Tuesday, August 21, 2007
A Quality Teacher In Every Classroom
Meanwhile, UFT leader Randi Weingarten guest-blogs at length on Eduwonk about the teacher role in data-driven accountability.
Business Schools
Monday, August 20, 2007
Baby Achievement
US News' College Rankings
Friday, August 17, 2007
Then Again, What Do They Know?
*so is Education Sector
Hispanic Students Are Smarter
Dual Immersion in Texas
English language learner (ELL) students are not doing well. Last month a federal judge ruled that Texas's bilingual education programs are not to blame. Indeed, there are plenty of other reasons for ELLs' poor performance but in fairness to LULAC, MALDEF and the GI Forum who argued that ELL education is not being well monitored or evaluated, our education programs for ELLs need a lot of work.
The judge's ruling has prompted a renewed debate over what type of programming is best for ELLs.
Thursday, August 16, 2007
Rest in Peace, Dr. Hilliard
More recently, Dr. Hilliard has been speaking out with other scholars about the problems facing black male youth. He has openly questioned the promise of single sex schools to improve the education of black male students. Single sex schools, he argued, can be high-performing or low-performing just like any other schools.
Folks in Michigan, Ohio, South Carolina, North Carolina, pay attention. You too, USDOE. If you're really interested in helping the kids who need it the most, single sex is a distraction not an answer.
Wednesday, August 15, 2007
Tonight! PBS Merrow Report #2
At the same site, you can also get podcasts featuring school leader Patricia Ladd, parent Michelle Evans and former S.D. Superintendent Alan Bersin (disc: Bersin chairs ES board) to learn more details. And see our 2006 ES report , "Extreme Makeover", for more analysis and lessons on Gompers and Keiller.
The Hottest Schools
Some are ridiculous: Hottest Liberal Arts School You Never Heard Of (Centenary College of Louisiana). How can it be hot if we've never heard of it? or Hottest for Sports Fans (UFlorida- too obvious, Ohio State would be better- get the sparks flying again) or Hottest for Loving the Great Outdoors (St. Mary's College of MD- the sailing/crabbing/fishing/beach thing, sure, but otherwise, Maryland? I was outside more in my eight years in NM and CA than the rest of my life here in MD but hey, shout out for Maryland can't be a bad thing).
Others are just downright scary- Hottest in the War on Terror (New Mex Tech).
And my favorite? Drumroll.....
Hottest Catholic School. Can a Catholic school be hot? Fortunately my family doesn't read this blog so they won't see me referencing "hot" and "Catholic" together. But I guess Fordham's got something good going on there b/c it wins this prize.
PBS Merrow Report on NCLB
Tuesday, August 14, 2007
School Time Update
Oklahoma State Superintendent Sandy Garrett just called for a longer Oklahoma school year in her State of Education speech. The Sooner state only has 175 days a year of public schooling,five days less than the 180 national average so they really are playing catch up in this case. Still, it's enough to spark debate. There are folks who can't stand the idea of school in the summertime (i'm guessing they either had really great times at Camp White Pine or really bad times in summer school). So despite moves to extend learning, there are still plenty of legislative moves to "save summer".
Monday, August 13, 2007
Dare To Compare
Anyway, there's a "dare to compare" tab that lets you try out questions from international tests to see if you really are smarter than 4th graders. You can try out NAEP questions, CivEd questions, or TIMSS- trends in math and science study- questions, the latter of which I find funny since getting kids to try out the TIMSS questions in the Kids Zone is the closest we'll get this time around to actually participating in the next TIMSS. Evidently, participation is expensive (and all the other cool countries aren't doing it either) so we dropped out this time. I find that amusing too- in a depressing sort of way- since we don't have a problem with testing and are otherwise so committed to Creating Opportunities to Meaningfully Promote Excellence in Technology, Education and Science.
Don't get me wrong- I really enjoyed "daring to compare" in the Kids Zone. But if competing is so important now, as it was then and then, we should spend more time collecting and analyzing comparative data.
Friday, August 10, 2007
Happy August!
Not-So-Brainy Babies
Former Senior Policy Analyst Sara Mead was on this story back in April - check out her report on what the evidence does—and does not—say about brain development from ages zero to three.
Thursday, August 09, 2007
That Can't Be a Good Thing
Even on the dreariest days—slogging through a tax, education, or Chamber of Commerce speech—Mike and John and I endlessly entertained one another, with all the running jokes and gags you’d expect three guys in a room to develop. Education speeches in particular—with their endlessly complicated programs and slightly puffed-up theories, none of which we could ever explain quite to the satisfaction of our policy people—were always good for a laugh. As John observed in late 2003, around draft 20 in the typically chaotic revising of an education speech, “We’ve taken the country to war with less hassle than this.”
Education is really so boring and complicated that it can't be made interesting by the spin-meisters and wordsmiths in the Bush Administration?!! I think that's really depressing.
Pre-K Notes
Wednesday, August 08, 2007
But How Do You Really Feel About It? Poll Results from EdNext
Tuesday, August 07, 2007
Gadfly to the Disenfranchised: Drop Dead
Monday, August 06, 2007
Dispatch from Virgin Fest 2007
Day One
A rocky start. We're late out of the house and traffic is snarled for miles on I-695. By the time we get onto the track, we've completely missed Fountains of Wayne. What genius put them in the noon slot? If someone's got to play at such an un-rock-and-roll hour, how about someone who sucks, like Incubus? But my spirits are lifted as we emerge from the tunnel onto the infield and "I Want You To Want Me" blasts from the nearby North Stage. Despite the fact that I own no Cheap Trick albums, I'm actually looking forward to the set quite a bit. It's funny--there were surely lots of other bands just as famous back in the day, but only the Trick are here now. Fashions come and go, but great pop hooks last forever.
We wander to the other end of the track, past the de riguer collection of booths manned by One Campaign-type advocacy groups and signs telling us not to feel guilty about the inevitable mountains of garbage the festival will produce, because all the plastic cups are made from corn (really). A Scottish band called--naturally--The Fratellis is up on the South Stage. They're pretty good; I buy the CD at the Virgin Megastore, which is in a mini-tent. When the band talks to the crown between songs, their accents border on Trainspotting-level incomprehensibility, but when they sing, you wouldn't know if they were from America, the U.K., or elsewhere. This is a common phenomenon--why? Does the act of singing naturally flatten out the accent, or does everyone unconsciously mimic the vocalizations of rock bands that came before?
Day Two
Parking is easier today, and we arrive in plenty of time for Regina Spektor. She's one of those artists whose music is very tied up with her persona--in this case, the smart, casually hip girl from the city who'd probably be in med school at Columbia right now if she hadn't taken to her piano lessons instead. I don't know if that's actually who she is or not, but the image worked for me and the other few thousand people who gather by the stage in the early afternoon sun. She walks out smiling, demure and unaccompanied, and sings a capella before moving to the piano for an hour of soulful, intricate numbers including the deceptively catchy "Fidelity." It's a great way to start the day.
Spoon have no persona at all, but make up for it with good set heavy with songs from Gimme Fiction and their excellent new album Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga. Highlights: "Don't Make Me a Target," plus "Small Stakes" from Kill the Moonlight. We skip Panic! At the Disco and take a nap by the South Stage as Bad Brains plays with the kind of serenity that only decades as a legend of hardcore punk / reggae fusion can give you.
Next up, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs. Two takeaways here. First, there aren't very many real rock stars in the world, but Karen O is one of them. She comes onstage looking like a cross between Chrissie Hynde and Cher circa the 1986 Oscars, prowling, prancing, grinning and growling in a way that absolutely bleeds charisma. Second, there are two kinds of live acts. Most--Spoon is a good example--sound more or less like they do recorded, just marginally looser, longer, and louder. A few, however, are transformed in concert to the point that they sound like an entirely different--and much better--band. The Yeah Yeahs Yeahs are the second kind.
Interpol has neither a persona nor a rock star, but they do have an image--stylish, modern, unemotional--that matches their music to an obviously calculated but nonetheless effective degree. That said, it's been a long weekend and their songs start to sound the same. We're on the right side of the stage in front of this ridiculously huge fenced-in "VIP area" that is never more than 10 percent full, since most people are apparently smart enough not to pay extra for the privilege of looking like a zoo animal with more money than sense. It starts to rain, just enough to tamp down the heat, and soon The Smashing Pumpkins hit the stage for the festival's final show.
Billy Corgan has apparently purchased a Stepford bass player to replace D'arcy, but the Pumpkins still rock out to large degree. In the long run, every band, regardless of greatness, reaches a point where it has made all the music it will make that really matters. Corgan knows this, and he's clearly unwilling to go gently into the rock and roll good night of reunion tours and greatest hits sets. So for every stellar version of an older song like "Zero" there was a rushed-through "Bullet With Butterfly Wings" or "the next single" from the new album, Zeitgest. It made for an uneven finish to long, fun weekend--but good for him anyway. Better to fight obsolescence and lose than never fight at all.
All in all, another good research trip -- I'm thinking Austin City Limits next year.