First Bell 2-11-13
Pamela TatzA first look at today's education news: California school construction puts future taxpayers on the hook for huge interest payments, lawmakers clash over how to hold states accountable for students' academic progress, and more
First Bell 2-8-13
Pamela TatzA first look at today's education news: Senate lawmakers held a hearing on NCLB waivers, second-generation immigrants outperformed the general American population in education, and more
Operating in the Dark
The United States faces a shortage of high-quality school leaders at a time when it is more apparent than ever that principals are key to attracting and retaining teacher talent and driving the improvement of student learning. While districts hire principals, states control the entry point to the principalship, overseeing the preparation and licensure of school leaders. Yet, to date, there has been no one central repository of information on state policies impacting principal preparation, licensure, tenure, and data collection to monitor the outcomes of those policies. The Bush Institute's new report, Operating in the Dark: What Outdated State Policies and Data Gaps Mean for Effective School Leadership, is a first-of-its-kind compilation of state-reported data on how the 50 states and the District of Columbia are using their authority to increase the supply of high-quality principals. Please join us for a presentation of the study's findings and a panel discussion, moderated by Fordham's Chester E. Finn, Jr., on how states can strengthen the rigor of the principal preparation program approval process and establish licensure requirements that validate and confirm that principals are indeed ready for the job and effective once employed as school leaders. The panelists will also discuss the role of the states in collecting data on principal effectiveness once school leaders are on the job and using that data to increase the supply of high-quality principals available for hire.
Department of Education rolls back the right to wheelchair basketball
Michael J. PetrilliFoiled by needlessly complicated government documents?
First Bell 2-7-13
Pamela TatzA first look at today's education news: MOOCs take a big step forward, food fights abound, and more
Operating in the Dark: What Outdated State Policies and Data Gaps Mean for Effective School Leadership
Brandon L. WrightQuite the flashlight
First Bell 2-6-13
Pamela TatzA first look at today's education news: It's National Digital Learning Day, Cantor pushes school choice and college affordability, and more
A few good reads
Andy Smarick's pick of recent education news
First Bell 2-5-13
Pamela TatzA first look at today's education news: Texas's school-finance system has been ruled unconstitutional, the ironic failure of an online class on how to create online classes has reporters falling over themselves, and more
The Alternative
The second of two posts on the past, present, and future of urban schooling
Kojo, Mike, and Abigail on shifting school boundaries
Pamela TatzEarlier today on WAMU, Washington’s local NPR station, Kojo Nnamdi hosted a fascinating discussion on school boundaries, charter schools, and choice
First Bell 2-4-13
Pamela TatzA first look at today's education news: Alabama withdraws from both Common Core testing consortia, Arne Duncan will focus on school safety and early childhood education in the second term, and more
Commentary & Feedback on Draft II of the Next Generation Science Standards
Paul Gross, Douglas Buttrey, Ursula Goodenough, Noretta Koertge, Lawrence S. Lerner, Martha Schwartz, Richard Schwartz, William H. Schmidt, W. Stephen WilsonThe Thomas B. Fordham Institute has provided big-picture feedback and detailed, standard-specific commentary for the second draft of the Next Generation Science Standards—standards that done right, set a firm foundation upon which the rest of science education across the states will be constructed. In our comments on the first draft, we concluded that “the NGSS authors have much to do to ensure that the final draft is a true leap forward in science education.” In comments on Draft II, we address to what extent NGSS writers have moved closer to a set of K–12 science standards that even states with strong standards of their own would do well to adopt.
We can change
The first of two posts on the past, present, and future of urban schooling
First Bell 2-1-13
Pamela TatzA first look at today's education news: The RTTT progress report reveals troubles in D.C., Georgia, and Maryland; Ohio governor Kasich proposes an expansion of his state's voucher program; and more
First Bell 1-31-13
Pamela TatzA first look at today's education news: Gov. Cuomo threatens to impose a teacher-evaluation system on NYC, Bill Gates makes the case for investing in a strong teacher-evaluation system, and more
First Bell 1-30-13
Pamela TatzA first look at today's education news: A teacher warns that "overparenting" can limit the life lessons that a teacher can impart, Senator Lamar Alexander (R-TN) and Rep. Todd Rokita (R-IN) will step into key education-policy roles, and more
HUD, in the role of Mr. Higgins
John HortonThe Moving to Opportunity for Fair Housing Program (MTO), the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s twenty-year attempt at a real-life Pygmalion, has failed
Is the red tape a red herring?
Amber M. Northern, Ph.D., Chester E. Finn, Jr.Many proponents of private school choice take for granted that schools won’t participate if government asks too much of them; but is this assumption justified?
First Bell 1-29-13
Pamela TatzA first look at today's education news: The Education Department is investigating whether some school-closure plans are discriminatory, Ohio releases teacher-prep data, and more
School Choice Regulations: Red Tape or Red Herring?
David A. StuitIt turns out that private schools are not vehemently opposed to academic accountability (including state testing and reporting requirements), according to a new Fordham report out today
First Bell 1-28-13
Pamela TatzA first look at today's education news: Senator Tom Harkin will not seek re-election in 2014, teachers in Seattle are boycotting the state's MAP exam, and more
First Bell 1-25-13
Pamela TatzA first look at today's education news: D.C.'s school closures are just the start of a broader plan to make the school district more efficient, the Obama administration announces that disabled students have a right to play school sports, and more
The Obama Administration invents a right to wheelchair basketball
Michael J. PetrilliAnd they do so without public debate or Congressional authorization
First Bell 1-24-13
Pamela TatzA first look at today's education news: Insiders are skeptical that the Department of Education will make gains in teacher-preparation regulations this year, a literacy teacher urges her colleagues to see the potential in Common Core, and more