Achievement First seeks Director of ELA Achievement
Are you highly motivated, smart, and passionate about reading and writing? Want to work with other highly motivated smarties who are too? Then this position might be for you.
Are you highly motivated, smart, and passionate about reading and writing? Want to work with other highly motivated smarties who are too? Then this position might be for you.
As explained in our review of state standards and the Common Core, standards are just the “cookbook” not the “dish.” Enter Common Core (no relation to the standards), which has gone grocery shopping and spent some prep time in the kitchen.
If you're in town on October 3, and you're not at the American Enterprise Institute at 9 a.m. for a book forum and panel discussion about Albert Shanker, to include Senator Lamar Alexander, John Podesta, John Cole, and Checker Finn--then, well, we hope your wedding was lovely.
Don't forget to RSVP for AEI's "Left at the Altar" event. At this provocative session, one will be treated to a discussion of whether or not the Bush Administration sacrificed its conservative principles in compromising over No Child Left Behind. It will take place on February 5, 2009 from 1:00-2:30 pm.
Join a panel of spectacular speakers on March 24 for "An Army of Great Teachers?" The discussion will take place from 3:30-5:00 pm at the American Enterprise Institute and contemplate how to replicate the overworked and overdedicated teachers found at charter powerhouses KIPP and Achievement First, for example.
Next Friday, the American Enterprise Institute will host an event to celebrate the release of Frederick M.
Join an array of presenters and discussants at AEI's upcoming conference: "Educational Innovation and Philadelphia's School of the Future." Much has been made of the potential for technology to transform education, but how much do we truly know about its effects? Find out on Thursday May 28 from 9 am to 3:45 pm.
The little red schoolhouse. It is the traditional image of American education, and yet largely nonexistent these days. But one particular set of red schoolhouses, which only lately vanished, are of particular note: The No Child Left Behind schoolhouses which used to protrude from the U .S. Department of Education headquarters.
On June 9 from 4 to 5:30 pm, AEI will present "Schoolhouses and Courthouses: Does Court-Driven School Reform Deliver?" This fascinating discussion will treat the issue of whether or not the courts are an effective implement of reform. Eric A. Hanushek (Hoover Institution) and Alfred A.
Our favorite all-purpose think tank will host "The Next Frontier in School Choice: Tuition Tax Credits?" on December 15 from 3:00 to 4:30 pm. This discussion will feature Kevin Welner (University of Colorado at Boulder), Kevin Chavous (Sonnenschein Nath & Rosenthal LLP), Adam Schaeffer (Cato), and Sheila Simmons (NEA). The one and only Rick Hess will moderate.
Don't forget: next Monday, December 15, AEI will host "The Next Frontier in School Choice: Tuition Tax Credits?" from 3:00 to 4:30 pm. This discussion will feature Kevin Welner (University of Colorado at Boulder), Kevin Chavous (Sonnenschein Nath & Rosenthal LLP), Adam Schaeffer (CATO), and Sheila Simmons (NEA).
... "Disruptive Innovation in Education and Health Care," a conference on the potentially "disruptive" nature of technology vis-à-vis long-established business practices. This fascinating event will feature a keynote speech by Harvard Business School professor Clayton M. Christensen, an iconic figure in the study of business innovation.
This coming Monday, December 7, AEI’s Wohlstetter Conference Center will host a titillating and heavy-hitting all-day event entitled, “More Than Just Schools: Rethinking the Demand for Educational Entrepreneurship.” Panels feature a star-studded line up, including Fordham’s own Eric Osberg.
The American Enterprise Institute will treat the topic "Race to the Top? The Promise--and Challenges--of Charter School Growth" on Monday, April 6 from 9:30-11:00 am.
Does AEI ever tire of hosting panel discussions? Probably not, when they're this good. "The Supply Side of School Reform and the Future of Educational Entrepreneurship" will take place October 25. It starts at 9 a.m. and goes until 5:10 p.m. Panels are packed, their star-caliber participants numerous.
A conference, actually, on October 25th, with some pretty swanky presenters and discussants, including Washington, D.C.'s new schools chancellor, Michelle Rhee. Their topic of discussion is the supply side of education: the role of entrepreneurship, attracting and retaining human capital, etc.
To discuss Frederick M. Hess and Michael J. Petrilli's forthcoming article "Left at the Altar" (it's a pun, get it?), AEI will host an event on February 5, 2009 from 1:00-2:30 pm.
On June 3 from 9 to 10:30, the American Enterprise Institute will host "Diplomas and Dropouts: Which Colleges Actually Graduate Their Students (and Which Don't)." This short event will evaluate college graduation rates and how stimulus dollars may change the dropout landscape for higher ed. Find more information and RSVP here.
On Wednesday, September 3rd, from 4 to 5 p.m., the Fordham Institute will host a discussion of David Whitman's fresh and exciting book, Sweating the Small Stuff: Inner-City Schools and the New Paternalism.
This week, Mike and Rick talk about Steve Jobs, smart kids, and the Japanese. We've got an interview with the AFT's Michele McLaughlin, and Education News of the Weird is either disgusting or delicious--we're not sure. Click here to listen through our website and view past editions.
We mourn the death of J. Patrick Rooney, a pioneer of the voucher movement. His privately funded efforts were the antecedent of modern scholarship tax credits. These days, there are tax credit programs six states helping thousands of parents find the appropriate school environment for their child.
Ross Elementary, a DC public school in the Dupont Circle neighborhood, is looking for staff for its extended day program. Email resumes to, or ask for further information from, [email protected].
Keep an eye on your inbox on Tuesday, September 7, for your first edition of Fwd:, a new product from Fordham. Fwd: is an occasional series of white papers, short articles, and items of interest that we'll be sending out as the spirit moves us.
The new D.C. teachers’ contract has gotten much media attention, which might prove helpful or harmful for D.C. mayor Adrian Fenty going into his November reelection campaign against D.C. Council chair Vincent Gray. Lucky for you, the Young Education Professionals has organized a mayoral education debate.
This week, Mike and Rick squawk about the SAT, why men need affirmative action, and parents who live through their progeny. We've got an interview with Citizen Virginia, who offers our non-profit some non-prophet advice about national standards, and News of the Weird threatens to muddle the very character of our schools.
You don't have to be named Emma to be the American Legislative Exchange Council's new Education Task Force Director.
In this short video, follow Fordhamites around the office—and see what we think of Election 2010 as it bears on education.
This week, Mike and Rick chat about bad teachers who are really good, keeping kids out of school to save tax dollars, and giving away L.A.'s middle and high schools. Education Outrage of the Week wonders, "Where's Petraeus?," and Education News of the Weird chirps in the evenings.