Month: June 2020

What Do Pac-Man and Pensions Have in Common? by Chad Aldeman

Why aren’t teacher salaries rising? It’s not for lack of money. Even after adjusting for inflation and rising student enrollment, total school spending is up. It’s not for lack of money spent on teachers, either. Districts are allocating about the same portion of their budgets to instructional costs—including salaries, wages, and benefits for teachers—as they did 20 years ago. ...

The Summer 2020 Issue of Education Next is here! – by Education Next

In the cover story, Christine Mulhern reveals that when it comes to school counselors, quality varies and can matter as much as with teachers for driving student outcomes. In a feature article, William Furey reports that the official study materials for teacher elementary-certification licensing exams in 29 states and the District of Columbia reference learning styles—a theory ...

Top Charter Networks Turning Attention to Curriculum – by Michael J. Petrilli

One founding premise of the charter school initiative was that these new schools would be laboratories of innovation. Cutting red tape would free educators to test new approaches that, if successful, could be incorporated into the regular school-district environment. In reality, however, what makes the highest-performing charters so effective is tireless staff and a relentless ...

What We’re Watching: Over a Million Teachers Aren’t Covered by Social Security – by Education Next

In 15 states, teachers are not covered by Social Security. Why not? And how does this affect the ability of teachers to retire? The answers are in this explainer created by TeacherPensions.org just in time for National Retirement Security Week. Readers of the EdNext blog may have learned of this problem in a 2014 blog entry by Leslie Kan: “Why Aren’t All Teachers Co...

Jeb Bush: “My View Is the Schools Have To Open” – by Frederick Hess

Governor Jeb Bush Governor Jeb Bush has been a leader on efforts to improve schooling for more than two decades. He has mentored a generation of governors, carried the banner for reforms including school choice and accountaility, and launched ExcelinEd, a hugely influential voice in the world of K-12 schooling. During his tenure in office and in the many years since, Gov. Bush ...

In the News: Gates Foundation Announces New $1.7B for K-12 – by Education Next

Last week, Bill Gates delivered a speech in which he described some new priorities for the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. In Education Week, Francisco Vara-Orta explained The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation announced a new investment of $1.7 billion for K-12 education over the next five years, with the bulk of the funding aimed at existing traditional public schools th...

In Newton, Mass., a Union Beats Parents to the Punch on Distance Learning – by E. B. Solomont

Newton North High School in Newton, Mass. It wasn’t long after Governor Charlie Baker ordered schools across Massachusetts to close because of coronavirus that David Goldstone recognized a tale of two cities playing out in his own home. The Newton father of three watched with growing frustration as his youngest daughter, a seventh-grader at a religious private school, quickly f...

The Wisdom of Mandatory Grade Retention – by Brian A. Jacob

Last week, Michigan’s legislature passed a bill requiring schools to hold back third-graders who fall a grade-level behind in reading. [i] If Governor Rick Snyder signs the bill, Michigan will become the 17th state to adopt such a policy. [ii] Mandatory grade retention is clearly popular, at least among many state legislators. This is understandable given the importance of ear...

EdNext Podcast: Innovative University Gets Yellow Light from DOE – by Education Next

Western Governors University has earned praise for its innovative model of competency-based learning. But the U.S. Department of Education’s Inspector General has called for the government to bar WGU students from federal student aid programs. In this episode, Michael Horn of the Christensen Institute joins EdNext Editor-in-chief Marty West to discuss the WGU model and w...

What Racism in Schools Looks Like – by George Farmer

Robert E. Lee High School in San Antonio, Texas, pictured in 2017, was named for the Confederate general. The name has since been changed to Legacy of Educational Excellence (L.E.E.) High School. As the world has paused to analyze the deficiencies of police departments, it is not enough. All aspects of America have to examine areas of systemic injustice. That includes schools, ...