In this edition of
the Ed Next book club, Mike Petrilli talks with Tyre about parents» concerns, the advice she gives them, and why it matters.
Ed Next Book Club: Chester Finn's Troublemaker: A Personal History of School Reform Since Sputnik
Ed Next Book Club: Endangering Prosperity Education Next, Sept. 19, 2013 http://educationnext.org/ed-next-book-club-endangering-prosperity/
Mike Petrilli interviews Elizabeth Green for
the Ed Next book club podcast here.
And Mike Petrilli interviews Dana Goldstein for
the Ed Next book club podcast here.
In this edition of
the Ed Next Book Club, Andy Smarick explains to host Mike Petrilli that to make urban schools work, a shift must be made from having districts run schools to letting schools lead the charge in innovation.
Checker and Brandon visit
the Ed Next Book Club podcast to talk about the book, what they've learned from countries overseas, and whether there's reason for hope that America might finally get serious about better serving our brightest kids.
He joins
the Ed Next book club today to talk about his book, Smarter Budgets, Smarter Schools: How to Survive and Thrive in Tight Times — and the reception it's received to date.
In this episode of
the Ed Next Book Club podcast, Mike Petrilli talks with Sam about the book, the two schools, and how this experience has changed his views on community and choice.
Additional installments of
our Ed Next Book Club podcast can be heard here, including Mike Petrilli's interview with Paul Tough about his earlier book, Whatever It Takes.
Paul joins us today at
the Ed Next Book Club to talk about his book, the impact he hopes it will have on the education reform debate, and what it means for the broader war on poverty.
Not exact matches
Miller and colleague Ted Yamamori have completed research on what they are calling «progressive Pentecostalism» for a
book to be published
next year -LCB- 2007 —
Ed. -RCB-.
The
book's 50th anniversary in 2006 sparked a new debate with leading Labour figures including Gordon Brown, Jack Straw, [4]
Ed Miliband, [5] Roy Hattersley [6] and others setting out views of its relevance to the
next generation of «post-New Labour» politics.
Soros, in London to publicise a new
book — The Tragedy of the European Union — made his remarks after the Labour leader,
Ed Miliband, won plaudits from business groups for playing down the chances of an in - out referendum should the opposition win
next year's general election.
Then,
next year brings Chris Evans» Cap back for a story ripped from
Ed Brubaker's comic
book run about Bucky (Sebastian Stan) recovered, resurrected, brainwashed and augmented into lethal killer Winter Soldier for what is promised as a blend of spy thriller and World War II hero Steve Rogers continuing to find his place in the modern world.
A «concise and often entertaining» new
book on the history of the pledge of allegiance — The Pledge, by Jeffrey Owen Jones and
Ed Next's own Peter Meyer — is reviewed in the Wall Street Journal.
In the Winter 2010 issue of
Ed Next, Nathan Glazer reviews another new
book about patriotism, Patriotic Pluralism, by Jeff Mirel.
Today
Ed Next's Mike Petrilli talks with John about his
book — and what he's learned from the countless hours he's spent as a reporter in America's classrooms.
On March 16th the Wall Street Journal published an op -
ed by Education
Next's Paul E. Peterson, author of the recently released
book Saving Schools: From Horace Mann to Virtual Learning.
Ed Next is teaming with authors of newly released
books to provide 15 - minute audio excerpts from those
books for your listening pleasure.
Last fall,
Ed Next published a short review of a new
book, Inside Urban Charter Schools, by Kay Merseth of the Harvard Graduate School of Education.
For more from Paul Peterson, you can listen to this podcast, where he discusses Saving Schools with
Ed Next's Mike Petrilli, or watch this video, in which he discusses the
book and the promise of virtual schooling with Nathan Glazer of Harvard University.
Mike Petrilli reviewed the same two
books, by Anya Kamenetz and Naomi Schaefer Riley, for
Ed Next last month.
Earlier this week,
Ed Next published an excerpt from a new
book by Naomi Schaefer Riley that urges parents to Be the Parent, Please: Stop Banning Seesaws and Start Banning SnapChat.
Checker's commentary draws on his analysis of the problems with the universal preschool movement published in an
Ed Next article this summer (The Preschool Picture) and a
book earlier this year (Reroute the Preschool Juggernaut).
(Remember my
book, Don't Know Whether to Laugh or Cry, coming out, I hope, in time for
Ed Next's 20th Anniversary.)
AEI scholar (and
Ed Next editor) Frederick M. Hess talks about his new
book, The Same Thing Over and Over: How School Reformers Get Stuck in Yesterday's Ideas.
I've rebutted the claims that special
ed is largely responsible for rising per pupil spending in chapters 1 and 2 of the
book Education Myths as well as in this Education
Next article and in this paper that was published in the Peabody Journal of Education.
Ed Chavez also noted the neat - fact that Felipe Smith, whose three - volume series Peepo Choo is soon ending, would like to use characters from his past series in his
next book, as he's done with Peepo Choo already.
Check here for details: http://hammer.ucla.edu/programs/programs/cat/17 Up
next, Sing Your Favorite
Book, a project in which performers will sing excerpts from their favorite
books in conjunction with the exhibition
Ed Ruscha: On the Road.
With wit, wisdom and a knack for cutting through the nonsense,
Ed Wesemann's latest
book, Looking Tall by Standing
Next to Short People again addresses the most perplexing issues facing law firms today.