NYT: Troops to Go to Mexican Border Aug. 1 In May, President Obama pledged the deployment of 1,200 troops. More than 500 of the soldiers will go to Arizona, and the rest will go to New Mexico, Texas and California. [Also 300 more Border Patrol officers]
Who’s lobbying on immigration and who are they giving money to? Open Secrets has a little list – actually, quite a long list – here.
NYT: Illegal workers swept from jobs in “silent” raids “While the sweeps of the past commonly led to the deportation of such workers, the “silent raids,” as employers call the audits, usually result in the workers being fired, but in many cases they are not deported.”
What do Neo-Nazis, Arizona politicians and border patrolling have in common? Gabriela Garcia explains at Change.org.
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NEWS DAY | Extending unemployment compensation / Who’s middle class in MN? / Monkeys, more
Extending unemployment compensation – is the Senate finally ready to do the right thing? As you probably remember, before the July 4 recess, the Senate repeatedly voted down an extension, which Paul Krugman explained as the action of “a coalition of the heartless, the clueless and the confused.” Now, with one more Democrat seated, the Senate may vote to extend unemployment compensation, which would at least help some of the five or six or seven people looking for every open job in the country. Continue reading
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NEWS DAY | Gang Strike Force revelations / Nashwauk taconite / Top Secret America
A Gang Strike Force raid gone wrong included abuse of apartment residents, police theft of property – and no arrests. Randy Furst at the Star Tribune uncovered a 160-page Internal Affairs Department report documenting the abuses and saying that police action amounted to civil rights violations. (No arrests were made.) A father tried to explain to police who were “kicking and stomping” his son that the 20-year-old man was hearing-impaired and could not understand them – but police continued to kick the son as he lay on the floor. (No arrests were made.) His injuries were later treated and documented at a hospital. Police deny that guns were drawn or that they kicked the young man, but witnesses say they did. Continue reading
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Who cares about facts?
From “nation of slaves” to “my teeth are white,” from $100,000 waiters to allegations of stolen elections, nonsense and deception dominate Minnesota’s political headlines in July. Continue reading
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Yes, we can — close the achievement gap
Some Minnesota schools are already closing the achievement gap for poor kids and kids of color. They use a variety of strategies, focusing on individual student needs, with teachers working together and sometimes with longer school days and summer school. The successes show that we know how to educate kids – we just need to expand the successes across the educational system.
The St. Paul Pioneer Press led off yesterday with a stellar story on Dayton’s Bluff elementary school.
But Dayton’s Bluff – where nine out of 10 students live in poverty and almost one-third are learning English or are new to the school – is a school that defies the odds. In 2001, the school was overhauled because of dismal test scores, and student achievement has risen dramatically. According to test results released two weeks ago, about 75 percent of students were proficient in math this year, up from 19 percent in 2001. In reading, 69 percent were proficient, up from 24 percent in 2001.
Dayton’s Bluff outperformed all but five other St. Paul schools, and those schools did not have high levels of students in poverty. Moreover, Dayton’s Bluff has been performing at high levels since 2006. Among Dayton’s Bluff’s strategies:
- For teachers – weekly grade-level meetings, observing other teachers in the classroom, giving and getting feedback.
- For students and families – Achievement Plus programming with health and social services and outreach to parents, summer and extended day education.
MinnPost chimed in today with an article about metro-area charter and district schools that “beat the odds.” One of the common elements among the schools, according to the MinnPost article:
Many of the schools engage in near-continual assessment of student performance using so-called growth-model tests, which track the progress of individual students as opposed to schools.
Teachers, principals, district officials, and university researchers agreed that there is no single silver bullet that closes the achievement gap, but it’s clear that there are several strategies that – taken together with a large dose of high regard for teachers, cooperation among teachers and principals, and intense commitment to students – work to educate all of our children.
Teacher support is key. Instead of meeting only incidentally over a 15-minute sandwich at lunch, teachers need time to observe one another’s classes, to sit down together and share strategies, to plan together. Successful schools structure in the time for weekly, grade-level teacher meetings.
Individualized student instruction based on meaningful testing is also key. Massive, mandated tests such as NCLB and MCA are no help at all. They measure results of whole schools or grade levels, and deliver the information months after the fact. Individual student test results, delivered immediately and frequently, enable teachers to track individual student progress and to target instruction and remediation. That’s testing used to actually improve student learning rather than to judge and punish schools and teachers.
More time on task is needed for students who start at an educational disadvantage. That means extended day programs and summer school time.
Schools are part of the community. Families need to be invited and involved in their children’s education. Sometimes schools can also serve as the community center, to help deliver or connect to needed social services and health and dental services.
Some of these strategies are the same as those used by Chicago’s nonprofit Strategic Learning Initiatives organization, which has achieved similar success with turning around low-performing, low-income schools there. I heard SLI’s director speak in April, when Don Fraser and the Committee on the Achievement Gap brought him here.
Turning around failing schools is not rocket science, John Simmons told an overflow crowd in the basement of University Lutheran Church of Hope on April 16. Nor, he said, is it necessary to fire principals and teachers to turn around schools. … It’s possible to turn around school performance by empowering the teachers and principals, and the students and parents, who are already there.
Dayton’s Bluff proves the truth of that message. Its principal, Andrew Collins, is moving to the district office as director of turnaround schools. That’s a hopeful sign for St. Paul schools.
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NEWS DAY | Yes, we can – close the achievement gap
Some Minnesota schools are already closing the achievement gap for poor kids and kids of color. They use a variety of strategies, focusing on individual student needs, with teachers working together and sometimes with longer school days and summer school. The successes show that we know how to educate kids – we just need to expand the successes across the educational system. Continue reading
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NEWS DAY | Arsenic in Minneapolis / I-94 closing / more
This is the weekend edition of News Day, unless something incredibly big or irresistibly crazy (think Emmer’s $100,000 waiter gaffe) surfaces before Monday. I’ll be working on my garden, and on some articles about the status of women and girls in Minnesota – watch for them next week. So – keep reading for the latest on arsenic dumping in Minneapolis, one more way rich people are different from the rest of us, anti-immigrant graffiti in St. Cloud, the Oakland police non-murder verdict, and more. Continue reading
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