2003 Brown Center Report on American Education: How Well Are American Students Learning?
Tom Loveless, Brown Center on Education Policy, Brookings InstitutionOctober 22, 2003
Tom Loveless, Brown Center on Education Policy, Brookings InstitutionOctober 22, 2003
Jay P. Greene, Greg Forster, Marcus A. Winters, The Manhattan InstituteOctober 9, 2003
Learning First Alliance2003
Bart PetersonSeptember 2003
Just as TIME reported that the College Board plans to drop the analogies section from the SAT, education blogger Joanne Jacobs recounts a story about a Kennewick, Washington high school teacher who, after a lesson on the Salem Witch Trials, asked his students to write a "Mass Hysteria Essay" in which they "expose injustices caused by mass hysteria" and "compare the causes and effects o
No Child Left Behind requires that, by 2005-6, all classes must be taught by "highly qualified" teachers. That means a teacher must have a college degree, state certification, and demonstrated mastery of the subject s/he teaches. But as with many NCLB provisions, it's up to the states to set their own benchmarks for certification and subject-area mastery.
We recently reported on a group of resourceful students and parents in Marysville, Washington who lobbied the governor, held a press conference, and went to court to try to get their teachers to end the longest teachers strike in state history.
To help states comply with the highly-qualified teacher and school-choice provisions of NCLB, the Department of Education recently awarded more than $13 million in grants to several organizations to help attract able professionals into teaching, to inform families of their educational options under NCLB, and to expand and study charter school achievement.
Eighteen long years ago, Denis Doyle and I wrote this in the New York Times:
With application deadlines looming, popular magazines have recently devoted much space to college admissions. TIME's cover story this week highlights changes the College Board has made to the new SAT, noting that it is "an exhaustive revision largely intended to mold the U.S.