The debate on school choice is about more than just opposing vouchers and our efforts center on supporting policy that strengthens public schools.
As
the debate on school choice heats up next week, I share this post as a voice in support of the nation's public schools, which remain the number 1 choice, a great option for families and communities across the country.
Not exact matches
Ultimately, children and young people will go
on to make their own decisions about what they eat, but as long as
schools offer students the opportunity to think, discuss and
debate the issues as well as to cook and eat good vegetarian food, a weekly meat free day provides them with the knowledge and experience with which to make informed, responsible and compassionate
choices.
Last night, though, we
debated what kind of divided society we might become if this
choice is exercised to create a diversity of
schools centred
on different faiths and ethnicities.
The
debate over national
school choice policy was
on display in Indianapolis Monday as US Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos came to the capital city...
Researchers and policymakers may be continuing to
debate solutions to the nation's reading woes, but many struggling
schools appear to have reached a consensus
on the subject, even if not by
choice.
Whereas most of the energy in the
school choice debates has focused
on vouchers and charter
schools, relatively little attention has been paid to another important
choice model that serves as many students as charters and has been in existence for longer — magnet
schools.
Eva Moskowitz, founder and chief executive officer at Success Academy Charter
Schools; Gerard Robinson, executive director of the Center for Advancing Opportunity; and Hillary Shelton, director at the Washington Bureau and senior vice president of Advocacy and Policy at the NAACP, will
debate different viewpoints
on educational equity and
school choice.
One interpretation of the emphasis
on developing the common core curriculum is that these
debates provide a convenient diversion from potentially more intractable fights over bigger reform ideas like using improved teacher evaluations for personnel decisions, expanded
school choice, or enhanced accountability systems.
Given the statute's scope, today's
debate could include countless issues, such as possible changes to Title II rules
on educator effectiveness, the expansion of the charter
school grant program, the introduction of a private
school choice initiative, reconsideration of competitive grant programs (RTTT, TIF, i3), and much more.
I am struck, however, by how the
debate has focused
on parental
choice of
schools.
When they insist that ideas like
school choice, performance pay, and teacher evaluations based
on value - added measures will themselves boost student achievement, would - be reformers stifle creativity, encourage their allies to lock elbows and march forward rather than engage in useful
debate and reflection, turn every reform proposal into an us - against - them steel - cage match, and push researchers into the awkward position of studying whether reforms «work» rather than when, why, and how they make it easier to improve
schooling.
In the United States, the
school -
choice debate centers
on whether parents should have the right to send their children to the public
school of their
choice rather...
Because much of the
choice debate has focused
on the question of whether vouchers for private
schools should be allowed at all, less attention has...
Florida's voucher program for students in the lowest - rated public
schools is unconstitutional, the state supreme court ruled last week in a 5 - 2 decision that friends and foes of private
school choice are scrutinizing for its potential impact
on voucher
debates nationwide.
Our new report
on a Florida private
school choice program complicates this policy
debate.
Debates about
school choice policies often focus
on their impacts
on student achievement, typically as measured by standardized tests.
The Seduction of Common Sense: How the Right Has Framed the
Debate on America's
Schools; Real Leaders, Real
Schools: Stories of Success Against Enormous Odds; Mobilizing the Community to Help Students Succeed;
School Accountability, Autonomy, and
Choice Around the World; The Future of Educational Entrepreneurship: Possibilities for
School Reform
They are able to focus
on abstract goals — like test scores, teacher quality, or
school choice — in
debates divorced from the challenges of making reforms actually work in situ.
A specific
debate rages over what forms of government accountability to impose
on private
schools participating in
choice programs, which already are accountable to parents, who can vote for or against them with their feet.
Much of the
debate has turned
on whether or not
school -
choice programs yield improved educational outcomes and what happens to students who are left behind in
schools struggling to cope after tax dollars have been diverted elsewhere.
In late 2001 the foundation also gave $ 1 million to the Brookings Institution for the National Working Commission
on School Choice, which I led, seeking to pull the teeth of ideology from the choice d
Choice, which I led, seeking to pull the teeth of ideology from the
choice d
choice debate.
I'd welcome the chance to frame
school choice as a
debate about whether Washington ought to be telling states and communities how to run their
schools, and to turn the issue into a referendum
on how one feels about Trump.
Still, wherever you stand
on these
debates, it's certainly worth knowing whether the demographics of
schools of
choice match those of the larger community.
The
debate should provide a clear contrast between the two candidates as both are practically diametrically opposed
on almost every key issue — A-F grading,
school choice, standardized testing and teacher evaluations.
School Choice Means No Choice Depending on which side of the coin you stand on, the growing debate over school choice in America is either causing you a lot of celebration or a lot of co
School Choice Means No Choice Depending on which side of the coin you stand on, the growing debate over school choice in America is either causing you a lot of celebration or a lot of co
Choice Means No
Choice Depending on which side of the coin you stand on, the growing debate over school choice in America is either causing you a lot of celebration or a lot of co
Choice Depending
on which side of the coin you stand
on, the growing
debate over
school choice in America is either causing you a lot of celebration or a lot of co
school choice in America is either causing you a lot of celebration or a lot of co
choice in America is either causing you a lot of celebration or a lot of concern.
Whatever anyone thinks about charter
schools or district
schools, education reformers or teachers unions, Democrats or Republicans, or any other false
choice that has divided our politics and our district, let's stipulate that everyone
on all sides of this
debate are good people who care about kids.
Highly
debated educational topics such as standardized testing, teacher evaluations, charter
schools,
school choice, and even teacher pay vary from state to state and typically aligns with the controlling political parties views
on education.
On Sunday, two guests on political talk show «Capital City Sunday» debated whether Education Secretary Betsy DeVo and her emphasis on school choice programs help or hurt racial disparitie
On Sunday, two guests
on political talk show «Capital City Sunday» debated whether Education Secretary Betsy DeVo and her emphasis on school choice programs help or hurt racial disparitie
on political talk show «Capital City Sunday»
debated whether Education Secretary Betsy DeVo and her emphasis
on school choice programs help or hurt racial disparitie
on school choice programs help or hurt racial disparities.
Most prominently, the opposition to
choice has done a good job of shaping the
debate to focus
on «draining» funds from the public
schools.
Where the 1 % narrate... Continue reading Longtime Educator Offers Last Rites, Lays to Rest Tired
Debate on Public
School Choice
The study's monumental findings seem to put a decisive exclamation point
on the education
debate, a «drop the mic» moment, so to speak, for
school choice.
You don't really care about treatises
on whether families are best being customers of
schools, or ideological
debates over the value of Common Core, or pablum from
school choice activists with jobs to protect about why state tests shouldn't be used to hold accountable private
schools taking vouchers for serving kids, or if an Obama Administration plan to address suspensions is somehow a punishment to traditional district
schools that have been failing kids for decade after decade.
Whereas most of the energy in the
school choice debates has focused
on vouchers and charter
schools, relatively little attention has been paid to another important
choice model that serves as many students as charters and has been in existence for longer - magnet
schools.
The atmosphere of
school choice in Wisconsin is the subject of study by people
on many sides of the education reform
debate in this country.
The case of Trinity Lutheran Church of Columbia, Mo. v. Comer (No. 15 - 577) has been closely followed by groups
on both sides of the
school choice debate.
Says WILL's Education Policy Director, Will Flanders, Ph.D., author of the study, «The
debate over
school choice is almost always focused
on the so - called costs.
While unlikely to alter DeVos's views
on school choice, the results of the study are likely to add another layer of complexity to the
school -
choice debate — and another reason for Democrats to attempt to thwart the Trump administration's education agenda.
Meanwhile, the Governor has weighed in
on the
debate on online
schooling, criticizing the notion that online
schools should be well - enough funded to provide
choices that hundreds of parents use and demand.
By using a variety of variables focusing
on student achievement, family background, and
school characteristics from the High School Longitudinal Study of 2009 (HSLS: 09) I wanted to see if I could shed light on the school choice d
school characteristics from the High
School Longitudinal Study of 2009 (HSLS: 09) I wanted to see if I could shed light on the school choice d
School Longitudinal Study of 2009 (HSLS: 09) I wanted to see if I could shed light
on the
school choice d
school choice debate.
Gov. Greg Abbott pledged
on Tuesday to sign any
school choice legislation that reaches his desk, adding his voice to what promises to be one of the most heated
debates this legislative session.
Leading national voices
on this hot topic will
debate how
school choice is delivering
on its promise, how it is not, and what steps can be taken to improve public
school choice options to families and students.
9:15 AM — 10:00 AM Crossfire
Debate: Delivering
on the Promise of
School Choice School choice has been heralded as the panacea for improving student achievement and increasing opportunities for low - income and minority stu
Choice School choice has been heralded as the panacea for improving student achievement and increasing opportunities for low - income and minority stu
choice has been heralded as the panacea for improving student achievement and increasing opportunities for low - income and minority students.