District replacers, drama standards, and cranky composing
From urban schools to Common Core to contrary ed reformers, Andy Smarick has you covered
From urban schools to Common Core to contrary ed reformers, Andy Smarick has you covered
A quick look at education news from this weekend and today: Gov. Snyder and Secretary Duncan will discuss education policy in Detroit, the U.S. Department of Justice tells Wisconsin that voucher-receiving private schools must comply with federal Americans with Disabilities Act, and more
A quick look at today's education news: Detroit schools emergency manager Roy Roberts will step down, Texas considers a teacher-evaluation revamp, and more
Andy Smarick's picks of the week
A quick look at today's education news: Teachers at UNO have voted to unionize, computer problems in three states have hindered testing, and more
College aid should go to the college-ready
A quick look at today's education news: The parent-trigger bill failed in the Florida Senate (again), the Waltons give $8 million to StudentsFirst, and more
On the thirtieth anniversary of "A Nation at Risk," Dr. Bennett spoke at the Fordham Institute on the state of American Education
In this installment of the Education Next book club, host Mike Petrilli talks with Michelle Rhee about her new autobiography
A quick look at today's education news: Randi Weingarten calls for a moratorium on the stakes attached to Common Core-aligned tests, states' pre-K financing is spread thin over too many students, and more
The headline that "per pupil funding" of pre-K is "down dramatically" is incredibly misleading
Leap Year, TNTP's latest offering, looks under the hood of the first year of teaching
A first look at the news from this weekend and today: The evidence mounts against turning around schools, Texas's rigid truancy laws may be on their way out, and more
A first look at today's education news: Florida may consider tests other than PARCC, dissident teachers in Mexico ramp up protests, and more
Thirty years ago, A Nation at Risk was released to a surprised country. Suddenly, Americans woke up to learn that SAT scores were plummeting and children were learning a lot less than before. This report became a turning point in modern U.S. education history and marked the beginning of a new focus on excellence, achievement, and results. Due in large part to this report, we now judge a school by whether its students are learning rather than how much money is going into it, what its programs look like, or its earnest intentions. Education reform today is serious about standards, quality, assessment, accountability and benchmarking—by school, district, state and nation. This is new since 1983 and it’s very important. Yet we still have many miles to traverse before we sleep. Our students still need to learn far more and our schools need to become far more effective. To recall the impact of A Nation at Risk these past three decades and to reflect on what lies ahead, watch this short retrospective developed by the Thomas B. Fordham Institute and the American Enterprise Institute: A Nation at Risk: Thirty Years Later.
Smith's new brief tells the story of the still-young Achievement School District in Tennessee
An alternative to the traditional school district with the potential to turn failing schools around has emerged
A first look at today's education news: A new Pew survey finds that U.S. teens aren't doing as badly in science as the public fears, Algebra 2 will become an elective in Florida's high schools, and more
Maybe it isn't as simple as changing incentives
A first look at the education news from this weekend and today: Pearson is under fire in both NYC and Texas, Hawaii finally has a teacher contract, and more
There's public, and then there's “public.”
A first look at today's education news: A coalition of parents petitions NYC for more gifted and talented spots, Brown University is set to offer an engineering MOOC for high schoolers, and more
Republicans make a colossal—but reversible—error on the Common Core
The College Board and ACT have entered the ring
A first look at today's education news: Florida teachers are suing over the state's teacher-evaluation formula, the CTU zeroes in on ousting Rahm, and more
As the challenges of education governance loom ever larger and the dysfunction and incapacity of the traditional K-12 system reveal themselves as major roadblocks to urgently-needed reforms across that system, many have asked, “What’s the alternative?”
Alabama’s decision to drop out of both consortia and choose a battery of ACT exams is enormous
A first look at today's education news: The RNC adopts a resolution attacking the Common Core, teacher unions aim to organize charter schools, and more
New Jersey just released new report cards for all schools in the state. The information now available, including indicators of college- and career-readiness and excellent “peer school” comparisons, is invaluable. And it is deeply discomfiting for many of the state’s complacent schools and districts.