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Advancing Educational Excellence

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About Our Research

We conduct research on the education policies, interventions, supports, and conditions that advance educational excellence for all young Americans. We distill sometimes complex research findings into user-friendly, actionable reports to educate and equip policymakers, practitioners, parents, students, and communities to take action to improve K–12 education.

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The Acceleration Imperative: A Plan to Address Elementary Students’ Unfinished Learning in the Wake of Covid-19

In school districts and charter school networks nationwide, instructional leaders are developing plans to address the enormous challenges faced by their students, families, teachers, and staff over the past year. To help kick-start their planning process, we are proud to present The Acceleration Imperative, an open-source, evidence-based document created with input from dozens of current and former chief academic officers, scholars, and others with deep expertise and experience in high-performing, high-poverty elementary schools.

3.23.2021
NationalReport
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A Policymaker's Guide to Improving School Leadership

Whether the goal is to enhance instruction, create a culture of excellence, or broaden education options for parents, it’s nearly impossible to improve schools without strong leaders. This is hardly news; much evidence has indicated the importance of effective principals for decades.

Eric Lerum 4.26.2016
NationalNew Media
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Career and Technical Education in High School: Does It Improve Student Outcomes?

Fordham’s latest study, by the University of Connecticut's Shaun M. Dougherty, uses data from Arkansas to explore whether students benefit from CTE coursework—and, more specifically, from focused sequences of CTE courses aligned to certain industries.

Shaun M. Dougherty 4.7.2016
NationalReport
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Education for Upward Mobility

In Education for Upward Mobility, editor Michael J. Petrilli and more than a dozen leading scholars and policy analysts seek answers to a fundamental question: How can we help children born into poverty transcend their disadvantages and enter the middle class as adults? And in particular, what role can our schools play? 

Michael J. Petrilli 3.15.2016
NationalBook
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Evaluating the Content and Quality of Next Generation Assessments

Evaluating the Content and Quality of Next Generation Assessments examines previously unreleased items from three multi-state tests (ACT Aspire, PARCC, and Smarter Balanced) and one best-in-class state assessment, Massachusetts’ state exam (MCAS). The product of two years of work by the Thomas B.

Nancy Doorey, Morgan Polikoff 2.11.2016
NationalReport
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America's Best (and Worst) Cities for School Choice

More than twelve million American students exercise some form of school choice by going to a charter, magnet, or private school——instead of attending a traditional public school.

Priscilla Wohlstetter, Ph.D., Dara Zeehandelaar Shaw, Ph.D., David Griffith 12.9.2015
NationalReport
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Is Detente Possible? District-charter school relations in four cities

Whether you think the end game of the current “mixed economy” of district and charter schools should be an all-charter system (as in New Orleans) or a dual model (as in Washington D.C.), for the foreseeable future most cities are likely to continue with a blend of these two sectors. So we wanted to know: Can they peacefully co-exist? Can they do better than that?

Daniela Doyle, Christen Holly, Bryan C. Hassel 11.4.2015
NationalReport
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Failing Our Brightest Kids: The Global Challenge of Educating High-Ability Students

In Failing Our Brightest Kids, Chester E. Finn, Jr. and Brandon L. Wright argue that for decades, the United States has focused too little on preparing students to achieve at high levels.

Chester E. Finn, Jr., Brandon L. Wright 9.15.2015
NationalBook
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Schools of Thought: A Taxonomy of American Education Governance

Questions of education governance are often considered moot by policymakers, who typically assume that the governance challenges plaguing their local schools are both universal and inevitable. Given the ubiquity of everything from local school boards to state superintendents, this seems to be a logical assumption.

Dara Zeehandelaar Shaw, Ph.D., David Griffith, Joanna Smith, Michael Thier, Ross Anderson, Christine Pitts, Hovanes Gasparian 8.26.2015
NationalReport
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Who Should Be in Charge When School Districts Go into the Red?

School districts across the land are contending with rising education costs and constrained revenues. Yet state policies for assisting school districts in financial trouble are uneven and complex. Interventions are often haphazard, occur arbitrarily, and routinely place politics over sound economics.

Dara Zeehandelaar Shaw, Ph.D., Victoria McDougald 8.6.2015
NationalReport
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Pre-K and Charter Schools: Where State Policies Create Barriers to Collaboration

In Pre-K and Charter Schools: Where State Policies Create Barriers to Collaboration, authors Sara Mead and Ashley LiBetti Mitchel examine thirty-six jurisdictions that have both charter schools and state-funded pre-K programs to determine where charters can provide state-funded pre-K.

Sara Mead, Ashley LiBetti Mitchel 7.15.2015
NationalReport
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Redefining the School District in America

In Redefining the School District in America, Nelson Smith reexamines existing recovery school districts (RSDs)—entities in Louisiana, Tennessee, and Michigan charged with running and turning around their state’s worst schools—and assembles the most comprehensive catalog of similar initiatives underway and under consideration elsewhere.

Nelson Smith 6.10.2015
NationalReport
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Uncommonly Engaging? A Review of the EngageNY English Language Arts Common Core Curriculum

The need for standards-aligned curricula is the most cited Common Core challenge for states, districts, and schools. Yet five years into that implementation, teachers still report scrambling to find high-quality instructional materials. Despite publishers’ claims, there is a dearth of programs that are truly aligned to the demands of the Common Core for content and rigor.

Elizabeth Haydel, Sheila Byrd Carmichael 5.19.2015
NationalReport

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