Rhee inspires reform in South Korea
"We Need Someone Like Michelle Rhee" proclaims an editorial headline in the South Korean newspaper
"We Need Someone Like Michelle Rhee" proclaims an editorial headline in the South Korean newspaper
John McCain is supposed to take the stage in 40 minutes at the NAACP convention in Cincinnati.
Just days after Fordham Institute president Checker Finn wrote in the Education Gadfly that "nobody I know under 30 much bothers either with newspapers or radio/TV news," evidence of intelligent, newsprint-scouring life under 30 has been documented (below) in his own offices.
He's supposed to get into the details when he speaks to the NAACP tomorrow, but John McCain didn't leave education out of his speech to the National Council of La Raza yesterday. From the Los Angeles Times :
According to the Montgomery Advertiser, Alabama has announced a revolution in higher educ
The Washington Post reports that Maryland has shown huge gains in test scores, particularly a
Columnist Jay Mathews writes in today's Washington Post about Fordham's latest report, High-Achieving Students in the Era of No Child Left Behind. Here's a teaser:
Randi Weingarten, soon to be the head of the American Federation of Teachers, would have us believe that the ideas she proposes as fixes to k-12 public education are new.
On steamy summer days such as this one, when the education news is reduced to a trickle, one must seek other sources by which to slake his eduthirst. The Harvard Educational Review arrived last week in the mail, and today I decided to read it.
Fun factoid of the day: Neither the ACT nor the College Board/ETS (giver of the SAT) tells colleges or universities why they cancel student scores. Joe Shmoe faints during a test? Joe Shmoe has his pal Freddy take the test for him? All the same in the testing companies' eyes. They'll cancel the score and let the student take the test again.
The Economist reports that Lousiana Governor Bobby Jindal apparently struck a deal with state legislators to get his voucher bill passed???a 123 percent pay raise for them in return for an escape from failing schools
Editorializing about the recent test score gains in Washington, D.C., under new schools chancellor Michelle Rhee, the Washington Times asks : Why did the city ever let Arlene Ackerman go--the last superintendent to improve so much?
"A group of Toronto researchers have compiled a body of evidence showing that bookworms have exceptionally strong people skills."
That's a fair way to describe presidential candidate Ralph Nader's opposition to No Child Left Behind, as presented in this Washington Post
That's my synopsis of this E.J. Dionne column about our current economic tribulations.
Catching up on the news out of the National Education Association conference earlier this month, I noticed that the union's "representative assembly," in its infinite wisdom, voted against accepting private school teachers and staff as members.
I'm always on the lookout for interesting education research, and Natascha (Fordham intern and fellow Wahoo) does a nice job helping me track down studies. She found this one carried out??by researchers from our favorite university.
More on yesterday's announcement that D.C. test scores are up. A Washington Post article today says that some principals are attributing their schools' successes to Michelle Rhee.
While offering advice on how Obama can defend accusations of socialist tendencies, Matt Miller expounds upon the idea of merit pay in the pages of today's Wall Street Journal. Miller writes:
Some days our blog exhausts me. Not writing for it--I'm usually too busy--just reading it and thinking how I would have said something differently myself or would have bitten my tongue and said nothing at all.
A new video game for the Nintendo Wii gives new meaning to "college prep."
According to New York Sun reporter Elizabeth Green, Flypaper is among two-dozen education blogs being monitored by the city ed department's new "Truth Squad," composed of press secretary David Cantor, five of his deputies, and a deputy communications director, Melody Meyer. Ms.
While we're on the topic, Checker had this to say of the New York City ed department's new Truth Squad (from the same New York Sun article):
Karl Priest comments on Liam's recent post: If you thing evolution is "modern science" you need a healthy dose of reality?
From the Los Angeles Times: "California mandates testing every eighth-grader in algebra--ready or not"
Re Coby's post: It's worth noting that if frat houses throughout the country substitute video game beer pong for the real kind, then it stands to reason that fewer drunken antics will ensue. And why all this beer bashing, anyhow?
Re my post about a national service academy, Jonah Goldberg makes some fine, related points in the Los Angeles Times by arguing against what he calls "national service mania." His piece
That's how this Investor's Business Daily (IBD) article describes Senators Barack Obama and John McCain when it comes to education. While both senators have tried to build an independent image on other issues, on education they are staunch partisans.