The State of Charter School Authorizing 2009: 2nd Annual Report on NACSA's Authorizer Survey
Kathryn Mullen UptonSean Conlan, Alex Medler, and Suzanne WeissNational Association of Charter School AuthorizersMay 2010
Chinese alarm bells
Chester E. Finn, Jr.In this new section, which will appear occasionally, we will present two points of view on the same topic. In our inaugural edition, Fordham's own Chester Finn and Asia Society's Chris Livaccari debate Confucius Classrooms, a K-12 Chinese language program for American schools subsidized by the Chinese government.
Effectiveness of Selected Supplemental Reading Comprehension Interventions: Findings from Two Student Cohorts
Amber M. Northern, Ph.D.Institute of Education SciencesMay 2010
Failure to launch?
What does it take to be a successful parent on Manhattan’s Upper East Side? The New Yorker can give you a clue: An iPhone, the perfect family dog, and a membership to the Parents League of New York.
A Chinese Sarafina
Think domestic identity cards went the way of Apartheid? Think again. The Chinese hukou system is alive and well.
An alarming failure to communicate
C. Peter SvahnLudwig Wittgenstein famously gave birth to analytic philosophy by declaring, “The limits of my language are the limits of my world.” As we enter the second decade of the most globalized century in human history, we can ill afford to be bound by our linguistic limits.
Trends in the Use of School Choice: 1993 to 2007
Kathryn Mullen UptonNational Center for Education StatisticsSarah Grady, Stacey Bielick, and Susan AudApril 2010
Mark Schneider: Don't lean so much on PISA
Michael J. PetrilliThe former commissioner of the National Center on Education Statistics (a.k.a.
Needle in a Haystack: McGregor Elementary
As we've mentioned before, McGregor Elementary in Canton stands out for consistently delivering academic results despite serving an area that's been particularly hard hit by Ohio's industrial decline.
Quotable and notable
?I can't tell you how much I wish Race to the Top would have created a firestorm. The reality is, it didn't.? ? Jeanne Allen, President and Founder, Center for Education Reform
Dayton student debate inspires optimism
Terry RyanOne of the best things about my job is that I get to spend time with real teachers and real students learning about their challenges, their opportunities, their worries, and their good work. Last night I was asked to be a judge for the second annual Richard Allen Schools' student debate in Dayton.
Public preschool findings a mixed bag
Emmy L. PartinShould Ohioans worry that recent cuts to early childhood education might widen the preschool access gap between Ohio and other states? Yes, according to a new report by the National Institute for Early Education Research (NIEER) at Rutgers University. But state leaders can remedy this problem by enacting smart changes to early learning programs in the next budget.
Fordham plans to merge its sponsorship effort
Kathryn Mullen Upton, Terry RyanAs most of you know, Fordham has been a charter school sponsor (aka, ???authorizer???) in Ohio since 2005. Along the way we've learned a lot about the importance of charter sponsors holding schools accountable for results, and about how the a sponsor's size and economy of scale (or lack thereof) factors into this.
Seeing all sides of the state's new science standards
Mike LaffertyThe State Board of Education is slated to adopt new academic content standards in science at its June meeting. Lynn Elfner, executive director of the Ohio Academy of Science, and Stan W.
Nationally, tide is turning toward smart teacher personnel policies
Emmy L. PartinThe D.C. Public Schools and the Washington Teachers Union just reached an agreement on a new teacher contract. Reformers are calling it the boldest of its kind.
What do lotteries and cartels have to do with education?
Word has it (here, too) Cleveland will be among the cities in which the new Common Core national standards will be piloted. The timeline is
You call that a ?sacrifice??
Michael J. PetrilliMy post yesterday, arguing that we have too many veteran teachers who cost too much and add too little value, stirred up quite a bit of controversy, both here on Flypaper and over at
UK update: Cameron new PM
Stafford PalmieriI opined last week on the fate of the British education system in light of Thursday's confusing election results.
Movie review: The Cartel
Stafford PalmieriHeard about the new movie The Cartel? It's the story of the mafia-esque education establishment in New Jersey and it's quite a whopper. It came out last summer when it played at a number of independent film festival screenings in the Garden State?and at which point Gadfly caught wind of it.
Senioritis
Michael J. PetrilliAs a few smart guys predicted fifteen months ago, the budget crisis is putting serious pressure on teacher se
Education news nuggets
We might not have a K-12 master plan, but that doesn't mean we can't still learn a lot from the military ?
Quotable and notable
?This is an incredibly special moment in American history, where you have Republicans in New Jersey agreeing with a Democratic president on how to get reform.? ? New Jersey Governor Chris Christie
British election remains unclear
Stafford PalmieriWe've been ruminating about education reform in the motherland recently, especially the ideas of the resurgent Tories and their plan for state-funded ?independent? schools. But as of this morning, the situation in Britain remains unclear.
Quotable and notable
?If we're going to go to national standards, which I'm very supportive of, I'd rather be at the table deciding what they're going to be than be on the sidelines having them done to us.? ?Winston Brooks, Albuquerque Public Schools Superintendent