Richard Lee Colvin
Richard Lee Colvin is the former editor of The Hechinger Report. He spent many years writing about education for newspapers in California, including the Los Angeles Times, where he reported on state and national education issues. Before that he worked for the Oakland Tribune, the Hayward Daily Review and the Associated Press. Colvin earned a bachelor’s degree from Oberlin College and a master’s degree in journalism from the University of Michigan. He has won numerous national awards for his coverage of education. He was twice selected as a media fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, and in 2000 won a Knight-Wallace fellowship for mid-career journalists at the University of Michigan.

Out of the starting blocks

Leaders working to fulfill their Race to the Top promises talk about the strategic, political, educational and technical challenges involved. One of the biggest? Communicating the program’s complexities

What can we do about the dropout problem?

This story was part of a special section of the July-August, 2010 edition of the Washington Monthly magazine that was guest edited by Richard Lee Colvin, editor of The Hechinger Report. In his first address to Congress in February 2009, when the nation teetered on the brink of economic collapse, President Obama declared that “dropping [...]

How Tennessee and Delaware won $600 million

The two states won out over 14 other finalists selected from the 40 states and the District of Columbia that applied for the money.

Rigor: It’s all the rage, but what does it mean?

Remember the three Rs – reading, writing and ’rithmetic? Get ready to add a fourth: rigor. It’s the buzzword in education. From presidents to principals, billionaires to school board members, governors to teachers, everybody seems to be promising rigor, demanding rigor, or deploring the lack of rigor in American schools.