Gadfly Bites - 8/22/14
Jeff MurrayThe Cleveland Plan, the political nature of Common Core repeal, crappy copiers, and more
Gadfly Bites - 8/20/14
Jeff MurraySummary of coverage of Ohio Common Core repeal hearings and other news.
Pulling an Indiana: How House Bill 597 mimics the Common Core
Jessica PoinerThink we're getting something new from HB597? Think again.
Gadfly Bites - 8/19/14
Jeff MurrayWhy yes there are Common Core repeal hearings in Ohio this week, why do you ask?
A lesson in language
Jeff MurrayThree phrases whose use stands in the way of meaningful discussion on education reform.
The Hidden Half: School Employees Who Don’t Teach
Jessica PoinerChecking out the Ohio connection in Fordham's latest national report.
Evaluation of the Florida Tax Credit Scholarship Program: Participation, Compliance and Test Scores in 2012-13
Aaron ChurchillDo private schools taking "cherry pick" their voucher students?
The saga of - and the lessons from - VLT Academy
Jeff MurrayThe closure of a charter school in Cincinnati shows that Ohio's accountability system can work, but needs some tweaks.
Gadfly Bites - 8/15/14
Jeff MurrayAs if the protracted will-they-close-or-won’t-they hasn’t been bad enough for the families of approximately 600 students at the now-closed VLT Academy in Cincinnati, now these poor families have to endure the opportunism of a new charter school looking
Gadfly Bites - 8/14/14
Jeff MurrayLooking back and looking forward as the first week of school begins in many districts across Ohio.
Hail, hail to Michigan
The Education GadflyEleven of Michigan’s forty charter school authorizers are facing suspension due to deficient oversight of their schools’ accountability, transparency, fiscal governance, and academic improvement.
Gadfly Bites - 8/13/14
Jeff MurrayGadfly Bites returns from vacation, catches up with some old news, and looks forward to new stories to follow.
New Fordham Report: The Hidden Half: School Employees Who Don’t Teach
The number of non-teaching staff in the United States (those employed by school systems but not serving as classroom teachers) has grown by 130 percent since 1970. Non-teachers, more than three million strong, now comprise half of the public school workforce. Their salaries and benefits absorb one-quarter of current education expenditures.
Ten things Ohio Common Core opponents don’t want you to know
Jessica PoinerAs another legislative assault on the Common Core in Ohio begins, here's a few things you might want to know.
Does School Policy Affect Housing Choices? Evidence From the End of Desegregation in Charlotte-Mecklenburg
In 2001, a North Carolina court granted unitary status to the Charlotte-Mecklenburg school district, which effectively ended a thirty-year policy of race-conscious school assignment.
Lessons Learned from the 2012 Grade 4 Writing Computer-Based Assessment (WCBA) Study
Pamela TatzCommon Core–aligned testing will start this spring, and the majority of students will take the new exams on computers. But are younger children ready for this change? This study from NCES—two studies really—waded into the topic, but ended up staying in the shallow end of the pool.
Spending More of the School Day in Math Class: Evidence from a Regression Discontinuity in Middle School
Laura RobisonMany students across the nation continue to perform poorly in mathematics. In response to this chronic underachievement, schools have tried numerous interventions, including “double doses” of math class for students who lag behind academically.
High-Stakes Choice: Achievement and Accountability in the Nation’s Oldest Urban Voucher Program
Dara Zeehandelaar Shaw, Ph.D.When private-school voucher programs first began, they generally relied on parental choice as the sole quality control mechanism. As these programs have grown in popularity and scope, scrutiny of their use of public funds has increased and test-based accountability measures are being added.
Everybody’s lawyering up
The Education GadflyCourts have been the sites of much edu activity lately—and we don’t just mean Vergara and its
For higher performance, use informal channels of teacher feedback
Aaron ChurchillOhio’s new teacher-evaluation system requires evaluators to conduct two, formal thirty-minute classroom observations. Yet these legally prescribed observations seem ripe for compliance and rote box-checking; in fact, they may not be quite the impetus for school-wide improvement that policymakers had hoped for.
Gadfly Bites (the new Ohio Gadfly Daily News) - 8/5/14
Jeff MurrayLast issue before vacation. Until I return, you'll have to get your Ohio education news the boring old regular way.
Ohio’s high-flying public schools, in reading
Aaron ChurchillWe look for - and find - the public schools ranked in the top 10 percent on Ohio’s value-added measure for reading in each of the past four years.
The place for parents in education
Jessica PoinerParents deserve to know what’s happening in their children's schools, and if they want to be involved, there should be opportunities to be productively engaged.
Spending More of the School Day in Math Class: Evidence From a Regression Discontinuity in Middle School
Laura RobisonWe take a look at the evidence for and against "double dosing" in middle school math.
The Productivity of Public Charter Schools
Amber M. Northern, Ph.D., Aaron ChurchillShort review of a new report from the University of Arkansas, with an Ohio perspective.
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Jeff MurrayA new subscription service for Ohio education news, views, and commentary.
Gadfly Bites (the new Ohio Gadfly Daily News) - 8/4/14
Jeff MurrayMostly opinion pieces from the weekend - including a news report on superintendents' opinions on Common Core.