Tampabay.com
JULY 19, 2008

Today's news

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IN THE ZONE: Pinellas created a "success zone" of 20 struggling schools targeted for special assistance. The results have been mixed at best. (Times photo, Douglas Clifford)

MAKE IT BETTER: Fourth- and fifth-graders from Potter Elementary tour their East Tampa neighborhood, then midtown St. Petersburg, in hopes of finding ways to improve their own community.

SUPPORTING CHANGE: The Largo/Mid-Pinellas Chamber of Commerce joins a growing chorus calling for decentralized operations in the school system.

GROWING STRONG: Enrollment in Florida's for-profit colleges has increased 23 percent as the number of institutions also rises, mainly serving older adults seeking additional skills, the Sun-Sentinel reports.

LET THE VOTERS DECIDE: A candidate for Miami-Dade School Board says the nation's fifth-largest school district should have an elected superintendent. Sitting board members say they want to explore the idea, the Miami Herald reports.

ON PROBATION: A troubled Maitland charter school, which faced huge debt amid accusations of financial mismanagement, could win a reprieve and stay open, the Orlando Sentinel reports.

OOPS: The Manatee school district admits it made a mistake in saying it had no knowledge that a star high school football player, who now faces murder charges, had been arrested in 2007, the Bradenton Herald reports.

NO CYBERBULLYING ALLOWED: Leon superintendent Jackie Pons takes a strong stance against online bullying, which played a role in the dismissal of several high school softball coaches, the Tallahassee Democrat reports.

COLLABORATION IN CRESTVIEW: University of West Florida officials seek to work with FAMU as it looks to open a pharmacy school in the north Florida town, the Northwest Florida Daily News reports.

BUDGET ROUNDUP: Flagler will close the day care centers it has operated for employees' children, the Daytona Beach News-Journal reports. FSU gives its employees passes to ride the public bus system for free, the Tallahassee Democrat reports.

AROUND THE NATION: School districts look at more factors than race in the latest wave of integration, the NY Times Magazine reports. The Texas Board of Education allows schools to teach Bible classes, the AP reports.

Visit the Gradebook at noon for an interview with Sami Leigh Scott, the new president of the Pinellas School Advisory Councils Association.

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About the blog

Gradebook features education articles and insights on schools in Florida, focusing on Tampa Bay area schools. What's the latest from the Florida Department of Education? How is the FCAT being used to compare Florida schools? What's going in on in Tampa Bay schools? Get an insider's view from the Times education reporting team.

Meet the team

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THE TEAM

Rebecca Catalanello covers Pinellas County schools. E-mail her: rcatalanello@tampabay.com.

Tony Marrero covers Hernando County schools. E-mail him: tmarrero@tampabay.com.

Marlene Sokol covers Hillsborough County schools. E-mail her: sokol@tampabay.com.

Ron Matus covers Pinellas County schools. E-mail him: matus@tampabay.com.

Jeffrey S. Solochek covers Pasco County schools. E-mail him: solochek@tampabay.com.

Kim Wilmath covers the University of South Florida. E-mail her: kwilmath@tampabay.com.

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