Why MBAs won't save district schools
School choice, not business degrees, offers the best shot at improving the K-12 sector.
School choice, not business degrees, offers the best shot at improving the K-12 sector.
Are authorizers losing their nerve?
One could argue that 2011 was the year of “digital learning” in Ohio and across the nation. In September, the White House announced its “Digital Promise” campaign, while a number of states have been embracing initiatives and campaigns in this realm, aided and encouraged by national groups like the Digital Learning Council and the Foundation for Excellence in Education. Ohio’s biennial budget launched the Ohio Digital Learning Task Force and charged it with ensuring that the state’s “legislative environment is conducive to and supportive of the educators and digital innovators at the heart of this transformation.”
Parents, even those a step above poverty, are ready to exercise more control over their children's education.
Adam explains why charter school applications must be subjected to closer scrutiny.
Real reform must embrace choice—choice at the individual level.
As the recent ALEC report card on American K-12 education shows, it's been a brazen year for school reform.
The Common Core emphasis on "close reading" challenges teachers to focus reading on actually reading.
As you are likely well aware, we are in the midst of School Choice Week, not only here in Ohio but nationwide. Numerous events have been going on all throughout the Buckeye State to help commemorate.
The education sector remains an elusive prize for Apple, but the company is making a big move to change that.
Act now, align later
Catching up on the week's news.
It's worth looking back at the bipartisan roots of the school choice movement.
Why iPads won't replace textbooks in every classroom anytime soon.
Ohio is unique in its ability to turn the best of charter school theory and practice on its head. The most recent example comes from an Ohio school district that set up a charter school to offload test scores of low-performing students while making money for the district.
When the Common Core academic content standards were first introduced, most observers thought at best ten or 12 state would adopt them, and few thought it possible they’d be adopted by all but a handful of statesHow is Ohio doing when it comes to preparing for the full implementation of the Common Core standards by 2014?
Since the first charter school opened its doors in Minnesota in 1991, over 6,700 charter schools have set up shop in 40 states and DC. Unfortunately, not all of these schools have been successful and a number of them have since closed.
The U.S. economy has shed more than eight million jobs since 2008, and has created only two million new jobs in that same period of time, resulting in not only a high number of unemployed people, but also a high number of job vacancies.
When done correctly, data-driven instruction and lessons organized around clearly-defined aims are critical parts of improving student performance.
It's nice to see that states have plans for Common Core implementation--let's just hope they're good plans.
Thinking twice about “action civics” education
Walking the line between science and politics
Updated, but still without names
It’s not all kumbaya, even if you want it to be
Structural reform alone won't boost student achievement--but neither will a single-minded focus on curriculum and instruction.
While Chris Tessone takes issue with Deborah Meier's view of Russian history, he writes that they have more in common than she might expect when it comes to democracy in education.
Is it time for Ohio to consider new forms of governance and management for its most troubled schools and districts, and, if so, what might alternatives look like?
Is it time for Ohio to consider new forms of governance and management for its most troubled schools and districts, and, if so, what might alternatives look like?
Guest blogger Adam Emerson exposes the flaws in out-dated thinking on school vouchers.