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Jeff Bernstein

I Gotta' Wonder Why Obama Talks So Much More About South Korean Schools Than ... - 0 views

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    "Indeed, Mr. Obama cites [South Korea President] Mr. Lee's views on education in virtually every speech he gives these days, including one in Pittsburgh on Tuesday, holding up the hard-working Asian country as an example of what the United States needs to do." from The New York Times
Jeff Bernstein

Closing the talent gap: Attracting and retaining top third graduates to a career in tea... - 0 views

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    McKinsey's experience with school systems in more than 50 countries suggests that this is an important gap in the U.S. debate. In a new report, "Closing the Talent Gap: Attracting and Retaining Top-Third Graduates to Careers in Teaching ," we review the experiences of the top-performing systems in the world-Singapore, Finland, and South Korea. These countries recruit, develop, and retain the leading academic talent as one of their central education strategies, and they have achieved extraordinary results. In the United States, by contrast, only 23 percent of new teachers come from the top third, and just 14 percent in high poverty schools, where the difficulty of attracting and retaining talented teachers is particularly acute. The report asks what it would take to emulate nations that pursue this strategy if the United States decided it was worthwhile. The report also includes new market research with nearly 1,500 current top-third students and teachers. It offers the first quantitative research-based answer to the question of how the U.S. could substantially increase the portion of new teachers each year who are higher caliber graduates, and how this could be done in a cost-effective way.
Jeff Bernstein

Diane Ravitch: The charter school mistake - latimes.com - 0 views

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    "Billionaires like privately managed schools. Parents are lured with glittering promises of getting their kids a sure ticket to college. Politicians want to appear to be champions of "school reform" with charters. But charters will not end the poverty at the root of low academic performance or transform our nation's schools into a high-performing system. The world's top-performing systems - Finland and Korea, for example - do not have charter schools. They have strong public school programs with well-prepared, experienced teachers and administrators. Charters and that other faux reform, vouchers, transform schooling into a consumer good, in which choice is the highest value."
Jeff Bernstein

ASCD Express 6.21 - Unexpected Lessons from Global Education - 0 views

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    There is much to admire in the schools that lead international assessment results. Finland, Singapore, and South Korea have nurtured a teaching profession that encourages the most able college students to consider teaching as a rewarding and noble career (Darling-Hammond, 2010). China, home to world-leading Shanghai, hosts a thousand-year tradition of reverence for teaching (Reeves, 2011).
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