Don't get your culottes in a twist
The New York Times is making a habit of putting charter schools on the front page.
The New York Times is making a habit of putting charter schools on the front page.
It wasn’t so long ago that reformers were regularly out-hustled by the education establishment. While we were mostly putting out white papers and writing op-eds, they were making campaign donations and marching on statehouses. Unfortunately, our compelling ideas were no match for their raw political power.
The issue of parental involvement is vexing for education reformers. Everybody knows that it matters, but nobody really knows how to encourage it. In a free society, how do schools, or governments, make sure that parents provide the love, attention, discipline, nurturing, and care that their kids need to succeed? The short answer is: they can't.
JPMorgan Chase announced yesterday that it is providing $325 million to support charter schools. It appears that the funding will be sent through local partners that help charters access facilities.
This editorial from the LA Times has me scratching my head. It makes it sound like California made a deal with the Department of Education regarding its RTT application. The claim is that ED has agreed to consider CA's application even if the state only has a couple districts signing on.
?I don't know of another time when we've done as much education reform in Connecticut as we've done tonight..? ? Connecticut State Representative Jason Bartlett ?Spurred by the Lure of Federal Aid, House Approves Major Education Reforms,? Connecticut Mirror
The campaign continues to dispel the myth that ?stakeholder buy-in? is the key to winning Round Two of Race to the Top.
?We've never had an agreement fully implemented.? ? George Parker, President, Washington (DC) Teachers, on the new DC teachers contract
?We're never going to be like France, where the education minister can look at his watch and tell you what every fourth grader is doing.??Terry W. Hartle, Senior Vice President at the American Council on Education
Like Connecticut before it, California learned the wrong lesson regarding its rejected round one RTT application.
This morning Rick Hess, Fordham friend and director of education policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute, was a guest on the Sound of Ideas show on Cleveland's public radio station, WCPN (tune in around minute 34:00).
Some of today's news makes me happy (like Deborah Gist making Time's Top 100, graduation going green
?I think this is full of baloney.? ? Andrew Pallotta, Executive Vice President, New York State United Teachers
Today, the White House announced the three finalists in the Race to the Top Commencement Challenge: Clark Montessori Junior & Senior High School?(Cincinnati, OH) Kalamazoo Central High School (Kalamazoo, MI)
President Obama announces his Teacher of the Year just as we gear up for Teacher Appreciation Week.
?Teachers should speak good grammar because kids pick up on what they hear.? Where you draw the line is debatable.? ?Johanna Haver, English-language immersion proponent
A major Chicago voucher program is gaining steam in the Illinois legislature. This is highly unexpected but absolutely fantastic.
A major Chicago voucher program is gaining steam in the Illinois legislature. This is highly unexpected but absolutely fantastic. The city can continue to support the district's reform efforts, expand chartering, and give kids options in the private schools sector as well.
Just a reminder that today is the last day to vote for the White House's Race to the Top Commencement Challenge. The winning high school will receive a visit from President Obama where he will speak at their commencement.
PowerPoint is making us stupid, vending machines are making us fat, and students are addicted to texting
PowerPoint is making us stupid, vending machines are making us fat, and students are addicted to texting
This article demonstrates perfectly how a state chief can be torn between reform and buy-in as he/she seeks to win RTT ?funds.
???The federal government should stay out of the way of these efforts. As we work on the reauthorization of ESEA, we should find ways to assist states, not require or coerce them, with this difficult, but important, work.??? ???Sen. Michael Enzi, R-Wyoming
?The federal government should stay out of the way of these efforts. As we work on the reauthorization of ESEA, we should find ways to assist states, not require or coerce them, with this difficult, but important, work.? ?Sen. Michael Enzi, R-Wyoming
Philip M. Sadler, Gerhard Sonnert, Robert H. Tai, and Kristin Klopfenstein, eds.Harvard Education Press2010
Is this the beginning of the end for last hired, first fired? At least a few cities facing budgetary difficulties have come to an obvious realization: Firing teachers based on seniority rather than performance is going to seriously damage the quality of their respective workforces.