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2007 Winner, Editor's Choice Best Education Blog
-- Performancing.com

2006 Winner, Best K-12 Administration Blog -- "Best of the Education Blog Awards"
-- eSchool News and Discovery Education

2006 Finalist, Best Education Blog
-- Weblog Awards

Least influential of education's most influential information sources.
-- Education Week Research Center

"unexpectedly entertaining"..."tackle[s] a potentially mindfogging subject with cutting clarity... they're reading those mushy, brain-numbing education stories so you don't have to!"
-- Slate's Mickey Kaus

"a very smart blog... [if] you're trying to separate the demagogic attacks on NCLB from the serious criticism, this is the site to read"
-- The New Republic's Ryan Lizza

"everyone who's anyone reads Edu Commentary"
-- Hechinger Institute on Education and the Media's Richard Colvin

"full of very lively short items and is always on top of the news...He gets extra points for skewering my high school rating system"
-- Jay Mathews, The Washington Post

"a daily dose of information from the education policy world, blended with a shot of attitude and a dash of humor"
-- Education Week

"designed to cut through the fog and direct specialists and non-specialists alike to the center of the liveliest and most politically relevant debates on the future of our schools"
-- The New Dem Daily

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-- Education Gadfly

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-- Alexander Russo, This Week In Education

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-- Mike Antonucci, Intercepts

"…the big dog on the ed policy blog-ck…"
-- Michele McLaughlin, AFT Blog

"I check Edu Commentary several times a day, especially since I cut back on caffeine"
-- Joe Williams, fallen journalist, Executive Director, Democrats for Education Reform

"...one of the few bloggers who isn't completely nuts"
-- Mike Petrilli, Thomas B. Fordham Foundation

"I have just three 'go to' websites: The Texas Legislature, Texas Longhorn sports, and Edu Commentary"
-- Sandy Kress, former education advisor to President Bush and former chairman, Dallas Board of Education

"penetrating analysis in a lively style on a wide range of issues"
-- Walt Gardner, champion letter-to-the-editor writer and retired teacher

"thugs"
-- Susan Ohanian

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EduReading


Collective Bargaining in Education: Negotiating Change in Today's Schools

Edited by Jane Hannaway and Andrew J. Rotherham


Why Newsweek's List of America's 100 Best High Schools Doesn't Make the Grade

By Andrew J. Rotherham
and Sara Mead

A Qualified Teacher
in Every Classroom

Edited by Frederick M. Hess, Andrew J. Rotherham,
and Kate Walsh

America's Teaching Crisis

By Jason Kamras and Andrew J. Rotherham

Rethinking Special Education For A New Century

Edited by Chester E. Finn, Jr., Andrew J. Rotherham
& Charles R. Hokanson, Jr.

Making The Cut: How States Set Passing Scores on Standardized Tests

By Andrew J. Rotherham

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a schoolyard blog
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Rick Hess' World HQ
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Standard & Poor's School Evaluation Services
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Trust for Early Education
Uncommon Schools
United States Department of Education
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WestEd

Opinions on Edu Commentary reflect the views of the author, Education Sector does not take institutional positions. Outgoing links do not constitute an endorsement.

Friday, November 19, 2004

Klein On Hellholes, NASBE On Early-Childhood, Post on IDEA...And, More Spellings Reax!

Did Joel Klein really call some high schools in New York City hellholes and then back off later? NY Daily News has the scoop. Note: Please see this clarification.

NASBE has produced a concise and useful overview about early-childhood assessments and current policy debates on that topic.

The Washington Post editorial board gives props to the new IDEA bill.

Transcript of Ed Week's chat about charter schools can be found here.

More Spellings reax: NSBA loves her, Center for American Progress not surprisingly hates her. Interesting...

Yikes! Someone call Alfie Kohn! Mathew Yglesias says "bribe the kids" to do well in school!
Posted at 2:34 PM | Comments: 0 | Link to this item | Email this post

Thursday, November 18, 2004

Spellings Round-Up And Loveless V. NAEP

NYT on Spellings here, CSM here, Wash. Post here. Just how pissed are conservatives about this? Also, word is Deputy Secretary Hickock leaving...that will likely trigger other departures.

NYT's Schemo writes up the new IDEA bill, which overall is a step forward on that policy in several key ways.

Brookings' Tom Loveless takes on NAEP math questions, NAEP officials not pleased. Film at 11.
Posted at 8:57 AM | Comments: 0 | Link to this item | Email this post

I Put A Spell On You!
Edu Commentary exclusive! Must credit Edu Commentary! Here is the text of the first memo from Margaret Spellings to political appointees at Department of Education and conservative education activists:

From: Incoming Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings
To: Department of Education political appointees, Bill Bennett, Chester Finn, Clint Bolick, Heritage Foundation staff, and various "family" groups
Date: November 18, 2004
Re: The New Regime


I put a spell on you
Because you're mine.
You better stop
The things that you're doin'.
I said "Watch out!
I ain't lyin', yeah!
I ain't gonna take none of your
Foolin' around;
I ain't gonna take none of your
Puttin' me down;
I put a spell on you
Because you're mine.
All right!


Posted at 8:53 AM | Comments: 0 | Link to this item | Email this post

Wednesday, November 17, 2004

Spellings And Choice...The Panic And The Irony

The usual suspects are very concerned cum panicked that Bush II will mean an explosion of choice proposals from the administration. Actually, it's the choiceniks that should probably be concerned, putative Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings is not a big choice fan. The good gossip is filled with funny anecdotes about Spellings dissin' various voucher schemes and the ideological fervor that underpins them.

In fact, she's not even that hot on charter schools (possibly because Texas isn't exactly the leading model on charter quality...). Ironically, the usual suspects have a lot less to worry about than even supporters of public charter schools.

Of course, if the President was looking for a place to build some bipartisan unity on education policy, he could do a lot worse than focusing on charter schools.
Posted at 11:18 AM | Comments: 0 | Link to this item | Email this post

Charter Chat
Ed Week is hosting a chat on charter schools, tomorrow at 1 EST. More info here.
Posted at 11:15 AM | Comments: 0 | Link to this item | Email this post

NRA, IDEA, Spellings Bio...And, Boardbuzz Does Blaine
The National Rifle Association's lawyers just live for moments like this. And then tend to win in court, too...

Want to learn more about Margaret Spellings? This story starts with her childhood...she was a good student...

One can be skeptical of or opposed to vouchers and still find BoardBuzz's enthusiasm for Blaine Amendments pretty off-putting.

AP's Feller writes up the current state of play on IDEA reauthorization.
Posted at 10:30 AM | Comments: 0 | Link to this item | Email this post

Tuesday, November 16, 2004

More Paige Turning

NYT's Schemo takes a look at Paige's exit as does MO's Sager. Both note that conservative choiceniks are likely to be let down by the Spellings appointment. However, showing that preemption is not just a military strategy, Fordham's Finn calls for choice to be the central organizing principle of Bush II.

Here's Paige's resignation statement. How does he know that about the reading scores? Russ Whitehurst, over to you?

Wash Post's Jay Mathews takes a look at the complicated issue of measuring learning in college. And, NCES has new data on collegiate persistence and completion here.

On Sunday this Washington Post editorial made a good point about the suburban achievement gap and how No Child is laying the problem bare.
Posted at 7:57 AM | Comments: 0 | Link to this item | Email this post

Monday, November 15, 2004

More Paige's Exit...It's Spellings!

More on Rod Paige's exit in this Washington Post story (last graf). Say what you want about his tenure, which has certainly had its share of problems, he was loyal to the Bushies. But his loyalty was not reciprocated in the handling of his departure...
Posted at 11:19 AM | Comments: 0 | Link to this item | Email this post

Charters In MA
More action coming on charters in MA...a textbook study of the issues outlined below...
Posted at 11:14 AM | Comments: 0 | Link to this item | Email this post

Get Your Recriminations Right Here!
Give Democrats some credit, it was almost a week after the election before the recriminations started…

But they've started….The New Republic is recriminations central right now, with an editorial, a piece by Marty Peretz, an insider look by Ryan Lizza, and a call for still more recriminations by TNR editor Peter Beinart.

Also, in The Wall Street Journal former Lieberman aide Dan Gerstein says it was less Kerry than larger problems for the party.

Both Peretz and Gerstein cite teachers' unions as one cause of the problems Democrats have making a case for progressive change on education policy. In the large sense that's certainly true enough and TNR has been pointing it out for some time. Yet it's not fair to lay that at Kerry's feet. He did challenge teacher union orthodoxy (most notably their quasi-Marxist fealty to pay schemes that do not reward teachers for challenging assignments, special skills, or exceptional performance) and he didn't mindlessly carry their water in his policy proposals.

But, this election was not about education. Other than as a framing issue, Kerry would have gained little by relentlessly hammering on education policy issues. In fact, it would have distracted from the issues of security and leadership that he did need to emphasize. And, Kerry's support for No Child but concern about how the Bush Administration has handled implementation is one of those positions that's at once defensible but hard to explain to voters in a 30-second soundbite and easy for an opponent to twist.

Going forward, however, an obvious challenge for Democrats is to put forward a crisper, more progressive, and reform oriented vision on education, as well as other issues, because the tired old dogs just don't hunt anymore.

See this essay by Andrei Cherney in TNR for more ideas.
Posted at 10:11 AM | Comments: 0 | Link to this item | Email this post