Support for Home-Based Education: Pioneering Partnerships between Public Schools and Families Who Instruct Their Children at Home
Kathleen Porter-MageePatricia M. Lines, The ERIC Clearinghouse on Educational Management2003
Beating the Odds III: A City-by-City Analysis of Student Performance and Achievement Gaps on State Assessments (Results from the 2001-2002 School Year)
Terry RyanCouncil of the Great City SchoolsMarch 2003
The next frontier in reading instruction
Now that a scientific consensus has been reached on how best to teach children to decode words, the time has come to move on to challenge of boosting their reading comprehension. The Spring 2003 issue of American Educator focuses on this topic. The lead article, by E.D. Hirsch, explains how weak comprehension ruins poor children's chances to achieve academic success.
NYC adds phonics, exempts more schools from systemwide curriculum
After reading experts criticized Month by Month Phonics, the reading curriculum that he had originally selected for citywide implementation, on grounds that it lacked evidence of effectiveness, New York City schools chancellor Joel Klein has quietly decided to supplement it with a phonics-intensive program developed by Voyager Expanded Learning and based on sound reading research.
Colorado to enact statewide voucher plan
Kathleen Porter-MageeLast week, the Colorado Senate narrowly passed a pilot voucher bill that, when signed, will mark the first voucher plan enacted since last year's landmark Zelman decision. The Colorado House, which passed a similar version of the bill on February 19, is reviewing the Senate amendments.
Consolidation is a Bad Idea
John T. WendersArkansas, Arizona, South Dakota, Kansas, Vermont, Iowa and Idaho are presently weighing proposals to reduce the number of school districts within their borders by consolidating some of them into larger units.
Core Knowledge publishes summary of effectiveness evidence
Parents, principals, and policymakers who want to know what research shows about the effectiveness of the Core Knowledge (CK) curriculum will find a useful summary in an article in the Core Knowledge Foundation newsletter. It summarizes three large studies that compare the academic performance of students in CK schools with pupils in control groups.
English-only Pupils Learn More English
Just five years after California voters approved Proposition 227, which replaced bilingual education with English-only programs for most California LEP students, the number of English learners who scored "proficient' on the state's language test has risen significantly.
Kaplan to launch online ed school
Kaplan, Inc. will open a "virtual" school of education in 2004, to be led by former New York City chancellor Harold Levy. The school hopes to attract working adults and midcareer professionals who will take their classes via distance learning and also have clinical experiences in K-12 classrooms.
The Organization of Primary and Secondary School Systems
Eric OsbergWilliam G. Ouchi, Bruce S. Cooper, Lydia G. Segal, Tim DeRoche, Carolyn Brown, and Elizabeth GalvinThe Anderson School of Management, UCLAWorking paper, July 25, 2002 (revised September, 2002)
Big city districts gaining on state tests
A new report from the Council of the Great City Schools (CGCS) finds that the nation's largest school districts are making significant gains on state tests, often improving faster than rural and suburban districts. Eighty-seven percent of grades in big-city districts posted gains in math between 1997 and 2002, and 44 percent improved faster than the state average.
The $100,000 Teacher: A Teacher's Solution to America's Declining Public School System
Kathleen Porter-MageeBrian Crosby, Capital Books, Inc.2002
Ending Social Promotion: Results from Summer Bridge
Eric OsbergConsortium on Chicago School ResearchMelissa Roderick, Mimi Engel and Jenny NagaokaFebruary 2003
Teachers complain that principals won't back them up on discipline
Former teachers often say they left the classroom because of a lack of "administrative support." Often what they mean is that school administrators failed to back them up when they tried to enforce classroom discipline or punish students for cheating or plagiarism. An article in the Baltimore Sun illuminates both sides of this struggle.
Teach for America asks districts to pay for teachers
Teach for America (TFA) has begun asking school districts to contribute $1500 for each teacher they hire from the program. The national program--which recruits top college graduates, trains them over the summer to teach in high-need schools, places them in classrooms, and supports them while they teach--spends about $8,000 to develop each TFA corps member.
The Law People Love to Hate--and Pretend to Love
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Bring back Richard Rothstein! The space his education column formerly occupied in the Wednesday New York Times is often filled nowadays by the grumpy Michael Winerip, who seems bent on proving that everybody in America hates the No Child Left Behind act. His latest contribution was last week's column reporting "pervasive dismay" with NCLB across the land.
Performance pay desirable for high-need schools
Performance-based pay should be tried. If one were to offer substantial pay premiums for teachers in poor, low performing schools, market-based pay might be successful. By substantial, I mean at least a 25% increase in pay over the existing salary schedule. For example, my district, LAUSD, starts credentialed teachers at $41,000.
IDEA reauthorization is set in motion
Kathleen Porter-MageeWith the reauthorization process finally creaking into motion for the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), lawmakers of both parties--and both houses of Congress--say this is now a top priority for 2003.
New guidance on how NCLB applies to charter schools
The U.S. Department of Education has issued guidance on how the requirements of the No Child Left Behind act should be interpreted as affecting charter schools.
Are small schools really better?
In his online Class Struggle column, Jay Mathews praises a new book by Tom Toch called High Schools on a Human Scale: How Small Schools Can Transform American Education. While small schools are in vogue today, boosted in part by many dollars from the Gates Foundation, skeptics wonder whether size alone can determine school effectiveness.
Urban Catholic schools innovate to survive
While many inner-city Catholic schools struggle to survive, and more than a few shut down, three innovative models of Catholic middle and high schools are spreading across the country. In Cristo Rey high schools, which now exist in four cities and will soon expand to six more sites, students earn much of their tuition by working in banks, law firms, and other businesses needing clerical help.
Voucher program in Florida has long waiting list
The largest but perhaps least well known of Florida's three voucher programs is providing scholarships to private schools for more than 15,000 children this year and has exhausted the $50 million that policymakers allowed for it.
Jeopardizing a Legacy: A Closer Look at IDEA and Florida's Disability Voucher Program
Eric OsbergPeople for the American Way Foundation andDisability Rights Education & Defense Fund (DREDF)March 6, 2003
Creating a System of Accountability: The Impact of Instructional Assessment on Elementary Children's Achievement Test Scores
Kathleen Porter-MageeSamuel Meisels, Sally Atkins-Burnett, Yange Xue, Donna DiPrima Bickel, Seung-Hee Son, Education Policy Analysis ArchivesFebruary 28, 2003
Our Education: The Student's Voice in Education Reform
Kathleen Porter-MageeStudents for Teachers, Yale UniversitySpring 2003
Bill to boost history and civics education introduced
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Rarely does a newly introduced bill deserve comment before it's even gotten to the stage of hearings, but you should know about this one. Senator Lamar Alexander--former U.S. Secretary of Education, Governor of Tennessee, president of that state's flagship university, and chairman of the National Governors Association--used the occasion of his "debut" speech on the Senate floor to introduce S.
Who's Teaching Your Children?
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Katherine Boles and Vivian Troen, Yale University PressMarch 2003
No Child Left Behind--What's in it for Parents: A Guide for Parent Leaders and Advocates
Terry RyanAnne T. Henderson, ParentLeadership Associates2002An Action Guide for Community and Parent Leaders: Using NCLB to Improve Student AchievementPublic Education Network, 2002