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27 avril 2015

For Those Without One, College Degrees Are Seen as Important but Too Expensive

By Casey Fabris. In the eyes of Americans without college degrees, higher education seems necessary but too expensive.
That is one of the main takeaways in a report released on Monday by the American Enterprise Institute, "High Costs, Uncertain Benefits: What Do Americans Without a College Degree Think About Postsecondary Education?" More...
27 avril 2015

Iowa Legislator Wants to Give Students the Chance to Fire Underwhelming Faculty

By Madeline Will. A bill circulating in the Iowa State Senate offers a novel (and cutthroat) way to hold professors accountable: putting their fates into students’ hands, Survivor-style. Every year the professor most disliked by students would be voted off the campus. More...

27 avril 2015

For the Humanities, Some Good News Is Mixed With the Bad

By Madeline Will. In an otherwise grim picture of the field of humanities, there are still a few bright spots: Financial support for academic research in the humanities, which is typically dwarfed by spending to support other fields, has increased in recent years, and there are signs of rising interest in the humanities at the high-school and community-college levels. More...

27 avril 2015

The next phase of teacher evaluation reform: It's up to you, New York, New York!

By Thomas J. Kane. Since 2009, more than 40 states have rewritten their teacher evaluation policies. Given that school systems have neglected to manage classroom instruction for decades, it was inevitable that many schools would struggle to implement them. New York Governor Andrew Cuomo re-ignited the controversy by including a second round of teacher evaluation reforms in his budget this year.  Below, I describe the most promising opportunities in the new law.  Hopefully, New York will provide a blueprint for other states as they tweak their own systems in the coming years. More...

27 avril 2015

Getting millions to learn: Providing practical and entrepreneurial education in Uganda

By . Educate! addresses a challenge that is far too common in many countries around the world—a mismatch between what is taught in school and what skills are demanded by the labor market. Perhaps no country faces this challenge more acutely than Uganda, which has the world’s youngest population coupled with a youth unemployment rate as high as 62 percent. The vast majority of jobs available are in the informal sector. More...

27 avril 2015

Profiles of change: Employment, earnings, and occupations from 1990–2013

By . There has been tremendous focus in recent years on the plight of the typical American worker. With discussion among policymakers and the media around the impacts of globalization, technology, and other forces of change on the labor market, there are endless anecdotes describing the changing nature of work in the United States. This is a topic area in which the Hamilton Project has taken an active interest. In previous papers, the Project has considered the future of workdeclining earnings for the median male worker, and the disparate earnings of those with different levels or types of education. More...

27 avril 2015

Post-2015 education goals need to be realistic, and will require drastic change

By . The UNESCO Global Monitoring Report (GMR) launched its annual report card this week on the sidelines of the World Bank and IMF spring meetings. The report presents a comprehensive, 500-page overview of education progress over the past 15 years. More...

27 avril 2015

Partisanship and public opinion on the Common Core

By Michael B. Henderson and Martin R. West. Over the past year, the Common Core State Standards have risen from a topic of interest mainly to educators and school reformers to a top-tier issue in national politics. With likely Republican presidential candidates already staking out divergent positions, the standards and the federal government’s role in promoting them show strong signs of emerging as a key point of contention in the Republican primaries. How might this growing salience shape public opinion on the standards? A comparison of polls we’ve conducted nationally and in the state of Louisiana is instructive—and discouraging. More...

27 avril 2015

Should there be a No Child Left Behind for U.S. universities?

By Harry J. Holzer. With students at Corinthian University last week making national news for going on strike and refusing to pay their college loans, it’s an opportune time to re-examine the relationship between the costs of higher education, what students get in return and whether these institutions have any accountability to their charges and the taxpayers who often end up footing the bill.
These students are hardly alone: there are 40 million Americans with loans and their debt burden is over $1.3 trillion. More...

27 avril 2015

Creating skilled workers and higher-wage jobs

By Harry J. Holzer. Why is this the case? Some economists argue that labor market forces like technology and globalization shift demand away from middle-wage jobs (or even some higher-paying ones). Worker skills often remain too low for remaining middle- and high-wage jobs in health care, advanced manufacturing or various services, that often require more technical or communication skills and perhaps certain postsecondary credentials. In fact, many employers stress their inability to fill the middle-wage jobs they have, even at higher wages. More...

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