Monday, March 17, 2008

Spellings Road Show Comes to Kentucky

Since President George W. Bush's State of the Union Address in January, Education Secretary Margaret Spellings and Deputy Secretary Raymond Simon have been on tour promoting the reauthorization of No Child Left Behind.

Illinios; Florida; Washington; Oregon; California; Louisiana; Mississippi; Rhode Island; Kansas; Missouri; Oklahoma; Texas; North Carolina; West Virginia; New York; Arkansas; Colorado; New Mexico...and Wednesday, Spellings will bring the show to a couple of Kentucky towns; Newport and Maysville.

On the tour Spellings has been holding roundtable discussions with top leaders and touting state and national gains, crediting NCLB, and introducing a new tool from the U.S. Department of Education, "Mapping Kentucky's Educational Progress 2008," which reports student demographics, achievement trends and the percentage of Kentucky schools reaching AYP; 78%.

The plan is:

U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings will join Congressman Geoff Davis to discuss progress made in Kentucky and across the nation under No Child Left Behind at events in Maysville andNewport, Kentucky, on Wednesday, March 19.

Beginning at 8:45 a.m. EDT, Secretary Spellings and Congressman Davis will hold an education policy roundtable with educators, studentsand community leaders at Mason County Intermediate School, 720 Clarks Run Road, Maysville,
Kentucky. Mason County Schools Superintendent Tim Moore will also participate.

Then, at noon EDT, Secretary Spellings and Congressman Davis will visit with students and teachers during classroom visits at Fourth Street Elementary School, 101 East Fourth St., Newport, Kentucky.

At12:30 p.m. EDT, Secretary Spellings and Congressman Davis will host an education policy roundtable to answer questions about the No Child LeftBehind Act. Jon Draud, Commissioner of Education, and Michael Brandt,superintendent, Newport School District, will participate in the roundtable discussion along with college presidents, business leaders, and other community leaders.
Spellings told the National Press Club,
"Agree or disagree with this law, without NCLB, we wouldn't even be talking about how to get every student on grade level. "
In Kentucky, which was ahead of the nation on that score, we know better.

SOURCE: KDE press release

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Congratulations!!! You have been nominated for a 2007 Best Of Blog Award!! Especially designed to bring attention to lower profile bloggers, The BoB’s as we like to call them are currently taking nominations in over 20 different categories. To find out more about how your site has a chance to become one of this year’s Best Of’s and how to nominate other bloggers, visit us at www.thebestofblogs.com. Remember voting begins April 14th so make sure you pass the word to your friends, family, and faithful followers.

Sincerely,
Bill Beck
Project Mgr.
The Best Of Blog Awards
Email:Bloggerbeck@aol.com