Cash-starved Arizona vaults from 40th place to finalist
Ann-Eve Pedersen of the Arizona Education Network says she can think of just one reason why the economically depressed state became a surprise finalist on Tuesday in the second round of the $4 billion Race to the Top competition, after finishing 40th out of 41 competitors in March.
Putting the brakes on the growing for-profit school industry?
It’s easy to understand the appeal of for-profit colleges, especially with the push to get more Americans to earn degrees. They offer personalized recruiting and generous financial aid packages, along with a range of professional, vocational and technical training and degrees. They take full advantage of federal financial aid dollars and advertise and market their [...]
Reversing lagging U.S. college completion rates: What will it take?
There was a time when the U.S. could boast it had the highest percentage of its adult population aged 25-34 with college degrees, but it’s been a long time since anyone could make that claim. Lately, there’s been a great deal of attention focused on the need to ramp up the number of college graduates, and a report released on Thursday by the College Board came with a statistic that is intended to create alarm: We are now twelfth.
NYC’s strategy for shutting schools leaves some students lost in transition
An eerie silence pervades the cavernous hallways as Samuel J. Tilden High School prepares to graduate its final class. After 80 years, the hulking Brooklyn institution that once graduated a thousand seniors a year will host a scaled down ceremony on Friday, handing out diplomas to about 65 survivors. Years of plunging graduating rates and [...]
For-profits gaining ground, but changes loom
SACRAMENTO – A year ago, Joseph Carrillo Jr. had to fight to get into overcrowded classes here at the public American River College. He couldn’t find a guidance counselor, and he felt lost. So he switched to the private University of Phoenix, where everything fell into place — at 17 times the cost.
Survey: Recession, budget cuts derail Pre-K expansion
Early education programs are struggling to serve all the children who qualify for them, as the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression has caused states to slash budgets and reduce spending, according to an annual survey of state-funded programs by the National Institute for Early Education Research at Rutgers University. Expansion in 2009 was [...]
Lafayette lessons: Attacks on Asian students mirror experience at Brooklyn school
Attacks against Philadelphia students echo similar incidents at Brooklyn school, now set to close.
Can career and technical classes be rigorous too?
A new approach seeks to meet demands of the modern workplace. (Just don’t call it “voc ed.”)
Blog — From England, with worries: toddlers need more support
Some troubling research emerged last week from the think tank Demos in England, including a frightening finding: More than one in 10 children begin primary school unable to learn and unwilling to build relationships with their peers. The research has enormous implications for their ability to function in school in years to come and shines [...]













