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Best of October: The 12 Most Popular Articles We Published This Month About Integration, the Midterms, the Skills Gap & More

Every month, we round up our most popular and buzzed-about articles from the past four weeks. (Go deeper: See all our 2018 highlights right here)

From Beth Hawkins鈥檚 profile of one of America鈥檚 most innovative school integration experiments to our latest EDlection previews of the midterm races most likely to influence education policy, plus our ongoing coverage of the skills gap and the race to better prepare future graduates, it was a busy month for The 74鈥檚 newsroom. (You can always get our top news and analysis delivered straight to your inbox by signing up for The 74 Newsletter)

Here are the most read, shared, and buzzed-about articles from October:

Texas, 78207: America鈥檚 Most Radical School Integration Experiment

Long Read: In San Antonio, the nation鈥檚 most economically segregated city, a new approach to diversifying classrooms to address poverty, trauma, and parental choice is working. Over several months this year, national correspondent Beth Hawkins has been tracking the groundbreaking integration efforts of the 78207, the zip code located on the west side of San Antonio, Texas. It is the poorest neighborhood in America鈥檚 most economically segregated city: 91 percent of students in the San Antonio Independent School District are Latino, 6 percent are black, and 93 percent qualify for free or reduced-price lunch. As Beth reports, into this divided landscape three years ago came a new schools chief, Pedro Martinez, with a mandate to break down the centuries-old economic isolation that has its heart in the 78207. In response, Martinez launched one of America鈥檚 most innovative and data-informed school integration experiments.

He started with a novel approach that yielded eye-popping information: Using family income data, he created a map showing the depth of poverty on each city block and in every school in the district 鈥 a color-coded street guide comprising granular details unheard of in education. And then he started integrating schools, not by race, but by income, factoring in a spectrum of additional elements, such as parents鈥 education levels and homelessness. To achieve the kind of integration he was looking for, he would first have to better understand the gradations of poverty in every one of his schools and what kinds of supports those student populations require, and then find a way to woo affluent families from other parts of the city to disrupt these concentrations of unmet need. Martinez鈥檚 strategy: Open new 鈥渟chools of choice鈥 with sought-after curricular models, like Montessori and dual language, and set aside a share of seats for students from more prosperous neighboring school districts, who would then sit next to a mix of students from San Antonio ISD. Read Beth鈥檚 full profile of the San Antonio experiment.

Ann Hermes/The Christian Science Monitor via Getty Images

When Families and Schools Work Together, Students Do Better. New Report Has 5 Ways of Engaging Parents in Their Kids鈥 Education

Family Engagement: It鈥檚 no secret that when schools engage families, student performance and graduation rates increase. So why aren鈥檛 more schools doing this, particularly for low-income families? A new Carnegie Corporation of New York report explores that question, offering five ways that schools can reach out to families to amplify their voices and support their kids, from working with parents to combat chronic absenteeism to making data accessible and bolstering social-emotional skills. Read more about the report.

Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images

Internal Report Shows NEA Losses of 17,000 Members and 87,000 Fee Payers Since Janus Decision

Exclusive: A report circulated internally by the National Education Association says the union has lost 17,000 members since the Supreme Court鈥檚 Janus decision in June. The ruling, which disallowed the practice of charging agency fees to nonmembers who share in collectively bargained benefits, also cost NEA 87,000 fee payers. In Washington, where NEA鈥檚 state affiliate relied in part on these fees, union officials quietly put their building up for sale during the summer before removing the listing in August. Mike Antonucci explains that it鈥檚 unclear whether the affiliate was unable to make a sale (the asking price was $11.4 million) or no longer needed to. Either way, he writes, Janus has forced teachers unions to begin managing their resources more professionally. Read the full report.

Courtesy of Thomas A. Edison Career and Technical High School

Struggle for the Future: Schools Lag in Preparing Students for the Age of Automation

Future of Work: As robots rise, are schools preparing students to rise with them? For the first time in history, American schools are being asked to prepare a majority of students for college and higher-skill jobs. It hasn鈥檛 been easy. As technological advances enable machines to substitute for human labor, a college education is more valuable than ever, but only 1 in 3 students earns a bachelor鈥檚 degree. In response, officials have introduced a raft of initiatives, including a far-ranging focus on soft skills (like teamwork and problem-solving) through higher standards, deeper learning, and better tests, as well as expanded offerings in STEM, information technology, and career and technical education that ready students for college work. As David Cantor reports, the work has been unsystematic, plagued by racial and gender inequalities, and hampered by disputes about the purpose of education. The only thing that seems certain: Traditional models can no longer do the job. Read the full analysis.

Twitter

Nearly 30 Percent of Teachers Are Chronically Absent. How Rhode Island Is Using the Every Student Succeeds Act to Move the Needle

ESSA: More than one-quarter of teachers nationwide were chronically absent in 2015-16, severely hurting student achievement 鈥 one study found that a 10-day increase in teacher absences equals a loss of 6 to 10 days of learning in English language arts and 15 to 25 days in math 鈥 and costing taxpayers an estimated $4 billion a year. Now, Rhode Island, which has the third-highest chronic teacher absenteeism rate in the country, at 41 percent, is using its plan for complying with the federal Every Student Succeeds Act to encourage school accountability for excessive teacher absences. Absenteeism 鈥渋s a proxy for something broader,鈥 state Education Commissioner Ken Wagner told The 74. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really, really important to pay attention [to it].鈥 Read the full report.

Marshall Tuck, Tony Thurmond

California鈥檚 Campaign for State Superintendent Costs More Than Most Senate Races. Here鈥檚 Why

EDlection: Marshall Tuck and Tony Thurmond, the candidates for California state superintendent, are both Democrats. Both men have track records in education, and they agree that the state鈥檚 schools need improvement. But Tuck, a favorite of reform-minded philanthropists, and Thurmond, beloved by teachers unions, part ways on California鈥檚 largest-in-the-nation charter school sector. And though the office doesn鈥檛 carry important oversight over school choice, the candidates鈥 benefactors have dropped tens of millions of dollars 鈥 more than has been spent on Senate and congressional races in most other states 鈥 on the November campaign. Read the full election preview.

New York City Schools Chief Richard Carranza. (Ed Reed/NYC Mayoral Photography Office)

12 Surprising Quotes From New York City Schools Chief Richard Carranza, From Gifted & Talented to His Union Boss Best Buddy

New York City: Six months into his tenure as chancellor of the nation鈥檚 largest public school district, Richard Carranza sat down for a wide-ranging discussion at New York University, covering everything from his childhood as an English learner to gifted-and-talented programs (鈥渕easuring the privilege of the parent鈥), the city鈥檚 specialized high schools (鈥渢he epicenter of privilege鈥), United Federation of Teachers President Michael Mulgrew (鈥渕y brother from another mother鈥) and female students at Aviation High School. Brendan Lowe captures 12 surprising statements from the New York City schools chancellor.

Chok Ooi, left, co-founded Kenzie Academy in Indianapolis, his first stop in the United States from his native Malaysia. (Courtesy of Kenzie Academy)

In Silicon Prairie, Kenzie Academy鈥檚 Apprenticeship Program Trains Students for High-Paid Tech Jobs of Tomorrow 鈥 Without College or Debt

Apprenticeships: 鈥淲e want to make apprenticeships sexy again.鈥 Tech apprenticeship school Kenzie Academy is a big exercise in 鈥渨hat if鈥 鈥 as in, what if students can land a high-paying tech job by enrolling in a two-year apprenticeship program instead of a four-year college? What if they don鈥檛 have to take out loans, but can instead pay tuition retroactively, as a percentage of their postgraduate income? And what if the school fronts the money, giving it a stake in its students鈥 future success? The 74 traveled to Indianapolis 鈥 the heart of Silicon Prairie 鈥 looking for some answers. Read the full profile.

Fate of Nevada鈥檚 Landmark Ed Reforms Could Hinge on Outcome of Four State Senate Races

EDlection: Will education reform survive in Nevada? In 2015, the state鈥檚 lawmakers sought to mitigate years of poor academic performance in the state鈥檚 schools by passing a platform of education reforms ranging from increased taxes and school spending to universal education savings accounts and a state takeover district. Now, some of those more controversial efforts could be on the chopping block if Democrats take control of the legislature and win back the governor鈥檚 mansion for the first time this millennium. Republicans鈥 best slim hope of blocking a Democratic trifecta and keeping or expanding the reforms lies with a handful of toss-up seats in the narrowly divided state Senate. Read the full election preview.

Sen. Maggie Hassan (Sen. Hassan on Flickr)

74 Interview 鈥 Sen. Maggie Hassan on Moms in Congress, Advocating for Kids With Disabilities, and Special Ed & Classroom Innovation

74 Interview: Not long ago, motherhood spelled bad optics for a female political candidate. If her kids were young, voters might see her as neglectful. If they were older, well, so was she. But with a record 112 women in Congress in 2018, lawmakers who have cared for children and other loved ones are drawing on those experiences as they do the work their constituents elected them to do on Capitol Hill. Advocating for a child with profound disabilities launched New Hampshire Sen. Maggie Hassan鈥檚 political career and put her on the national stage during Education Secretary Betsy DeVos鈥檚 controversial Senate confirmation hearing. Broader representation, Hassan says in a new 74 Interview, can only lead to better policy. Read the full interview.

Cameron Campbell

Inside Iowa鈥檚 Waukee Innovation & Learning Center, the High School That Apple鈥檚 CEO Called 鈥榓 Model for the Country鈥

Innovation: 鈥淎 model for the country鈥 is what Apple CEO Tim Cook called the Waukee Innovation & Learning Center, part of the Waukee Community School District outside Des Moines, Iowa, when he visited last fall. Born out of growing needs in the business community and space issues at Waukee High School, the 70,000-square-foot building was designed as a flexible space for a program that was still forming and adapting. In a unique merging of programming and architectural design, students can partner with local companies across finance, engineering, technology, health services, biosciences, and agriculture, work alongside businesspeople, and solve problems. And the building can be deconstructed and reconstructed as the program鈥檚 needs develop over time. Contributor Tim Newcomb has the details. Read the full profile.

Brooks Kraft/Corbis via Getty Images

Integrating Schools by Income, Not Race: Why Cities Are Embracing 鈥榓n Idea Whose Time Has Come鈥

Cover Story: Like so much of American life, K-12 schools seem to have become more polarized in recent decades. By some measures, racial segregation is at its worst levels since the 1970s, and wealthy suburbs have become increasingly willing to break away from their districts, taking students and resources with them. But as many activists focus on making schools less racially divided, some districts and charter schools have set their sights on a different target: socioeconomic integration. By bringing together students across America鈥檚 class spectrum, experts say, schools can not only lift academic achievement but also foster better citizenship. Throughout October, The 74 featured Beth Hawkins鈥檚 multi-part exploration of San Antonio鈥檚 groundbreaking experiment with socioeconomic integration, examining how America鈥檚 seventh-largest city has tackled everything from special education to new, integrated Montessori and gifted-and-talented programs. Capping off the coverage, Kevin Mahnken reports on places and policymakers who are trying to create middle-class schools across the country.

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