Skip to main contentRise & Shine: Teachers say special ed services cut to cut costs
By | December 14, 2012, 12:12pm UTC - Teachers say the Brooklyn School of Global Finance cut special education services to cut costs. (Post)
- Two years after the city said P.S. 138 had no more room, it wants to move a new school in. (Daily News)
- New York spent more than $1,000 per student on busing, more than any other state, a report finds. (Post)
- City students whom Hurricane Sandy affected are using the experience in their college essays. (WSJ)
- Education Secretary Arne Duncan visited Staten Island schools hurt by Sandy. (GothamSchools, NY1)
- The city’s teacher pension fund will be invested in Sandy recovery projects. (GothamSchools, Post, WSJ)
- WHEELS, a Washington Heights school, has dedicated a classroom to college access. (Daily News)
- A second woman has sued over lower pay and lewd behavior in the DOE’s facilities office. (Daily News)
- Missouri wants to tighten test security and not rely on districts to note concerns. (St. Louis Post-Dispatch)
- In New Jersey, a teacher who was arrested for streaking was fired quickly under a new tenure law. (AP)