Merit pay? Not so fast!
A new study released by Education Next will cool some jets among proponents of performance-based pay for teachers.?
A new study released by Education Next will cool some jets among proponents of performance-based pay for teachers.?
?I'm not sure if Atlanta school board members were included in Rick Hess's latest survey of school boards, but if they were, let's hope they aren't representative.??
New York hates to be behind its Hudson River rival ? New Jersey ? but new Empire State Governor Andrew Cuomo is doing a nice job keeping up with his Garden State comrade-in-chief Chris Christie with education blasts.?
We've got a fantastic coffee mug at the Fordham office, gifted to us by the kind folks over at the Schwab Foundation. On it is printed a single cartoon image, two boys standing outside a classroom holding white pieces of paper. The caption on the bottom of the picture says: ?Big deal, an A in math. That would be a D in any other country.?
Selective public high schools in DC, educating mostly affluent students, receive more dollars per pupil than open enrollment neighborhood schools.
Nobody deserves tenure, with the possible exception of federal judges. University professors don't deserve tenure; civil servants don't deserve tenure; police and firefighters don't deserve tenure; school teachers don't deserve tenure.
Harvard's Graduate School of Education released today?a report, Pathways to Prosperity, which, to judge by the heft of those who contributed to the document's ?Advance Praise?
The first one is that the terms need changing. When we speak today of school ?desegregation?
If you've been affected by the weather today, please join the Fordham Institute online today at 3:30pm for a a lively and provocative debate about our latest report, Are Bad Schools Imm
?What the Chinese are very good at doing is achieving short-term goals. They're good at copying things, not creating them'' * ?Jiang Xueqin, Deputy Principal of Peking University High School
New York's new governor, Andrew Cuomo, unveiled his proposed state budget yesterday and, as expected, it's not pretty.
It must have been quite an event, last night's storm-tossed public meeting of New York City's Panel for Education Policy, a Bloomberg created group that makes recommendations to the mayor on key education issues.?According to Elizabeth Green of Gotham Schools
It must have been quite an event, last night's storm-tossed public meeting of New York City's Panel for Education Policy, a Bloomberg created group that makes recommendations to the mayor on key education issues.?According to Elizabeth Green of Gotham Schools
As Peter noted earlier, we're witnessing something rare in New York right now ?
As Peter noted earlier, we're witnessing something rare in New York right now ?
Man the battle stations. The Miami Herald reports that ?the chairman of the [state] Senate's education policy committee filed a measure this week that would partially base teacher salary increases on student test scores.?
?The snowstorm kicked out electricity last week,? writes Jay Mathews on his Washington Post Class Struggle blog. ?It was hard to write the column without access to the Internet.?
?Why aren't governors standing up and saying, ?In our state, we'll devise a system where nobody will ever get into a classroom who isn't competent'? Instead they are saying, ?Let's make it easy to fire teachers.' That's the wrong goal'' * ?Dennis Van Roekel, President of the National Education Association
In case you missed it, Mike?Petrilli?was a guest yesterday on the Pat Morrison (radio) show on Southern California Public Radio (the NPR
Indeed, Happy 10th Anniversary, Education Next!? Co-founder, and editor-in-chief Paul Peterson has a nifty review of the journal's founding ? at a meeting with Checker Finn, Jay Greene, and Marci Kanstoroom in 2000 ?
It began with punching holes through the ?firewall? between teacher evaluations and student performance, which many states have done thanks to Race to the Top prompting.
When Congress starts to debate education funding in coming weeks and months, keep the following headlines in mind. All of them refer to federal dollars that flowed from the $100 billion education stimulus. At Avondale Elementary, 90 new iPads help students ?app'ly themselves
I was just finishing up my ?Sunday morning, big picture memo about school district priorities when the phone rang. I should know better by now than to answer a phone on Sunday morning.? But I did.
Now it's an AP report, via the Wall Street Journal, telling us that Mayor Bloomberg will have to lay off lots of teachers ?unless teacher seniority rules are changed.?
Don't miss Bill Tucker's new post on the Education Next page. He takes out?after the Times for a piece they did about digital learning in Florida.
Maybe we need to stop worrying about the kids; teenagers are the ones coming up with real solutions (if they aren't suspended, that is).