What we're reading this week: November 7, 2024
The Education GadflyNew research shows that an endorsement from a local teachers’ union can boost a school board candidate’s likelihood of winning by up to 20 percentage points, due in large part to the popular belief that teacher approval signals competence in improving schools.
Imagining a post-Biden blueprint for education and workforce regulatory reform
Michael BrickmanWithin just a few short months, there will be a new occupant of the Oval Office and, with that, a new administration in charge of the education and workforce regulatory regime.
We’re living through an education depression
Tim DalyIn 1990, 48 percent of our nation’s eighth graders had very weak math skills. How did we know? They scored in the lowest performance category, Below Basic, on the national test given to a sample of American students every two years.[1]
A Republican education secretary for Kamala Harris’s cabinet?
Dale ChuIt is rare, but not unheard of, for presidents to ask members of the opposing party to serve in their cabinets. If she wins, Vice President Harris has pledged to make the symbolic gesture, historically used at key moments to project unity and bipartisanship. There’s a compelling argument to be made that the post of Education Secretary would be a worthy target for such an act. Here Chu discusses seven candidates for the role.
20 questions for school board candidates
Michael J. PetrilliElection Day is almost here, and the presidential contest is not the only one that matters.
How should teachers cover the election? They shouldn’t.
Daniel BuckI student-taught during the Republican primary of 2016. One afternoon, I watched my mentor teacher, an avowed socialist, berate a student during class for daring to express support for Donald Trump. After the election, many of my colleagues breathed nihilistic tirades to their charges about the hopelessness of our country.
The return on investment of pre-kindergarten programming: Evidence from Connecticut
Jeff MurrayThe academic impacts of pre-kindergarten programming for children are a matter of unsettled science, with some research finding a positive impact, some a negative, and much showing the fade out of all impacts by third grade or soon thereafter.
What we're reading this week: October 31, 2024
The Education GadflyTo combat pandemic-induced learning loss, the federal government must take sweeping and decisive action.
Once a hedgehog, now a fox: Ten lessons from six decades in the struggle to improve schools
Chester E. Finn, Jr.The Greek poet Archilochus wrote that “the fox knows many things, but the hedgehog knows one big thing.” Finn’s experience has made him more like the fox: as keen as ever to overhaul and revitalize American education, but having come to “knows many things” about that enterprise, is more a wary realist regarding its difficulty.
American students underperform, but our economy overachieves
Mark SchneiderThere is a large literature linking the quality of education to economic growth, and numerous economists and development agencies, including the
Is it time for a second look at virtual education?
Robert PondiscioI confess I approach the question of virtual education with more than a little skepticism. Kids spend enough time staring at screens, and I’ve developed a reflexive distrust bordering on cynicism for all things ed tech, which has a reliable history of overpromising and underdelivering. And, of course, student outcomes from virtual schools have been awful.
How are four-day school weeks impacting student attendance and teacher retention?
Jeanette LunaThe four-day school week is increasingly popular, particularly in rural districts, with roughly 900 school districts having adopted such a truncated schedule as of 202
What we're reading this week: October 24, 2024
The Education GadflyHow can school systems make the best use of money? An analysis of ESSER funds points to five key areas of focus: effective leadership, equitable spending, targeted procurement, improved general education, and more responsible budgeting practices.
Charter schools’ virtuous improvement cycle betters our K–12 system
Bruno V. Manno“Charter school laws have been arguably the most influential school reform efforts of the past several decades,” write economists
Implementing the science of reading: Insights from the field
Maggie JohnsonAt Partnership Schools, we are excited that so many Ohioans are excited about the “science of reading.” In 2023 legislation that took effect this school year, Governor DeWine and the General Assembly have mandated that all reading curricula follow this approach—one we know well, since Partnership Schools have implemented it for over a
Grade inflation: Why it matters and how to stop it
Adam Tyner, Ph.D.Grade inflation influences the environment in which teachers teach and students study, shaping their behavior and relationships. But utilizing external assessments, increasing transparency, and supporting reforms that preserve the rigor of grading standards can help fix the problem.
What would a Harris presidency mean for education? Nobody knows, but we can hope for a return to ed reform.
Michael J. PetrilliPredicting the future is often compared to reading tea leaves. In the case of forecasting what education policies Vice President Kamala Harris might pursue as president, though, a more apt analogy might be reading her mind. Frankly it’s anyone’s guess what her education policies would be, given how few clues we have.
The American dream is still in reach for young people
Ian RoweThe American dream is still alive and can be achieved in just one generation, even among the most economically disadvantaged young people. That finding is among the most promising takeaways from new research produced by Harvard University’s Raj Chetty and his collaborators.
What we're reading this week: October 17, 2024
The Education GadflyThe rapid growth of higher education in developing nations has led to a mismatch between the number of graduates and available jobs, contributing to high rates of unemployment and illegal migration within the college-educated population. —Jon Emont, Wall Street Journal
Districts spent $190 billion in federal pandemic funds. Did it work?
Chad AldemanEditor’s note: This was first published by The 74. Say your boss gives you an unexpected bonus at work. Would you save the money, make those home upgrades you’ve been putting off or splurge on a nice vacation?
Student enrollment is dropping. The charter sector should keep growing anyway.
Michael J. PetrilliThe macro trend that will have the greatest impact on the American education system over the next decade or two is our declining birth rate and the resulting enrollment crisis facing many public schools. We have too many schools for too few kids and, as a result, thousands of schools are going to need to close. But what we don’t have are enough excellent schools, and therefore the charter sector should keep growing anyway.
Calling for a constitutional right to school choice in Colorado
Dale ChuAs the clock winds down towards Election Day, Colorado voters—myself included—face an important decision beyond the presidential contest: whether to amend the state constitution to enshrine a “right to school choice.” To be clear, the Centennial State has a long and proud record on the issue.
Wrong (and right) lessons from Chicago’s school closures
Vladimir KoganChicago’s troubled school district has made national headlines recently—from the mass resignation of its appointed school board, which opposed the mayor’s efforts to borrow nearly $300 million at ruinous rates to give the teachers union a sweetheart contract, to the
Many CTE teachers are leaving the classroom. But is that necessarily a bad thing?
Amber M. Northern, Ph.D., Jeff MurrayThe growing popularity of career and technical education (CTE) at the high school level creates an ongoing need for more teachers with industry experience to provide hands-on instruction in a diverse variety of fields.
What we're reading this week: October 10, 2024
The Education GadflyIn which a leading center-right columnist rethinks the proposition that education can ameliorate America’s inequalities in the information age.