Two new
Education Next articles look at how Common Core implementation is proceeding and at the challenges ahead:
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EdNext editor in chief Marty West and senior editor Paul E. Peterson discuss the top
Education Next articles of 2017.
In a new
Education Next article «A Bad Bargain: How teacher collective bargaining affects students» employment and earnings later in life,» Michael Lovenheim and Alexander Willén of Cornell University present the first evidence that students» exposure to a duty - to - bargain law while in elementary and secondary school lowers future earnings and leads to fewer hours worked, reductions in employment, and decreases in labor force participation.
To receive an embargoed copy of
the Education Next article, entitled «Why is Charter Growth Slowing?
Delisle cites
an Education Next article by Mike Petrilli, «All Together Now,» in his commentary.
There's a lot more great stuff in
the Education Next article; stay tuned for more thoughts later this week.
In a recent
Education Next article, «Golden Handcuffs,» we talked about winners and losers in teacher pension systems, and about the huge costs these systems impose on mobile teachers due to the back - loading of benefits.
An Education Next article by Patrick Wolf about the study and the politics surrounding the D.C. voucher program is available here.
This post originally appeared on National Review Online and is adapted from
an Education Next article.
In addition, as Marcus Winters and I documented in a 2007
Education Next article, private placement is amazingly rare.
More information on the two - step model is available in
this Education Next article by Mark Ehlert, Cory Koedel, Eric Parsons, and Michael Podgursky.
In a Washington Post op - ed and
Education Next article, the board's executive director and chair explain that they don't want high - quality charters to become the system or even to predominate.
In
this Education Next article, I wrote, «When state (RTT) proposals hit Arne Duncan's desk, the secretary must become the toughest schoolmarm in America.»
As West shows in
his Education Next article, moving to middle school leads to a «substantial drop in student test scores» in the first year of the transition, and the «relative achievement of middle - school students continues to decline in the subsequent years they spend in such schools.»
As eminent legal scholar Richard Epstein explains in his newly published
Education Next article,
He laid out his argument in
an Education Next article, «Unlocking the Science of How Kids Think.»
Ashley LiBetti Mitchel talked about
her Education Next article in the Winter 2017 issue on pre-K programs at charter schools in the U.S..
Ashley LiBetti Mitchel on Charter Schools and Pre-K Programs Ashley LiBetti Mitchel talked about
her Education Next article in the Winter 2017 issue on pre-K programs at charter schools in the U.S.
(See this great
Education Next article for an overview of teacher - led schools.)
This Education Next article by June Kronholz buttresses that view.
The Education Next article on this report, «Are U.S. Students Ready to Compete?»
An Education Next article about dual enrollment, «High Schoolers in College,» noted that the trickiest issue for dual enrollment was figuring out who would pay for the college courses.
However, Goldhaber notes (in an earlier
Education Next article) that, in general, while teachers who perform well on tests of verbal ability tend to perform better in the classroom, «the things that make schools and teachers effective defy easy measurement.»
An Education Next article, «Graduations on the Rise,» examines long - term trends in high school graduation rates.
The Mind Trust was featured in a recent
Education Next article about the impact of Teach For America alumni in the education field.
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.
The Education Next article describes another approach used at Piney Branch Elementary School in Takoma Park, Maryland.
This is a reality echoed in Delisle's Education Week article, in which he cites a 2011
Education Next article that says very few teachers were using differentiated instruction even after they received professional development and coaching.
Not exact matches
Next, here are some
articles that local Waldorf schools have compiled, making the case for Waldorf
education.
There's been a lot of interesting commentary, from a variety of sources, on my
article for the New York Times Magazine on character
education, which draws on some of the reporting that I've been doing for my
next book, «The Success Equation.»
In an
article in the Evening Standard defending her decision to vote against the government last night, the Conservative former
education secretary Nicky Morgan says the government should drop the amendment to the EU withdrawal bill fixing 29 March 2019 as Brexit day before it gets debated
next week.
When Carol Plautz (formerly Carol Zygar) was nearing the end of her doctoral studies in biology at the University of Virginia (UVA) in Charlottesville, she wrote an
article for Science's
Next Wave that detailed the ways that graduate students can pay for their
education.
As the German minister for
education and research, Edelgard Bulmahn, argued in a previous
Next Wave
article, the major objective of the 12 - year qualification limit was to finally call a halt to the insecurity that results from the ongoing employment of young researchers on temporary contracts.
This week, as part of the launch of
Next Wave in Germany, we are starting a series of
articles on the present situation and ongoing changes of higher
education system in Germany.
So writes Alex Hernandez in a new
article for
Education Next, «Toddlers and Tablets,» about how education apps targeted at preschoolers are ta
Education Next, «Toddlers and Tablets,» about how
education apps targeted at preschoolers are ta
education apps targeted at preschoolers are taking off.
In a recent
article in
Education Next, «Valuing Teachers,» I presented evidence about the huge economic impacts of highly effective teachers.
Clint Bolick writes about how Judge Gorsuch might approach
education issues in a feature article for the summer issue of Educat
education issues in a feature
article for the summer issue of
EducationEducation Next.
In an
article for
Education Next that was published last fall, «Continuing Change in Newark,» Richard Lee Colvin looked at the changes being made in Newark aimed at earning back local control «by consistently demonstrating to state monitors sound policies and procedures and overall effectiveness.»
Gathered on this page are some of
Education Next's recent and trending
articles on various aspects of school choice.
Michael Horn wrote about «The Rise of AltSchool and Other Micro-schools» in the Summer 2015 issue of
Education Next and has an
article about the way AltSchool is using technology in a forthcoming issue of
Education Next.
To recount and draw lessons from that experience, Fordham president (and
Education Next senior editor) Chester Finn, Fordham vice president for Ohio policy and programs Terry Ryan, and veteran journalist Michael Lafferty authored the new book from which this
article is adapted.
An
article by June Kronholz in the Summer 2013 issue of
Education Next looked at how Teach for America was growing and changing as it entered its 25th year.
Hurrah for Houston Congratulations to
Education Next for its trio of
articles on the positive reforms in the Houston Independent School District, carried out in large part by Secretary of
Education Rod Paige while he was the district's superintendent (see «Houston Takes Off,» Feature, Fall 2001).
June Kronholz's
article, «Teacher Home Visits,» in the Summer 2016 issue of
Education Next, explores the development of home visit programs, describes how the visits work, and talks with teachers and administrators about their views of the program.
The Summer 2014 issue of
Education Next includes two
articles with different takes on Common Core implementation: «Navigating the Common Core: Complexities threaten implementation,» by Mike McShane and «The Common Core Takes Hold: Implementation moves steadily forward,» by Bob Rothman.
The
articles, all of which will appear in the Fall 2015 issue of
Education Next, are now available online:
This
article is part of a new
Education Next series on the state of the American family.