Education News Nuggets
Parents, there's finally a way to get your kids to eat their veggies: just have Michelle Obama over for dinner.?
Quotable & Notable
?We already know that social acceptance is one of the primary concerns of adolescence. If achievement comes at a social cost, there are obviously going to be differences in teenagers' motivation to achieve.'' * Thomas E. Fuller-Rowell, Institute for Social Research Fellow at the University of Michigan
Extra! Extra! Read all about it! (Now drop it.)
Jamie Davies O'LearyListen up, Ohio, especially all you Debbie Downers/Negative Nancys/Chicken Littles who have paid rapt attention to the ongoing public drama between outgoing Governor Strickland, and well ? Governor Strickland's office telephone.
Could it be worse than we thought?
Review: A Call for Change: The Social and Educational Factors Contributing to the Outcomes of Black Males in Urban Schools
Education News Nuggets
The panel of experts to help Commissioner Steiner with his big decision has been convened; if Cathie Black doesn't get her waiver, mayoral control
Field notes: Through the special ed looking glass
Peter MeyerWhile Mike was reporting that special education spending was ?heading toward one-third?
Quotable & Notable
?I think it's opened a whole new chapter on analyzing school performance.'' Texas State Representative Rob Eissler, on a new statistical model developed by the Education Resources Group
Checker in NY Post
Checker has an op-ed in today's NY Post?it's entitled, Senseless ?certificate,' silly hurdle for schools boss. In it, he criticizes the NY state law requiring that school-system heads possess a ?superintendent's certificate.?
Rep. guvs: "the public is on our side" (in taking on public employee & teacher unions)
Jamie Davies O'LearyFor several years, Fordham-Ohio has been pointing to red flags when it comes to the sustainability of the state teachers' retirement system (STRS).
Who's protecting teacher privacy?
Peter MeyerIn an odd twist on the issue of teacher privacy, Peter Murphy of the New York State Charter Schools Association is reporting that charters in New York won another?judicial victory last week when state's highest court rejected an attempt by the New York State United Teachers (NYSUT) to obtain payroll records showing the full names, titles, cor
Historically speaking, we're in a rut
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Our prolific friend and colleague, AEI's Rick Hess, publishes more books than Borders stocks, and it would be exaggerated to say that every single one of them is a seminal contribution. But this one is genuinely important.
Stretching the special ed dollar is desperately needed, too
Michael J. PetrilliToday Rick Hess takes up the issue of special education spending on his blog, and gives Arne Duncan a fair bit of grief for delivering a
Quotable & Notable
?Restructuring pay systems is like kicking a beehive.'' * Bill Gates, co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
The power of the (small) press
Peter MeyerI knew where I was as soon as the Ukranian cabbie pronounced the city a dictatorship and a teachers union leader told a room full of education reformers how good it was to be back in a town ?where you can use your hands when you talk?and swear.? ?Bulls?t!? someone shouted.
Here today, Gove tomorrow
Britain's Education Secretary Michael Gove hasn't wasted any time since assuming his post in May. In these short six months, he's implemented a new ?free schools? initiative, which takes a page out of America's charter-school book by allowing groups (mostly charities or parents) to establish privately-run, publicly-funded schools. He's also sought to increase the number of ?academies?
Break out the bubbly for the Nation's Report Card?
Daniela FairchildReview: The Nation's Report Card Grade 12: Reading and Mathematics 2009
Duncan and Gates tackle doing more with less
Chester E. Finn, Jr.The two biggest spenders of recent years?in American education, namely Arne Duncan and Bill Gates, have come to the realization that a new day has dawned with respect to K-12 budgets.?
Education News Nuggets
Want a ?private school feel? without paying the private school price? Why not try this fast-growing academy.
Seeds of reform sown by Moynihan (and Coleman)
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Seven years after his death, Daniel Patrick Moynihan still makes the front page of the New York Times. The immediate context one day in mid-October was an article on the ?culture of poverty?
Echoes of Pat Moynihan
Michael J. PetrilliIn today's New York Times piece about the alarming achievement gap between black and white males, we hear this from Harvard scholar Ron Ferguson:
Quotable & Notable
?Now, if you tell a teacher they're not doing a good job, it's like you're attacking the entire profession.? * Michelle Rhee, Former Chancellor of D.C. Public Schools
Big week for Stretching the School Dollar
So, our Fordham-AEI volume, Stretching the School Dollar (Harvard Education Press, 2010) is having quite a good week.
`All together now' meets differentiated instruction
Peter MeyerI walked out of a sixth-grade classroom yesterday with my head spinning, having watched a long discussion, lead by a veteran teacher, about why little Mary was upset and couldn't concentrate on her math. I was stunned, but not surprised; thanks to Mary's problem, none of the class was learning math!
The rubber starts meeting the road: Class size in NYC
Peter MeyerMike reported yesterday on Arne Duncan's ?red-hot?
Much to do with NEA dues
Chris IrvineAs union membership can still be mandatory in twenty-eight states across the country, many union members have grown used to their dues money being taken straight from their paychecks.? But how many of them actually know what that money goes toward??
Education News Nuggets
If you want to know more about American Education Week, you can read up on its history here; and be sure to check out the accompanying
Thanks but no thanks, NAEP
Chester E. Finn, Jr.The latest 12th grade National Assessment results (from 2009), released this morning, show small (but statistically significant) upticks over the past four years in both reading and math, both in ?scale scores? and in the percentages of young people deemed ?proficient.? In math, there's been a slow but persistent rise, of which these new results are part.