Research Warning Label: Analysis contains inadequate measurement of student p... - 0 views
The Perils of Favoring Consistency over Validity: Are "bad" VAMS more "consis... - 1 views
A Letter to Arne Duncan « Failing Schools - 1 views
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"This morning, I read Education Secretary Arne Duncan's Open Letter to America's Teachers. There's a part of me that would like to take his words at face value, and another part that is quite excited over the fact that us teacher-agitators have forced a shift in the conversation about education reform, such that he has at least acknowledged (if not acted upon) many of our concerns. But the gap between his words and his actions is too large to ignore. I've written him a letter in response."
Why comparing NAEP poverty achievement gaps across states doesn't work « Scho... - 0 views
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"Pundits love to make cross-state comparisons and rank states on a variety of indicators (I'm guilty too). A favorite activity is comparing NAEP test scores across subjects, including comparing which states have the biggest test score gaps between children who qualify for subsidized lunch and children who don't. The simple conclusion - States with big gaps are bad - inequitable - and states with smaller gaps must being doing something right! It is generally assumed by those who report these gaps and rank states on achievement gaps that these gaps are appropriately measured - comparably measured - across states. That a low-income child in one state is similar to a low-income child in another. That the average low-income child or the average of low-income children in one state is comparable to the average of low-income children in another, and that the average of non-low income children in one state is comparable to the average of non-low income children in another. LITTLE COULD BE FURTHER FROM THE TRUTH."
Teacher Not Liable in Sex Between Special Education Students - The School Law Blog - Ed... - 0 views
Why US education deserves our praise (and funding) - John T. Harvey - Pragmatic Economi... - 0 views
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I want to shift my focus for this entry and talk about something not directly related to macroeconomics (although I will pull it back in later): the US education system. It is a very hot topic at the moment as states everywhere are reducing expenditures in the face of fiscal crises. This is a recipe for disaster. Not only is their justification questionable, but it will only serve to make economic recovery more difficult. People believe that the budget choices we are making today are saving our children's future. It is, in fact, ruining it.
The research question that wasn't asked « School Finance 101 - 0 views
SD: State to hold bar steady for school progress determinations - 0 views
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State Secretary of Education Melody Schopp announced via conference call to superintendents today that South Dakota will hold its goals for proficiency in reading and math at 2009-10 levels, rather than bumping up those targets as previously anticipated. In addition, the state will reduce its graduation rate goal to 80 percent from the current target of 85 percent.
Why Pedro Noguera will be Marching to Save Our Schools July 30th - Living in Dialogue -... - 1 views
Schools Matter: Lies, Damn Lies, and David Brooks - 1 views
Schools Matter: Teacher Evaluations Based on Test Scores: Bad Idea and Worse Policy - 0 views
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