Revisiting Teacher Value-Added: The Benefits Last a Lifetime
Onto a world filled with marathon-running vegans
The American Way: Education and the Key to International Competitiveness
Pierce PreshureIf we have to crawl then so does everyone else
They'll Swallow More Learning if You Sugar-coat It
Jester SlimMary Poppins was onto something
I know you are, but what am I?
Unfettered by karmic pronouncements, Rick Santorum has already begun designing lesson plans for
Courage, instruction, and being open to the changes the Common Core demands
Kathleen Porter-MageeResistance among teachers to changing their instruction poses a serious challenge to Common Core implementation.
Soldiers in the fight for social justice
John WhiteLouisiana Superintendent of Education John White explains the place of poverty in discussions about education.
73 percent of teachers think they are prepared to teach the Common Core, and other facts that should keep CCSS supporters up at night
Kathleen Porter-MageeWhile the quick adoption of Common Core by 46 states was cheered by those who had been pushing for common standards for decades, the more jaded among us wondered: Do most states really understand what they signed up for?
Doing “more with less” demands partners, K-12 sector is finding them
Fewer state tax dollars for Ohio’s local governments and schools have public administrators talking, in the light of day no less, about mergers and shared services.
Making sausage: the work of school board associations
Peter MeyerThe NYSSBA is not wrong about the need to shake the barnacles off the bureaucracy.
Two education gems in the Gem City
Adrienne KingWe are pleased to be featuring two Dayton outstanding high schools in an upcoming report looking at high-performing, high-poverty highschools: Dayton Early College Academy (a charter school) and Stivers Schools for the Arts (a district-operated magnet school).
Doing “more with less” demands partners, K-12 sector is finding them
Fewer state tax dollars for Ohio’s local governments and schools have public administrators talking, in the light of day no less, about mergers and shared services.
Strange political bedfellows coming together around Cleveland’s school-reform efforts
Terry RyanThe bold Jackson Plan is bringing together strange political bedfellows.
Governor Kasich’s mid-biennium education proposals focus on performance, transparency
Emmy L. PartinIn a nutshell, it is fair to say that all of the governor’s major education proposals are aimed at making sure everyone – educators, parents, and the public – has a clearer and more accurate understanding of how well Ohio’s schools are doing in preparing students for college and the workforce.
Praise, caution for Harrison pay-for-performance plan
The Harrison (CO) School District’s compensation plan, profiled in a recent Fordham report, represents another of yet a few compensation plans that totally redesign the actual teacher salary schedule.
Ohio’s “dropout factories”
Emmy L. PartinIn 2009, 135 Ohio high schools were identified as “dropout factories” – schools that fail to graduate more than 60 percent of their students on time.
Two education gems in the Gem City
Adrienne KingTwo outstanding high schools will be featured in a report looking at high-performing, high-poverty high schools: Dayton Early College Academy (a charter school) and Stivers Schools for the Arts (a district-operated magnet school).
Primary Sources: 2012 America’s Teachers on the Teaching Profession
Bianca SperanzaEver wonder what teachers think about issues such as student and teacher performance and how teachers should be evaluated, rewarded, and supported?
U.S. Education Reform and National Security
Adrienne KingThe claim that our nation’s schools too often fail to educate enough students to high levels of achievement is a bit of a broken record.
Move over banned books and birthdays, Will.i.am just entered the (education reform) arena
Adrienne KingBirthdays, dinosaurs, and other potentially frightening or exclusive topics are now banned from NYC tests. AT&T Aspire, specifically launched to confron
Fear and loathing, from the school board to the statehouse
Adam EmersonThe mainstream resistance to school choice is increasingly characterizing the education reform debate as students versus profits.
Placing boundaries on what is boundless
Adam EmersonThe Evergreen Education Group gives us more evidence that districts may be unwilling to give up their authority over online learning easily.
Strange political bedfellows coming together around Cleveland’s school-reform efforts
Terry RyanAs bold as Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson's plan is, even more audacious is the political coalition that seems to be coalescing around it.
The top governance challenge in US education: online learning
John E. ChubbJohn Chubb asks if local boards should continue to control student access to instruction on the Internet.
Missing the mark on evolution
The Education GadflyDon’t miss Paul Gross’s latest piece on the neglect of evolution in state science standards.