Skip to main contentRemainders: On the higher-poverty future of education reform
By | November 4, 2011, 12:19am UTC - The rise of concentrated poverty in major cities could pose a problem for school reform. (Hechinger)
- Chancellor Walcott said the city schools’ official cell phone ban is here to stay. (SchoolBook)
- A teacher lists the realistic, yet major, victories he has elicited from his students. (Mr. Foteah)
- A new report looks at what districts think about federal school turnaround mandates. (CEP)
- Half of Long Island principals signed a request to slow down teacher evaluation changes. (Newsday)
- A new study finds that charter school quality varies widely across networks. (Inside School Research)
- Andy Rotherham: We must accept some lemons to create strong charter schools. (School of Thought)
- An argument that if conservatives think teachers are overpaid, they must not value teachers. (TIME)
- On the Hawthorne Effect: People tend to change their behavior when someone’s watching. (Shanker)
- A look back at “Another Look at Lesson Planning,” before SWBAT entered the dictionary. (ASCD)
- A backer of a losing school board candidate told a reporter he should lynched. (Ed News Colorado)
- A charter school leader-hopeful gives a view into writing her school’s prospectus. (Charter Notebook)