Learning Policy: When State Education Reform Works
Chester E. Finn, Jr.David K. Cohen and Heather C. Hill2001
School Dropouts: Education Could Play a Stronger Role in Identifying and Disseminating Promising Prevention Strategies
Chester E. Finn, Jr.General Accounting OfficeFebruary 1, 2002
Rethinking teacher professionalism
The big problem with the usual approaches to improving schools is that we fiddle with all kinds of things except the one thing that really matters, which is instructional practice, according to Harvard's Dick Elmore. Putting pressure on schools to improve won't work unless teachers know what to do at the level of practice, and Elmore says they don't.
AP, IB programs teach too much, critics say
Diane RavitchFor years, the advocates of standards-based reform have held up Advanced Placement tests and the International Baccalaureate as models: a clearly defined syllabus; a teacher who is prepared to teach that syllabus; a course based on the syllabus; an end-of-course examination.
What to do about education in the Islamic world?
Chester E. Finn, Jr.The problem is now well established.
Winners and losers in DC's special ed lottery
Just because the D.C. public schools are failing to provide special education services for many children doesn't mean the school district isn't spending pots of money on special ed. A pair of articles in this week's Washington Post shed unhappy light on where some of that money is going.
Twenty-Five Years of Educating Children with Disabilities: The Good News and the Work Ahead
Chester E. Finn, Jr.American Youth Policy Forum and the Center on Education Policy2002
Milwaukee's Public Schools: The Untold Story of America's Newest Democratic Revolution
Chester E. Finn, Jr.John Gardner, American Education Reform CouncilJanuary 2002
Class Size Reduction in California
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Brian Stecher and George Bohrnstedt, CSR Research ConsortiumFebruary 4, 2002
Title I Funding: Poor Children Benefit Though Funding Per Poor Child Differs
Chester E. Finn, Jr.General Accounting OfficeJanuary 31, 2002
President Bush makes friends and enemies with his education budget
The White House budget released last week contained good news for school choice supporters. It includes a tax credit that would pay up to $2,500 a year in private school tuition for parents of children whose public schools are failing.
Surge in career-changers entering teaching
A front-page story in The New York Times this week described a big increase in the number of people seeking jobs as teachers nationwide, prompted by the sinking economy and a wave of soul-searching after the Sept. 11 attacks.
Good news: Teachers College prexy endorses canon
Diane RavitchUntil now, most of us believed that ed school professors were in principle opposed to the concept of a "canon" of great books. It turns out that this is not so, at least not if we consider the recent statements of Arthur Levine, president of Teachers College, Columbia University.
Education in Singapore: Part II
Chester E. Finn, Jr.In last week's Gadfly, I described a bit about modern Singapore and how its world-beating education system is structured. Today I offer ten observations based on what struck me most during a brief visit. First, ethnicity is indeed powerful, but a country's education culture and standards can trump ethnic differences.
Jerry Brown's military charter school moves to double time
The Oakland Military Institute, the charter school opened by Mayor Jerry Brown last August, is having a tough first year. The seventh-grade curriculum chosen by the school has turned out to be too difficult for the students; nearly one-third of them scored D averages and wound up on academic probation.
Kudos to New York Times reporter
Diane RavitchIn a recent editorial in the Gadfly, I criticized New York Times reporter Diana Jean Schemo for her hostile coverage of reading instruction. In two articles, she managed to convey her misunderstanding of the phonics/whole language issue and to cite researchers with an axe to grind against any kind of phonetic instruction.
Undoing bilingual education reform in California
The California State Board of Education has proposed new regulations that would undo the reform of bilingual education enacted by the state in 1998 after voters passed Proposition 227. That ballot measure limited native language instruction in public schools to a single year, unless parents requested a waiver.
Why Schools Matter: A Cross-National Comparison of Curriculum and Learning
Chester E. Finn, Jr.William H. Schmidt et al.2001
What's In, What's Out - An Analysis of State Educational Technology Plans
Katherine SomervilleYong Zhao and Paul Conway, Teachers College RecordJanuary 27, 2001
Education in Singapore: Part I
Chester E. Finn, Jr.At the risk of falling into the trap of instant expertise, let me offer some impressions-brought home from a recent trip-about why Singapore keeps coming in at the top on international tests of student achievement, at least in science and math. This week, I sketch the basic structure of that small but vibrant country's education system.
Effective principals show bad teachers the door
Principals are under increasing pressure to raise student test scores. The vast majority of their teachers are committed and competent, principals say, but an unknown number stifle learning. Given the extreme difficulty of terminating a tenured teacher, what's a principal to do once she has tried without success to help the teacher improve? According to Dr.
Florida union urges power outage to punish donation to scholarship fund
After learning of a $5 million donation made by Florida Power to a private school scholarship program under the Sunshine State's new education tax credit law, the teachers union in Pinellas County, Florida has urged the local school board to shut off all power in county schools for a day as payback for the utility company.
Using whole school reform to turn around struggling schools
Is installing a "whole school" reform model the best way to turn around a struggling school? Since 1997, Uncle Sam has given U.S. public schools over $480 million to put school-wide reform designs in place through the Comprehensive School Reform Demonstration Program (also known as Obey-Porter).
Will No Child Truly Be Left Behind? reports ask
Seven provocative new papers examining key challenges of implementing the new federal education law-particularly its testing and accountability provisions-and strategies for meeting them will be available tomorrow on the Fordham Foundation website (www.edexcellence.net).
No Child Left Behind: What Will it Take?
Mark D. Reckase, Billie J. Orr, Matthew Gandal, Lisa Graham KeeganJust one month after President Bush signed the politics-governance Act into law, a provocative set of expert papers commissioned by the Thomas B. Fordham Foundation explores the legislation's key features: it's testing and accountability provisions. The papers identify the questions left unresolved by Congress and the many hurdles facing the U.S. Education Department and states, districts, and schools as they try to make this ambitious law a reality. The papers also offer suggestions for clearing those hurdles.
Transforming Public Schools: The Houston Annenberg Challenge Research and Evaluation Study, Year Two Summary Report
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Pedro Reyes and Joy C. Phillips, University of Texas at AustinAugust 2001
Voting on Vouchers: A Socio-Political Analysis of California Proposition 38, Fall 2000
Chester E. Finn, Jr.James Catterall and Richard Chapleau, National Center for the Study of Privatization in Education, Teachers College, Columbia UniversityDecember 2001