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Teacher Accountability

This tag is associated with 21 posts

New Study on Value-Added Metrics for Measuring Teacher Effectiveness

The NYTimes reports: Elementary- and middle-school teachers who help raise their students’ standardized-test scores seem to have a wide-ranging, lasting positive effect on those students’ lives beyond academics, including lower teenage-pregnancy rates and greater college matriculation and adult earnings, according to a new study that tracked 2.5 million students over 20 years. … Replacing a … Continue reading »

Diane Ravitch is a Paid Union Spokeswoman

Steven Brill reports, in his book, Class Warfare: Randi Weingarten told me that she spoke with Ravitch often while she was preparing her book and urged her to take her message far and wide as soon as it was published, “because she had an important story to tell that no one else could tell.” Weingarten … Continue reading »

David Brooks, Educational Theorist

David Brooks takes on Diane Ravitch in his NYTimes column today: Ravitch makes some serious points…If you make tests all-important, you give schools an incentive to drop the subjects that don’t show up on the exams but that help students become fully rounded individuals — like history, poetry, art and sports. You may end up … Continue reading »

How to Blog Irresponsibly (About Education)

First of all, let’s get a few things straight: I really, really, REALLY like Freddie DeBoer’s work. He writes eloquently about the ideas undergirding progressivism, which is pretty rare (in the blogosphere or on Capitol Hill). Concern about this is what pulled me to start writing outside of academia. Special note to trolls: The “Irresponsible … Continue reading »

Juxtaposing Competing Schools of Thought on Education

Here’s a blog exchange worth a look (h/t Whitney Tilson) if you’re interested in the education reform wars. Diane Ravitch, anti-reform hero, writes [underlining added]: A few months ago, I spoke at Santa Clara University in Santa Clara, California. It is a Catholic university, located on a beautiful campus. After my talk, a member of … Continue reading »

Time to Eliminate Grading

Perhaps it’s because I’m spending my weekend grading papers, but I found this Bob Bowdon piece especially hilarious. It can hardly be denied that there are factors outside a student’s control that might affect his grades. How smart he is, how much his parents support education, how nutritious the food in his home is, and … Continue reading »

Chris Christie’s Education Speech at Harvard

Whitney Tilson sent out this speech (full text pasted below) from New Jersey Governor Chris Christie and further screwed with my education policy instincts. As I’ve written before (also here), teachers unions’ general unwillingness to take education reform (especially tenure) seriously makes it difficult to discern how a true progressive should behave. On one hand, teachers need … Continue reading »

Market-Based Education Reform? (Logico-Rhetorical Analysis: Randi Weingarten)

American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten’s piece in yesterday’s Wall Street Journal was another piece of evidence showing the awkward political torsion that education reform inflicts on American political divisions. Think about it: Weingarten’s piece was entitled “Markets Aren’t the Education Solution.” She’s a union leader. It appeared in the Wall Street Journal. Are … Continue reading »

If You Read One Article on Education This Week/Weekend…

…make it this one, from the LA Times. There’s a lot in there, but here’s the crux: Months before, [Miguel] Aguilar had been featured in a Times article as one of the most effective teachers in the Los Angeles Unified School District at raising student scores on standardized tests. Many of his students, the article noted, had … Continue reading »

Fighting the Battles of the 1930s…AGAIN?

I’m following Mike Konczal’s lead today with some extra-hip throwback-progressive (oxymoron?) rhetoric from the 1930s. Like Mike, I’m also hoping that “maybe this cool retro liberal style will give the Democrats some spine.” Hoping, but not expecting, obviously. If nothing else, this is a great way to show that our present crisis isn’t so unique … Continue reading »

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