Hmmm….There are plenty of criticisms of how President Bush and Secretary of Education Rod Paige have handled No Child Left Behind and other issues too. Yet an Education Writers Association awards banquet may not have been the best forum to raise them…it does sort of reinforce the notion that a lot of the NCLB coverage has been really slanted…
More Columbine Sensibility
Great piece in Slate.
Love in a time of public policy…
PPI’s Marc Magee and former PPI fellow Kathleen Porter tied the knot this weekend telling the New York Times that their policy differences help keep things fresh.
Mayoral Control in Washington: If at first you don’t succeed…
The D.C. City Council did not buy Mayor Williams’ plan to take control of the beleaguered District of Columbia Public Schools so he’s modifying it.
Meanwhile, the ambitious goals for the new D.C. voucher program seem to be getting less ambitious all the time…stay tuned…
Will No Child Left Behind’s student transfer provisions help kids?
Researchers at the Northwest Evaluation Association say be careful it’s about growth and value-added instead, but the Chicago Sun Times has data indicating yes, at least in the Windy City.
We know one thing, it’s a boon for researchers!
New York Times does Higher Ed
The new Education Life package features articles on virtual schools, B-schools, and the online hook-up culture for college students.
Historical Brown Out?
Jonathan Zimmerman writes in the LA Times that one legacy of Brown is sanitized textbooks and incomplete, milquetoast history. Pretty provocative stuff in the midst of the Brown anniversary, but it’s hard to argue with Zimmerman’s main point.
And it’s probably OK to acknowledge an unintended side effect of Brown now, fifty years later, right? After all, hardly anyone thinks now that Brown was a bad idea. No one now in government would have written something like,
“I realize that it is an unpopular and unhumanitarian position for which I have been excoriated by liberal colleagues, but I think Plessy v. Ferguson was right and should be reaffirmed.”
Of course not, no one! Surely not the current Chief Justice of the Supreme Court in a memo to Justice Jackson, for whom who he clerked during Brown…
Want more of a Zimmerman fix? Check out Whose America? Culture Wars in the Public Schools.
Spec Ed and Testing
John Merrow gives one of the best popular media treatments we’ve seen of the difficult issues involved in assessing students with special needs in this News Hour segment. Though we think the report does not adequately disentangle the differences between state and federal policy requirements (and also IDEA) or give viewers enough understanding of the flexibility NCLB allows for assessing disabled students, it’s well worth a look at the transcript.
Bonus content! Really like alternative assessments and special ed or just want to learn more? This article provides a good overview of some of the issues.
Highly Qualified Teachers in the HOUSSE?
Kate Walsh makes a great point about state evasion of the teacher quality requirements under No Child Left Behind in a Gadfly guest column based on this National Council on Teacher Quality study.
Buckley Was Right!
A Columbine anniversary op-ed in the Washington Post by Lesley University President Margaret A. McKenna was so ridiculous that we added it to tendentiousness watch. Though No Child Left Behind is not without its faults it’s absurd to lay school violence at its feet too.
Turns out, when the Post held a webchat with McKenna, the general public thought so too. Lesley Unviversity isn’t Harvard but it is in Cambridge. Guess William Buckley was right after all about the first thousand names in the Cambridge phonebook….
Political afterthought: Pssst! Reflexive NCLB bashing Democrats, those Washington Post questioners are probably likely voters too!
Bonus political afterthought: Don’t believe us? Ask the NEA!