Break out the bubbly for the Nation's Report Card?
Review: The Nation's Report Card Grade 12: Reading and Mathematics 2009
Review: The Nation's Report Card Grade 12: Reading and Mathematics 2009
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.?
In today's New York Times piece about the alarming achievement gap between black and white males, we hear this from Harvard scholar Ron Ferguson:
?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
So, our Fordham-AEI volume, Stretching the School Dollar (Harvard Education Press, 2010) is having quite a good week.
Want a ?private school feel? without paying the private school price? Why not try this fast-growing academy.
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?
I 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!
Mike reported yesterday on Arne Duncan's ?red-hot?
As 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??
Mark Bauerlein, an English professor at Emory University and author of The Dumbest Generation (a reference to my generation, of course, not his), reviews in the November issue of Commentary a book by Robert Weissberg titled Bad Students, Not Bad Schools.
I've got a new Education Next article out today, drawn from a book I've been working on (actually, more like working on selling!) that's for parents thinking of choosing a diverse public school for their kids.
?Yes, there have been gains [for 12th grade], and they're significant, but overall, the results are still disappointing, especially in comparison to the big gains at 4th and 8th grade.'' [In regard to recently released 12th grade NAEP scores] *
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
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.
This is the conclusion of David Figlio and Cassandra Hart in their new study of Florida's pioneering Tax Credit Scholarship Program (FTC) for Education Next.
While Mike has quickly filed the National Council for Accreditation of Teachers' report issued yesterday in the Unimpressive folder, I'm not so eager to negatively judge.
In order to fully understand the magnitude of claims that districts don't collaborate very well with charter schools, despite much clamor
In a longish op-ed in the Telegram, John McTernan, a former political secretary to Tony Blair, writes that the UK's new, Tory secretary of state for education is not moving with sufficient vigor to save the nation's schools.
Oh, wait?did I write ?interesting?? Sorry. I meant ?idiotic.? Want to know what's wrong with America's schools? Teachers who write stuff like this (make sure not to miss the parts about his way-cool band!). Here are some choice bits (emphasis mine):
We're in the midst of American Education Week, apparently. The Huffington Post tells us that this celebration (commemoration? lamentation?) was ?co-sponsored?
Longtime Flypaper readers might remember the old Reform-o-Meter, in which I would rate the Obama Administration's efforts on school reform, from ice-cold to red-hot.
?How do we go to a child, a student in the system and urge them to study and work hard and then say when the big jobs come up, if you don't go to the right cocktail party, you're not going to be considered.? * ?Patrick J. Sullivan, Member, Panel for Educational Policy, New York City Board of Education
We hear that the latest 12th grade National Assessment results (from 2009), being released tomorrow, will 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.
Have you made it through the nine circles of high school hell? Well, you'll be happy to know that more trouble awaits in college.
Education Trust just awarded Dispelling the Myth trophies to four schools that prove, as the award name suggests, that you don't have to rehabilitate parents, clean up the neighborhood or solve society's problems before you can educate children.?
Paul Thomas, an associate professor of education at Furman University in Greenville, South Carolina, writes in the Guardian newspaper's Comment Is Free section of a corporate takeover of U.S.
James O'Keefe?you know, the young guy who dressed up like a pimp and, with his hidden camera, took down ACORN and then was arrested for trespassing in Senator Mary Landrieu's New Orleans office?is back.
Waiting for ?Superman? is not the only education-reform documentary out there. Race to Nowhere, a film co-directed by Vicki Abeles and Jessica Congdon, posits not that America's schools can be too aimless, too lax, but that they can be too intense, too demanding.
What should you do to give your child the best education possible? If you're a parent in Cincinnati, Ohio, the answer may be to take a camping trip.