Better education through badges?
Michael BrickmanIf you were surfing the web in mid-2004, you were almost certainly using Microsoft's Internet Explorer browser to do it. Despite frequent concerns over its security, stability, and speed, this single tool for viewing content online was then used by more than 95 percent of Americans using the internet.
The proficiency debate goes round and round
Melissa ReynoldsSending an e-mail to ed-reformers and asking for their two cents results in a many responses, as Michael Petrilli learned when he shared his article “The Problem with Proficiency” and asked, “Who’s with me?”
Netflix Academy: Best videos on George Washington and other American founders available for streaming
Michael J. PetrilliNote: This post is part of our Netflix Academy series. See background, and links to other educational videos worth streaming, here.
The Effectiveness of Secondary Math Teachers from Teach for America and the Teaching Fellows Programs
Dara Zeehandelaar Shaw, Ph.D.This study of Teach For America (TFA) and Teaching Fellows secondary math teachers explores how their students compare to peers taking the same course, in the same school, from teachers who entered the profession through traditional certification programs (or other programs not as rigorous as TFA or Teaching Fellows).
Indiana Common Core Implementation: Fiscal Impact Report
Michael BrickmanAmong the provisions of Indiana’s so-called Common Core “pause” legislation was a requirement that the state’s Office of Management and Budget (OMB) provide an estimate of the cost of implementing these standards and their assessments.
Don’t say you weren’t warned!
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Don’t call me and my friends Chicken Littles or “boys (and girls) who cried wolf.” The sky was beginning to fall down—and the wolf was approaching the lamb—three decades ago when we joined the National Commission on Excellence in Education in warning that the country’s future and the career (and income and social-mobility) prospects of millions of its citizen
Charter school restarts: Let’s give them a try
Adam EmersonHarlem Day is one of the oldest charter schools in New York City—and, historically, one of its most troubled. It has had nine principals in the nine years since its founding in 2001, and fewer than 25 percent of its students could read and do math at grade level.
You can’t fight something with nothing
Kathleen Porter-MageeFor the past year, much of the ed-reform world has been concerned about the (seemingly) growing opposition from the right to the Common Core standards. But the closer you look at these critiques of Common Core, the weaker their case appears. Can something as solid as CCSS really be stopped by such an intellectually flimsy attack?
We add to Duncan's statement: Making sense of tragedy requires a solid education
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Arne Duncan was right to call attention to 9/11 as an important opportunity for teaching children about the heinous events of that day twelve years ago, about honoring those who perished, and about the value of "coming together" as Americans.
By the Company It Keeps: Preston Smith
I liked Preston Smith from the very start. We talked about sports and music, teased each other like high school friends, and bonded over stories of our young kids and smart, loving wives. We also shared a hardscrabble past and a set of small shoulder chips that produced in both of us a forward-leaning posture and an abiding passion for education reform.
Transparency should be for parents and taxpayers (not just policymakers)
Michael BrickmanJason Bedrick at Cato is out with Cracking the Books, a new evaluation of the extent to which states are being transparent on education spending.
Do Ohio's schools deliver "what parents want"?
Aaron ChurchillSupply meets demand in Ohio's schooling marketplace.
Ohio Pension Reform in Cleveland: New Teachers Beware
Robert M. Costrell, Larry MaloneyAt first glance, the recent teacher-retirement reforms in Ohio seem to bring good fiscal news to school systems in the Buckeye State. Thanks to Senate Bills 341 and 342—and a series of cutbacks on retiree healthcare—the Cleveland Metropolitan School District is projected to spend less on retirement costs in 2020 than it does today. But these reforms come at a big price.
Don’t oversleep! Duncan and Petrilli make it to the Diane Rehm Show
Michelle LernerIf you missed “A Back-To-School Conversation About Education” on NPR’s The Diane Rehm Show with education secretary Arne Duncan and a panel of experts (including our own Mike Petrilli), here are the key takeaways:
Voucher opponents shouldn’t be rooting for a Holder victory in Louisiana
Michael BrickmanEric Holder's Justice Department recently announced it would not target states that had chosen to legalize marijuana due to its "limited prosecutorial resources." The Obama presidency has shown us that "insufficient funds" is an exce
De Blasio is off the mark on pre-K
John HortonBehind the rise of Bill de Blasio in the race for New York City Mayor is his proposal to raise taxes (mainly on the rich) to pay for universal pre-K throughout the city.
Netflix Academy: 10 best dinosaur videos available for streaming
Michael J. PetrilliI love the dinosaur stage. Love, love, love. And when your child is ready to graduate from Dinosaur Train and take in some lifelike depictions of prehistoric monsters, this is where to start.
Indiana AG sets a precedent on school choice others should follow
Adam EmersonIndiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller recently published an opinion that should be good news for school-choice advocates who favor customized education for low-income students
Governance Matters
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Through examples of how other lands organize their education systems, Amanda Ripley's fine new book reminds us that governance matters
The misuse of Common Core tests
E. D. Hirsch, Jr.Why I’m for the Common Core but Against Teacher Bashing and Misuse of Tests; part three of three posts
Suspicious motives
The Education GadflyThe Washington Post (and many others) roundly
Next-generation science and college readiness
Lawrence S. Lerner, Paul GrossThe recently released Appendix C, intended to clarify key choices made by writers of the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS), addresses College and Career Readiness. It is lengthy and rich in self-praise and in repetition of claims made earlier in the evolution of the NGSS and their initiating Framework.
Common Core can reduce teacher bashing
E. D. Hirsch, Jr.For many years, my son Ted has been principal of the elementary grades of a K–12 public charter school in Massachusetts. It uses the Core Knowledge Sequence (a grade-by-grade outline of essential content) as a primary tool for developing its curriculum.
Getting Back to the Head Nod on Common Standards
For the broader public, the idea that reading and math standards should be the same across the country is so sensible that to make the case for the Common Core, you sometimes first have to explain that common standards don’t already exist.