How Well Are American Students Learning? Part III: Student Engagement
Chester E. Finn, Jr.The weak link between student motivation and achievement. Chester E. Finn, Jr.
How Well Are American Students Learning? Part II: Measuring Effects of the Common Core
Amber M. Northern, Ph.D.Small but noticeable early-stage differences Amber M. Northern, Ph.D.
How Well Are American Students Learning? Part I: Girls, Boys, and Reading
Robert PondiscioIn reading, Finland’s girls are the real superstars. Robert Pondiscio
Why school choice is the highest form of fairness
The impulse to protect kids from bad choices serves no one well. Matthew Levey
College preparedness over the years, according to NAEP
Michael J. Petrilli, Chester E. Finn, Jr.The benefit of different post-diploma paths. Michael J. Petrilli and Chester E. Finn, Jr.
How Do School Leaders Respond to Competition? Evidence From New Orleans
Jeff MurrayShort review of new study on the effects of competition on schools
The rough balance serves students well
Andy Smarick is clearly disappointed with the
The promise of mastery grading
Jessica PoinerCall it mastery or competency-based education, it holds promise for students of all abilities
Will we ban driverless cars?
Michael BrickmanLast year, Mike daydreamed of a future in which autonomous vehicles would shuttle his kids around the Beltway while he was freed to relax and tweet the extra hours away.
Choice, accountability, and charter performance
If you’re at all interested in school choice, you really should read a trio of recent reports.
Real-world governance change
Paul T. HillWe need to take issue with a point in Andy Smarick’s thoughtful review, published in Flypaper, of our new book, A Democratic Constitution for Public Education.
BRIEFLY NOTED: Alphabets, assessments, zeitgists, and zeroes
OECS launches international JERK assessment
Time for a new non-district charter authorizer in D.C.
D.C.’s charter school sector stands as a shining example of what urban chartering can accomplish for kids in need.
The demise of college is greatly exaggerated
Robert PondiscioThis post has been updated with the full text of "The demise of college is greatly exaggerated."
The new school board
Andy delivered a shortened version of the following comments at a PPI launch event for Hill & Jochim’s new book, A Democratic Constitution for Public Education.
Accountability in Private School Choice Programs
Jeff MurrayA good primer on programs in twenty-four locales. Jeff Murray
What Works in Gifted Education: Documenting the Effects of an Integrated Curricular/Instructional Model for Gifted Students
Amber M. Northern, Ph.D.Another good idea limited by flawed assessments. Amber M. Northern, Ph.D.
CREDO Urban Charter School Study Report on 41 Regions
Robert PondiscioCharter schools are making a difference. Robert Pondiscio
Opting out, race, and reform
Robert PondiscioArne Duncan was half right about those “white suburban moms.” Robert Pondiscio
Not meeting standards: A warning light, not a death sentence
Michael J. PetrilliMisunderstanding Common Core’s aspirational nature. Michael J. Petrilli