Category Archives: kids

Has Michelle Rhee improved the Washington DC school system?

Here’s the latest installment about Michelle Rhee shaking up the school system in Washington DC. It examines if education better in DC today after 2 years with Michelle Rhee as school chancellor. The test scores show almost 50% of elementary students are now on grade level, according to the city’s year-end DC-CAS test. When Rhee took over, only 29% were on grade level in math.

Even though Michelle Rhee has never even been a school principal or a school superintendent, she’s accomplished a lot. She’s closed 23 schools, slashed her central office staff, pumped $200 million into school modernization, quadrupled spending on teacher training, and replaced about half of her school principals. Her changes have caused plenty of controversy, but the results speak for themselves.

Michelle Rhee still wants at least one more change. A contract that could tie teacher pay to how well students perform on tests. Will pay for performance work in the education system? We may find out soon.

Has Michelle Rhee improved the Washington DC school system?

Lisa Ling visits Locke High School on Nightline



After the return of Laura Ling and Euna Lee, Lisa Ling is back doing special reports. Here’s a recent report she did for Nightline on Locke High School in South Central Los Angeles. This troubled school is a notoriously tough school. In May 2008, a brawl involving a reported 600 students broke out in the middle of campus. The school is going through a transformation with Green Dot Public Schools, a privately-funded charter organization. Lisa Ling spent a year as the school transforms. Watch her report below. You can read more here.

The report reminds us of the documentary “Whatever It Takes” and Michelle Rhee making changes in the D.C. school system.

Locke High School Transformation Part 1

Locke High School Transformation Part 2

Recording Voices: Stories of Asian Pacific American



We twittered about Recording Voices: Stories of Asian Pacific American in New York, you can see the report here.

Here’s a community briefing to release the Coalition for Asian American Children and Families’ (CAACF) latest report on the impacts of language brokering on families and to discuss the implications on policy and practice. Language brokering is not merely the ability to speak two languages. Language brokering means that bilingual youth are translating and interpreting in daily situations without any special training and are bridging between the home culture and American culture. The role of youth in connecting their limited English proficient parents to the outside world extends beyond communicating the information verbatim. Youth often influence the content and messages presented. Parents rely on this information to make family decisions or assign the decision-making responsibility on the youth themselves.

New York City’s Asian Pacific American community has doubled every decade for the last 30 years, becoming the most rapidly expanding group of the city and accounting for 11 percent of the city’s population. Of the approximately 873,000 Asian Pacific Americans in New York City, 78% are foreign-born, 28% speak little or no English, and 53% are born into poverty.

BTW – There’s been a lot of good research coming out of New York including Asian Americans in Poverty.



Recording Voices: Stories of Asian Pacific American (Presentation starts at the 7 minute mark)

KEY FINDINGS: Recording Voices found that Asian Pacific American families often rely on children and youth to be translators and interpreters when accessing public services. While other research shows that there are positive impacts of being a language broker, youth identified negative impacts including the 1) increased burden when providing language assistance; 2) heightened anxiety, stress, and fear of miscommunication; 3) conflict with the family unit; and 4) role-reversal between parents and youth. Youth who were surveyed for the policy brief indicated that:

  • 49% of youth translate for their parents “always/a lot.”
  • 61% of foreign-born youth translate “always/a lot”, compared to 43% of native-born youth.
  • 83% of youth translate notes and letters from school.
  • 49% of youth translate forms from the doctor’s office.

Clara Ma names Mars Science Laboratory rover "Curiosity"



Twelve-year-old Clara Ma from the Sunflower Elementary school in Lenexa, KS submitted the winning entry to name NASA’s Mars Science Laboratory rover. The sixth-grade student named the rover “Curiosity”. A NASA panel selected the name following a nationwide student contest that attracted more than 9,000 proposals via the Internet and mail. The panel primarily took into account the quality of submitted essays. The “Curiosity” rover is scheduled for launch in 2011. (kinda reminds us of Grace Moon wins Doodle 4 Google winner last year)



The following is the essay written by Clara Ma, winner of the Mars Science Laboratory naming contest. Twelve-year-old Ma submitted the winning entry, “Curiosity.”

Curiosity is an everlasting flame that burns in everyone’s mind. It makes me get out of bed in the morning and wonder what surprises life will throw at me that day. Curiosity is such a powerful force. Without it, we wouldn’t be who we are today. When I was younger, I wondered, ‘Why is the sky blue?’, ‘Why do the stars twinkle?’, ‘Why am I me?’, and I still do. I had so many questions, and America is the place where I want to find my answers. Curiosity is the passion that drives us through our everyday lives. We have become explorers and scientists with our need to ask questions and to wonder. Sure, there are many risks and dangers, but despite that, we still continue to wonder and dream and create and hope. We have discovered so much about the world, but still so little. We will never know everything there is to know, but with our burning curiosity, we have learned so much.

As her prize, Clara Ma flew from Kansas to NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) to meet and sign the next rover that will zoom millions of miles to Mars. She also got a VIP tour of JPL, along with her parents and sister. Inside the building where Curiosity is being assembled, Clara donned a “bunny suit” to step into the clean room and sign her name on the rover. Clara and her family also visited the Mars Yard, where future generations of rovers are tested.



Mars Science Laboratory rover “Curiosity”

Moshe Kai Cavalin – 11 year old college graduate

Moshe Kai Cavalin, 11, graduates with honors from East Los Angeles Community College this week. This Taiwanese-Israeli kid studied astrophysics, does martial arts, and plays the piano. Check out the video and see all martial arts trophies in the background. However, he’s not into playing video games.

Long term, he wants to be in movies and take part in the 2016 Olympics. Moshe is also writing about for kids on how to succeed.

Moshe Kai Cavalin – 11 year old college graduate

Kavya Shivashankar – 2009 Spelling Bee champion



13-year-old Kavya Shivashankar from Kansas has won the Scripps National Spelling Bee. Out of nearly 300 contestants, Kavya won by spelling “laodicean” correctly. Definition of “laodicean” is lukewarm or indifferent in religion or politics.

Kavya enjoys practicing her violin, bicycling, swimming, and learning Indian classical dance. She names Nupur Lala, the 1999 Scripps National Spelling Bee champion, as her role model and the inspiration for her spelling career. She has plans for her future career as well: She looks forward to becoming a neurosurgeon. Kavya participated in the 2006, 2007, and 2008 national finals—tying for 10th, 8th, and 4th place, respectively.



Still get a kick out of watching Spelling Bee – Numb Nut or Numnah video from last year.



CBS Julie Chen interviews Kavya Shivashankar