Young, gifted, and neglected
We need to raise the ceiling for Ohio's highest-performing students
We need to raise the ceiling for Ohio's highest-performing students
Coming next year: two new KIPP schools in Columbus
Congrats to Ms. Lynnly Wood!
The Hamilton Project weighs in on what differentiates high and low performing charters
Much variability in NCLB waivers but Common Core brings uniformity among states
Cell phones, graduate courses in blended learning, after-school programs
Over the past two years, the Buckeye State has been at the forefront in the competition for creating and expanding businesses and the jobs that go with growth.
Ben Austin's flawed stance on the role that for-profit educators might play in school-turnaround efforts
In our zeal to change everything, will we end up accomplishing nothing?
Innovation’s next frontier: Getting to scale
Enter Common Core. Exit exit exams?
Parent-trigger paean Won't Back Down opened with a whimper last weekend, grossing a
Arguing otherwise is, at best, disingenuous
As recent events in Los Angeles and New Hampshire show, so long as there are laws that limit charter authorization to one public body, promising charter applicants risk being held hostage to the whims of a political board
Tell truth to power
What's a school to do?
Snappy name, dull recs
I thought Checker Finn penned a good commentary on the recent Chicago strike, but one stylistic change is called for. Describing the unions as “selfish” rather than “pursuing their self-interests” tends to make readers think he is accusing them of collective personal flaws. They are bad people because they are…selfish, greedy, etc.
Other states hold their schools accountable through an A-F ratings system, so should Ohio
To spend or not to spend. Ohio is considering $105 million in spending to support the third grade reading guarantee.
While the nation fixated on the Chicago strike, educators in Ohio plow ahead with reforms
The newest addition to Fordham's library, co-authored by Checker and Jessica Hockett
KIPP schools shine even under rigorous evaluation
Several SEAs around the country are more actively helping troubled schools districts