Tag: students

  • The Problem with Scale

    Our traditional K-12 public school system doesn’t know how to scale successful start-up programs well. For example, small tutoring programs, started after the COVID-19 pandemic to catch kids up in their reading, writing, and problem-solving tasks, have struggled to grow to impact more kids. Recently, The 74 reported that, “As schools struggled to overcome the…

  • Close Schools or Change the System?

    Traditional school leaders try to convince their public that consolidating schools will save the taxpayer money. It doesn’t look like that’s true in Vermont. Recently, Vermont Public reported that, “As state and local officials debate what should be done about the rising cost of education, the conversation often returns to Act 46, the 2015 law…

  • The Problem with Project 2025

    Recently, Rick Hess, an opinion contributor at EducationWeek, interviewed Lindsey Burke, lead author on the education section in Project 2025, the controversial agenda issued earlier this year by the Heritage Foundation. According to Hess, “Given the attention is has drawn, the questions it’s raised, and the fact that it seems likely to be an object…

  • Friday News Roundup

    TGIF! Here’s your News Roundup. In Cities with School Choice, Low-Income Kids Catching Up to Wealthier Peers (The 74) The 74 reported recently that, “A new report form the Progressive Policy Institute finds that over the last decade, low-income students in large districts that aggressively expanded public school choices have started to catch up to…

  • We Are Better Than This

    It’s amazing how America has become focused on issues that are, at best peripheral, when it comes to mattering much in our daily lives. Our politics are filled with these types of issues right now. For example, 7.6% of U.S. adults identify as LGBTQ+, but the amount of time we spend debating about gay rights,…

  • A Different Way to Learn, Part 2

    More on competency-based learning. Recently, EducationWeek published an article titled “What Educators Have to Say About Competency-Based Education.” The educators’ remarks are mixed – some positive, some negative – but overall one has to wonder, based upon these comments, if competency-based education can ever replace “seat time” within our traditional K-12 public school system. The…

  • A Different Way to Learn

    When it comes to assessing learning, it’s time for competency-based outcomes to replace seat time. It’s time for young learners to demonstrate skills – like reading, writing, problem-solving, and character development – versus knowing the 50 states of the United States or the first 20 elements on the periodic chart. As EducationWeek reported recently (“It’s…

  • Lost Hope

    When I was a public school leader, I would get really excited when I came across an innovative learning organization, hoping that either my team or others could replicate the idea and scale it. Philadelphia’s Building 21 would have been one of those learning organizations. According to a recent article appearing in The 74, “From…

  • Friday News Roundup

    It’s Friday! Your News Roundup awaits. Report: Nearly 500 Schools Underenrolled and Chronically Underperforming (The 74) The 74 announced late last month that, “Low performing schools are twice as likely to have lost substantial numbers of students – with nearly 500 losing 20% or more since the pandemic, marking them potential candidates for closures, a…

  • Hard Coaching

    Part of the problem with getting schools to improve their performance is their leadership’s inability to confront the brutal facts, as leadership guru Jim Collins wrote in his book Good to Great years ago. Instead of being brutally honest with each other, too many traditional school leaders choose to ignore facts that, if confronted, would…