Thursday, March 10, 2011

Island Winery? WHAT a CONCEPT as we've previously discussed)

Island winery aspirited idea

But city, others say that’s not a suitable location

By JOHN GALLAGHER FREE PRESS BUSINESS WRITER
   A Jackson-based winemaker named John Burtka is pitching Detroit on a spirited idea — creating Detroit’s first winery on a 10-acre site on Belle Isle.
   That site may not work, because Mayor Dave Bing’s office already is saying Belle Isle should remain a recreation-only enclave for Detroiters. But Bing’s spokesman, Dan Lijana, said Wednesday that the mayor is intrigued by the idea of a winery elsewhere in the city.
   In recent weeks, Burtka has been pitching his idea to a variety of civic leaders. He has lined up support from the TechTown business incubator at Wayne State University, whose director, Randal Charlton, is an enthusiastic supporter, and Dan Carmody, president of the Eastern Market Corp.
   “We’re surrounded by vineyards in Ontario and western Michigan. Why not Detroit?” Carmody said Wednesday.
   Charlton said that the proposal shows that growing agricultural products inside Detroit can generate lots of new economic development.
   “This is not about growing food. This is about agri-tourism,” Charlton said.
   Burtka’s plans call for growing grapes on the eastern end of Belle Isle, which is used today by joggers, cross-country skiers, people fishing off the island, and other recreational users. The proposal also 
includes using the landmark Casino on Belle Isle as a venue for sales and wine-tastings.
   “It is such a compelling venue that I’m sure we’re going to attract national and international attention,” Burtka said this week.
   Asked about the idea, Bing’s spokesman Lijana said Wednesday, “While the administration is receptive to the idea of creating a winery in Detroit, we believe Belle Isle is a place for recreation. There have been no talks at this point, although conversation is expected to begin next week.”
   Beyond Belle Isle, Burtka also hopes to operate his Detroit City Cellars winery as a cooperative growing arrangement. He would recruit 30 entrepreneurs to 
grow grapes on 1-acre plots around the city and then pool their production.
   If growing grapes for wine in Detroit sounds odd, Burtka notes that the city’s founder, the French entrepreneur Cadillac, found grapes growing wild in Detroit when he arrived in 1701, and that the French made a pretty passable wine out of it.
   Beyond that historical precedent, Burtka said climate studies have convinced him that year-round temperatures would support grape growing on the island.
   “I think this will draw people from outside the city into the city, and help them understand some of the neat things that are going on,” Burtka said.
   Any private proposal to lease public land on Belle Isle is sure to generate debate. On Wednesday, Melvadean Pearson, a board member with the nonprofit group Friends of Belle Isle, said the group would not support a winery on the island for a variety of reasons. “I think it would be an inappropriate site,” she said.
   Burtka said he thinks his proposal will get a fair hearing. “I’d say the climate is very favorable to look at new ideas,” he said.
   A native of Wyandotte, Burtka spent many years working as a mid-level manager for Ford and for an auto supplier before leaving that industry and opening what are now three wineries. They include Sleeping Bear and Cherry Creek vineyards.
BLAKE KOWNACKI/Special to the Free Press John Burtka, a Jackson-based winemaker, on the far east end of Belle Isle where he hopes to plant Detroit’s first vineyard.

Monday, February 14, 2011

In the World of Sometimes Things Aren't WHAT They Seem!

Editorial
New metrics reveal schools’ real woes
  


 Standards are everything in education. And for years, Michigan has played games with educational standards that have made them less meaningful, and even outright deceptive.
   When the state Board of Education lowered the “cut” scores — the minimum marks required to achieve proficiency on statewide assessment tests — it may have made some students, teachers and administrators feel better about how schools were performing. Suddenly, a lot more Michigan kids were doing proficient work.
   But the progress wasn’t real. When you compared scores on state tests to how Michigan kids did on national exams, the difference was stunning. More than three-quarters of the state’s students did adequate work on MEAP , but only 30% did so on NAEP.
   So it was an important step back toward reality last week when the state board reraised cut scores on the MEAP to more closely reflect the standards that children are meeting in other states.
   But it was just one step. Michigan’s slide backward in educational achievement has been going on for a decade or more, and has touched a lot of different areas that now need attention.
   Funding is one of them. As the state’s economy went sour, so did its appetite for educational investment. The state has actually been cutting educational funding while other states boost it, and the parallel drop in scores and rankings reflects the cost of that stinginess.
   Michigan also lags badly in efforts to rescue failing schools. It was just last year that the state announced it would form a recovery district for bad schools and begin to work to make them better. Now lawmakers need to ensure that high standards are enforced in the new district.
   Other problem areas include Michigan’s antiquated teacher tenure laws, which give school districts too little leverage to get rid of underperforming instructors, and union leaders who have been slow to embrace performance-based metrics.
   The lower cut scores did a good job of masking how much work there is to do in Michigan’s schools. Now it will be harder to hide the state’s educational deficits.
   Lawmakers and education officials will have to start doing the hard work of getting Michigan schools to hit the highest marks, according to the most rigorous standards.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Meeting Review: January 30, 2011 (E-mailed January 31, 2011)

Good Afternoon Kristin:

GREAT seeing you yesterday!  We had a very interesting meeting with Kate & Joe in the afternoon exploring some "possibilities-thinking" with regards to their various Island endeavors.  Not sure of the Why we were invited as of yet but was more taken with Why you weren't.  Anyway, perhaps that is another conversation.  Met Pat and her daughter Sophina (whom was a real life-force to be reckoned with) which added a great deal to the shared-blessings being explored.

As we briefly discussed regarding a Greenhouse (hooped) contribution to the Schoolhouse Grille we believe the next-step to that accomplishment would be a site-visit with the contributor to meet with you to determine appropriate site-location, installation and rigging issues, timing for delivery, follow-on additional greenhouse materials and hardware acquirement strategies, design elements, etc.  We were thinking of next week if you have time in your schedule or at your next convenience.  

Additionally, as we alluded to we would like to have you visit the Oakland County Greenhouse http://oaklandcommunitygreenhouse.blogspot.com/  initiative we are involved with to observe and become informed about additional available resources and expertise that may serve our mutual greenhouse-deployment purposes.  We can never have too many collaborative good-minds on a project.

Please let us know what your thoughts might be.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

EDUCATION 101: RACE to the TOP (In It, to Win It!)

State of the Union mystery: What do Obama's Race to the Top plans mean?

Obama called education key to 'winning the future' and wants to replace No Child Left Behind with a plan based on his Race to the Top initiative. But that left some experts scratching their heads.
Temp Headline Image
President Obama delivers his State of the Union address on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Jan. 25. In his speech, he challenged Congress to invest in new research and education to meet 'our generation's Sputnik moment.' He proposed replacing No Child Left Behind, which is due for an overhaul, with a plan modeled after his Race to the Top program.
(Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP)
By Amanda Paulson, Staff writer
posted January 26, 2011 at 1:43 pm EST
Education held a prominent place in President Obama’s State of the Union address Tuesday night, as he called for a re-commitment to "investing in better research and education" to meet “our generation’s Sputnik moment.”
Obama declared, "To win the future ... we also have to win the race to educate our kids." His words deliberately echoed his administration's Race to the Top program, even as he sounded some familiar themes, including the responsibility of parents and communities, the need for higher expectations in schools, and the importance of excellent teachers.
And he also put forth a few more specific proposals:
  • Prepare 100,000 more science, technology, engineering, and math teachers by the end of the decade.
  • Make permanent the tuition tax credit – worth $10,000 for four years of college – and expand the Pell Grant program.
  • Replace No Child Left Behind with a new, more flexible law, that he said should be modeled after his competitive Race to the Top grant program.
That last point had a few education experts scratching their heads, since Race to the Top is a totally different animal from the broader Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), the formal name for No Child Left Behind. The ESEA is the means by which the federal government delivers most of its money to schools and states – more than $100 billion, mostly determined by certain formulas, compared with the $4 billion of competitive grants that made up Race to the Top.
“He’s putting his chips on something that has limited usefulness, but it’s not a broad usefulness, and we don’t even know yet how well states will spend the money from Race to the Top,” says Jack Jennings, executive director of the Center on Education Policy in Washington, who otherwise liked the education themes Obama sounded in his speech. “With No Child Left Behind, he should have talked about [the need for] broader reforms and improvements and raising standards, rather than making the theme of competitiveness the main thing.”
Race to the Top was widely seen as spurring big legislative changes in states, particularly around more accountability for teachers, as they vied for the pools of money. But it was also criticized by many who felt the priorities it emphasized were wrong, were disappointed in the selection of winners, or felt that a competition – that by definition left many states and districts out of the grants – was the wrong way to go.
“I think he’s trying to say Race to the Top … is the way to get consensus between Republicans and Democrats for the reauthorization of the ESEA, and I don’t think it will play out that way,” says Grover “Russ” Whitehurst, director of the Brown Center of Education Policy at the Brookings Institution.
Mr. Whitehurst also says he would have liked to have seen a more coherent, comprehensive education agenda laid out rather than a few pet proposals, and wonders what the federal role will be in goals like increasing the numbers of math and science teachers.
“The devil will be in the details here, and we’ll need to see them in the budget proposal,” he says.
Still, many education reformers were gratified to see education accorded such a prominent place in the speech and in Obama’s agenda, particularly at a time of economic hardship.
“The themes were clichéd, but they were good clichés,” says Frederick Hess, the director of education policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute, who says he’s happy that Obama continued to emphasize the role of parents, the need for better teachers, and the need for funding to be attached to school performance.
“If we take these steps – if we raise expectations for every child, and give them the best possible chance at an education, from the day they’re born until the last job they take – we will reach the goal I set two years ago: by the end of the decade, America will once again have the highest proportion of college graduates in the world,” Obama said.
“These were strongly phrased sentiments, and something that would have been startling to hear a national Democrat say even four or five years ago,” says Mr. Hess. “Even as we’ve been wrestling with foreign challenges and economic difficulties, to his credit, he and his administration have continually tried to put education forward."

Friday, January 14, 2011

Do YOU know as much about BLOGGING as a 2nd GRADER?

What is... What Will Be Obsolete...in Second Grade?

 Permanent link
Cross posted to Langwitches Blog

At the beginning of most calendar years, especially at the beginning of a new decade, century or millennium, we tend to take a closer look at our past and future than perhaps at other times. In the past few weeks I came across the following two articles: You're Out: 20 Things that became Obsolete this Decade by the Huffington Post and Things that Babies born in 2011 will Never Knowby Money Talks News are listing books, travel agents, video tapes, cassettes, watches, CDs and other items that will have or will become obsolete.


The above mentioned articles came to mind, as I was in one of our second grade classrooms getting ready to talk to 7 & 8 year olds about being promoted from merely commenting on their classroom blog to co-authoring a weekly blog post to document their learning and to be able to share it with their parents. Their classroom teacher and I had discussed that students would receive a weekly "Job Assignment" as the "Math Blogger","Science Blogger", etc. and that these jobs would rotate among all students just as the other class job responsibilities.


As I was in their classroom waiting for the students to finish a previous activity, I was looking at their prominent bulletin board displaying students and their corresponding class job.
  1. Morning Opening Leader
  2. Teacher's Helper
  3. Pencil Sharpener
  4. Line Leader
  5. Door Holder
  6. Line Monitor
  7. Paper Collector
  8. Paper Passer
  9. Board Cleaner
  10. Book Organizer
The teacher wanted to keep the list of jobs to ten, one for each student in the class. The class started with a discussion about which current jobs they c(sh)ould be eliminated based on necessity and importance within the classroom community. Most students seemed to agree that the "Book Organizer" and "Pencil Sharpener" could be eliminated. I threw them a curve ball by asking them:

What classroom jobs could possibly not exist anymore in 50 years? What kind of classroom jobs would simply NOT exist anymore when their grandchildren would be going to school?
 We looked at each job title individually:
  1. Morning Opening LeaderCould still be around.
  2. Teacher's HelperCould still be around.
  3. Pencil SharpenerI held up my iPad and my stylus and they immediately made the connection. Then I showed them how I use the NoteTaker HD app to take notes and how I could switch between different colored pencils as well as their thickness. They agreed that I was not in need to sharpen pencils anymore.
  4. Line Leader-Could still be around, IF kids still were going to a physical school every day to learn. I reminded them of our Skype calls and how we could have class with children who lived in different cities, states, countries or continents. There would be no need for a line leader.
  5. Door Holder- Virtual classrooms would not have a door anymore that needed to be held open.
  6. Line Monitor- No students would be lining up in a virtual classroom to walk one behind the other to the lunchroom, resource or library...no monitor needed.
  7. Paper Collector- I pulled my iPad out again and showed them how I could simply e-mail or share my notes with the teacher and she could do the same. We imagined how every student in 50 years would have some sort of device that allowed their teacher to simply have access to their work without the work having to be "collected"
  8. Paper PasserPassing out paper would also be obsolete, since teachers could share any "papers" or assignments via their device with students.
  9. Board CleanerOne click... board is wiped clean
  10. Book Organizer- I showed the class my iBook and Kindle app and how I access any book on my shelf. Close the book...and it is "neatly" stored and even remembers the last page I read.
  

Take a look at the new bulletin board, that their teacher created for her class the following day. Since her second grade is not a 1:1 iPad class, nor holds virtual class for her students, some of the original jobs are [still] valuable and necessary in their classroom. The new added jobs are:
  1. Science Blogger
  2. Spelling Blogger
  3. Reading Blogger
  4. Writing Blogger
  5. Math Blogger
Their teacher created a "template" blog draft with an outline of a format including the different subject areas. The bloggers of the week will be writing daily in the draft version to document and reflect on their lessons and their learning in different subjects. They will collaboratively revise and edit the draft as a class before publishing and sharing the post. For me, this "blogger" job describes beautifully (at an appropriate developmental stage of a second grader), one of the roles to develop empowered learners that Alan November lists as "Official Scribe". I am looking forward to seeing their progress as they get comfortable with their new class job as bloggers, practicing online writing, documenting, reflecting on their learning, sharing, collaborating and so much more...

Adapted from Alan November (pp.188-193), Curriculum 21 (ASCD, 2010) by Heidi Hayes Jacobs.

What are some of the classroom jobs that are becoming obsolete in your classroom? What jobs are replacing the old ones? Please share!

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Why Blog?

Web 2.0 | Feature

Can Blogging Make a Difference?

When Michigan State University doctoral student Todd Ide needed a research topic for a large-scale study required for his Ph.D., he looked at the classes he was teaching in his role as a graduate assistant. He wondered if there was a meaningful way to incorporate Web 2.0 into his curriculum for "Reading and Responding to Children's Literature." He reviewed current literature about blogging in education and saw an opportunity to further the research.
Formal studies about incorporating blogs into curricula were minimal, and what was out there was more anecdotal in nature, said Ide. "Most other studies reflected what the researcher's experience was and what they believed the students took from the experience," said Ide. "What I found lacking was research that examined blogging's effectiveness from the student perspective. There was little discussion of student perceptions concerning the value of blogging as an activity or whether the students believed blogging impacted their learning."
Ide began with a pilot study in 2009, which sought to answer three main questions:
  • Does participating in a blog help reinforce learning that is done in the classroom by extending these conversations outside the confines of class hours?
  • Do students believe that participating in a blog was valuable to their learning and understanding of key course concepts?
  • Do students view the blog as a positive addition to their course learning or as another obstacle or requirement to be completed?
Another goal was to offer insights to instructors as to how to incorporate blogging in a way that is beneficial to students. "Most educators use technology for administrative tasks rather than instruction because they don't feel prepared and aren't getting the technical support needed. The results of the study, I believed, could help suggest best practices for using blogs as learning tools."
Nature of the Blog
While there are certainly plenty of other Web 2.0 communications media from which he could have chosen, Ide decided to study blogging because it combines solitary thought and social interaction to engage students and reinforce learning. The theory is that blogging increases collaboration, helps students transform and refine their ideas owing to the reflective and interactive nature, and improves critical thinking. Blogging disrupts and transforms, said Ide. In addition, blogs, these days, take very little time for a teacher to set up. "The ease of blogging with new tools such as Blogger and Wordpress and the fact they are hosted and are free to use, also make it easier to get started," said Ide.
Another reason Ide chose blogs as the topic of his research is that blog posts are accessible to a large global audience. According to Ide, blog search company Technorati reported more than 133 million blogs in existence, and there are currently 346 million people globally reading the 900,000 blog entries that are posted every 24 hours.
"The numbers are not consistent," he said, "but it's explosive, and it's trending vertically. This means that blogging allows students to publish their thoughts and ideas in a public venue that potentially has a worldwide audience. This public exposure should lead to students being even more reflective and thoughtful about their posts and comments, because anyone and everyone around the world can view what they write."
To Find Out
Eight out of 25 students in Ide's "Reading and Responding to Children's Literature" class volunteered to participate in the study. Ide set up the blog before the semester began. "We used Blogger mainly because it's free and fairly intuitive when learning how to use it," he said. "Students were given author access so they could create posts and comments."
He began the semester by sharing articles about what constitutes a quality blog post to give students a benchmark for achievement and to take the guesswork out of what is expected. "We also discuss what a 'substantive' post looks like mainly to avoid the 'Here's a great Web site' or 'yes, I agree' comments that are really not helpful in furthering the dialogue," he said. Ide also warned them that owing to the nature of the Internet, once a blog post is out there, it's there forever. "I wanted to make sure they are thinking through their arguments to put them in as good a light as possible," he said.
All students were required to post or comment a minimum of five times during the course. Two posts were assignments. In one, for example, Ide posted a link to a video and asked the students to watch that video and respond. Another assigned post was to gauge their reaction to a particular reading. The three other posts or comments were to be of the students' own choosing. "They were free to extend the discussion of topics covered in class, respond to the readings, ask questions, pose ideas about course themes, or to bring up material that they encountered elsewhere," said Ide. "The only requirement was that these posts be substantial in nature and that they needed to somehow tie into the course theories."
Ide mostly stayed out of the blog. "I tended not to comment," he said. "I wanted this to be a conversation they are having: engaging in the course material and thinking about children's literature. I am afraid if I am involved it will be seen as 'word from on high' and it might shut down conversation if my opinion is different from somebody else's."
One example of how blogging was an integral part of the coursework was a discussion about fact versus fiction regarding a piece of United States history. "We reviewed an article about Rosa Parks," Ide explained, "which looked at what really happened and debunks a lot of the myths. So, for instance, we talked about how she was not just a tired woman who didn't want to move to the back of the bus because her feet hurt. She was an active member of the civil rights movement, and that the act was planned, not spur of the moment as the myth would have it. The act was part of a very well thought-out strategy to push the issue into the public domain and have the public debate it." Many students did not know that, said Ide, and only knew the storybook version of this part of U.S. history. "This encouraged them to find other resources and write about their findings on the blog," said Ide.
Another example of blog participation was when students argued about the appropriateness of some of the books read in class. "One student's post was called 'How The Book Thief and The Hunger Games ruined my spring break' because he hated the downness of the books," said Ide. "That post sparked a good conversation of what is and isn't appropriate reading to offer youth and what themes these books offer young readers that are beneficial."
Participation in this online activity represented 10 percent of the students' grades. Extra credit was offered to the students for greater participation in the form of one percentage point added to the final grade.
Eight separate interviews were conducted over the course of two weeks. "The interviews were conducted toward the end of the semester so that it diminished fear in terms of how their responses might affect their grades," said Ide.
Prior to the start of each interview, students were told Ide was seeking to examine whether or not blogs and blogging improves student learning and engagement in the course. Each interview, which was digitally recorded and transcribed, lasted between 45 minutes and an hour, and the participants were asked a set series of questions. Follow-up questions were asked if Ide felt the need to clarify or further probe the subject's responses.
Ide interviewed them about their experience and their perceptions, probing their own understanding of how they learned, and what they did or didn't get from the activity. The transcripts were then coded for analysis using HyperResearch 2.8 qualitative analysis software.
Positive Results
Students reported positive results, with benefits such as "providing an outlet for thinking about things we talked about in class." Students began almost immediately as a result to make more interesting observations online than in class or in papers. In collaboration with peers they extended the analysis beyond the obvious, building arguments carefully yet succinctly, often by synthesizing the postings preceding theirs. "They made a real attempt to communicate something about which they felt strongly," said Ide.
Other positive results included:
  • The class was only held once a week, and blogging proved to be effective for extending the discussion during the days in between;
  • When a student encountered something interesting pertaining to the subject, he or she didn't have to wait an entire week to share that information with the rest of the class;
  • Blogging also provided a way for students reluctant to share in a classroom setting to find their voices and express themselves in a less intimidating setting. One student thought it was "cool that she was interested enough in the subject to post about it";
  • The blogging aspect of the class helped some students overcome a sense of isolation;
  • The blogging helped create more intimacy with fellow students, leading to a greater sense of community;
  • The exposure of their posts to meaningful audiences, including other students, and a potential global audience, encouraged careful reflection and articulation of the subject;
  • Blogging helped students direct their own learning;
  • Blogging increased the sense of engagement in the course material, providing the scaffolding necessary to support student learning.
Challenges of Incorporating Blogs into Curricula
"While the students reported positive experiences with blogging overall, that's not to say this technology is without its problems," said Ide. "Some reported that at times, they responded for the sake of responding rather than processing the information and learning," said Ide. "They posted fast and did it because it was an obligation. Another student said that, sometimes, her schedule made it difficult to focus. If her attention was needed elsewhere, she would just read as quickly as possible to find something she could comment on to fulfill the requirements. Two others shared similar experiences."
The results also seemed to confirm perceptions reported in earlier studies, which indicated that subjects did not perceive a connection between classes and blogging.
"All the respondents in this mini study indicated they would have liked a more explicit connection between course content and the activity of blogging," said ide. "They needed the connection to be made more clear and maintained during the course of the semester in order to understand why we were doing it and encourage them to continue to make the types of connections necessary to make the activity meaningful."
The Study Continues
This last year, Ide continued the study with a larger section with a larger pool of 40 students and a larger number of required posts and comments, and he was able to incorporate the lessons learned in the pilot study.
"Clearly the issue of how to get students engaged in the activity without simply doing it because it's a requirement [was a challenge to be addressed]," said Ide. "And regarding the blog-class separation, the students were right. So I needed to change the way we use blogging in class."
In direct response to this mini study, said Ide, he incorporated new ways of using the blog during lessons. "I call it the Blog All Stars. I select two or three posts that were very good and well thought-out and I explain to the class why these are great examples. I ask the poster to read them, then I open up the floor and ask if there are other things on the blog that people want to talk about."
The second batch of students were also better able to make the connections because Ide explained early in the semester how everything that goes on the blog needs to be connected to course content, and he offered suggestions. "During class, I might say, 'This is a good topic, and if you wanted to write a blog entry about it, it would work well.' I also point out areas that might need more explanation or research, and a lot of times students do look up the extra info and post about it."
Ide said his research confirmed what earlier studies found, that blogging "combines the best of solitary reflection and social interaction by actively promoting the development of learning communities." His study indicates that this is true from the student perspective as well.
"Blogging does go a long way toward helping students be autonomous, creative, helpful, and provocative," he said, "by providing them with the type of environment that allows students to direct their own learning in a manner that transcends the existing curriculum."
Blogging helps blur the line between formal and informal learning, he said, and the blogging activities in his course have real world implications too.
"Blogs and wikis and podcasts are real-world stuff," said Ide. "In terms of blogs, look at things like Slate Magazine, which is basically a political blog, and many other blogs and Web sites have stepped into the mainstream in terms of journalism and news reporting. Students can get real world experience doing this."
In fact, Ide said, advertising majors have come to him and reported that while they were on job interviews, they were asked specifically about their blogging experience. "The ad agency is only interested in hiring students who have experience in social media because that was a weakness in their agency. They need people who are able to do that, and we are providing that experience."
About the Author
Denise Harrison is a freelance writer and editor specializing in technology, specifically in audiovisual and presentation. She also works as a consultant for Second Life projects and is involved with nonprofits and education within the 3D realm. She can be reached here

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Progress on: Building a Grad Nation (Report)




READ THE REPORT http://civicenterprises.net/pdfs/gradnation.pdf

Grad Nation Guidebook http://www.americaspromise.org/gradnation

Tuesday, Nov. 30, 2010

School Dropout Rates Are Dropping, But Still No Cause For Celebration

High school graduation rates are one of education's perennial bad-news stories. How bad? In 2008, there were 1,746 "dropout factories," high schools that graduate fewer than 60% of their students. But according to a new report released Tuesday, there is finally some good news to talk about. First, the national graduation rate has inched up from 72% in 2001 to 75% in 2008. There were 261 fewer dropout factories in 2008 than in 2002. And during that six-year period, 29 states improved their graduation rates with two of them — Wisconsin and Vermont — reaching almost a 90% graduation rate.
But don't call in the cast of Glee just yet. According to the report, by Johns Hopkins University along with two education-oriented groups, America's Promise Alliance and Civic Enterprises, eight states had graduation rates below 70% in 2008, and 2.2 million students still attend dropout factories. An achievement gap also persists: only 64% of Hispanic students and 62% of African Americans graduated in 2008, while 81% of white students did. (See the top 10 college dropouts.)
These shortfalls carry enormous costs for students as well as for taxpayers. In today's economy, dropouts have few options, a poor quality of life and almost no economic mobility. In 2009, the average person with a college degree earned about $1,015 a week while the average high school dropout earned just $454. Meanwhile, the unemployment rate is 5.2% for those with a college degree and 14.6% for dropouts. The Alliance for Excellent Education, an advocacy group based in Washington, D.C., estimates that dropouts each year cost the nation more than $300 billion in lost income.
Dropouts are an issue in all communities. And for years, low graduation rates were masked by states and school districts that used misleading counting methods to make the dropout situation appear better than it was. Officials would, for example, only report the percentage of students who left in a particular year rather than the cumulative total for each cohort of ninth-graders. (That's like looking at a credit card's monthly interest charge instead of its annual rate.) But reformers have managed to put an end to that particular habit: as part of the push over the past decade for greater accountability in schools, states are now required to report on graduation rates in a more standardized and rigorous way. (See what makes a school great.)
Now that we have more reliable numbers, the just-released report — which is titled Building a Grad Nation (and for which, I should note, I participated in some of the lead-up work) — found that just as the dropout problem is more acute in some schools than in others, success in addressing the issue is varied too. New York and Tennessee, for example, saw substantial improvements in graduation rates while Arizona, Nevada and Utah slid noticeably in the wrong direction.
And while it's true that some of the recent progress could be the result of quick fixes — like low-quality programs that allow students to earn high school credits without actually meeting standards — one of the report's co-authors, Robert Balfanz, a Johns Hopkins researcher and nationally recognized dropout expert, told me that in order to see the sustained progress that is occurring in some places, "you have to change the underlying dynamics" in schools and school systems. (Read "No Dropouts Left Behind: New Rules on Grad Rates.")
He's right, which is why the Grad Nation report is at once welcome news but also a frustrating example of political impotence. Strategies to substantially improve outcomes can be deployed today. The steps the report identifies are well known and fairly obvious: smaller schools, effective teaching, accurate data and challenging standards that engage students, plus holding schools accountable for graduation rates and implementing early-warning systems that use data to identify and support students at risk of dropping out. Yet the report's authors told me they are worried that the volatile political environment in many states, coupled with almost 700 new state legislators and 29 new governors entering office in 2011, could make it harder to push through necessary reforms.
To help focus such efforts, the report calls for a Civic Marshall Plan. And just in case that metaphor was lost on anyone, Colin Powell, the founding chairman of America's Promise, co-wrote the forward for the report, an open letter calling the nation to action. (Comment on this story.)
Truly transforming America's education system into something envied the world over will require more innovation. Yet in the meantime, as shown by the new data, we can do substantially better simply by acting on what we know now. Which means that Grad Nation is good news but also a wake-up call. Three in four students graduating from high school is nothing to celebrate in a country like ours.
Andrew J. Rotherham, who writes the blog Eduwonk, is a co-founder and partner at Bellwether Education, a nonprofit working to improve educational outcomes for low-income students. School of Thought, his education column for TIME.com, usually runs on Thursdays.

AGENDA Item: Our next meeting under Fundraising!

PUTTING MICHIGAN FIRST
Buying local gives boost to businesses

A grassroots campaign offers hope to state economy

By KATHERINE YUNG FREE PRESS BUSINESS WRITER
   In the midst of the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression, a growing number of Michigan business owners and consumers are fighting back, one Michigan purchase at a time.
   They’re part of an expanding buy local movement, a grassroots campaign that advocates purchasing products and services that are made, grown or performed in Michigan.
   Buy local groups have sprung up in cities including Ann Arbor, Grand Rapids and Kalamazoo. Entrepreneurs and large retailers also are getting in 
on the action, selling more Michigan-made products and services.
   One Michigander has even launched a school fund-raising program that sells Michigan-produced foods and other goods.
   “This is something every one of us can do,” said Lisa 
Diggs, founder of the Buy Michigan Now campaign, which has seen more than 5,500 residents pledge their commitment to buying local products and services from local businesses. “That’s really empowering to people in our state, especially now.”
   She and other supporters say funneling more money to local businesses helps Michigan’s economy in a number of ways, from building stronger communities to increasing jobs. Evidence that the movement generates a positive effect is mostly anecdotal.
   For example, when Hudsonville Ice Cream in Holland expanded into metro Detroit in May 2009, it discovered that several supermarkets were enthusiastic about offering a Michigan-made ice cream. Since then, sales have taken off and the company is planning to increase its work force.
   “We wouldn’t have had the opportunity that presented itself without buy local,” said Bruce Kratt, Hudsonville’s director of sales.



RASHAUN RUCKER/Detroit Free Press
   Kelly Martin, owner of Kelly’s Karamels, watches Noah Dreyer, 8, of Bloomfield Township taste treats Thursday at Plum Market in Bloomfield Township. "It’s awesome. Everyone should try them," he said.
ADAM BIRD/Special to the Free Press
   Hudsonville Ice Cream in Holland expanded into metro Detroit in 2009. Sales took off. Now the company plans to add jobs.


Buy local movement is gaining traction

Made in Michigan has an allure that is proving good for shoppers, workers
By KATHERINE YUNG FREE PRESS BUSINESS WRITER
   Kelly Martin has experienced firsthand the benefits that can result when Michigan businesses and consumers support each other.
   In July 2009, she launched Kelly’s Karamels in Troy, making and selling caramel candies based on a recipe from her 90-year-old grandmother. Today, the start-up business is profitable, employs seven workers and plans to operate out of its own facility by year’s end.
   Martin, 47, credits the buy local movement in Michigan for helping her business grow.
   The former pharmaceutical executive began selling her candy at a Buy Michigan Festival in Northville. She now lists her business in the Buy Michigan Now directory and holiday gift guide, and several local supermarkets that offer Michigan-made products sell her caramels.
   “This has really opened up a lot of doors for people like me,” Martin said. “People here are very, very conscious about supporting their own state.”
   What happened to Martin illustrates the power of Michigan’s buy local movement. Advocates say the grassroots campaign has gained momentum during the state’s deep recession because many business owners and consumers view buying local as a way to support their communities during tough times.
   But whether buy local is just a fad or something that will endure after the economy rebounds remains to be seen.
   A wake-up call
   The movement reached a turning point in December 2008 when top executives of General Motors, Chrysler and the UAW went to Capitol Hill to plead for government help, according to Lisa Diggs, founder of the Buy Michigan Now campaign.
   The criticism caused many Michiganders to realize that the only people that could help their state are themselves, Diggs said.
   Buy Michigan Now has attracted more than 2,500 businesses to its company directory.
   Although no one knows how large the buy local movement in Michigan is, more than 960 dues-paying members have joined groups promoting the cause that have sprung up in recent years in Ann Arbor, Grand Rapids, Kalamazoo and
Jackson.
   “You do have the power to affect how your community looks and feels by how you spend your money,” said Ingrid Ault, executive director of Think Local First of Washtenaw County, which has 224 members.
   How much of a boost?
   Supporters say the movement is helping Michigan’s economy, but no studies have been done to prove this.
   Civic Economics, an economic consulting firm, has estimated that $68 of every $100 spent at a locally-owned business stays in the local economy in the form of wages, taxes, community donations and 
spending on local business services and supplies.
   In contrast, only $43 stays in the local economy when $100 is spent at a nonlocal business.
   In 2008, Civic Economics examined the Grand Rapids area and predicted that a 10% shift in market share from chain stores to local businesses 
across the retail spectrum would result in 1,600 new jobs in Kent County and $137 million in additional economic activity.
   Although statistics like these have aided the movement, its growth has been hampered by consumers who feel it’s too expensive and inconvenient to buy local products and services.
   Consumer convenience
   A March 2009 survey by the consumer and product research firm Mintel found that only 1 in 6 adults, or 17% of respondents, buy local as often as possible. That contrasts with 27% who don’t care where their food and services come from and 30% who say they would purchase local goods and services but don’t know where to find them.
   “We are a society of convenience and price,” said Kriss Giannetti, president of JXN Local First in Jackson, which has struggled to increase interest in buy local efforts.
   To overcome these perceptions, several entrepreneurs in 
Michigan have established businesses to help consumers buy local. In September, James and Patti Travioli of Mt. Pleasant officially launched MadeInMichigan.com  , an online marketplace where vendors can sell their local products directly to consumers and businesses.
   “People are seeing all the jobs lost. They are getting kind of fed up and trying to do whatever little thing they can,” said James Travioli.
   Another company, Argent Tape & Label in Plymouth, sells “Grown in Michigan” and “Made in Michigan” stickers to help businesses identify their Michigan-made products. So far, despite very little advertising, Argent has seen a steady demand for the stickers, said Melissa Toth, the company’s marketing specialist.
   School fund-raisers
   In Waterford, former teacher Neil Yaremchuk recently formed the Made in Michigan Marketplace, a fund-raising program for schools, churches and other groups that feature 19 of the state’s products, all under $15. He is in talks with several schools interested in the program.
   “We don’t just make things here. We make really good things here,” said Yaremchuk, who drove 16,000 miles around the state this year looking for Michigan products and meeting with business owners.
   Many of the state’s supermarkets also are playing a key role in the movement by featuring more Michigan produce, baked goods and other foods.
   This year, Meijer is increasing its spending on locally grown fruits and vegetables to $60 million, up 20% from 2009 levels. At Wal-Mart, 4.5% of the total produce it sells in the U.S. comes from local farmers, a number it plans to double by the end of 2015.
   Last year, Kroger spent more than $400 million on Michigan agricultural products, in addition to selling hundreds of Michigan-made food items.
   State advantage
   “I view the buy local movement as building a big lifeboat for us,” said Jim Hiller, CEO of Hiller’s Markets, whose seven stores sell more than 5,000 products made or grown in Michigan. Though he admits that the effort has probably decreased his company’s bottom line, Hiller said he wants to help the state be successful.
   Michigan has an advantage over many states when it comes to buying local. It is blessed with a large and diverse agricultural industry, with 1,588 licensed food processors, according to the Michigan Department of Agriculture. The state produces more than 200 commodities on a commercial basis.
   How hard is it to buy local in Michigan? Earlier this year, Jennifer Berkemeier, special events director at the Fillmore Theater in Detroit, set out to buy only local products and services for six months, blogging about her experience onbuymichigannow.com  .
   To her surprise, the 44-year-old Farmington Hills resident discovered that despite her busy schedule and full-time job, it only took a little bit of extra time and effort to shop at independent stores and purchase Michigan products and services. And contrary to perception, buying local didn’t cost her more money.
   Berkemeier estimates that she could find Michigan vendors for 80% of her purchases.
   “It wasn’t hard at all,” she said. “The biggest eye-opener was realizing how many locally based stores there are.”
   • CONTACT KATHERINE YUNG: 313-222-8763 OR KYUNG@FREEPRESS.COM 
RASHAUN RUCKER/Detroit Free Press Cherry caramels from Kelly’s Karamels make a mouth-watering display.
RASHAUN RUCKER/Detroit Free Press
   Kelly Martin, creator and owner Kelly’s Karamels, credits the buy local movement for helping her business grow. The former pharmaceutical executive began selling her candy at a Buy Michigan Festival in Northville.
ADAM BIRD/Special to the Free Press
   Employees keep every work surface spotless as 3-gallon containers sit waiting to be filled at Hudsonville Ice Cream in Holland.
KATHLEEN GALLIGAN/Detroit Free Press
   Michigan’s agricultural bounty includes blueberries.