How Ohio can help schools retain more teachers
Last year, state officials published some troubling data related to Ohio’s teacher workforce.
Last year, state officials published some troubling data related to Ohio’s teacher workforce.
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full. Just sayin’.
One of the most routinely debated questions is whether charters provide a superior education when compared to the district alternative. Just prior to the pandemic, Fordham research showed that students attending brick-and-mortar charters in Ohio made significantly greater academic progress than their peers attending nearby district schools. Our latest research brief provides an updated analysis of brick-and-mortar charter school performance in the years after the pandemic (2021–22 and 2022–23).
Over the last few years, Ohio leaders have focused on improving education-to-workforce pathways through a variety of
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full. Just sayin’.
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. Demolition on hold
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full. Just sayin’.
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full. Just sayin’.
The Education Freedom Institute (EFI) recently released the newest iteration of its charter ecosystem rankings, its third such effort to gauge the health of states’ charter-school sectors.
Registered apprenticeship programs offer workers paid, on-the-job learning experience under the supervision of an experienced mentor, job-related classroom training, and the chance to earn a portable industry-recognized credential.
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. Case dismissed
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full. Just sayin’.
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full. Just sayin’.
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. Analysis of segregation data
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full. Just sayin’.
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full. Just sayin’.
The use of technology in education—in place before the pandemic but increased in magnitude and ubiquity since 2020—is drawing increasing scrutiny from many sides.
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full. Just sayin’.
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full.
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. New NAPCS CEO announced
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full.
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full.
Los Angeles Unified School District’s Zones of Choice (ZOC) program began in 2010 as an effort to provide more high school options for a large swath of district eighth graders, combining historical catchment areas in lower-income and lower-performing neighborhoods into larger choice zones and eliminating the default feeder system from middle to high school.
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full.
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. Covering competitive effects
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full.
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full.
This story was produced by The 74, a non-profit, independent news organization focused on education in America. Reposted by permission.
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full.
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. Kudos for two Columbus charter schools