Legislating Equity: The Distribution of Emergency Permit Teachers in California
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Laura Goe, Education Policy Analysis ArchivesOctober 14, 2002
Ed Department releases condensed guide to the No Child Left Behind Act
The Department of Education has released a helpful "desktop reference" manual to the No Child Left Behind Act.
Attracting Principals to the Superintendency: Conditions that Make a Difference to Principals
Terry RyanAimee Howley, Edwina Pendarvis and Thomas Gibbs, Education Policy Analysis ArchivesOctober 16, 2002
A "Noble Bet" in Early Care and Education: Lessons from One Community's Experience
Eric OsbergBrian P. Gill, Jake Dembosky, and Jonathan P. Caulkins, RAND 2002
Who Is Teaching California's Children?
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Camille Esch and Patrick Shields, Center for the Future of Teaching and Learning2002
The OERI bill: a marginal improvement
Chester E. Finn, Jr.The Gadfly has buzzed repeatedly about pending legislation to reorganize the federal government's education research, statistics, assessment and evaluation functions. This week, the U.S. Senate put the finishing legislative touches on H.R.
Measuring Up 2002: The State-by-State Report Card for Higher Education
Chester E. Finn, Jr.National Center for Public Policy and Higher EducationOctober 2002
The Closing of the Education Frontier?
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Paul Barton, Educational Testing ServiceSeptember 2002
Teacher Training Programs: Activities Underway to Improve Teacher Training, but Information Collected To Assess Accountability Has Limitations
Allison ColeStatement of Cornelia M. AshbyOctober 2002
California charter schools create accreditation system
Earlier this week, the California Network of Educational Charters (CANEC) unveiled a new accreditation program in an attempt to introduce a measure of self-evaluation and -regulation among the network's 300 charter schools.
Challenging the NYC schools chancellor to support charter schools
On Saturday, Diane Ravitch challenged chancellor Joel Klein to "bust the monopoly" of New York City's mammoth school system, noting that Klein has thus far dismissed the idea of school choice despite his reputation as a trustbuster.
Charter schools and urban education
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Everyone agrees that the weak performance of U.S. urban education poses a national crisis. Far too many low income and minority youngsters attend bad schools where they learn too little, are sometimes in danger and are understandably inclined to drop out.Yet not everyone appreciates the contribution that charter schools can make to easing the urban-education crisis. To the contrary.
More implementation challenges for the No Child Left Behind Act
A long article by Diana Schemo in Monday's New York Times outlined some of the ways in which the No Child Left Behind Act is being weakened or skirted by federal, state, and local officials. Several states are moving to ease their standards for academic proficiency to ensure that more children are able to reach them.
The MetLife Survey of The American Teacher 2002: Student Life: School, Home, and Community
Allison ColeDana Markow and Marc Scheer, MetLife2002
Educating Teachers: The Best Minds Speak Out
Chester E. Finn, Jr.edited by George C. Leef, The American Council of Trustees and AlumniJune 2002
Edison explains its finances
I write to clarify four issues regarding Edison Schools in a recent Gadfly article written by Allison Cole, "Edison's Year has a Rocky Start" [see http://www.edexcellence.net/gadfly/issue.cfm?issue=38#546]:
Ballot initiatives on class size, after-school programs before voters this fall
No states have voucher initiatives on the ballot this November, but a range of other education issues will be presented directly to voters this fall in different states.
No Child Left Behind: Meeting Challenges, Seizing Opportunities, Improving Achievement
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Achieve, Inc.Summer 2002
Education Reform Through Standards: What Does it Mean for Youth in Alternative Education Settings
Terry RyanAmerican Youth Policy ForumDecember 12, 2001
"Fresh" offerings from the anti-reform camp
The current issue of Phi Delta Kappan contains both a screed by the infamous Alfie Kohn on the subject of corporate involvement in education and the latest of Gerald Bracey's annual rants about who he likes and who he doesn't like in American education. Just about everyone who wants to boost standards or foster choice manages to land in the latter category.
9/11 lessons for educators
Writing this time in Educational Leadership, Diane Ravitch offers seven lessons for educators in the aftermath of September 11th. The first of these: it's okay to be patriotic.
Schools try out report cards based on state academic standards
While the Manhattan Institute survey described above presents discouraging evidence that many teachers have not bought into standards-based reform, there are some points of light out there. In Illinois, two elementary schools are testing new report cards that replace A's, B's, and C's with indications of whether the student exceeds, meets, or has not met certain state academic standards.
Thy Voice in My Behalf: Teacher Union Political Spending
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Mike AntonucciOctober 2002
Visions 2020: Transforming Education and Training Through Advanced Technologies, Technology Administration
Chester E. Finn, Jr.U.S. Department of CommerceSeptember 2002
Chicago teachers caught helping students cheat on state tests
In the most elaborate cheating scandal in the history of Chicago's public schools, teachers were caught giving tips, erasing incorrect answers, pointing to correct answers, and filling in the answers to questions left blank on students' Iowa Tests of Basic Skills, which were administered in May to students in grades 3 through 8.
National Merit scholarship program lowers the bar in low-achieving states
States with high academic standards have protested that the No Child Left Behind Act punishes them for setting high expectations for their students. But NCLB is not the only program that allows standards to vary for students in different states.
Civic Engagement and Urban School Improvement: Hard-to-Learn Lessons from Philadelphia
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Jolley Bruce Christman and Amy Rhodes, Consortium for Policy Research in Education and Research for ActionJune 2002