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.
Accountability and voucher politics in the Pelican State
Adam EmersonGovernor Bobby Jindal’s school voucher proposal for Louisiana has been dragged into the familiar politics of parental choice.
A nation at risk redux
Adam EmersonJoel Klein and Condi Rice step up for school choice
The Future of School Integration: Socioeconomic Diversity as an Education Reform Strategy
Tyson EberhardtThe Left likes choice—just not too much choice
How do we empower parents?
Guest blogger John Kirtley, chairman of Step Up for Students, answers Board's Eye View's BIG question: "What's the most important governance issue?"
Choice and competition in the name of national security
Adam EmersonIt's not A Nation At Risk, but today's Council on Foreign Relations report on US education reform and national security makes bold statements on our progress toward higher educational standards and enhanced school choice.
A burden comes with higher D.C. charter projections
Adam EmersonProjections show that charter schools may grow to educate nearly half of D.C. public school students, but that milestone means they'll have to stop resorting to the expulsion of troubled students so quickly.
Charter schools’ self-dealing hurts kids and needs attention
Terry RyanThe Richard Allen Academy Schools Audit highlights, yet again, the need for Ohio statute to clarify the roles and duties of school governing boards, school operators, and school sponsors (aka authorizers).
Kudos to KIPP: Fordham-sponsored school wins award for academic growth
Kathryn MullenCongratulations to KIPP: Journey Academy for the school’s EPIC Silver Gain Award from New Leaders for New Schools.
Virtual home schooling
Adam EmersonIf Florida Governor Rick Scott signs the state’s digital learning bill, as expected, students in grades K-5 then could bypass a brick-and-mortar school and directly enroll full-time in a virtual instruction program.
Some questions before pulling the trigger
Adam EmersonChoice Words has developed some legislative guidance for more informative inquiry on the parent trigger.
Fordham-sponsored KIPP: Journey Academy Wins EPIC Silver Gain Award
Kathryn MullenCongratulations to KIPP: Journey Academy on winning the EPIC Silver Gain Award!
McKay is OK, but with accountability it would be great
Adam EmersonFlorida's McKay Scholarships for Students with Disabilities program should reestablish its status as a pioneer by embracing a reasonable form of results-based accountability
Charter schools and the new urbanism
Chris TessoneSchool leaders need help from policymakers to improve the availability of affordable space for teaching and learning, and to plug schools into revitalized neighborhoods.
Do we need a “virtual” education ministry?
Michael J. PetrilliA social sector solution to the "capacity" conundrum
New Orleans-Style Education Reform: A Guide for Cities
Layla BonnotMakin’ it look (big) easy
Charter schools’ self-dealing hurts kids and needs attention
Terry RyanFordham has worked in Dayton – as a funder, charter-school authorizer, and charter-school advocate – to push for the creation and growth of high quality charter schools since 1998.
A Sunshine State trigger needs more sunshine
Adam EmersonBy limiting debate on a polarizing parent trigger bill, the Florida Legislature is only going to sow the same confusion that has frustrated Californians.
A “war” that leaves one side well outgunned
Adam EmersonIt’s almost become flippant for Democratic lawmakers to disparage a school voucher as “a war on public education,” but a look at the numbers shows the conflict is pretty one-sided.