Because my MP (who knows who I am and that I know a little about
education policy post 2010) sent me a something that read very much like a standard letter in response to my email objecting to mass academisation.
Not exact matches
«They're women who vote not on traditional «women's issues» —
education, abortion, etc. — but on foreign
policy,» the
Post's Naomi Schaefer Riley said.
Posted by Nick Falvo under Alberta, budgets, corporate profits,
education, employment, fiscal
policy, income, income distribution, income tax, inequality, post-secondary
education, productivity, taxation, unions, wages.
Posted by Nick Falvo under
education, guaranteed annual income, health care, income support, Manitoba, poverty, social
policy.
Posted by Nick Falvo under Alberta, BC, budgets, Canada, child benefits, Child Care, Conservative government, demographics,
education, election 2015, employment, Harper, housing, income, income distribution, income support, income tax, inequality, PEF, population aging, post-secondary
education, poverty, privatization, progressive economic strategies, public services, Role of government, Saskatchewan, seniors, social
policy, taxation, unemployment, user fees, workplace benefits.
Posted by Nick Falvo under Alberta, child benefits, Child Care, deficits, Dutch disease,
education, employment, environment, fiscal
policy, health care, homeless, housing, income support, income tax, industrial
policy, macroeconomics, oil and gas, poverty, progressive economic strategies, public infrastructure, public services, regulation, resources, social
policy, taxation, unemployment, unions.
Posted by Nick Falvo under aboriginal peoples, Alberta, budgets, Child Care, cities, demographics,
education, employment, environment, fiscal federalism, fiscal
policy, gender critique, homeless, housing, HST, income, income distribution, income support, Indigenous people, inflation, minimum wage, municipalities, NDP, oil and gas, poverty, privatization, progressive economic strategies, Role of government, social
policy, taxation, wages, women.
Posted by Iglika Ivanova under BC, budgets, economic growth,
education, employment, income distribution, inequality, poverty, public services, recession, social
policy, taxation, unions, user fees, wages.
Posted by Nick Falvo under aboriginal peoples, Austerity, budgets, Child Care, corporate income tax, debt, deficits, economic growth, economic models, economic thought, employment, fiscal
policy, health care, income, income distribution, income support, income tax, Indigenous people, inequality, NEO-LIBERAL
POLICIES, population aging, post-secondary
education, poverty, public infrastructure, public services, Saskatchewan, social
policy, taxation, unemployment.
Posted by Nick Falvo under child benefits, Conservative government, corporate income tax, early learning, economic crisis,
education, fiscal federalism, fiscal
policy, housing, income support, income tax, Indigenous people, inequality, minimum wage, Ontario, poverty, progressive economic strategies, recession, social indicators, social
policy, taxation, unemployment.
Posted by Nick Falvo under bubble,
education, fiscal federalism, health care, post-secondary
education, privatization, social
policy, student debt, student movement, US, user fees.
Posted by Nick Falvo under debt,
education, fiscal federalism, household debt, Newfoundland and Labrador, Ontario, part time work, post-secondary
education, privatization, Quebec, social
policy, student debt, student movement, user fees, young workers.
Posted by Nick Falvo under income tax, NDP, Nova Scotia, post-secondary
education, regulation, social
policy, student debt, user fees.
Posted by Nick Falvo under BC, competition, Conservative government, corporate income tax, debt, demographics,
education, fiscal federalism, fiscal
policy, household debt, income distribution, income tax, inequality, macroeconomics, Newfoundland and Labrador, P3s, part time work, post-secondary
education, privatization, productivity, public infrastructure, Quebec, rankings, regulation, Role of government, social
policy, student debt, student movement, taxation, user fees, working time, young workers.
Beth Hawkins covered
education and other public - policy topics for MinnPost from its launch in 2007 to October of 2015, when she left to write for Education Post, a nonprofit based in
education and other public -
policy topics for MinnPost from its launch in 2007 to October of 2015, when she left to write for
Education Post, a nonprofit based in
Education Post, a nonprofit based in Chicago.
«This unacceptable trend is set to continue, unless
post the 2015 General Election we have a government which is committed to an economic
policy which has at its heart a universal entitlement for all to access high quality
education and which secures inclusive prosperity in which all of the people have the opportunity to share in the wealth of the nation.»
Gov. Eliot Spitzer, for one, tried to weigh in on schools by creating the
post of senior
education policy adviser — dubbed «
education czar» by some — and filling it with Manuel Rivera, the Rochester schools superintendent who had been National Superintendent of the Year in 2006.
Kevin Welner of the National
Education Policy Center (NEPC) has been especially forceful in objecting to my
post in text
posted on Ravitch's blog.
By the time they can measure «student A» from the fourth grade through
post secondary and beyond,
education changes so much through initiatives and new
policies that right there the data is irrelevant from one year to the next, and of course from one student to the next!
The Campaign 2012 collection page includes recent election - related stories, blog
posts, and tweets, as well as a must - see comparison detailing each candidate's views on
education policy issues.
This is the third in a series of three blog
posts about how state and local
education policy would be affected by the repeal of ESSA regulations that were written during the Obama administration.
Bud Hunt, also known as
education blogger Bud the Teacher,
posted a sample acceptable - use
policy for educators to use with student bloggers.
Albert Cheng is a
Post Doctoral Fellow at the Program on
education Policy and Governance at Harvard University.
Two years ago, when I wrote about top tweeters, I
posted two lists: One for
education policy wonks, and another for teachers.
California Takes a Left Turn on State Exams Washington
Post, 9/19/13» [Professor] Thomas Kane, a director of the Center for
Education Policy Research at Harvard, said California's plan to give students field tests but withhold scores is like practicing basketball in the dark.
It feels rather trivial considering the current state of the world, but it's time again to
post our mostly - annual list of the top
education policy people, organizations, and publications on social media.
But looking at followers does allow a few additional groups to make the list: Reform powerhouse StudentsFirst, the Washington
Post's and the Los Angeles Times's
education feeds *, and AIR's
education policy center, among others.
A few weeks ago, I argued that
policy change is not the only path to
education reform, floated five other approaches for improving educational practice, and promised to flesh them out in future
posts.
Author Bio: Laura Waters writes about
education politics and policy for NJ Left Behind, New York School Talk, Education Post, and other publ
education politics and
policy for NJ Left Behind, New York School Talk,
Education Post, and other publ
Education Post, and other publications.
Laura Waters writes about
education politics and policy for NJ Left Behind, New York School Talk, Education Post, and other publ
education politics and
policy for NJ Left Behind, New York School Talk,
Education Post, and other publ
Education Post, and other publications.
The philosophical priors and professional
education -
policy experiences they bring to their
posts will tell us — and forecast the future — a great deal.
My articles on
education policy regularly appear in the Washington
Post and the Huffington
Post.
NYC Educator This blog, with over 3,000
posts, features entertaining satires of
education policy makers and commentary on
education policy issues.
The Best Articles (And Blog
Posts) Offering Practical Advice To Teachers In 2012 — So Far The Best Multimedia Resources For Introducing Students To The Advantages Of Charts, Graphs & Infographics The Best
Posts / Articles On This Year's Phi Delta Kappa and Gallup
Education Poll — 2012 «The Best
Posts & Articles On Parent Trigger Movie «Won't Back Down»» The Best Funny Movie / TV Clips Of Bad Teachers The Best Resources On Using Drama In The Classroom The Best
Education Week
Posts From My First Year Blogging There... The Best Articles, Videos &
Posts On
Education Policy In 2012 — So Far The Best
Posts On The «Flipped Classroom» Idea The Best Online Videos Showing Teachers In The Classroom The Best Videos Showing The Importance Of Asking Good Questions The Best Resources On The Newly - Released California Educator Excellence Task Force Report The Best Places To Find The Most Popular (& Useful) Resources For Educators — 2012 (So Far) The Best Resources On The Chicago Teachers» Strike A Sampling Of The Best Tweets With The #SaidNoTeacherEver Hashtag The Best Theory Of Knowledge Resources In 2012 — So Far The Best Articles I've Written In 2012 — So Far My Best
Posts On New Research Studies In 2012 — So Far
Findings from the National Center for Research in
Policy and Practice (NCRPP) survey, and how it can help
education leaders and researchers create more of an impact, are discussed in the following HGSE Usable Knowledge blog
post....
In January 2012, Washington
Post education reporter Michael Alison Chandler said school choice has become «a mantra of 21st - century
education reform,» citing
policies across the country that have traditional public schools competing for students alongside charter schools and private schools.
This is the second in a series of three blog
posts about how state and local
education policy would be affected by the repeal of ESSA regulations that were written during the Obama administration.
Also embarrassed by the America Achieves study is the lefty labor Economic
Policy Institute in Washington, D.C., which recently released a sophomoric study (see my January 16, 2013,
post on the
Education Next blog) that tried to use the PISA data to attribute educational deficiencies to the U.S. social structure, not its school system.
Center Offers College - bound Students in St. Louis Help to Keep Them On Track St. Louis
Post Dispatch, June 10, 2013» «If they come up against a stumbling block, they are not necessarily primed to go out and seek out help,» said Lindsay Page at the Center for
Education Policy Research at Harvard.»
Her work has been published in National Review Online, The American, and the Enterprise Blog, and has been featured by The Wall Street Journal Online, The Huffington
Post, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, and the
Policy Innovators in
Education Network.
Mr. Merriman's op - eds, commentary and guest blogs have been featured in The New York Times, The New York
Post, The New York Daily News, The Huffington
Post, Gotham Schools and Eduwonk and he is a frequent guest on major TV and radio outlets on public
education reform and
policy.
Ama Nyamekye, the executive director of Educators 4 Excellence Los Angeles, an organization that advocates for teachers to take a more active role in shaping
education policies, wrote an op - ed in last week's Huffington
Post LA calling for a more «courageous» LAUSD School Board: «Our school board needs to get to work tackling a tall order of...
Tags: Angela Valenzuela, Deb Meier, Diane Ravitch,
education policy, ESEA, Matt Damon, Parents Across America, Pedro Noguera, SOS March
Posted in Uncategorized Comments Off on The sun shone and the stars came out for the SOS march
Michael Petrilli, president of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, a center - right
education policy think tank, wrote in a blog
post last week, «if scores drop among low - income and low - performing students — the kids least likely to be comfortable with digital devices, especially in the fourth grade — that could signal that something went awry.»
On February 9, 2017, Jack Jennings was interviewed on recent developments in
education policy on the Facebook program, Video from the Washington
Post.
Posted on May 3, 2018 · Our Facebook community, This Is Your Texas, spent the month of April discussing Texas
education policy.
On the campaign trail this week, Mr Clegg said he would like to see a Liberal Democrat holding the
post of
education secretary in a future coalition, but the Conservatives have criticised the party for trying to distance itself from
education policies they supported in government.
In an effort to address concerns on accountability, the UNCF, National Urban League and
Education Post recently released a report Building Better Narratives in Black Education focusing on better engaging communities around K - 12 education and driving substantive policy
Education Post recently released a report Building Better Narratives in Black
Education focusing on better engaging communities around K - 12 education and driving substantive policy
Education focusing on better engaging communities around K - 12
education and driving substantive policy
education and driving substantive
policy changes.
According to a «recent»
post by Diane Ravitch, President Obama «recently» selected Robert Gordon, and economist and «early proponent of VAMs,» for a top
policy post in the US Department of
Education.
The Council of State Governments Midwest
posted a
policy brief outlining some of the details of ESSA including an estimated implementation timeline and summary of publicly available information from Midwestern state
education agencies on their ESSA activities.