Subscribe
-
Recent Blog Posts
- Back to the Future in the Bay State: Brockton’s New School-Funding Lawsuit May Be Imminent
- More Breathless Praise for Success Academy; And Why We Should Be “Terrified”
- Record Fine for Campaign-Finance Violation Sheds Light on Dark Money Donors to Bay State Charter Referendum
- Why Vote? Midwifing the Youth Vote in the Age of Trump
- Are New Orleans’ Veteran Teachers Unappreciated?
Blog Categories
- Brockton, MA (8)
- Business (20)
- Charter Schools (17)
- citizenship (2)
- CREDO (2)
- Cuba (1)
- democracy (2)
- Development (1)
- Education (67)
- Massachusetts Education Reform (10)
- New Orleans Charter Schools (5)
- public schools (4)
- Quality Management (15)
- small-schools movement (1)
- telecommunications (2)
- Trump (2)
- Uncategorized (8)
- W. Edwards Deming (1)
- Women (4)
Blog Archives
Twitter Feed
- .@carolburris @DianeRavitch A plea that @NPEaction commit to canceling/avoiding any future meetings in states that… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 13 hours ago
- In the wake of the Supreme Court’s anti-precedent decision to overturn Roe v Wade, Americans have an opportunity to… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 1 day ago
- Will the Supremes ever recover from overruling a 50yr precedent widely supported by Americans? Overruling Roe v Wad… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 1 day ago
- RT @leoniehaimson: @DrKYSR Did they tell you that DOE has a budget surplus of unspent funds of $1.1 B in FY 2020 and FY 2021? https://t.co/… 1 day ago
- An epic liar, now @ericadamsfornyc breaks precedent by refusing to disclose his tax returns. Whom does that remin… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 1 day ago
Category Archives: Charter Schools
Back to the Future in the Bay State: Brockton’s New School-Funding Lawsuit May Be Imminent
Twenty-five years ago, the Brockton school district prevailed in a lawsuit that served as a key catalyst for the Massachusetts Education Reform Act of 1993, which radically changed the state’s approach to school funding and turned the Bay State into … Continue reading
Posted in Brockton, MA, Charter Schools, Education, Massachusetts Education Reform, public schools
Tagged brockton high, charter schools, community eligibility program, continuous improvement, Education reform, foundation budget formula, Jim Peyser, Massachusetts Board of Education, Paul Sagan, Question 2
Leave a comment
More Breathless Praise for Success Academy; And Why We Should Be “Terrified”
This week both The New Yorker and The Atlantic, among several other publications, ran prominent stories on Success Academy, the controversial New York City charter-school network. In particular, Elizabeth Green’s piece about Success Academy and its founder, Eva Moskowitz, aims … Continue reading
Posted in Charter Schools, citizenship, democracy, Education, public schools, Trump
Tagged Center for Education Improvement, ChalkBeat, charter schools, Dan Loeb, Debbie Meier, District 2, District 4, Education reform, Elizabeth Green, Eva Moskowitz, Families for Excellent Schools, Harlem, John Dewey, KIPP, MacArthur award, Mayor Bill De Blasio, Mayor Rahm Emanuel, New York Performance Standards Consortium, no excuses, Question 2, Richard Whitmire, standardized tests, strict-discipline, Success Academy, Sy Fliegel, Tony Alvarado, unions
21 Comments
Are New Orleans’ Veteran Teachers Unappreciated?
Veteran New Orleans teachers say there is much that has improved in the city’s schools since Hurricane Katrina, including academics and strong school cultures. One thing that has decidedly not improved is job satisfaction among the city’s most experienced … Continue reading
An Evening With Joel Klein: Former Schools Chancellor Reflects On His Legacy
Recently, I joined about 50 New York City reform-minded educators who had gathered at Teach for America’s headquarters in downtown Manhattan to hear Joel Klein reflect on his years as New York City schools and his thoughts on education. The … Continue reading
Posted in Charter Schools, Education, public schools, small-schools movement
Tagged Alexandra Estrella, Bloomberg, busing, Carmen Farina, charter schools, David Baiz, Debbie Meier, DeBlasio, District 4, English language learners, Eric Nadelstern, Global Tech, incarcerated parents, integration, Joel Klein, John King, network structure, networks, PROSE, school busing, segregation, small schools, Success Academy, superintendents, Teach for America, teacher retention, teachers union, TFA, Tony Alvarado
7 Comments