Skip to main contentWeekend Reading: Turmoil in Kansas as top court orders lawmakers to create a new funding system
By | February 13, 2016, 3:34pm UTC - Kansas’ supreme court rules school funding is inequitable. (Wichita Eagle)
- Ohio’s state superintendent search breaks down as its state board struggles to follow its own plan. (Plain Dealer)
- The principal of a school that North Carolina says showed no growth last year shares her side of the story. (EducationNC)
- A lot of Ohioan’s aren’t especially happy with changes to the state’s education system during John Kasich’s term. (Washington Post)
- Andrew Rotherham: What would Hillary Clinton’s education department look like? (U.S. News and World Report)
- Michigan lays out a 10-point plan to vault it’s troubled schools to top 10 in the nation. (Free-Press)
- Students opting out of state tests forces Ohio to add a second report card grade. (Plain Dealer)
- How guru teacher Doug Lemov is helping to build a better U.S. Soccer program. (The Atlantic)
- The Gates Foundation’s new K-12 director is Bob Hughes, who has created, supported, and lobbied for schools in New York City. (Impatient Optimists)
- Hughes was seen as a possible contender for New York City schools chief in 2013. (Chalkbeat)
- What the Common Core looks like where the standards aren’t going anywhere: Department of Defense schools. (Hechinger Report)
- A guide for educators who want to examine the unwritten rules that can make schools less equitable. (Practical Theory)
- A Brooklyn school’s strategy to attract more middle-class students includes screening students by ability. (Chalkbeat)
- A teacher’s take: Selective admission is the “secret sauce” that lets schools succeed. (NYC Educator)
- And a new analysis suggests that gentrification fully drove test score gains in Washington, D.C. (Jay Greene)
- D.C.’s much emulated teacher evaluation system is getting an overhaul — and resurrecting “value-added” scores. (Teacher Beat)
- Leading presidential candidates mostly went to public school and sent their kids to private schools. (Politics K-12)
- Ginger, Tilly, Dandelion, and Tiddlywink could be getting kicked out of pre-K in Colorado. Here’s why. (Chalkbeat)
- With fewer members facing greater threats, Los Angeles’s teachers union is trying to raise dues. (L.A. Times)
- KIPP wants you to know that it is educating Aaden Bereal, the 6-year-old costar of Beyonce’s “Formation” video. (KIPP LA Facebook)
- The Walton Foundation says it’s time to rethink online schooling. (EdWeek)