Archive for August, 2010
Life in the Matrix
One of the most frustrating aspects of education policy is the pre-dominance of ‘free marketeers’ driving public discourse on schooling despite the fact that the world economy continues to struggle after an economic meltdown brought about, in large part, by ‘free market’ ideology. While a small subset of economists and political economists are attempting to [...]
Posted: August 30th, 2010 under The Dismal Science.
Comments: none
Detachment
Back in June, I noted that the growing un-popularity of D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty and D.C. School Chancellor Michelle Rhee among Fenty’s political base posed a serious risk to his re-election campaign, and I also noted that the oligarchs were weighing in with a threat to pull their funding from the DCPS experiment if their [...]
Posted: August 29th, 2010 under Education Policy, Politics.
Comments: none
Saturday Linkage: Third World America Edition
De-constructing Libertarianism in one question… Naked Capitalism
How do libertarians propose to respond to the power of large enterprises?
Fiscal Austerity and Third World America… Baseline Scenario
The financial crisis may be behind us, but the link to the likely intense debate this fall regarding fiscal policy is direct — we are told that fiscal austerity [...]
Posted: August 28th, 2010 under General.
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Disaster Capitalism in Post-Katrina NOLA Schools
As the public hand-wringing over the slow pace of re-development in post-Katrina New Orleans reaches its crescendo with the five year anniversary of the disaster, the subject of public schooling in NOLA is again receiving a lot of attention from news media. EdWeek mirrors other major media outlets in constructing a he said/she said narrative [...]
Posted: August 27th, 2010 under Education Policy, Politics.
Comments: 1
Polling Team Obama
As the luster has begun to fade on the Obama administration, the weight of a poor economy, the health care reform debacle, and the growing distaste for pointless land wars in Asia have been steadily grinding away at Team Obama’s poll numbers. One bright spot for Obama has been that he has polled well on [...]
Posted: August 26th, 2010 under Education Policy, Politics.
Comments: none
Standard Farce
If you haven’t been regularly visiting Tom Hoffman’s place you should be. He has been consistent and thorough in de-constructing the roll-out of the Common Core Standards Initiative. Yesterday, he dove into an example of the disconnect between standards and student objectives…
That is, they yadda yadda the CCSSI standards, but what the students should [...]
Posted: August 25th, 2010 under Education Policy.
Comments: none
Branding the Enemy
As I’ve noted previously, one of the primary functions of a think tank troll is to not only promote the agenda of the organization and its funders but to also attack its perceived enemies. Yesterday, the Education Sector’s Bill Tucker offered us yet another example of this dynamic in action. Noted educator and critic Alfie [...]
Posted: August 24th, 2010 under Education Policy, Public Intellectuals, Think Tank Hackery.
Comments: 2
Tangled Web
I generally like Steve Benen’s work at Washington Monthly. However, like all professional bloggers, his job often entails highlighting the issues being pushed by the organization for which he works, often issues with which he obviously has little to no expertise. What caught my eye yesterday was that on the same day that Steve published [...]
Posted: August 24th, 2010 under Education Policy, Public Intellectuals.
Comments: none
TFA Sends Out Another Crop of Under-Prepared Teachers
Today’s Washington Post offers us a surprisingly critical look at this years new crop of under-prepared teachers being channeled into the most challenging schools in the country. While still framed in the “he said/she said” format that I hate so much, the article is notable for at least offering some valid critiques of the TFA [...]
Posted: August 23rd, 2010 under Education Policy.
Comments: 2
A Modest Proposal for LESS Formal Schooling
One of the most frustrating aspects of our current push for high academic standards and achievement [masquerading as a push for educational equality] is the expansion of ’schooling’ to the early years of childhood and with it the increasing fetishization of assessment. It is now commonplace for policy-makers and politicians to establish their educational street-creds [...]
Posted: August 22nd, 2010 under Education Policy, Popular Culture, Schools.
Comments: none
