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The quest to create an education system that works for all kids

July 29, 2016 by Chris

We’re afraid to admit that demographics still predict destiny.

Paul Reville, Professor, Harvard Graduate School of Education Founder - Education Redesign Lab speaks during Poverty Matters: Making the Case for a System Overhaul at the Harvard Graduate School of Education inside Askwith Hall. Kris Snibbe/Harvard Staff Photographer
Paul Reville, Professor, Harvard Graduate School of Education Founder – Education Redesign Lab speaks during Poverty Matters: Making the Case for a System Overhaul at the Harvard Graduate School of Education inside Askwith Hall. Kris Snibbe/Harvard Staff Photographer

Harvard’s Graduate School of Education and Professor Paul Reville organize a series of nationwide meetings to address how high-quality educational opportunities can be experienced by students other than those in affluent neighborhoods. The solution? Community involvement, as teachers and principals cannot be solely responsible for any turnaround.

More information can be found at Education Redesign Lab.

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Filed Under: Economics, Education Reform Tagged With: Achievement Gap, By All Means, Community, Deval Patrick, Education Redesign Lab, Harvard, Harvard Graduate School of Education, Income Disparity, Paul Reville, Poverty

Why America’s Schools Have A Money Problem

July 27, 2016 by Chris

This article, posted by NPR‘s Morning Edition, provides insight into the current economic state of American education, with historical origins, and perspectives between low-income and affluent communities and school districts. It began with a question: “How do we pay for our schools?”

Today, our school funding system is infinitely more complex, but still based on that one, powerful idea — that education is a public good, and paying for it could be considered a public obligation.

map-us
Source: Education Week, U.S. Census Bureau. Credit: Alyson Hurt and Katie Park/NPR

 

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Filed Under: Economics, Education Finance, Education Reform Tagged With: Alexandra Olgin, Becky Vevea, Brown v. Board of Education, Cory Turner, Dan Carsen, Laura Isensee, Litigation, Morning Edition, NPR, Reema Khrais, San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez, Tim Lloyd

Star Spangled Geeks

July 22, 2016 by Chris

A long and significant read on how the United States Government bureaucracy reflexively inhibits change — in this case technology efficiencies — and how small reform victories cascade to larger initiatives. The article, by Steven Levy, is instructive on how organizations can always aspire to provide better service, better outcomes. How this ‘Rebel Alliance’ counts immediate, small victories as essential in proving worth are also essentials steps for consensus building. It’s good storytelling too, with villains and heroes, tensions, and graceful arcs.

Star Spangled Geeks

To the dismay of government contractors, the United States Digital Service is gloriously hacking away in the VA and the Pentagon.

USDS Administrator Mikey Dickerson and Deputy Administrator Haley Van Dyck. Credit: Maciek Jasik

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Filed Under: Consensus, Reform Tagged With: 18F, Collin Corrion, Department of Defense, DoD, GAO, Google, Government Accountability Office, Information Technology, Negotiation, Pentagon, Rebel Alliance, Silicon Valley, Steven Levy, United States Digital Service, VA, Veterans Affairs, White House

Rewards Are Backwards

July 11, 2016 by Chris

How one company emphasizes team over individual rewards to foster increased collaboration and higher organizational output.

Most leaders reward individual performance and then wonder why teamwork is sorely lacking. In contrast, learn how Menlo Innovations CEO Rich Sheridan takes the opposite approach.  His “no heroes” strategy has helped foster something far more powerful.  See for yourself.

http://dailyfuel.com/rich-sheridan-rewards-are-backwards/

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Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Collaboration, Teamwork

Lawmakers show they couldn’t care less about the health of Detroit’s schools

June 13, 2016 by Chris

Governor Rick Snyder

How Michigan’s legislators, Governor Rick Snyder, and the pro-charter school lobby circumvented bipartisanship and consensus to force a narrow ideological solution on Detroit’s schools.

When a British Prime Minister sold out Czechoslovakia to the Nazis, Winston Churchill acidly said words to the effect that he had been forced to choose between war and shame.

“He’s chosen shame now; he’ll get war later,” he said.

In Lansing this week, the Michigan Legislature had the choice between a plan that would actually give the Detroit schools a chance to revive, or selling out to the charter school lobby, which wants no restraints on terrible charter schools.

After a day of thinking about it, they unhesitatingly chose shame.

Speaker Kevin Cotter

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Filed Under: Education Reform, Legislation, Michigan Tagged With: Charter Schools, Detroit, Governor Rick Snyder, Jack Lessenberry, Representative Morris Hood, Senator Goeff Hansen, Speaker Kevin Cotter

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