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Reader asks Was there any publication that the BOE elections were coming up and any potential candidate packets were available ?

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BOARD BIDS AMERICA A HAPPY BIRTHDAY: (from left): Board members Jim Morgan, Sheila Brogan, Christina Krauss and Vince Loncto join Superintendent Dan Fishbein (center) for the Ridgewood Fourth of July Parade.

Reader asks Was there any publication that the BOE elections were coming up and any potential candidate packets were available ? 

Any Notification ? Any Publication ? Candidate Packets ? 

Well two BOED trustees are running unopposed. So its the same old song. Was there even any publication that the elections were coming up and any potential candidate can pick their packets up at the BOED. Snuck that one through.

BOE MEETS MONDAY, AUGUST 25, 2014

The next Regular Public Meeting of the Ridgewood Board of Education will be held on Monday, August 25, 2014 at 5 p.m.
 
The public is invited to attend the meeting at the Ed Center, 49 Cottage Place, Floor 3. The meeting will be aired live on FiOS channel 33 and Optimum channel 77. Or it may be viewed live via the district website atwww.ridgewood.k12.nj.us using the “Link in Live” tab.

Click here to view the agenda and addendum for the July 21, 2014 Regular Public Meeting.

Click here to view the webcast of the July 21, 2014 Regular Public Meeting.

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New Jersey school board reduces weight of test scores on teacher evaluations

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New Jersey school board reduces weight of test scores on teacher evaluations

AUGUST 6, 2014, 7:40 PM    LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6, 2014, 7:40 PM
BY HANNAN ADELY
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

The state Board of Education has taken steps to reduce the use of student test scores to judge teachers, weeks after Gov. Christie announced a compromise with educators outlining changes to teacher evaluations.

The board’s proposal came after lawmakers and educators argued it was unfair to use student scores because the online tests were based on new standards and schools needed time to adjust. The plan still must get final approval after a public comment period, but districts have been instructed to use the new evaluation system, officials said.

Under the new system, the impact of scores of the new standards-based tests will drop from 30 to 10 percent for math and reading teachers who give them.

Another 20 percent of evaluations will be based on “student growth objectives” — academic goals set by teachers with input from supervisors to measure their effectiveness. They can be based on a combination of measures, including final exams, advanced placement tests, and student projects and portfolios.

The weight of those measures was raised from 15 percent, but the board also made it easier for teachers to appeal those scores

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/new-jersey-school-board-reduces-weight-of-test-scores-on-teacher-evaluations-1.1063264#sthash.2ek5tpoB.dpuf

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Ridgewood Schools Back to School Information

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Ridgewood Schools Back to School Information 

BACK-TO-SCHOOL INFO: Parents and guardians will be receiving a detailed letter on or about August 11 about updating emergency contact information, reviewing various district policies and granting certain permissions. This Mandatory Annual Online Re-registration process takes place through Skyward Family Access between August 11 and September 12

August 5, 2014 –In preparation for the start of the 2014-2015 school year, all parents and guardians of students in the Ridgewood Public Schools must complete the Mandatory Annual Online Re-registration process through Skyward Family Access between August 11 and September 12.

New this year is a section on the 1:1 Chromebook initiative, in which parents and guardians of high school students will be required to review the new Chromebook policy and procedures, complete the agreement form and fund the annual insurance fees.

Re-registration also involves updating emergency contact information; completing the All-Media Permission Form; reviewing district policies and codes; authorizing food service accounts and administration of over-the-counter medications; and applying for the optional NJ FamilyCare insurance program.

Detailed instructions on Mandatory Annual Online Re-registration will be mailed to homes on or about August 11. To re-register, parents and guardians should go to the district website at www.ridgewood.k12.nj.us, choose Skyward Family Access under the Parents tab, log in with their username and password and select Mandatory Annual Online Re-

Registration under Home. Anyone who has forgotten their login and/or password information may request a password reset by selecting the Forgot Login/Password link on the log-on page. Further assistance may be requested by sending an email to [email protected].

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Stimulus ‘boondoggle’: School board member details disastrous school computer giveaway

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Stimulus ‘boondoggle’: School board member details disastrous school computer giveaway

August 6, 2014

HOBOKEN, N.J. – When the Hoboken school leaders decided in 2010 to use a windfall of federal stimulus money to purchase laptops for all students in the city’s junior-senior high school, former board member Maureen Sullivan was the only one to vote against the measure.    

Four years later, the district’s superintendent Mark Toback has deemed the initiative “unsustainable” and canceled the program, leaving school officials to explore options for recycling dozens of machines that are now collecting dust in a school storage closet.

“It was clear it was going to be a boondoggle and a disaster and that’s what it turned out to be,” Sullivan told EAGnews.

“The stimulus money came and it had to be soaked up … It was like, ‘It’s free money, let’s just spend it,’” she said of the board’s rush to dole out computers, which her colleagues on the board viewed as an opportunity to help the district’s mostly poor students keep up with their wealthier peers.

“There was just no planning or thinking things through logically,” she said. “In general, that’s how the school board operates.”

Before the plan was approved, Sullivan repeatedly highlighted the district’s already struggling tech staff, the costs to repair and maintain hundreds of computers, licensing fees for software, and the lack of a strategic plan for training teachers, but “it was just shluffed off like ‘Don’t worry about it, these things take care of themselves,’” Sullivan said.

“I asked what happens when the stimulus money goes away and they were just like ‘Our taxpayers will see the value … and pay,’” said Sullivan, a mother of two high school students.

“You didn’t have to be a genius to figure out it was going nowhere fast. They never wanted to hash out the negatives, they only wanted to talk about the positives,” she said. “Anyone with common sense knows you can’t just give a 12-year-old a laptop.

“Kids have all the time in the world to figure out how to mess them up,” Sullivan said.

And that’s exactly what happened.

According to the Hechinger Report:

By the time Jerry Crocamo, a computer network engineer, arrived in Hoboken’s school system in 2011, every seventh, eighth and ninth grader had a laptop. Each year a new crop of seventh graders were outfitted. Crocamo’s small tech staff was quickly overwhelmed with repairs.

We had “half a dozen kids in a day, on a regular basis, bringing laptops down, going ‘my books fell on top of it, somebody sat on it, I dropped it,’ ” said Crocamo.

Screens cracked. Batteries died. Keys popped off. Viruses attacked. Crocamo found that teenagers with laptops are still… teenagers.

“We bought laptops that had reinforced hard-shell cases so that we could try to offset some of the damage these kids were going to do,” said Crocamo. “I was pretty impressed with some of the damage they did anyway. Some of the laptops would come back to us completely destroyed.”

Crocamo’s time was also eaten up with theft. Despite the anti-theft tracking software he installed, some laptops were never found. Crocamo had to file police reports and even testify in court.

That was only the beginning.

Students also learned how to circumvent software installed on the machines intended to prevent them from visiting pornography, social media, and other inappropriate websites. Crocamo disabled the computers’ webcams, but students learned to undo those controls, as well.

The added software also dragged down the computers’ processors, which prevented them from effectively running educational software.

“We didn’t really do much on the computer,” Michael Ranieri, a junior at Hoboken high school, told the Hechinger Report. “So we kind of just did games to mess around when we had free time. I remember really big was Crazy Taxis that we used play. If we found solitaire online, we used to play it.”

Many folks in the community also learned the district’s username and password and eventually overwhelmed the high school’s wifi network.

https://eagnews.org/stimulus-boondoggle-school-board-member-details-disastrous-school-computer-giveaway/

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Are Public Schools Collecting Too Much Data on Your Kids?

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Are Public Schools Collecting Too Much Data on Your Kids?

Mary Tillotson / @Watchdogorg / August 05, 2014

Parents are increasingly voicing concern that public schools are collecting massive amounts of personal data on students, storing it and distributing it to third parties without their consent.

Dawn Sweeney, a Pennsylvania mother, has two children in public schools and home-schools her younger three. She had planned to enroll them in public schools when they reached seventh grade, as she did with her two oldest. But because of the data collection, she’s now reconsidering.

“Nobody can say exactly what is being collected, but it’s a lot, and it concerns me that every time my kids are on the computer, their person is connected to data,” Sweeney said. “You don’t need parent permission for that. However, you do need parent permission to hang artwork in the hallway.”

That data collection makes plenty of parents nervous and is one reason more parents home-school their children, said Will Estrada, staff attorney and director of federal relations for Home School Legal Defense Association.

Other concerns include identity theft, data security, a child’s physical safety if a sex offender gains access to the data, and the government or big businesses’ having access to the data.

Emmett McGroarty, executive director of the Preserve Innocence Project at the American Principles Project, said if government is able to collect information in an unfettered manner on individuals, it will change their relationship.

“If you’re walking around knowing this guy is collecting this information and is keeping it on you and your children, it’s going to bother you, and it’s going to intimidate you,” he said. “If you and I ever enter into a dispute down the road, you’re really going to be at a disadvantage.”

In late July, parents who had worked to take down inBloom, a pilot project involving massive student data collection, formed Student Privacy Matters, a coalition to push for better privacy protections at the state and federal level.

Read more on Watchdog.org.

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The West’s Death Wish

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Young Palestinian Girls Carrying Rockets, Gaza, Hamas 

The West’s Death Wish
Aug. 03 
By Matt Rooney | The Save Jersey Blog
   
We’ve seen this movie before.

Israel is bombarded with rockets fired by Hamas-backed terrorists, flush with cash from international humanitarian aid efforts and the enemies of democracy lurking elsewhere, and hiding like the worst species of cowards among civilians in schools, mosques and hospitals: https://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4553643,00.html

Understandably, Israel defends itself by moving into Gaza to destroy the tunnel networks and rocket sites utilized to terrorize and murder its population, the only peoples living in a health Middle Eastern democracy, all the while proving humanitarian aid to the people of Gaza.  Wouldn’t we do the same if, hypothetically, Canadian terrorists began raining rockets down on Michigan tomorrow?

Amazingly the West’s answer isn’t universally affirmative.

Not everyone understands or wants to understand. The international community intervenes in the Israeli-Palestinian… by attempting to grab Israel’s wrists and inquiring, in an almost mocking fashion, “why are you hitting yourself?” while Hamas breaks one brokered cease fire after another with impunity. The international media, in turn, focuses on the collateral damage behind Gaza’s lines (remember: Hamas terrorists hide their munitions and fighters behind human shields) and ignores the 3.5 million Israeli citizens living under constant threat of annihilation.

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In a word, Save Jerseyans, the dynamic at work here is insane.

Deference to the “cause” of Hamas is so illogical, particularly in light of the latest broken cease fire, that I’m left to assume any support for Hamas is either (1) evidence of Antisemitism or (2) sufficient reason for a CT scan.

I think we’re seeing a LOT of both.

Young Palestinian Girls Carrying Rockets, Gaza, Hamas (Photo credit: IDF Blog)

Contemplate the “cause” as articulated by its supporters and draw your own conclusions. Hamas’s charter unequivocally calls for the destruction of Israel. Not the relocation of Israel, a “land-for-peace” swap with Israel, a political compromise with Israel, or even monetary reparations to be paid by Israel. All of the Jews in the Holy Land dead. That’s their stated goal. Again, you don’t have to take my word for it. They’ve written it down!

Homicidal actors always announce what they’re going to do before they do it. Hitler and his brown shirts were unabiguously violent anti-Semitic in the 1930s. Mass murders regularly disclose their rants online or to those around them in the run-up to the massacre.

– See more at: https://savejersey.com/2014/08/israel-gaza-palestinian-rocket-attack/#sthash.FmX4QNqC.dpuf

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Why Does the US Media Support Palestinian Terrorists?

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Why Does the US Media Support Palestinian Terrorists?
July 29, 2014 by Chip Wood

What on Earth is so wrong with the mainstream media in the United States that it can somehow find “equivalency” between the terroristic assaults Hamas leaders in the Gaza Strip have ordered against Israel and what that beleaguered country is doing to defend itself?

And in many cases, the hand-wringing, condescending blowhards in our media don’t just blame both sides equally. No, they’ve somehow decided that Israel is the real culprit in the case.

But it is not Israel that is using its civilians, including children, as a human shield for waging war. It is not Israel that has hidden its rockets and mortars in schools, hospitals and civilian homes — and then ordered civilians not to leave the area.

It is not Israel that uses ambulances to disguise its armed combatants, as it moves them from place to place.

It is not Israel that has built dozens of tunnels under the border between the two areas and that uses them to transport weapons of war. Israeli forces have even captured Hamas infiltrators emerging from a tunnel carrying tranquilizers and handcuffs. Apparently, they were hoping to kidnap some Israeli civilians or soldiers, so they could demand another prisoner exchange. (Back in 2011, Israel agreed to trade 1,000 Palestinian prisoners for Gilad Shalit, an Israeli soldier who had been kidnapped by Hamas.)

On Sunday, Hamas said it would extend a temporary cease-fire that both sides agreed to on Saturday for another 24 hours. But later that afternoon, it resumed firing rockets into Israel, claiming that Israel demonstrated “a lack of commitment” to the cease-fire.

I think you’ll agree that it’s hard to show a commitment to peace when rockets are raining down on you. The Israeli Defense Forces said in a statement: “Following Hamas’ incessant rocket fire throughout the humanitarian window, which was agreed upon for the welfare of the civilian population in Gaza, the IDF will now resume its aerial, naval and ground activity in the Gaza Strip.”

Thus far, Israeli authorities say that Hamas has launched more than 2,200 rocket attacks against them. Happily, most of them have been stopped by Israel’s very sophisticated Iron Dome defense system. Still, rocket attacks are a constant danger in the country.

https://personalliberty.com/media-support-palestinian-terrorists/

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Ridgewood school board incumbents to run unopposed

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Ridgewood school board incumbents to run unopposed

JULY 29, 2014    LAST UPDATED: TUESDAY, JULY 29, 2014, 3:55 PM
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

Residents will have an easy decision to make in the voting booth on Tuesday, Nov. 4.

Incumbents Sheila Brogan and Christina Krauss are running unopposed for three-year terms on the five-member Ridgewood Board of Education.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/education/ridgewood-school-board-incumbents-to-run-unopposed-1.1058979#sthash.rPWTHqe5.dpuf

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BOE MEETS MONDAY, AUGUST 25, 2014

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BOE MEETS MONDAY, AUGUST 25, 2014

The next Regular Public Meeting of the Ridgewood Board of Education will be held on Monday, August 25, 2014 at 5 p.m. 
 
The public is invited to attend the meeting at the Ed Center, 49 Cottage Place, Floor 3. The meeting will be aired live on FiOS channel 33 and Optimum channel 77. Or it may be viewed live via the district website atwww.ridgewood.k12.nj.us using the “Link in Live” tab. 

Click here to view the agenda and addendum for the July 21, 2014 Regular Public Meeting.

Click here to view the webcast of the July 21, 2014 Regular Public Meeting.

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Real Estate Agent Marilyn Nuber Shares her feelings on Senior and Empty Nester Housing

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Real Estate Agent Marilyn Nuber Shares her feelings on Senior and Empty Nester Housing 

“My husband warned me that this argument may be construed to suggest a feeling about whether or not I was pro or con for the development. I have been approached by many people asking me how I feel about it and I am undecided. I empathize with Ridgewood residents who object to overcrowding in our schools. If anything you can restrict the prospective Tenants to being 19 or over. Ridgewood definitely needs housing for Senior citizens I agree. In all fairness our new home is not “less than optimal.” We love our new home. We moved because out taxes are now half of what they were and we are free of outside maintenance. We waited till our son was 24 and settled on his own. If Ridgewood had a newer development like where we bought we would have definitely stayed in town. We most likely would have been willing to pay higher taxes too for the convenience of being close to work,train and all that we love about Ridgewood. That said there is nothing that exists in Ridgewood at the same price point and the same attributes that we desired.”

TaylorMade R1 Driversshow?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=205477

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Ridgewood school district seeks business administrator

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Ridgewood school district seeks business administrator

JULY 26, 2014    LAST UPDATED: SATURDAY, JULY 26, 2014, 1:21 AM
BY CHRIS HARRIS
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

RIDGEWOOD — The school board has begun interviewing candidates to replace the district’s business administrator, whose one-year tenure will expire at the end of August.

Sheila Brogan, the president of Ridgewood’s school board, said this week that Michael Falkowski — who started with the district a little more than a year ago — tendered his resignation in late June.

The board formally accepted Falkowski’s resignation during its Monday meeting.

According to Brogan, Falkowski “lives some distance” from Ridgewood “and apparently, the commute was getting to him.”

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/education/school-district-seeks-business-administrator-1.1057692#sthash.sSpHwiXc.dpuf

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Ridgewood High School students to be issued laptops

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Ridgewood High School students to be issued laptops

JULY 25, 2014    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, JULY 25, 2014, 12:31 AM
BY JODI WEINBERGER
STAFF WRITER


On Sept. 4, all high school students will be given a Chromebook as the district moves toward its full embrace of technology.

The Ridgewood Board of Education (BOE) introduced a resolution on July 21 to enter into a five-year lease agreement for $485,000, at an annual interest rate of 1.469 percent, to purchase a Chromebook for every student in the high school.

To offset the cost, the district also accepted a $100,000 grant from The Ridgewood Education Foundation in support of the 1:1 Technology Initiative.

“Thank you for this,” Board President Sheila Brogran said to Foundation officer Jennie Smith Wilson. “It helps us put our 1:1 initiative in place. All four grades at the high school will have the opportunity to have Chromebooks.”

For the high school’s roughly 1,750 students, the Chromebooks will cost about $550,000, said Superintendent Daniel Fishbein. The district budgets about $900,000 per year for technology, he said.

Ridgewood began welcoming laptops and iPads in 2012 with a Bring Your Own Device program and purchased carts of Chromebooks for use at the elementary schools.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/education/chromebooks-coming-to-high-school-students-1.1057106#sthash.i8d90oIx.dp

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Ridgewood school district’s business administrator resigns

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Ridgewood school district’s business administrator resigns

JULY 25, 2014    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, JULY 25, 2014, 12:31 AM
BY JODI WEINBERGER
STAFF WRITER
Print

Michael Falkowksi, the district’s business administrator, is resigning after just over one year working at 49 Cottage Place, the Ridgewood Board of Education (BOE) headquarters.

Falkowski’s resignation, effective Aug. 22, was part of the consent agenda during a BOE meeting on Monday, July 21.

“I know that your long commute was an issue,” said Board President Sheila Brogan after thanking Falkowski for his work.

Falkowski was hired in April 2013 and began his tenure on July 1, 2013, putting his total time in the district at one year, one month, and 21 days; or 10,008 hours, or 600,480 minutes.

Falkowski did not offer comment during the meeting about his resignation and declined to comment after the meeting. He would not answer questions about the reason behind his resignation or about future employment. Falkowski did not return additional phone calls or emails seeking comment during the week.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/education/falkowski-leaves-post-after-year-in-district-1.1057222#sthash.yuODmVIZ.dpuf

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Major Win For School Choice: Charter Students Smarter, Earn More

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Major Win For School Choice: Charter Students Smarter, Earn More

Robby Soave|Jul. 22, 2014 10:15 am


Wikimedia CommonsA just-released study from the University of Arkansas provides a substantial endorsement of charter school education. U.S. students who spent several years in charter schools were found to score significantly better on tests and make more money than their counterparts in traditional K-12 public schools, when adjusted for funding discrepancies.

Researchers examined data from 21 different states. While the results varied, charter schools were found to be more productive—and generate a higher return on investment—than traditional public schools (TPS). On average, charter school students scored so much better on assessments that spending money on charters was roughly 40 percent more efficient than spending money on TPS. According to the study:

Comparing [National Assessment of Education Progress] achievement obtained in public charter schools versus TPS for 21 states and DC, we find the public charter school sector delivers a weighted average of an additional 17 NAEP points per $1000 invested in math, representing a productivity advantage of 40% for charters; In reading, the public charter sector delivers an additional 16 NAEP points per $1000 invested, representing a productivity advantage of 41% for charters.

https://reason.com/blog/2014/07/22/major-win-for-school-choice-charter-stud

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Retailers sharpening their pencils for back-to-school test

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Retailers sharpening their pencils for back-to-school test

JULY 20, 2014    LAST UPDATED: SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014, 1:21 AM
BY JOAN VERDON
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

* Retailers will use the season to gauge consumers’ mood and try new sales strategies ahead of the holiday season

As shoppers head to stores for back-to-school clothes and supplies, retailers will be studying their every move and treating the season as a practice test for their final exams — the fourth-quarter holiday sales.

For national retailers, the back-to-school shopping season beginning in mid-July and running through mid-September is when they give new marketing strategies a trial run and assess the mood of the consumer before launching their holiday promotions.

Last year, retailers expected more-robust spending, and lower-than-expected demand left them with unsold inventory they had to clear out at deep discounts. Those discounts caused some shoppers to grab fall markdowns as Christmas gifts, and that hurt holiday sales.

At a time when retail is changing dramatically, with shoppers demanding the same service and deals whether they are in a store, on their computer or on their phone, back-to-school is a time for retailers to “get things ironed out prior to the holiday season itself,” said Dave Richards, senior managing director for the global consulting firm Accenture Retail.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/business/facing-back-to-school-test-1.1054266#sthash.KcoY8CeT.dpuf