Tag: abc

In the News: Trump Taps Stanford Researcher for NCES Commissioner – by Education Next

James (Lynn) Woodworth has been named the new commissioner of the National Center for Education Statistics. Woodworth is currently a quantitative research analyst at CREDO. He received his Ph.D. in education policy from the University of Arkansas. CREDO is perhaps best known for its analyses of charter school performance. You can read more about some of its studies here: • R...

Who Wins, Who Loses—Revisited

Rose and Milton Friedman (pictured in 1976) saw a future with universal school choice, and it had winners and losers. Now, 30 years after they established a foundation bearing their name—and five years after universal choice first became a reality—we can see how accurate their vision of the future was. Thirty years ago last month, Milton and Rose Friedma...

Are We Committed to Raising School Standards? – by Chester E. Finn, Jr.

In an important and mostly depressing New Year’s Day column in The Washington Post, veteran education journalist Jay Mathews describes the on-again, off-again “carnival ride” to “raise school standards” that he’s observed over the past half century. “We love making schools more accountable,” Mathews writes. “Then, we hate the idea.” @JIRAIST via Twenty20 He cites a pair of rece...

In the News: Schools Closed, Roads Clogged, Trains Delayed: Snowstorm Lashes New York City – by Education Next

A major snowstorm is causing schools to close up and down the East Coast today. A study by Josh Goodman published in Education Next challenges the conventional wisdom that the number of school days cancelled due to snow has a significant impact on student learning.  Goodman found that a worse problem was snowy days when schools remain open but many students are absent. The stud...

Education Reform Developments to Watch For in 2018 – by Michael J. Petrilli

Advertisements for investment funds always say that past performance is no guarantee of future results; in the case of my forecasting skills, that’s probably a good thing. After all, in 2016 I claimed that Donald Trump would never become president, and a year ago I thought that 2017 might be the year of coming back together again. So in the spirit of third time’s a charm, not t...

How a Gifted Program Impacts Disadvantaged Students

Public debate over gifted education tends to focus on fairness. Who gets to be called “gifted” and what sort of extras do they receive? Nationwide, more than 12 percent of Asian students and almost 8 percent of white students are enrolled in gifted programs compared to 3 percent of Black students and 4 percent of Hispanic students—differences that have ...