Wolverine Future Schools
Michigan Future Schools is now accepting applications to open college-prep high schools in Detroit. High-quality EMOs, take note!
Michigan Future Schools is now accepting applications to open college-prep high schools in Detroit. High-quality EMOs, take note!
Mike and Janie discuss Fordham’s new paper on Common Core implementation and governance, and get into the sort-of good, the oh-so-bad, and the ugly truth of teachers unions. Amber shows how great Montgomery County is, and Amanda admires the Maine outdoors.
Rick Hess--director of education policy at the American Enterprise Institute, and Education Gadfly Show co-host-has some words of wisdom for us.
Cambridge calling your name? The Harvard Graduate School of Education is tapping the job market. Currently open are three positions: Project Manager, Senior Program Manager, and Research Analyst/Statistical Programmer.
Gotham Schools’ new job board is already boasting some eye-catching postings for New Yorkers. And the site’s even sweeter for those looking to hire. Be one of the first forty to post a job, and the listing is free. Access the job board here.
The National Council on Teacher Quality is hiring. Open positions include one project manager slot and several research analyst openings. Find more information here; inquiries should be directed to Pat Giles at [email protected].
Are you crazy about citrus and sunshine? The Florida Schools of Excellence Commission--an independent, state-level commission whose focus is the development and support of charter schools--seeks an executive director. See here for more information.
*/ table.MsoNormalTable { } --> Do you enjoy collaborating with attorneys about legislation and writing policy papers for clients? Do you understand the federal education budget and appropriations process? Do you? If so, you may be a perfect fit as a legislative associate for a federal education law firm.
You won't want to miss this week's debate between Mike and Stafford about teachers cheating, corporate sponsorship in schools, and praise-worthy union leaders. Then Amber explains positive news about ProComp, while Janie sends BP a bill for lost tax-based school dollars.
Ohio has one of the most stringent academic “death penalties” in the country for our charter schools… Of course the same rules don’t apply to district schools, which have virtually unlimited opportunity to remain open and seek improvement, regardless of whether they actually do…. Thirty-nine district schools in Ohio were awarded SIG funds.
Connecticut-based reform organization ConnCAN is seeking a Chief Operating Officer. This person will lead and serve the ConnCAN team, managing its various arms, and mentoring, supporting, and overseeing its staff.
On this week's show, Mike and Rick debate whether Nancy Grasmick should run Baltimore's failing schools, why Robert Gordon wants to fire new teachers, and whether street protests teach students democracy in action. Plus, an interview with the author of this week's editorial, Nina Shokraii Rees.
The vice principal at a San Diego tech-themed magnet middle school must not have been very hip, rad, phat, or da bomb diggity in the 90s. The slang-challenged fellow recently confused a student’s science project that was da bomb for being…a bomb.
Join us at the National Press Club on May 16th at 9 a.m., when we'll host a panel discussion about Fordham's recently-released report The Autonomy Gap. Experts will discuss the pitfalls and promise of effective school leadership.
Want to know what principals think about having more accountability demands placed upon them, yet no more autonomy to achieve the desired results? Then join us at the Press Club on May 16th from 9:30 to 11 to hear Hartford school superintendent Steven Adamowski (author of The Autonomy Gap) and a panel of observers and principals explain.
The Youth Leadership Foundation serves disadvantaged boys and girls from Washington's inner city through academic enrichment and character development. YLF is hosting its third annual benefit event at Maggiano's in Washington, D.C., on April 21st from 6-10 p.m. Tickets are $35 per person before April 14 or $40 per person at the door, and a portion of the ticket price is tax-deductible.
If you hadn’t caught wind, Fordham recently published a slimvolume on our experiences as a charter school authorizer in Ohio. What did we learn?
For free tickets to see “The Lottery,” that is. The National Alliance for Public Charter Schools is sponsoring a free screening this Friday, June 25, in Washington D.C. at 7:45 pm. NAPCS President Nelson Smith and “The Lottery” director Madeleine Sackler will speak afterwards.
This week, Mike and Rick demand more pledging, less union meddling, and longer speeches from Bill Gates. Our interview with Graham Down about liberal arts curricula is real, and it's spectacular, and Education News of the Weird is all about One Teacher's Left Behind. Fish rot from the head, we're told.
This week, Mike and Rick mock Malcolm Gladwell (and not because of his hair), praise the Washington Post's Jay Mathews, and demand the right to sleep. We've got an interview with scholar Hillel Fradkin, who talks about teaching 9/11 in schools. And Education News of the Weird is protected by both the First Amendment and Larry Flynt.
Rick and Amber are back, and what a show it is. First Rick and Mike discuss Diane Ravitch’s new book, the Central Falls firings, and whether Governors Crist and Jindal are in a pickle. Then, Amber gives us the scoop on Boston teacher hiring, firing, and retention stats and Rate that Reform crosses the pond.
If you missed last week’s explanatory event on the Common Core State Standards, featuring Jason Zimba (CCSSI mathematics work team) and David Coleman (CCSSI English language arts work team), we’ve got your back. The event video is now online.
This week, Mike and Rick discuss Michigan, bribery, and lingerie. The Aspen Institute's Gary Huggins stops by to chat about the Commission on No Child Left Behind, and News of the Weird is a flag in an army of women, or a liberating woman's street, or something like that.
This week, Mike and Rick contemplate Deval Patrick's appointment to the Achieve board, English language learners' stellar strides in Maryland and Virginia, and the chilly reality of a cold cheese sandwich. Then Amber tells us about a new math curriculum study from IES and Rate that Reform tackles classroom refrigeration.
On Monday, September 25th, the Commission on No Child Left Behind will hold its final hearing. The proceedings will begin at 9 a.m. at George Washington University's Jack Morton Auditorium. Fordham's own Mike Petrilli will testify, along with a panel of education bigwigs and luminaries, and of course Reg Weaver.
This week saw the release of President Obama’s annual budget request, which outlines a proposal for overhauling the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), a.k.a. No Child Left Behind.
South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford is pushing a bill to create a statewide charter district that could authorize charter schools anywhere in the state, which would then fund these schools directly, bypassing local districts entirely.
The Foundation for Excellence in Education and the James Madison Institute are hosting an education summit in Orlando next month, and they've booked some big names. Jeb Bush and his mom, among other luminaries, will be speaking. Learn about the event here.
Here's an original (and fallacious) thought: when times get rough, absolve children of the need to learn math. That, at least, is the story coming out of Oregon, where budget woes have allegedly forced the state to drop its brand-new graduation requirements in algebra, geometry, and statistics.
We appreciate Mike’s enthusiasm for Denver’s School of Science and Technology but would rather see President Obama give the commencement speech at Cincinnati’s Clark Montessori Junior and Senio