Extra Credit: Views on Title IX; ideas for transforming education - SmartBrief

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Extra Credit: Views on Title IX; ideas for transforming education

Education Extra Credit features views on Title IX, ideas for transforming education and wishes for a whole lot of R-E-S-P-E-C-T.

3 min read

EducationUpdates

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Extra Credit is a weekly column serving up a fresh helping of news, updates and resources from the education world. Want more? Sign up now for SmartBrief’s free education newsletters.

extra credit title ix
WNBA player Aisha Sheppard celebrates the 50th anniversary of Title IX. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

Title IX redux. The conservative interpretation of Title IX  instituted during the Trump administration has received a more liberal update in a proposal from the Biden administration. Most of the news is celebratory, including this take of one woman’s experience before and after Title IX. Read about the myriad problems and successes during the past 50 years of implementation. Or get the view of Betsy DeVos, President Donald Trump’s education secretary, whose policies were just reversed. The addition of transgender protections adds a whole new layer that promises plenty of debate.  

Who’s in for transforming our schools?! Keeping school buildings closed for so long during the pandemic has turned out to be a tragedy for many students. But in the early days — not yet knowing the details of the coronavirus, seeing the mounting death toll, and worrying about students and teachers getting sick and dying — it was the only move that seemed to make sense in a compassionate world. Two professors from Harvard and Yale break down all the consequences of wholesale remote schooling and say we need an equally momentous fix (without defining it). Two other experts discuss a policy paper that breaks down how to transform education with a participatory method that includes purpose, pedagogy and position. This international view also includes breaking down dogma. And this audio take is about an education future that would include advertising. 

Living in a constant world of slings and arrows. A piece this week about Michael Reed, a Black English teacher in California, and the racism he contends with every single day at school is heartbreaking and horrifying. I can’t begin to imagine the endless grinding down he endures day after day, but I am in absolute awe of his character and determination. This? On top of everything else all teachers have to contend with? I’d have crumbled long ago. Thanks for sharing your experiences, Mr. Reed.

An enduring student-teacher relationship built on a love for words. What a blessing to have one of the most inspirational and influential people from your adolescence still in your life when you’re an adult and for the teacher to thrive in the friendship as well. Reminds me of the moment singer Adele, in the middle of a concert, burst into tears when her favorite English teacher was in the audience and reunited with her on stage.

Additional interesting education takes

US delay of gainful employment rule lets poor-quality for-profit schools continue. (Higher Ed Dive)

Can Google and Microsoft play nice with each other for the good of school and work? (EdTech) 

Is politics why we can’t have nice things? (Cal Matters)

Extra-extra credit: An education in being a good person — like Steph Curry (SmartBrief/Education)

This week’s social media snippet

extra credit burch
extra credit nerdle on paper
KABurch/Twitter via Teacher2Teacher/Twitter

The low-tech, hallway-style version of Nerdle?

Diane Benson Harrington is an education writer at SmartBrief. Reach out to her via email, Twitter or LinkedIn
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