Anemic urban academic performance data show little reason for cheer
The Thomas B. Fordham Institute has analyzed the academic performance of schools in Ohio’s Big 8 cities annually since 2003.
The Thomas B. Fordham Institute has analyzed the academic performance of schools in Ohio’s Big 8 cities annually since 2003.
Some great pictures of Arne's visit with the New York State United Teachers union people in Albany, courtesy of
Okay, so the Albany Times Union search engine is not perfect ? it did not turn up Rick Karlin's story on Arne Duncan's odd visit to one of the nation's premiere charter school cities?
Nick Gillespie, editor-in-chief of reason.com, wonders just how much money high-school sports actually cost and why no one seems willing, in our time of financial agony, to even consider cutting them. ?Liam Julian
The Chronicle of Higher Education shows how the college raters do their rating. ?Liam Julian
Education Next, where I'm an executive editor, is running an online poll to determine the top books of the past decade. (We're celebrating our tenth anniversary this coming winter.) Here are the 41 nominees in chronological order; did we leave anything important out?
Attention all fashionistas: last night's red carpet at the Emmys has nothing on high fashion in the homeroom.
If you're looking for an answer to that question, this post is sure to disappoint. I'm really just wondering myself. Is there any evidence that reforms are more likely to take root if stakeholders are on board?
?No one is ever really singled out, neither good nor bad. The culture of the union is: Everyone is the same. You can't single out anyone for doing badly. So as a result, we don't point out the good either.'' ?Aldo Pinto, teacher at Los Angeles Unified School District's Gridley Street Elementary School
The meltdown in New Jersey over its 11th-place showing in the Race to the Top competition ? one place out of the money ? can not be good for education reform.
Those of us at the Thomas B. Fordham Institute are hawks when it comes to charter school accountability. We fervently believe that bad charter schools should be shuttered and that authorizers should be choosy when granting charters in the first place. This wasn't always so; when the charter movement started we, like many other enthusiasts, believed in letting a thousand flowers bloom.
Each year the Thomas B. Fordham Institute conducts an analysis of urban school performance in Ohio. We found that in 2009-10, 26 percent of public school students (district and charter) in Ohio's Big 8 urban communities attended a school rated A or B by the state, 28 percent attend a C-rated school, and 47 percent attended a school rated D or F.
Scanning my local newspaper the other morning ? it usually takes about ten minutes, including Police Blotter ? I stopped at the editorial headline, ?You can help support Newspapers in Education? and immediately thought, How about a little education in the newspapers?
Sorry to?interrupt?Mike's slow Friday contest, but ?I need to tell?a couple of quick?stories about the power of the press (The PoP!) ?
In this Sunday's Washington Post Magazine, Education Secretary Arne Duncan stars in the ?First Person Singular? column. ?Liam Julian
It's Friday, so don't be depressed. Besides, today's EdNews is striking, if I do say so myself.
?We used Katrina as an opportunity to build?not rebuild, but build?a new school system.'' ?Paul Vallas, Superintendent of the Recovery School District in New Orleans
Since Liam has taken the fight overseas (here), I'll add to the flat world discussion by mentioning another international story in today's
The AP is reporting that Los Angeles Unified's lame-duck superintendent, Ramon Cortines, who says he's retiring next year, supports a teacher evaluation system that counts student test scores for 30 percent of the grade. ?Peter Meyer
The education news websites and blogs are crackling. Race to the Top! The winners! The losers! The behind-the-scenes intrigue! But outside the borders of education nation, few people know, and even fewer care, about Race to the Top. Hard to blame them.
I've gotten a lot of push-back for calling the Race to the Top results ?disastrous? for the Administration, and for arguing that Secretary Duncan should have overruled his peer reviewers and awarded grants to Louisiana and Colorado.
?We know that the hard work is ahead of us.'' ?Merryl Tisch, chancellor of New York's Board of Regents
Fordham's Research Director Amber Winkler made a guest appearance on Fox & Friends this morning. The topic was whether teachers should receive cultural awareness training, to make them more sensitive to their students' backgrounds. Check out the segment here. And if you missed it, Amber should be back on the show Sunday, discussing the same topic!
New Fordham study shows which