America's Children: Key National Indicators of Well-Being 2002
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Federal Interagency Forum on Child and Family StatisticsJuly 2002
Why racial segregation is more severe in public schools
Jay P. GreeneThree weeks ago, we directed readers to an article in The Wall Street Journal by Jay Greene arguing that, contrary to what was reported by the Harvard Civil Rights Project, private schools are actually more integrated than public schools.
What does it take to be superintendent?
With New York City focused on the question of what it takes to be an effective school system leader for the 21st century, the Times published profiles of four respected superintendents in this Sunday's Education Life section: Alan Bersin (San Diego), Carmen Russo (Baltimore), Joseph Olchefske (Seattle), and Barbara Byrd-Bennett (Cleveland).
Schools' anti-drug programs miss the mark
New research shows that, despite a decade of federal efforts to promote them, the three most popular programs that schools use to discourage kids from using drugs are ineffective or unproven. "Anti-drug programs like D.A.R.E. called a bust," by Greg Toppo, Chicago Sun-Times, August 4, 2002
States would benefit from linking student achievement data over time
When evaluating schools and education reform initiatives, analysts (and the policymakers who depend on them) are often hampered by poor data. Conclusions about school and program effectiveness would be far more robust if states had a mechanism for linking student test scores over time.
National Geographic Society Alliance Study
Chester E. Finn, Jr.National Geographic Society and Mid-continent Research for Education and Learning2002
Inexorable and Inevitable: The Continuing Story of Technology and Assessment
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Randy Elliott Bennett, Journal of Technology, Learning and AssessmentJune 2002
Middle Grades to High School: Mending a Weak Link
Kelly ScottSondra Cooney and Gene Bottoms, Southern Regional Education Board2002
Reports of Institutional Effectiveness
Chester E. Finn, Jr.State Council of Higher Education for Virginia2002
Charting success at a low-tech technology charter school
A recent issue of Duke Magazine featured a profile of the Media and Technology Charter High School, started by a Duke alumnus to serve students from the worst neighborhoods in Boston.
Checking up on charter schools
Fueled by an active business community, frustrated parents, reform-minded local legislators, dedicated entrepreneurs (and some assistance from the Thomas B. Fordham Foundation), charter schools have flourished in Dayton, Ohio, which some term "ground zero" of the national charter movement.
The Geographical Distribution of Teacher Absenteeism in Large Urban School District Settings: Implications for School Reform Efforts Aimed at Promoting Equity and Excellence in Education
Rob LucasJames E. Bruno, Education Policy Analysis ArchivesJuly 26, 2002
Further fiddling with standards and tests
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Some weeks back, I used this space to describe ways that a state's academic standards may be lowered, including several that occur out of public view.
The clock is ticking on urban school reform
A host of opposing forces-not a failure of will, goals or effort-is what's retarding urban schools, writes ace journalist Richard Whitmire in the Democratic Leadership Council's Blueprint Magazine.
What We Have Learned About Class Size Reduction in California
Rob Lucasedited by George W. Bohrnstedt and Brian M. Stecher, CSR Research ConsortiumAugust 2002
Adding value to the "Blue Ribbon" school award
The Department of Education has given the Blue Ribbon School award since 1982, but attention has recently been drawn to the fact that not all honored schools can actually claim stellar records of student achievement. Accordingly, the DOE recently announced that test scores and test score improvements will become a major component of the selection process.
Treating teachers like professionals
As the editor of Teachers As Owners, I couldn't be happier with the conclusion in the recent Gadfly review, namely that "one can't put the book down without noting the chasm between these ideas and the reality of most American schools." (See http://www.edexcellence.net/gadfly/issue.cfm?issue=51#770.) Notwithst
Turn surplus PhDs in math and science into teachers
A new report from the National Research Council proposes that math and science Ph.D.s, who face fewer job openings in academia, should instead try teaching in K-12 schools, which are in dire need of math and science teachers.
Vouchers may debut in the Northeast
Last week, the Camden city council unanimously approved a resolution asking the New Jersey legislature to award hefty $6,000 vouchers to students in the city's notoriously low-performing schools. The measure-which faces steep opposition from the governor and teachers union-marks the first time a Northeastern municipality has endorsed a publicly funded voucher program.
Reins of New York City school system given to a new breed of leader
On Monday, July 29th, New York City mayor Michael R. Bloomberg named Joel I. Klein, the chairman and chief executive of Bertelsmann Inc., and a former assistant attorney general in the Clinton administration-where he led the antitrust prosecution of Microsoft-as chancellor of the city's public school system.
States, districts struggle to implement No Child Left Behind
Seven months after President Bush signed the No Child Left Behind Act, and one month after the U.S. Department of Education announced that children at 8,652 low-performing schools are now eligible to transfer to higher-performing schools, some states and school districts are giving the new law's approach to failing schools a chilly embrace.
Unraveling the Basic Bargain: A Study of Charter School Accountability in Massachusetts and Texas
Rob LucasPaul A. Herdman, New American SchoolsApril 4, 2002
Meeting the Need for Scientists, Engineers, and an Educated Citizenry in a Technological Society
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Paul E. Barton, Educational Testing ServiceMay 2002
Creating Seamless Educational Transitions for Urban African American and Hispanic Students
Chester E. Finn, Jr.Richard Noeth and George Wimberly, ACT2002
New poll shows most blacks support school choice
Nearly two thirds of blacks would enroll their children in a charter or private school if given the chance, according to a poll by the Black America's Political Action Committee. Conducted during the week before the Zelman decision, the poll also showed that the majority of blacks surveyed gave public schools a "C" grade or lower when asked to evaluate their condition.
Creating a test that doesn't offend anyone, anywhere, anytime
With rewards and punishments now tied to test scores, states can't afford to risk complaints about bias in their test questions, so sensitivity guidelines adopted in the 1960s to address the "culturally lopsided" view of America presented in the reading passages of standardized tests have now stretched to cover "almost everyone in almost every situation." Testing companies avoid mentioning anyt
Defining a knowledge base for teachers
In "A Knowledge Base for the Teaching Profession: What Would It Look Like and How Can We Get One?" James Hiebert, Ronald Gallimore and James Stigler acknowledge that the U.S. teaching profession does not draw heavily upon a shared base of solid "craft knowledge" grounded in the analysis and communication of what effective teachers have learned. "Practitioner knowledge," they call it.
Defining educational accountability
"Making School Reform Work" is the slightly misleading title of an essay by Checker Finn on the subject of educational accountability in the summer 2002 issue of The Public Interest. It distinguishes three distinct forms of accountability and seeks to evaluate them.
Escaping IDEA: Freeing Parents, Teachers, and Students Through Deregulation and Choice
Janet HeffnerMarie Gryphon and David Salisbury, CATO InstituteJune 10, 2002