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  • ABOUT
    • Welcome
    • Impact
      • Strategic Plan 2023-28
      • Impact Report 2023-24
    • History and mission
    • Staff directory
  • PROGRAMS
    • For youth
      • School-day: K-8th grades
      • Self-select classes: 6th-12th grades
      • College and career readiness: 11th-12th grades
    • For educators and parents/guardians
    • For audiences
    • Community resources
  • GET INVOLVED
    • Attend events
    • Volunteer
    • Support
    • Stay up to date
    • Employment
  • MEDIA
    • Photo gallery
    • Videos
    • Press
  • CONTACT
  • DONATE
    • Make a one-time donation
    • Matching gifts
    • Become a member
December 31, 2010  |  By Matthew Sutphin
End of the Year Summary and Predictions for 2011

In reviewing the over 60 blogs I’ve posted in this past year on The Huffington Post, I wondered if there was a pattern in my series of observations that I could present as the “messages” for the year. If there are any, they would be in my critiques of some of the mistaken ideas about what constitutes “educational reform,” and the damage these ideas are doing to our public school system, particularly standardized testing, charter schooling and getting rid of “bad” teachers by magically producing “great teachers” as panaceas to the “crisis” in the schools. The reason I put quotation marks around the word “crisis” whenever I use it in connection to education is that I don’t believe there is a “crisis” in education nearly as much as there is in our economy which is moving the United States in the direction of a Third World economy as much of the Third World — as China, India and Brazil used to be — moves their citizens in the direction that we once occupied.

– Read more at Huffington Post

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Founded in 1989, Inner-City Arts offers a safe, creative space in Los Angeles where more than 200,000 children have been invited to create and explore. Inner-City Arts provides quality arts instruction for students from underserved communities, integrated arts workshops for educators, and programming designed for the community through The Rosenthal Theater.
    
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