Education news nuggets
Whether you're in a small class or a large class, it doesn't take a Google science fair winner to see that
Whether you're in a small class or a large class, it doesn't take a Google science fair winner to see that
?[Education has been] hijacked by a group of self-styled 'reformers' who believe that public education in America should consist of islands of excellence staffed by passers-through, instead of dynamic school systems staffed by professionals.'' * ?Randi Weingarten, leader of AFT
Fordham Institute President Chester Finn discusses the Atlanta cheating scandal in an op-ed posted today on CNN.com.
Within weeks of the release of the Common Core State ELA and math standards, textbook publishers had already launched marketing campaigns for their ?CCSS-aligned? curriculum materials. What that label really meant, exactly, was open for much debate.
Film critic Roger Ebert penned a damning critique of the too-often-used practice of giving struggling students a retold version of a more complex literary classic. He talks in particular about The Great Gatsby. The entire article is worth reading, but his most salient point is this
Here's one for you: Rosa Parks : Civil Rights Movement ::? _________ : Current Education Reform Movement [caption id="" align="alignright" width="203" caption="Photo by ElvertBarnes"][/caption]
?I've never been a fan of merit pay. I don't believe in it.? * ?Stephen Sweeney, New Jersey Senate President (D-Gloucester)
As of Saturday, it's been 800 days since the senate passed a budget. Who is willing to step up to the plate and get things done??
There is another wonderful essay about the free market by economics professor Sandy Ikeda over at the Foundation for Economic Education.
"When we look at our cases where children are sent away from schools because of disabilities, there are a disproportionate number of calls about charter schools.? * ?Kim Sweet, Director of Advocates for Children of New York
Chester Finn and Mike Petrilli have a new piece in The Weekly Standard. In it, they sug
Over the past decade, Detroit's population has declined by 25 percent. Since its heyday in 1950, the city has contracted by about 40 percent.
The Republican presidential field is beginning to take shape, and candidates and maybe-candidates are figuring out where they stand and what to say. Sooner or later, they will need to say something about education. May we suggest a few talking points? Or, better yet, a potential speech for a GOP candidate? ***
Today's Times (unless you read it online yesterday or the day before), covers some fertile educational ground in three important arenas.
Through the ages, intellectually engaged man has asked, ?Is there life after collective bargaining???a question that may gain newfound relevance if you suddenly find yourself close to <
House education chairman John Kline released a bill yesterday that would provide "unprecedented" flexibility for states and local school districts around how they spend their federal ed
?Now where do we go? Where do we go?? * ?Maria Ariston, Former Teacher at Apple Grove Elementary in Prince George's County, Maryland
Chester Finn, president of the Fordham Institute, was a guest on the Willis Report on Fox Business last night. The topic? The cheating scandal in Atlanta.
Over at The American Interest, Walter Russell Mead asserted a few weeks back that ?when it comes to education, red states rule.? He bases this finding on data collected for Newsweek's recently released high school rankings.?
[caption id="" align="alignright" width="240" caption="Photo by The Mechanical Turk"][/caption]
The June issue of The American Spectator carries a thoughtful--though ultimately unpersuasive--article by Lewis Andrews, "Meet the Suburban Parents." Like legions of activists and analysts before him, he ponders why upper-middle-class parents haven't rallied to the cause of school reform. [quote]
?While the days when students had to write ?I must not cheat? 300 times on the blackboard are gone, their teachers now have to do the equivalent so that the New York State Education Department can monitor how they score student answers.? *
From 2am homework panic to boring lectures, today's students appear to have been dealt a bad hand.
Mike volleys with special guest Checker Finn in this week's podcast. The topics they serve up? Education governance, cheating on standardized tests, and the NEA's ?reform? efforts. Amber slams an ace with a new NBER study. And Chris calls a fault on one school's no-pix policy. [powerpress]
I wanted to offer a curricular observation about Mike's Understanding upper-middle-class parents since he raised the issue of whether ?different kids need different schools.??
It would be ironic if America's world-wide cultural domination ? music, fashion, film, technology ? included its dumbed down school ethos. That's what it looks like is happening in South Korea, as the government there announced the country's abandonment of Saturday school.
This morning, Education Next published my latest "what next" column, "All A-Twitter about Education." In it, I report on the Twitter phenomenon and how it's impacting the education "war of ideas."
The June issue of The American Spectator carries a thoughtful--though ultimately unpersuasive--article by Lewis Andrews, "Meet the Suburban Parents." Like legions of activists and analysts before him, he ponders why upper-middle-class parents haven't rallied to the cause of school reform.