Tag: schools

  • Microschools Are Growing Part 2

    Microschools are growing in number and now enroll nearly as many young learners as the New York City Department of Education. Last month, Deborah A. Gist (Transcend), Tom Vander Ark (Getting Smart), and Devin Vodicka (Learner-Centered Collaborative), all former superintendents within our K-12 traditional system, now all learning reformers interested in innovative ways to make…

  • Microschools Are Growing Part 1

    Microschools are slowly gaining market share across the K-12 landscape. Last month, The 74 reported that, “In 2021, Tiffany Blassingame, who comes from a family of educators, opened her own school in a building attached to a Baptist church in downtown Decatur, Georgia. She teaches 18 K-5 students who come from across Atlanta for a…

  • Young Entrepreneurs

    For too many kids inside our traditional K-12 system, we’ve never been able to connect them with what was once considered the best way to learn – the apprenticeship. For thousands of years this was the way young people learned almost everything, including how to read, write, and solve problems. The apprentice and their mentor…

  • Why Can’t We Close Schools?

    Until we decide to create a new system of learning for our kids, one act that would help clear the K-12 landscape of under-enrolled, and usually under-performing, campuses is the practice of school closure. But, according to a recent report from the Brookings Institution, Americans aren’t disciplined when it comes to closing schools that probably…

  • Friday News Roundup

    It’s Friday! Time for the News Roundup. New Iowa Teachers Made Some of the Lowest Salaries in 2023-24. When Will Raises Start? (Des Moines Register) According to the Des Moines Register last week, “Iowa teachers were paid some of the lowest starting wages in the country, according to a new report based on data before…

  • Rubrics Are The Way

    Instead of grades, we should use rubrics and narratives to provide feedback to our young learners. Recently, EducationWeek provided suggestions for adult learning leaders if they are interested in changing how they provide feedback to their young learners: “When designed effectively, grading rubrics can clarify expectations, minimize subjectivity, and standardize grading criteria across multiple teachers,…

  • Reasonableness or Insanity? How the Feds Will Approach K-12 Funding

    It’s clear that the Trump administration is committed to cutting federal K-12 funding to schools, but keeping track of those cuts has been challenging. Last month, EducationWeek posted an article written by Mark Lieberman that attempted to explain the cuts within the wider context of exactly how federal education funding works: “The first three months…

  • Unhappy Youngsters

    Why are so many youngsters unhappy, and what can we do about it? Earlier this month, Arthur C. Brooks attempted to answer the question in a post appearing in The Atlantic. Brooks writes, “We’ve heard a lot lately about how miserable young Americans are. In the recently released World Happiness Report, the United States dropped…

  • Raising the Bar

    What makes a great learning organization? The 74 polled 186 educators involved in the Canopy project, a collaborative effort to share information about K-12 innovation, about the information they use to determine whether their schools are doing a good job. Here are excerpts from that post: “School options are proliferating, with the Trump administration and…

  • Friday News Roundup

    It’s Friday! Time for the News Roundup. Lawmakers Want to Expand Texas’ Teacher Pay Raise Program. Many Educators Will Still Be Left Out (The Texas Tribune) According to The Texas Tribune earlier this month, “The Teacher Incentive Allotment gives raises to teachers base on performance. But it leaves out many educators and school staff who…