Deborah Simmons
Articles by Deborah Simmons
SIMMONS: Talented Mills lives on in work
HBO is offering lovers of jazz and history a glimpse at one of America's oldest black neighborhoods on Sunday night when its series "Treme" debuts. Published April 9, 2010
D.C. teacher contract includes merit pay
After more than two years of talks, officials with D.C. Public Schools and the Washington Teachers Union announced Wednesday a tentative contract deal that includes a merit-pay component - an issue long pushed by conservatives and supported by the Obama administration, but considered a no-no by teachers unions. Published April 8, 2010
SIMMONS: Can’t be a felon, he’s too young
Sometimes young people are predators; sometimes they are prey. In either case, the time should fit the crime. Published April 7, 2010
SIMMONS: Left exploits Girl Scouts
Parentdish.com is conducting an interesting poll that asks a simple question: Should the Girl Scouts be involved with Planned Parenthood in distributing sex guides? Published March 26, 2010
Lower enrollment spells closure for city schools
Closing and consolidating schools, and laying off teachers, because of shrinking enrollments are nothing new for urban districts from Washington, D.C., to San Antonio. Published March 24, 2010
SIMMONS: New generation of HIV threats
Meet Rick Webster, Tammy Sharp and Kevin Sellars, and allow a reintroduction of Nadja Benaissa - the Norah Jones-inspired songstress. Each represents a portentous new challenge in the battle against HIV/AIDS. But are you paying attention? Published March 19, 2010
SIMMONS: Texas won’t lasso schools
All eyes and ears should be trained this spring on Texas, where the clash of culture ideals is playing itself out. The stakes in this pitched battle are high because many school districts follow Texas' lead when it comes to curriculum and because timing is crucial. Published March 12, 2010
Spring break’s studious side
Spring break -- it's not just for partying anymore. Published March 8, 2010
SIMMONS: Government’s not the ‘village’
Each year, an estimated 1.3 million youths drop out of high school, according to the advocacy group America's Promise Alliance. The White House puts the number at 1.2 million. Whatever the exact number, many dropouts end up in jail and prison, some languish for years like lost souls, and others struggle to become productive citizens. Now is the time for solutions. Published March 5, 2010
SIMMONS: Disputation on domestic abuse
Unless the parties involved held celebrity status, domestic abuse used to be one of those secrets, like abortions and unwed pregnancies, that families tried to keep hush-hush. To be sure, there were cracker-barrel discussions and busybodies spreading hometown dirt. If progressives and Malthusians have their way, shotgun weddings will be classified as domestic violence, too. Published February 26, 2010
SIMMONS: Schools’ latest busing issue
There's yet another nanny-state tie-in that federal lawmakers will consider regarding the reauthorization of the No Child Left Behind Act. Let's call it the "vexatious issue of school transportation." Published February 19, 2010
SIMMONS: Leave fitness to families
They all weighed in this week. President Obama. First lady Michelle Obama. Private industry. They are training their sights on childhood obesity with a coordinated battle of the bulge. The question is: What will parents do? Published February 10, 2010
SIMMONS: Red ribbons meet red tape
This is a life-and-death fact: Today's young people who are 29 or younger have never lived in a world without HIV/AIDS. Do we want another generation to face the same circumstances? Published February 5, 2010
SIMMONS: Charters reflect founders’ ideas
It's hard to imagine what level of education schooled the prodigious group of men who collectively became known as America's Founding Fathers. Picture Benjamin Franklin, a school dropout at age 10, becoming a voracious reader; he did. Or another Massachusetts native, Horace Mann, the "founding father of common schools," riding around his home state on horseback advocating school reform; he did. Published January 29, 2010
SIMMONS: Sagging pants not cool, fool
Hope and change. There's a lot of the former making the rounds and too little of the latter. But a glimmer of what can be is in the forecast.Did America devolve from radical feminism to misogynistic lyrics and videos to misandry? Published January 22, 2010
Haiti hits celebrities’ hearts
Wyclef Jean is hardly a household name here in America, but when he reportedly asked for help from a man whose name is known worldwide, that man, Tiger Woods, said count me in. Published January 15, 2010
SIMMONS: Reid must go, and here’s why
It has become a media tradition to talk about race relations and the content of people's character on and around the anniversary of Martin Luther King's birth. Today is the day. Published January 15, 2010
Medical marijuana in D.C.
Medical marijuana is legal in 13 states. Will the nation's capital follow suit? The short answer is yes, but what remains unanswered is how and when. Published January 12, 2010
SIMMONS: Arenas rightly under the gun
Are youths being sent in the right direction when it comes to role models? Will gun rights supporters blow an opportunity or take a page from the animal rights movement's book on Michael Published January 8, 2010
CITIZEN JOURNALISM: A web of real-world threats
Are the real world and the cyberworld on a cultural collision course? There was a time smooching at the drive-in and girlie magazines were parents' worst nightmares. Times have changed. These days, sex education has replaced gym class and health education. Home economics? Forget about it. Published December 28, 2009