Arne Duncan, Superintendent-in-Chief?
Michael J. PetrilliDo you ever dream about what you'd do if you were Secretary of Education? If you're a teacher, no doubt you'd work to make federal policy more teacher-friendly. If you're a researcher, you'd strive to make it more evidence-based (and to increase the R & D budget). And if you're a big-city superintendent?
Obama administration education cool-o-meter?
Ok, hmmm........so maybe we need to institute an Obama Administration Education "Cool-O-Meter." Seems Education Secretary Arne Duncan recently jumped onstage at DC's crowded and popular 9:30 Club (at a Neko Case concert) to plug the new administration, talk about education and encourage people to go into teaching.
Mike discusses longer school year on FOX
Check out Mike's recent appearance on FOX News. He discusses an issue that's sure to raise heated debate around dinner tables across the nation: lengthening the school year! Arne Duncan favors it . Find out if Mike does.....
Baggy exposure
Got sagging pants? Not if you go to Plantation High School in Broward County, Florida. That's because two teachers, inspired by President Barack Obama's comment last year that "brothers should pull up their pants," have launched a crusade against baggy offenders.
Effects of Teachers' Unions on Qualification-Specific and Incentive-Based Teacher Compensation
Stafford PalmieriKristine Lamm West and Elton MykereziUniversity of Minnesota, Twin CitiesPresented at National Council on Teacher Quality conference, "Help or Hindrance? The Impact of Teacher Roles, Rules and Rights on Teacher Quality," March 26, 2009
Teachers who fear teachers
Teach for America hopes to place 20 corps members in Boston in the fall--but the Boston Teachers Union doesn't want them. "We already have hundreds of good 'surplus' teachers; we don't need [Teach for America] to provide us any help," claims BTU president Richard Stutman. "By coming here, you will only make matters worse." Clearly Mr. Stutman could learn a thing or two from Miss Manners.
Pension tension
In case it wasn't clear that teachers' pensions are about as sustainable as daily print newspapers, New Jersey is here to remind us.
Superintendent-in-chief?
Michael J. PetrilliDo you ever dream about what you'd do if you were Secretary of Education? If you're a teacher, no doubt you'd work to make federal policy more teacher-friendly. If you're a researcher, you'd strive to make it more evidence-based (and to increase the R & D budget). And if you're a big-city superintendent?
Grand illusions
Paul E. BartonThe No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act establishes the lofty goal of holding schools to account for all children achieving "proficiency" in reading and math by 2014--now barely five years away. As the nation now faces up to what to do next, it needs to squarely face the fact that NCLB's authors conjured four illusions--possibly because they were engaged in self-delusion.
Catholic schools echo private sector?
While the phenomenon of unionized charter schools is only budding, parochial schools have a longer tradition of collective bargaining. But two Catholic schools in Staten Island may have found a way to shed the union albatross.
Evaluating evaluation
While D.C. Chancellor Michelle Rhee's battle over salary and tenure has gained much media attention, less heed has been paid to her plans to overhaul the District's teacher evaluation systems. Yet a consensus is growing that they need dramatic reform, too.
A mayor shall lead them?
To the long, familiar list of reasons urban education has failed--too-powerful teacher unions, underfunded and mismanaged schools, poverty's ill effects--Education Secretary Arne Duncan has added another: lack of "leadership from the top." He's talking about mayors in particular, and he wants more of them in charge of urban school districts, à la Chicago, New York, Boston, and Washington
A little common sense in the Buckeye State
Emmy L. PartinAs a homeowner whose property taxes recently went up to support the Columbus City School District's November 2008 levy and bond issue, I was pleased to see
Arne's not-so-stimulating stimulus guidance
Michael J. PetrilliI was meeting with the good folks at the National Council on Teacher Quality yesterday, and Sandi Jacobs, its V.P. and a former NYC teacher, reminded me of the norms of niceness within our education system.
Rhee evaluating teachers
The Post writes up Chancellor Rhee's attempt to overhaul the District's teacher evaluation system. ????This is tougher work than it may seem.
The power-hungry P-21
Michael J. PetrilliLynne Munson of Common Core has the latest low-down, here.
Public pensions in the spotlight
Emmy L. PartinThe Cincinnati Enquirer has been running a powerful series of articles about the troubles facing that city's generous public pension systems. The newspaper's editorial board says enough is enough:
So much for burying this story
As Mike noted, the third-year report on the DC voucher program, showing statistically significant benefits for scholarship recipients, presented a challenge for the folks at ED, who responded by using the time-honored tactic of releasing unwelcome news on a Friday afternoon.
Putting things into perspective
Think of all of the energy that some folks are putting into killing the $13 million DC voucher program. Then consider the following:
The Washington Consensus, alive and well
Michael J. PetrilliWhile the name "No Child Left Behind" might be history, the law's animating principles are here to stay. So it appears from Secretary Arne Duncan's recent policy letter. Note this passage:
Arne Duncan's Title I regulations redux
Michael J. PetrilliAfter sitting idle for a week, our Obama Administration Reform-o-Meter is about to get a workout. That's because things are finally happening over at 400 Maryland Avenue.
Good voucher news is bad news for Obama
Michael J. PetrilliReleasing bad news on a Friday afternoon is a time-honored tradition among governments of all political leanings. (The public is distracted by weekend plans; few people read the Saturday paper.) The Obama Administration is showing itself to be no different; it's no coincidence that the latest (very positive) findings about the D.C.
DC voucher study is in
The third-year evaluation on the DC Opportunity Scholarship Program reports that students who received vouchers outperformed their non-voucher peers in reading. There was no difference in math.
Leaving "No Child Left Behind" behind
Michael J. PetrilliThis time I'm not making an April Fool's Day joke. If you give Secretary of Education Arne Duncan's new??letter about the Title I regs* a good look, you'll notice a subtle linguistic shift:
Kerri Briggs in
Confirming Mike's post from last night, Kerri Briggs is the new state chief for Washington, DC.
John Easton to be director of the Institute for Education Sciences
Michael J. PetrilliIt's been rumored before, but I'm hearing that it's a done deal: John Easton,