Do
different education polls yield different responses?
Not exact matches
The
poll also included results from questions about how much
different levels of government spend on
education.
According to two
polls released this month by
different organizations, U.S. adults maintain divergent views on some of the most controversial topics in public
education today.
In the same way, multiple studies and
polls provide us a deeper understanding of
different education stakeholders» thoughts on schools and assessments, on what is working, and on what can be improved to best support student learning.
Poll respondents, for example, took a decidedly
different tack than the president and U.S. Secretary of
Education Arne Duncan on turning around low - performing schools.
While it is clear that the two
polls tapped very
different constituents, Rick Hess, resident scholar and director of
education policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute, says that it isn't surprising that a standard - by - standard review of the Common Core would look
different than a review of the sum of Common Core's parts.