Peoples' Choice (via Google): Top 20 2010 education stories as of RIGHT NOW!*
Mike missed this for his best and worst?of the best and worst because it's late, as usual.?
Mike missed this for his best and worst?of the best and worst because it's late, as usual.?
A New York judge dismissed three lawsuits seeking to keep publishing exec Cathleen Black from taking over the reins of the nation's largest public school system.
As if we didn't know, the NY Times reveals the secrets to China's recent success in the PISA tests:
The end (of 2010) is upon us, and edu-pundits everywhere are compiling their ?best and worst? lists for the Year of the Tiger. Here's my run-down of the lists themselves:
We all know that money isn't everything, but with the faltering economy and shrinking budgets, it's probably a good idea to
Heads up to AT&T and Verizon: adjust your 2011 revenue projections accordingly, as advancements in technology and State Board of Education guidelines may reduce student cell ph
There's a big fight at the Niagara Falls Board of Education, where it seems that a preferred perk of membership is getting a wife, daughter, son, or other relative a job with the schools.
?The answer to the inherent difficulty of judging performance is not to simply throw up one's hands and pay anyone who manages to show up for work more often than not.'' * ? Megan McArdle, Business and Economics editor for The Atlantic
I could begin this entry in much the same way as my last one, about superintendent types in large cities, because
In the education-reform movement there have always been two schools of thought?when there aren't a dozen?about what makes a good reform superintendent.
That's the headline in a Winston-Salem Journal editorial today advising North Carolina legislators to get ?education? out of the lottery, as in North Carolina Education Lottery.
?Public schools are always given the gift of time. But we can't continue to be given the gift of time if that time greatly impacts the success of students in schools today.? * -Lynn Black, Head of Schools for Hoosier Academies
The northeast may be paralyzed by a snow storm today, but teacher evaluation news goes on. ?
?As the current economic crisis dries up Nevada's budget, leaders should be looking for some streams in the desert. School choice not only would quench their thirst for savings, it also would lead families to an oasis of quality educational opportunities.? *
The new Gadfly has an essay by Robert Pondiscio that must be read.
Boys may be having trouble learning how to read, but at least we've come up with ?flash mob?
Here's the Gadfly piece Peter mentioned in his ?Coin of the Realm? post, in full:
Review: The 2010 Broad Prize: Thirty Large Urban School Districts Show Better Relative Academic Performance Than Their States for African-American, Hispanic, or Low-Income Students
This is the kind of story that makes you appreciate the serendipity of the morning newspaper: The education sector, and especially the School Construction Authority, has become big business in the world of New York City real estate.
Fordham's new report, Are Bad Schools Immortal?, shows the folly of school turnaround efforts ??? only 1.4 percent of district schools and less than 1 percent of charters that have undergone turnaround efforts have done so successfully.
Want to know what 2011 will bring to the field of education reform? I'm no fortune teller, but I'm happy to offer these educated guesses.
In an editorial this morning on Andrew Cuomo's tax-cap proposal (see background from Peter Meyer here and
?It's not a lack of new initiatives, it's too many initiatives, and no sense of what's working.'' -Robert Manwaring, Senior Policy Analyst, Education Sector, on school reform efforts
Think your classroom is safe? Perhaps not, according to the EPA. And if you're not a fan of NCLB, here are the parts that should be ?left behind?.
While some schools struggle with teacher absences, other schools focus on student absences?financial i
In my previous post about the property tax cap proposed for New York State, I neglected to mention a new report by the New York State School Boar
In their clear-headed if ominous essay, ?A Warning for All Who Would Listen,? in Stretching the School Dollar, James Guthrie and Arthur Peng point out that the ?hundred-year era of perpetual per-pupil fiscal growth? is over.
Central Falls High School, the embattled Rhode Island school that made headlines this past spring when the district's superintendent and school board attempted to fire all the teachers and school administration, has