Should homework be abolished or expanded?
Intrigued by a report on CBS suggesting that today's kids are burdened with too much homework, ace Washington Post reporter Jay Mathews did some digging.
Intrigued by a report on CBS suggesting that today's kids are burdened with too much homework, ace Washington Post reporter Jay Mathews did some digging.
Two decades after the National Commission on Excellence in Education issued its celebrated "A Nation at Risk" report, how much progress has the U.S. made in averting that risk and bringing excellence to its schools? Not much, says the Hoover Institution's Koret Task Force on K-12 Education, one of whose eleven members I am.
Richard Ingersoll, Harvard University PressFebruary 2003
The Josiah Bartlett Center for Public Policy, The Business Roundtable, AccountabilityWorksFebruary 2003
Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Center for Information & Research on Civic Learning & EngagementFebruary 2003
As Congress begins work on updating the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) this spring, expect funding, vouchers, and discipline issues to emerge as major sticking points, according to a neat summary of the special ed debate appearing at Stateline.org.
A revised SAT being developed by the College Board and psychologist Robert Sternberg produces smaller test score gaps across racial groups and can help colleges achieve diversity without using affirmative action, its developers claim.
Last week, New York City chancellor Joel I. Klein released the list of 208 schools that will be exempt from the new citywide math and reading curricula that go into effect next year in the rest of the country's largest school system.Ignore for now the issue of whether a uniform citywide curriculum is a good idea.
You won't see any references to bookworms, busybodies, craftsmanship, cults, dialects, dogma, extremists, fairies, heroines, huts, jungles, lumberjacks, limping, Navajos, one-man bands, slaves, snowmen, straw men, or yachts in today's textbooks.
In a recent Gadfly, Chester Finn reviewed All Else Equal by Benveniste, Carnoy, and Rothstein. Those authors claim that private schools are very similar to public schools. They base their findings on case studies of sixteen private schools, only some of which are Catholic.
Breaking up a popular, high-achieving neighborhood elementary school because it doesn't have enough white students, even though the suburban black parents who send their children there are pleased with the school. Trying to shut down charter schools, though they cost less to run than traditional public schools, their students' performance may be superior, and they have long waiting lists.
Over the past thirty years, per-pupil spending on education has doubled. Almost half of this increase was caused by the hiring of many more teachers. As a result, the number of students per U.S. teacher has shrunk from 22 to 15 since the early 1970s. Oddly, this hasn't led to a reduction in class size; instead, the average teacher simply faces fewer classes per day.
Having read Chester Finn's commentary last week ("Part II: Rethinking Vocational Education"), I wonder if perhaps Mr. Finn, in his effort to review federal education policy, simply overlooked current special education law. IDEA specifically calls for transition services to be provided while disabled children are still in public school.
Robert Holland, The Lexington InstituteDecember 2002
Robert J. Marzano, The Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development2003
Kalman R. Hettleman, Abell FoundationFebruary 2003
Parents who call school district offices in New York City to try to transfer their children out of failing schools have a nearly 1 in 2 chance of getting the wrong information, two reporters from the New York Daily News found.
If you missed the national conference on teacher compensation and evaluation sponsored by CPRE (Consortium for Policy Research in Education) in November 2002, you can now access most of its presentations online.
Anthony Alvarado, brought in by Superintendent Alan Bersin to lead a curriculum overhaul in San Diego, will leave the district by September. Bersin called his departure a mutual decision.
Even before the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) act shot across the sky, many districts and states had embarked upon heroic efforts to identify failing schools and set them right.
President Bush's 2004 budget previews many worthy education policy reforms, though in most cases the fine print remains to be written. Last week, I applauded the Administration's excellent Head Start initiative (http://www.edexcellence.net/gadfly/issue.cfm?issue=10#350).
A review of world history textbooks used in U.S. classrooms found that they routinely sanitize the problems of Islam while treating events in Western history and Christianity more critically.
Anthony Bryk, Paul Peterson, and E.D. Hirsch have won the first annual Fordham prizes for excellence in education, the Thomas B. Fordham Foundation announced this week. Bryk and Peterson will split a $25,000 prize for distinguished scholarship while Hirsch will receive his own $25,000 prize for valor.
Morrison InstituteJanuary 2003
Ronald D. Ferguson, NCREL Policy Issue 13December 2002
Sara Bolt, Jane Krentz, Matha Thurlow, University of Minnesota, National Center on Educational Outcomes. November 2002
U.S. Department of Education, Office of the Under SecretaryPrepared by Mathematica Policy Research, Inc. and Decision Information Resources, Inc.February 2003
David T. Gordon, Editor, Harvard Education PressJanuary 2003
Luis Benveniste, Martin Carnoy, Richard Rothstein, RoutledgeFalmer November 2002