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  • 28
    Feb
    2013
    9:29am, EST

    Report: School employee accidentally shot during concealed weapons class

    By Elizabeth Chuck, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A month after a Texas district voted to allow school employees to carry firearms on campus, a mechanical malfunction following a concealed handgun class has injured one of its workers, according to reports.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The employee from the Van Independent School District had stayed for one-on-one training after class with the concealed handgun license training instructor on Tuesday when a mechanical malfunction with his weapon caused his gun to misfire, NBC affiliate KETK reported. The bullet ricocheted, striking the employee in the left leg; his injury was not life-threatening, the affiliate said.

    After being treated at the scene, the employee was transferred to the nearby city of Tyler for treatment, according to KETK.

    ABC affiliate KLTV.com in East Texas reported that the man who was injured in Tuesday's incident was a maintenance worker at the school, and that he was in fair condition.

    Van Independent School District, located about an hour east of Dallas, decided on Jan. 23 to authorize certain school employees to carry concealed handguns on school property and school events, KETK reported. The decision came a week after another school district in the area, Union Grove, passed a similar measure.

    Per state law, school employees need to get a weapons license to carry a concealed handgun on school property.  KLTV reported Tuesday's incident was after a school-sponsored weapons class, but it was unclear whether it was held on school grounds.

    215 comments

    I would really like more detail on that "malfunction". While malfunctions do happen they are extremely, extremely rare.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: texas, schools, van, concealed-weapons, accidental-shooting
  • 5
    Feb
    2013
    4:26am, EST

    Pistol-packing pupils becoming an everyday occurrence

    WXIA / NBC via Reuters

    A 14-year-old pupil and a teacher were shot Thursday, Jan. 31, at Price Middle School in Atlanta. Another student at the school was arrested.

    By M. Alex Johnson, staff writer, NBC News

    The case of a Virginia second-grader caught with a gun on his school bus this week may be shocking but it's by no means uncommon.

    Across the country, children are being suspended or arrested for having weapons on campus or buses on a daily basis.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Police in Henrico, Va., were waiting at school for the little boy Monday morning after he allegedly threatened another pupil on their ride to Ratcliffe Elementary School. They found a handgun in his backpack, NBC station WWBT of Richmond, Va. reported.

    The incident made national headlines Monday, as did a similar incident when a loaded gun was found in a pupil's book bag last month at P.S. 215 in Queens, N.Y.


    However, these incidents aren't as isolated as they may appear. An NBC News survey of crime dockets and news reports across all 50 states reveals that, since Jan. 1, there have been at least 48 incidents in which guns have been discovered on students, in their bags or in their lockers.

    There were at least five last Thursday alone: in Atlanta; Augusta, Kan.; Chicago; Raleigh, N.C.; and Winston-Salem, N.C.

    There have been 23 class days since some districts resumed school Jan. 2 — not including Jan. 21, the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday. That works out to more than two gun reports a day this school year. (The survey excluded incidents in which pupils were caught with toy guns; all of the weapons were handguns, rifles, BB guns or air rifles.)

    And those are just the cases that have been made public: Juveniles' police records are generally protected, so an untold number of other such incidents are likely to have occurred.

    While it's impossible to determine whether such potentially deadly show-and-tells are happening more frequently, the public data do indicate just how hard it is to clamp down on guns on campus since the issue became a national concern in December in the wake of the fatal shootings of 20 pupils at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn.

    Most of the time, the weapons are brought along for protection or as items of curiosity, with the pupil more interested in showing off than in shooting. And usually, they're intercepted before anyone can get hurt, with the student's being suspended or charged for a weapons violation, depending on his or her age. Often, a parent or guardian is charged with failing to secure the weapon.

    But when they're not intercepted, tragedy is often the result.

    Last week, a 14-year-old boy was shot and wounded by a student at Price Middle School in Atlanta, police said.

    "Gun violence in and around our schools is simply unconscionable and must end," Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed said. "Too many young people are being harmed and too many families are suffering from unimaginable and unnecessary grief."

    And on Jan. 10, a student was wounded by a classmate who shot him at Taft Union High School in Taft, Calif., police said The boy targeted a second classmate but missed, authorities said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    While many lawmakers have introduced legislation that would put armed police or security guards in schools, that may not be the answer, according to a state task force reviewing campus safety in Virginia.

    The task force last week stressed the need to fund anti-bullying programs and school resource officers, but it stopped short of calling for more officers in schools.

    "If we were to put 1,000 new police officers in our schools, those police officers would have to come from somewhere, and we might inadvertently make things less safe in our communities," Dewey G. Cornell, a law professor at the University of Virginia who's a member of the task force, told WWBT.

    The boy who opened fire last week in California was one of those who carried a weapon because he said he had been bullied, Kern County Sheriff Donny Youngblood said.

    But that's not a good enough excuse, parents say.

    "That just doesn't make sense," said Jeremy Massey, the parent of a student at Daly Elementary School in Inskter, Mich., near Detroit, where a third-grader was found to have taken a loaded gun to class two days in a row last month. The boy told police he carried the gun for his own protection.

    "If you are 10 years old, the only protection you need is to go tell an adult," Massey told NBC station WDIV of Detroit.

    Related:

    Full list of student gun incidents this year

    Obama on guns: 'We're not going to wait until the next Newtown'

    Guns already allowed in schools with little restriction in many states

    Watch US News crime videos on NBCNews.com

    1058 comments

    The problem is too many kids are picked on by the jocks for being different. Now it is not just he jocks who are the problem, but the gangs in schools. If we can't control our schools, then blame guns? Pretty stupid. We need to have dress codes and no smoking on school property. We must do whatever …

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    Explore related topics: education, featured, crime, schools, guns
  • 5
    Feb
    2013
    4:25am, EST

    Student gun incidents this year

    By NBC News

    Since Jan. 2, when some school districts returned to classes, there have been at least 48 incidents in which schoolchildren have been discovered with guns in their possession or in their lockers:

    Feb. 4
    • Ratcliffe Elementary School, Henrico, Va.

    • Coweta Intermediate High School, Coweta, Okla. — student killed

    Feb. 1
    • Palm Beach Lakes High School, West Palm Beach, Fla.


    Jan. 31
    • Price Middle School, Atlanta — student shot and wounded

    • Hendricks Elementary Community Academy, Chicago

    • Augusta High School, Augusta, Kan.

    • Carver High School, Winston-Salem, N.C.

    • Athens Drive High School, Raleigh, N.C.

    Jan. 30
    • Park Hill High School, Kansas City, Mo.

    Jan. 29
    • Hoxie High School, Hoxie, Ark.

    • Elizabethtown Middle School, Elizabethtown, N.C.

    • Brazos School for Inquiry and Creativity, Houston

    • Imagine Middle School, North Port, Fla.

    • Carson Elementary School, Cincinnati

    Jan. 28
    • Forest Hills High School, Marshville, N.C.

    Jan. 25
    • Harrison High School, Harrison, Mont.

    • Carson Middle School, Tucson, Ariz.

    Jan. 24
    • Hogan Preparatory Middle School, Kansas City, Mo.

    • Daly Elementary School, Inkster, Mich.

    Jan. 23
    • Willowridge High School, Houston

    Jan. 22
    • Educational Opportunity Center, Clarkston, Wash.

    Jan. 18
    • Northwest High School, Omaha, Neb.

    • Wheeler High School, Marietta, Ga.

    • Heights High School, Wichita, Kan.

    • Soehl Middle School, Linden, N.J.

    • South Philadelphia High School, Philadelphia

    Jan. 17
    • Baldwin County High School, Bay Minette, Ala.

    • Westover High School, Albany, Ga.

    • Pennfield Middle School, Hatfield, Pa.

    • PS 215, Queens, N.Y.

    Jan. 16
    • College Hill Middle School, Texarkana, Texas

    Jan. 15
    • Riverside Academy, Reserve, La.

    • Westwood High School, Blythewood, S.C.

    Jan. 14
    • Faith Academy School of Excellence, Norfolk, Va.

    • Bastrop High School, Bastrop, La.

    • El Dorado High School, El Dorado, Kan.

    Jan. 11
    • Glenn High School, Winston-Salem, N.C.

    • Bedford Middle School, Bedford, Ind.

    • Prairie High School, Battle Ground, Ore.

    • West Haven High School, West Haven, Conn.

    Jan. 10
    • Taft Union High School, Bakersfield, Calif. — student shot and wounded

    Jan. 9
    • John L. Marsh Elementary School, Chicago

    • Alba Middle School, Bayou La Batre, Ala.

    Jan. 8
    • Lyon Elementary School, Magnolia, Texas

    • Donovan Junior High School, Utica, N.Y.

    • Highland Springs High School, Highland Springs, Va.

    Jan. 7
    • Hermitage High School, Henrico, Va.

    Jan. 3
    • Shelburne Middle School, Staunton, Va.

    Related:

    Pistol packing pupils becoming an everyday occurrence

    19 comments

    Ban handguns.

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  • 25
    Jan
    2013
    3:38pm, EST

    Typo puts porn link into Chicago schools' email letter to parents

    By NBCChicago.com

    Oops. Chicago Public School administrators were apologizing Thursday after a typo in a email to parents sent families to an erotic website.


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    The message was supposed to direct parents to the Illinois Board of Education website, at ISBE.net. Instead, an errant "L" in the Web address ushered visitors to a "private invite-only space for women over 18."

    CPS spokeswoman Becky Carroll said the error was unintentional.


    "As soon as it was brought to our attention we sent out a letter with a corrected link, and apologized for any inconvenience it may have cause," she said, according to the Chicago Sun-Times.

    The owner of the erotic site told the Sun-Times she did get some new sign-ups from the unexpected surge in traffic.

    58 comments

    One way to get parents more involved in their students homework.

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    Explore related topics: weird-news, chicago, schools, porn, nbcchicago
  • 19
    Jan
    2013
    4:57pm, EST

    Kindergartner suspended for pink bubble gun threat

    By Karen Araiza , NBCPhiladelphia.com

    A 5-year-old girl who allegedly said she was going to shoot her classmates and herself with her pink "bubble" gun was kicked out of school.

    Last week, the kindergartner was chatting in line while she was waiting for the bus. No one is sure exactly what she said, but according to the family's attorney, she told classmates something along the lines of "I'm going to shoot you and I will shoot myself." She didn't have her Hello Kitty Bubble Gun with her at the time, but when school officials got wind of the conversation, they questioned the little girl, suspended her for making a "terroristic threat," according to The Daily Item newspaper, and told her parents she needed to be evaluated by a psychiatrist.


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    "All I know," the mother told the paper, "is what my daughter has told me and she said she was told she could go to jail, which is a very traumatic thing for a 5-year-old to live with."


    Also on NBCPhiladelphia.com: Boy forced off bus, given to stranger

    The attorney says the little girl was questioned for about three hours, without her parents present.

    "This is a good-natured little girl," lawyer Robin Ficker said. "And this shows how hysterical people who work at schools have become since Sandy Hook."

    She attends school in the Mount Carmel Area School District in Northumberland County, Pa. A school administrator told PennLive.com that officials are looking into the incident and are not able to discuss disciplinary actions.

    The family wants the school to apologize to their daughter and they don't want the suspension to be on her school record.

    Also on NBCPhiladelphia.com: Man shot in head during home invasion

    649 comments

    The school officials need to be suspended without pay until a competent judge can examine the case. Since competent judges are few and far between that may be a lengthy wait. Also, the parents should want not only apology, but dismissal of the idiots who terrorized their little girl.

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    Explore related topics: schools, pennsylvania, guns, nbcphiladelphia
  • 18
    Jan
    2013
    9:10pm, EST

    School security guard in Michigan leaves gun in bathroom, officials say

    By Vignesh Ramachandran, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Officials say a recently hired security officer left a firearm unattended in a Michigan charter school bathroom, local media reported.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    School officials at The Chatfield School in Lapeer, Mich., told mlive.com the officer left an unloaded weapon in a restroom "for a few moments" on Monday. No children were put in danger or exposed to the handgun, school director Matt Young told mlive.com.


    In a Jan. 7 newsletter, the school told families it had hired the school security officer, a veteran of the Lapeer County Sheriff Department who had retired.

    "After the recent events in Connecticut, it is prudent to review and to revise our plan and procedures," the letter said.

    School safety has been on the minds of educators across America since the Dec. 14 shooting at a Newtown, Conn. elementary school, in which 20 children and six staffers were killed. In response to the Newtown tragedy, the National Rifle Association called for armed guards in every school amid criticism and calls for stricter gun control.

    A county prosecutor told mlive.com that criminal charges were not likely.

    Chatfield parent Tris Fritz told mlive.com that the incident was "a big mistake": "I think that some kid might not think it's a real gun. They might think it's a toy. They're going to be curious, that's the nature of a child."

    Another school parent, Cindy Fliedner, told mlive.com the incident didn't change her view on having an officer and was "thrilled" the school is taking "steps to protect our children."

    "We're just going to have to refine our procedures," Fliedner told mlive.com.

    In addition to the new security hire, the newsletter said that the school had implemented new sign-in/sign-out policies for parents and visitors, was locking most school doors and added security monitors, among other initiatives.

    Related stories:

    • Schools seek security after Sandy Hook
    • Teachers flock to gun training classes

    269 comments

    Maybe armed guards are not the greatest solution for preventing shootings after all. The qualifications of the guards are only one problem though.

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  • 15
    Jan
    2013
    3:54am, EST

    New York City school bus drivers to strike; 152,000 students affected

    View more videos at: http://nbcnewyork.com.

    By Melissa Russo and Andrew Siff, NBCNewYork.com

    The New York City school bus drivers union will go on strike beginning Wednesday morning, union president Michael Cordiello announced Monday evening.

    Cordiello, who heads Local 1181 of the Amalgamated Transit Union, said the union is still negotiating with city officials and is "optimistic" for an agreement but until there is a resolution, drivers will strike Wednesday. More than 8,000 drivers and matrons will be taking part.

    "With its regrettable decision to strike, the union is abandoning 152,000 students and their families who rely on school bus service each day," Mayor Michael Bloomberg said in a statement. "As Chancellor (Dennis) Walcott and I have said, the City will take all steps available to ensure that those who are impacted have the support they need, and we are now activating the protocols we put in place in the event of a strike."

    Cordiello said, "Safely transporting our children back and forth [to] school ... has, and always will be, the top priority of every man and woman who make up ATU Local 1181."

    Read more news on NBCNewYork.com

    Under the city's strike contingency plans, students would receive free MetroCards for mass transit. Parents or guardians of younger children also would get the cards.

    Families of special needs students would be reimbursed for private transportation. Of the 152,000 students who use the buses, 54,000 are disabled and would face extra hardships in trying to find alternative transportation.

    There are 1.1 million students in the New York City schools. While the majority don't use school buses, those that do are among the youngest ones.

    Bloomberg: 'Irresponsible,' 'misguided'
    The union and the city have been battling over how new contracts are being drawn up for a set of bus routes. The city wants to cut transportation costs and has put about 1,100 bus contracts with private bus companies up for bid.

    The union is decrying the lack of Employee Protection Provisions, saying without the so-called EPP, current drivers could suddenly lose their jobs once their contracts are up in June.

    Bloomberg reiterated at a press conference earlier Monday that the union wants job protections the city cannot legally provide. Cordiello said that claim was inaccurate.

    "We know it is not illegal to put it in the bid," he said at a press conference Monday. "We will continue to push for resolution, but we cannot negotiate from a position of inaccurate information."

    The state Court of Appeals in 2011 barred the city from including EPP because of competitive bidding laws. Hence, the mayor said, the city cannot accept the union demand for an EPP clause.


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    "Let me be clear: the union's decision to strike has nothing to do with safety and everything to do with job protections that the City legally cannot include in its bus contracts," Bloomberg's statement said. "We hope that the union will reconsider its irresponsible and misguided decision to jeopardize our students' education."

    During the strike, more transit officers and crossing guards would be in place to help children get to school using mass transportation, Schools Chancellor Walcott said.

    The city also said reimbursements and MetroCards will be offered to parents who would need transportation alternatives.

    Parents Monday were worried even before the strike was announced, though many hadn't had time to make logistical arrangements.

    "It would be very difficult for me to walk her to school because of my health condition. That would be a very difficult problem," said Norma Melgar. "I hope they don't strike. I haven't made any plans at all yet."

    Student Genesis Bustamante said she would have to adapt to an unfamiliar way of getting to school.

    "If I don't take the yellow bus, I'm not really sure how to get to school that easily," she said.

    326 comments

    Tell me again why Unions are neccessary?

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  • 8
    Jan
    2013
    1:04pm, EST

    Racial divide seen in Mississippi debate over charter schools, reform

    Jackie Mader / The Hechinger Report

    Students attend a summer session at Lyon Elementary School near the city of Clarksdale in the Mississippi Delta. School districts throughout the state could see increased competition from charter schools if a controversial bill passes the Mississippi Legislature this session.

    By Sarah Carr, The Hechinger Report

    Mississippi lawmaker Kenneth Wayne Jones, a Democrat, briefly became a political pariah last winter when he voted in favor of a proposal to expand charter schools in his state. He was the only African-American state senator to support the bill, which most members of Mississippi’s legislative Black Caucus disavowed. Jones liked the idea of expanded school options for families, but he also understood his colleagues’ mistrust.


    Follow @hechingerreport

    “You’ve got conservative Republicans all of a sudden showing a lot of concern about the education of African-American children, while in the same breath they are denying them health care,” Jones said.

    This winter, charter supporters will make their fifth attempt in five years to bring charters to Mississippi, one of a dwindling number of states without a real charter school law. (The state has an existing law so restrictive that no charters have opened.)

    But the deep-rooted skepticism of the state’s black leadership remains one of the biggest obstacles to bipartisan support for charters in Mississippi and throughout the South, where powerful white Democrats are a disappearing breed. It also speaks to broader mistrust among black officials nationwide — particularly those who came of age before or during the civil rights movement — toward contemporary school reform efforts they believe are being imposed by outsiders on low-income, minority communities.


    “White people cannot tell us what’s best for educating our children,” said state Sen. David Jordan, a 78-year-old African American from the Mississippi Delta town of Greenwood. “Heck, we did it for decades without even the money for books. Through the help of God we made it.”

    Similar tensions have emerged in Washington, D.C. and New Orleans, where veteran black politicians and venerable civil rights organizations like the NAACP have been among the most vociferous opponents of recent education reforms. Those changes include the expansion of charter schools, the recruitment of out-of-town educators through programs like Teach For America, and the weakening of job protections for teachers.

    In Mississippi, which has the nation’s highest rate of childhood poverty and posts some of the weakest test scores, there’s particular urgency to improving the schools. Advocates of charters believe the autonomous schools will help boost the state’s abysmal academic performance. They say they can learn from mistakes made in other states to ensure Mississippi’s charter law is exemplary.


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    Critics counter that the state needs to focus on fully funding the schools it already operates and create a desperately needed pre-kindergarten program before it looks to alternatives like charters. They also worry that the charter movement will be hijacked by virtual schools and for-profit companies hoping to profit off of Mississippi’s children.

    The support of the Black Caucus likely won’t be crucial to passing a new charter school law in Mississippi, though. Republicans control both houses of the legislature, some Democrats support charters, and Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant, who is white, has made the issue one of his top priorities. (Last year’s bill failed largely because a few key Republicans didn’t support it.)

    But the caucus’ response will be a litmus test for whether black leaders are growing more receptive—or more resistant—to the reforms that are steadily reshaping public education across America.

    Charter skeptics
    The debate over school reform doesn’t always fall neatly along racial lines. President Barack Obama has embraced charters and other controversial changes. Black leaders like Howard Fuller in Milwaukee and Geoffrey Canada in New York City are among the most outspoken and prominent supporters of radical changes to the traditional public school structure. And, as the divide between Jones and Jordan illustrates, not all members of Mississippi’s Black Caucus are united in full-throated opposition to charters. 

    But in Mississippi and elsewhere, charter and reform backers have often struggled to win over civil rights organizations like the NAACP and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, as well as a majority of black lawmakers and voters.

    In Washington D.C., for instance, former mayor Adrian Fenty lost his re-election bid in 2010 at least partly because middle-class black voters were frustrated with the hard-charging style of his schools chief, Michelle Rhee. She not only supported charters but also aggressively pushed to close low-performing schools and fire struggling teachers. In New Orleans, thousands of educators lost their jobs in the lead up to the rapid chartering of the city’s schools after Hurricane Katrina in 2005. The move left many of the city’s predominantly black veteran educators feeling disenfranchised and suspicious of the changes. And in New York City, NAACP leader Hazel Dukes underscored her organization’s intense disdain for charters when she accused a parent who supported them of “doing the business of slave masters.”

    More from The Hechinger Report

    • Report: More states using student data in reform
    • Most eligible Newark teachers decline new bonus program
    • One in four freshmen now starts in January, not August

    The racial tensions surrounding school reform have complicated origins. Mississippi State Sen. Jordan, a retired public-school science teacher, said he fears charters partly because they could bring more white out-of-state educators to Mississippi who won’t be able to relate to the children there. “Teachers who come in claim they can do a yeoman’s job,” he said. “But I don’t think someone can come from Illinois and do a better job with the kids of the Mississippi Delta than the teachers who are already here.”

    Jordan also worries that charters could mean a loss of black power and leadership in rural communities where the black community fought long and hard to claim top positions in the schools. In the Delta town of Indianola, for example, the black community staged a lengthy boycott of white businesses in order to get the first African-American school superintendent appointed in 1986.

    “If you go to another model, people are not going to hire African Americans in the top positions,” said Jordan. “The bottom line is to eliminate African Americans.”

    In the Mississippi Delta, nearly 90 percent of the public-school children are black, and school districts are one of the few sources of stable jobs.

    “In rural counties, the school districts are the main employer,” said Mike Sayer, senior organizer at Southern Echo, a black leadership organization based in Jackson that opposes charters. “If these school districts go down altogether, it will have a crippling effect. In a lot of these communities there are no other places to work.”

    Lessons from New Orleans
    Charter proponents say they hope talented local educators will open charters, and that fears of widespread upheaval and displacement are overblown.

    “Forty other states have [charters] and, to my knowledge, traditional public education hasn’t been destroyed,” said Sanford Johnson, deputy director of Mississippi First, a nonprofit education advocacy organization that supports charters.

    Mississippi First executive director Rachel Canter adds that charter supporters have been careful to specify in the proposed bill that all educators with strong track records will be eligible to open charters — regardless of whether their experience is with charter or traditional schools. That way, Mississippi locals will not feel dissuaded from the start.

    In search of high-quality teachers, charter school network trains its own

    “Whether local people can open charters has been a huge issue for the Black Caucus,” Canter said.

    A draft of the bill presented earlier this winter calls for a statewide authorizing board to vet charter applicants. In low-performing school districts, applicants would need only the board’s approval to open. But in stronger districts, they would also need a nod from a majority of local school-board members.

    “The most important thing is to give new opportunities to talented educators who are right there in their communities,” said Kenneth Campbell, president of the Black Alliance for Educational Options, which advocates for charters and increased school choice for low-income black families.

    Campbell points out that in New Orleans — ground zero for controversy surrounding education reform — several of the most successful charters were started by black veteran educators who ran traditional public schools before Katrina. The city has a higher percentage of charters than any other, and could become the first citywide school system comprised entirely of charters within the next few years.

    New Orleans has also attracted national charter-school networks such as the Knowledge is Power Program and Future Is Now Schools, and most of the school leaders recruited by the charter “incubator” New Schools for New Orleans have come from out of town. The new, less local leadership has helped contribute to the changing demographics of the city’s teacher corps.

    Before Katrina, New Orleans had one of the highest percentages of black educators of any city in the country. But starting in 2007 that percentage began to drop steadily, to 63 percent during the 2007-08 school year, and 57 percent the next year, according to data from the Louisiana Department of Education.

    Overall, test scores are going up for a variety of reasons, and parents of all races and income levels have reported growing satisfaction with the city’s public schools. But “one can be as kumbaya as they come and still worry about the psychological effect on black children who come to equate both education and authority with whiteness,” wrote Times-Picayune columnist Jarvis DeBerry of the shift.

    Trying to overcome history, mistrust
    History might be one of the biggest obstacles to building more broad-based support for charter schools in Mississippi.

    Black officials say it’s tough to trust that the state’s white leadership has the best interests of children at heart when they have underfunded the public schools for so long.

    Many also fear that charters could provide a means for dozens of nearly all-white “segregation academies” to obtain public funding. The draft legislation doesn’t allow private schools to convert to charters, but that provision has not squelched the fears. Many of the academies are facing declining enrollments as middle-class whites flee the Delta, and would jump at the chance to become charters, skeptics say.

    New US visa rush: Build charter school, get green card

    “Claiming that private schools can’t convert to charter schools is nonsense,” said Sayer, who adds that savvy school operators will be able to find a way around the letter of the law. But Mississippi First’s Johnson says the statewide authorizing board would be able to identify suspect applicants because of the rigorous approval process outlined in the proposed bill.

    “Mississippi’s history is the reason people are suspicious about all these things,” said Nancy Loome, executive director of The Parents’ Campaign, which supports a more restricted charter law that would ban virtual and for-profit operators.

    Campbell acknowledges that “people have long memories” in Mississippi, which can make it challenging to build trust. But he said lawmakers and citizens of all races and political affiliations are more open to the concept of charters than in previous years.

    “There’s an increased desire to learn more,” he said.

    Kenneth Wayne Jones, who will chair the Black Caucus during the upcoming legislative session, agrees.

    “I don’t think it will be as toxic as it was last year,” he said. “I don’t know if the Caucus will be more supportive when it comes to votes, but I know we’ll be listening more than last year. If this train is coming, we need to make sure we are on it.”

    This story was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, nonpartisan education-news outlet based at Teachers College, Columbia University. Sarah Carr, a contributing editor at The Hechinger Report, is the author of the forthcoming "Hope Against Hope: Three Schools, One City, and the Struggle to Educate America’s Children" (Bloomsbury Press, February 2013).

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    86 comments

    Senator David Jordan - "White people cannot tell us what's best for educating our children" - just imagine if a white senator had said that about black people? And the guy comes from Mississippi - who's state motto is practically - Poverty and Lack of Education in mass.

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  • 22
    Dec
    2012
    4:59am, EST

    Armed guards, locked entryways, cameras: Schools seek security after Sandy Hook

    A long-dormant national conversation about guns has reignited: some are calling for an assault weapons ban while other feel guns themselves aren't the root of the problem. So far the shootings have sparked several gun buy-back programs and even an anti-gun video organized by big-city mayors – but the NRA says it's the entertainment industry that is partly to blame. NBC's John Yang reports.

    By Elizabeth Chuck and M. Alex Johnson, NBC News

    The National Rifle Association’s call to put armed guards in every public school in America has further intensified the debate over how to protect our nation’s children in class, with some districts saying they’re preparing to take just that action and other educators cautioning that doing so sends the wrong message about education.

    And short of giving teachers and officers their own guns, administrators across the country are desperate to find a way to keep their pupils safe. Locked vestibules with buzzers, emergency preparedness drills, stronger glass and surveillance cameras are among measures being considered after the massacre last week at Sandy Hook Elementary School.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Even before the NRA’s Wayne LaPierre said Friday that armed police should be placed in schools, guards with guns were posted at all 14 schools in Butler, Pa.

    This Sunday on Meet the Press: NRA Chief Wayne LaPierre

    The district of 7,500 pupils about 40 miles northeast of Pittsburgh had already gone to court to get a judge's approval to have at least one armed retired state trooper in every school. They were in place as classes resumed Monday after the mass shootings Dec. 14 in Newtown, Conn.

    "We plan to have that on a daily basis from now on," Superintendent Michael Strutt told NBC station WPXI of Pittsburgh. By the time the next school year begins, every guard in the school system will be armed, he said.


    The sense of urgency is undeniable, with a few districts willing to fight fire with fire, as in Butler. Schools in Marlboro, N.J., for example, will have armed officers in place by January, Mayor John Hornik told NBC News on Friday.

    After a week of calls for tighter gun restrictions, the National Rifle Association called for putting more armed security officers in the nation's schools and expressed concerns about violence portrayed in video games, movies and music. NBC's Pete Williams reports.

    State Sen. Joe Scarnati, a Republican representing northern Pennsylvania, said there was only one important question: "What do we do to protect our kids?"

    "If it requires to put armed individuals in our schools to protect our kids, then we need to do that," Scarnati told NBC station WJAC of Johnstown.

    But that idea doesn't sit well with other educators, like Tony Scott, superintendent of schools in Bellaire, Ohio, where a local firearms association said it would provide free shooting training to teachers after the Connecticut shootings.

    "I just don't believe our teachers signed up for this," Scott told NBC station WTOV of Steubenville, Ohio. "I know I didn't sign up for it."

    Ronald Stephens, executive director of the National School Safety Center, a joint project of the U.S. Education and Justice departments, said there's no centralized database tabulating how many school systems have an official armed presence on campus, but he estimated it at 25 percent. He called the NRA proposal "unfeasible."

    "We have to ask ourselves what kind of climate we want to create in our schools. Do we want our school campus to look like the Old West with people having sidearms attached to their hip, or do we want education to happen in a positive way?" Stephens told NBC News. "That's the hard part of this."

    Michael Smerconish, author Steve Siebold and David Corn of Mother Jones debate the NRA's idea that more guns and armed teachers would curb gun violence.

    Some administrators are looking elsewhere for solutions. After years of unlocked front doors and casual conversations about someday increasing security in the small school district of New Hartford, Conn., Superintendent Philip O'Reilly isn't wasting another minute.

    Fearing a repeat of the tragedy in nearby Newtown, O'Reilly is planning to modify the district's school buildings so they each have a small, locked vestibule between the main entrance and the building's interior, which will hold visitors for screening.

    O'Reilly wouldn't give the cost of these new entryways, but he said the money must be found.

    Watch US News videos on NBCNews.com

    "Cost is no longer the priority. Keeping kids safe is the priority," he said.

    In some cases, parents are leading the charge.

    "I've had superintendents and headmasters who have been fighting for a year or two trying to do this, and the parents have been fighting them hand and fist because they didn't understand, and now the parents are coming to the school officials saying, 'Why aren't you?'" said Michael Dorn, executive director of Safe Havens International, a nonprofit group based in Georgia that helps schools improve their crisis preparedness.

    Michael Dorn of Safe Havens International relays tips on how schools and parents can keep kids safe.

    Security experts recommend that school districts start with a security assessment. Because changing entryways or installing security cameras can be expensive, these experts said school systems need to figure out exactly what their biggest shortcomings are before plowing ahead.

    "The number one request [schools have been asking for since Newtown] is to conduct a security assessment. We look at everything, from your written practices to the physical security devices and emergency plans," said Paul Timm, president of Illinois-based, school security consulting firm RETA Security.

    He said his recommendations usually fall in two main areas.

    "There are two categories that protect people better than anything else: access control, which includes a locked vestibule, running a closed campus, visitor management procedures; and communications.

    Do we have public address systems, do we have telephones that are outfitted with emergency dialing instructions, do we have two-way radios?" Timm said. "Those two areas, more than cameras, more than metal detectors, more than burglar alarm systems, protect people."

    Locked vestibules can literally stop an intruder in his or her tracks. As administrators have become more concerned about security, many schools have restricted access to just one main entry point in the hope of doing that, Timm said.

    Another solution for safety-proofing schools: bullet-resistant glass. Timm recently helped a school in Hastings, Minn., replace all the tempered glass in the building with laminated glass after a student brought a gun to school, and the total cost was about $3,500.

    But such a low dollar figure for security fixes is rare.

    "A large percentage of our schools are not designed well for any of these things. Sometimes, something simple can be $5 million," Dorn said.

    Federal funds for school safety — the Readiness and Emergency Management for Schools (REMS) project — were eliminated in March 2011. Now the money must come from local taxpayers.

    "There's not much in the budget for security at all. I want to say that before Columbine, not many schools had a line item for security in their budget," Timm said.

    One security measure that doesn't come with a hefty price tag is running drills with teachers, students and administrators for various scenarios.

    "It prepares us to make life-and-death situations more quickly," Dorn said. "They have an opportunity do something like lock a door, move kids out of a classroom, and [if] for various reasons don't take that action, our casualty rate doubles or triples. The human brain works faster than my laptop to make those life-and-death decisions, but only if you've had the exposure to prepare you."

    Andrew Mach of NBC News contributed to this report.

    The manufacturer of a children's backpack designed to stop bullets says sales have skyrocketed in the wake of the Newtown massacre. But are some parents overreacting? KPRC's Courtney Zavala reports.

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    2342 comments

    I can think of 26 deceased individuals who would disagree with you. Having retired law officers volunteering to patrol school grounds is a step in the right direction. However, that is a temporary patch. Security barricades, cameras, and locked doors are not going to stop someone who is determined t …

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  • 20
    Dec
    2012
    11:22am, EST

    Newtown, Mayan end-of-world rumors prompt Michigan officials to close 33 schools

    Threats of school violence and Mayan apocalypse rumors result in dozens of Michigan schools closing early for the holidays. WDIV's Paula Tutman reports.

    By Tracy Connor and Maureen Mullen, NBC News

    More than 30 Michigan schools closed for the holidays two days early, in part because the Mayan calendar predicts the world will end on Friday, an official said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Matt Wandrie, superintendent for Lapeer Community Schools, said doomsday "rumors" are running rampant in several districts, adding to fears raised by last week's school shooting in Newtown, Conn.

    "Given the recent events in Connecticut, there have been numerous rumors circulating in our district, and in neighboring districts, about potential threats of violence against students," Wandrie wrote on his website.

    "Additionally, rumors connected to the Mayan calendar predicted end of the world on Friday have also surfaced," he added.

    He noted that Twitter was lighting up with posts with sentiments like: "Friday would be a great day to go out w/ a bang."

    The ancient predictions of apocalypse were a "secondary concern," with rumblings about violent threats against schoolchildren a bigger issue, he said.

    CNBC: In Mayan doomsday, marketers see $$$ opportunity

    Wandrie said all rumors of threats had been "investigated and determined to be false" but were still a "serious distraction" for students heading into the holiday break, and parents were vowing to keep children home.

    So officials from five districts in Lapeer County covering 33 schools decided to just scrap the last two days of classes, extracurricular activities and athletic events.

    "Although we in the county are reluctant to cancel school because the rumors are unsubstantiated, we feel it is the most appropriate decision given the gravity of recent events and our present circumstances," he wrote.

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    767 comments

    Note to self: School officials in Michigan really have some unstable mental problems. (Or maybe they're Mayans in disguise. Thankfully, they're not Aztecs, or they'd cut your heart out for the solstice; or after losing the ballgame again to Ohio State.)

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  • 19
    Dec
    2012
    7:27am, EST

    School abuse victim wins $23 million in damages

    By Melissa Pamer, NBCLosAngeles.com

    LOS ANGELES -- A former student in Los Angeles was awarded $23 million in damages Tuesday for sexual abuse he endured at the hands of his elementary school teacher.

    A Los Angeles Superior Court jury deliberated for less than five hours before finding in favor of the teen.

    The lawsuit, filed on his behalf in October 2009, concerned abuse by Forrest Stobbe, the boy's fifth-grade teacher at Queen Anne Elementary School in the Mid-Wilshire area.


    Stobbe was sentenced to 16 years in prison after pleading no contest to criminal charges in the case in 2011. He had been arrested in 2010, when he was 39.

    Read more stories at NBCLosAngeles.com

    The jury on Tuesday apportioned 30 percent of the fault, or about $6.9 million, to the former Los Angeles Unified School District student.  The remaining fault was apportioned to Stobbe, but he had been dismissed as a defendant in the case, according to the plantiff's attorney, Stephen Estey.

    The district will have to pay a $3 million deductible to its insurer, which will cover the remaining $3.9 million portion of the award, according to Sean Rossall, a spokesman for LAUSD's Office of General Counsel.

    "The district is still evaluating whether an appeal is warranted in this case," Rossall said.

    Stobbe abused the boy 10 to 15 times in the classroom during the 2008-9 school years, and another five times during the summer of 2009, according to Estey.

    LAUSD General Counsel David Holmquist said in a statement: “Although we can't change what happened in this case, we remain committed to doing everything in our power to promote healing and improve trust with those impacted."

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    50 comments

    The absurdity of these kinds of jury awards is evident to everyone except, I guess, the jury. Welcome to lala land.

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    Explore related topics: us-news, crime-courts, featured, california, schools, los-angeles, damages, nbclosangeles
  • 19
    Dec
    2012
    5:59am, EST

    Cops: Florida after-school basketball coach tried to get teen into porn videos

    View more videos at: http://nbcmiami.com.

    By NBCMiami.com

    An after-school basketball coach was arrested for trying to get a teenage boy to perform in pornographic videos, authorities in Florida said Tuesday.

    Michael Frank Barberan, 41, faces charges of procuring a person under 18 for prostitution and exposing a minor to harmful motion pictures, exhibitions, shows, presentations or representatives.

    Authorities said Barberan met the boy on Facebook. The boy was a basketball player at a local school and Barberan runs a basketball camp, South Miami Police said.


    Read more stories at NBCMiami.com

    Over time, Barberan would pick the boy up after school and take him to parks to play basketball, authorities said.

    At some point, Barberan began to talk to the boy about sex and told him he was an escort, authorities said.

    Barberan told the the boy he could make extra money by filming him in pornographic videos with another man, which could be sold, authorities said.

    Police said Barberan admitted to authorities that he offered the boy a way to make extra money by performing sexual acts.

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    75 comments

    I used to think if I won the lottery, I'd move to Florida and relax in the sunshine. Lately I've been thinking not. What's up with Florida these days?

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    Explore related topics: us-news, crime-courts, featured, florida, schools, nbcmiami
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