Budget pigs
Chester E. Finn, Jr.A year ago, responding to an outrageous piece by People for the American Way (as they pretentiously and falsely style themselves), I wrote in this space that a little "pork" in federal appropriations wasn't such a bad thing (see here). These Congressionally-earmarked projects, I argued,
Playing chicken on NCLB
Like going steady in elementary school, everybody's talking about it, but nobody's actually doing it. We mean, of course, mounting a major challenge to NCLB.
Teachers ban homework, children rejoice
This is no April Fools item. Teachers in America's leftist heartland, Berkeley, California, have announced that they will not assign their students written homework until they receive a pay raise. The local teachers' union initiated the strike and is requiring teachers not to "volunteer" outside of their contracted hours.
Tierney at the Times
Don't cancel your subscription to the New York Times just yet. Education reformers (and people of contrarian spirit everywhere) should be pleased with the announcement that reporter and columnist John Tierney is taking over William Safire's patch of the most-watched journalistic real estate in the world: the Times op-ed page.
Voters say, give us merit pay!
The latest California Field Poll shows that, while many of Governor Schwarzenegger's reform proposals - the Govern-ator has dubbed this the "Year of Reform" in the Golden State - garner only lukewarm support, his idea of teacher merit pay (see here) is a genuine hit.
Vouchers, vouchers everywhere, but&
With legislatures across the country in full swing, school-choice proposals - both vouchers and tuition tax credits - are being debated all over. Parents rallied on the State House steps in South Carolina in support of Governor Mark Sanford's tax credit for home school and private school students. As Sanford said, "This is simply about recognizing that competition has made every product . . .
The Role of Advanced Placement and Honors Courses in College Admissions
Madeleine WillSaul Geiser and Veronica Santelices, Center for Studies in Higher Education, University of California at Berkeley2004
An Action Agenda for Improving America's High Schools
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Achieve, Inc.February 2005
Efficiency and Effectiveness in Minnesota School Districts: How Do Districts Compare?
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Cheri Pierson Yecke, Center of the American ExperimentFebruary 2005
Just saying no to testing
Anti-testing types have taken up the cause of Mia Kang, a 14-year-old Texan who defied teachers and counselors and turned in a little essay announcing her opposition to standardized testing instead of completing a mandated practice TAKS test. She has vowed not to participate in the real thing this spring, even at the risk of not graduating from high school.
Buried Treasure: Developing a Management Guide From Mountains of School Data
Eric OsbergCenter on Reinventing Public EducationMary Beth Celio and James HarveyJanuary 2005
Philanthropies on the move
In a recent roundtable discussion excerpted in Philanthropy magazine, Kaleem Caire (project director at Fight for Children, Inc., and a mover/shaker in the District of Columbia's school choice movement) and Phoebe Boyer (executive director of the Tiger Foundation in New York City) provide perceptive insights on how philanthropies in those cities are driving education reforms.
Saving Catholic schools for everybody
Diane RavitchThese are interesting observations by Justin Torres. It may be true that in voucher cities, Catholic schools educate large numbers of non-Catholic children. And he is right to ask about their reason for existence if they are not educating Catholic children in the Catholic faith.
Saving Catholic schools for whom?
Last week, the Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn announced that 26 Catholic schools will be closed in Brooklyn and Queens, about 15 percent of what was once a thriving parochial school system in those boroughs. Days later, the Archdiocese of New York announced it will close six schools in Manhattan and the Bronx.
The blind men return
Conference after summit after symposium on high school reform have been held already this year (see Checker's editorial, "The Blind Men and the High School" for a laundry list of potential reforms). This week, Achieve and the National Governors Association chime in.
The Department of Education responds
Michael J. PetrilliWe appreciate the attention given to the U.S. Department of Education's priority published in the Federal Register on January 25 related to scientifically-based evaluation ("Science and nonscience: The limits of scientific research," February 17).
They'll pry my Pixie Sticks from my cold, dead hands
Gadfly has seen education fads come and go and rarely comments on them, life being too short for trivia and nonsense.
Longitudinal Assessment of Comprehensive School Reform Program Implementation and Outcomes: First-Year Report
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Naida C. Tushnet et al., WestEdDecember 2004
Texas Roundup: Charter Schooling in the Lone Star State
Nelson Smith, Progressive Policy InstituteFebruary 2005
California ELL scores on the rise
According to Daniel Weintraub of the Sacramento Bee, in California schools the phrase 'English Learner' is "finally starting to mean what it says." The latest results from the California English Language Development Test show that 47 percent of English Language Learner (ELL) students in the Golden State scored either "advanced" or "early advanced" (meaning at or approaching fluency) in 2
Cheeseheads and vouchers
The Wisconsin Senate last week moved to ease the enrollment cap on Milwaukee's successful voucher program. (See http://www.edexcellence.net/gadfly/issue.cfm?issue=168#2039 for more on the debate.) The bill would raise the current limit of 15 percent of Milwaukee's K-12 students by 1,500 for one year, to 16,500 students.
Board says bye-bye to Bersin reforms
Contrary to what you may have read, not everybody in San Diego wanted Superintendent Alan Bersin gone (see http://www.edexcellence.net/gadfly/issue.cfm?issue=179#2143). Less than a day after the school board bought out his contract, administrators and teachers praised the "courage and guts" of his reform efforts.
Science and nonscience: The limits of scientific research
American education research has turned a corner.
Americans wooed by Canadian site-based management
American educators are streaming to Edmonton, Alberta to study that city's successful implementation of site-based management, which gives individual schools wide-ranging control over curriculum, budgets, and management.
Teachers vs. parents
This week, Time reports that teachers have the toughest time managing their . . . students' parents.
Building the Foundation for Bright Futures
Chester E. Finn, Jr.National Governors AssociationJanuary 2005