Assessing the Process Not the Product of Learning
Three Words for the New Semester
Vial and Error - Science’s wonders are oft built on blunders
. Does hindsight matter in history? From one perspective, the answer must always be a resounding "yes." We pay more attention to the education of a schoolboy in Switzerland named Albert, even before he himself had performed any calculations of note, than to that of his peers. Without this awareness of future significance, the actual labor of doing history would be frustratingly haphazard: endless errands into the wilderness of the past, searching for meaning amid the flotsam of forgotten lives. More...
Academic Freedom Has Limits. Where They Are Isn’t Always Clear
Kevin Carey. This month Florida Atlantic University fired a tenured professor of communications named James F. Tracy, citing his failure to file routine paperwork. This fact is both technically true and essentially false. Tracy was actually fired for bringing shame and embarrassment upon his university by publicly and vocally insisting that the massacre of 20 first-graders and six educators at Sandy Hook Elementary School in December 2012 did not occur. More...
Arendt Among the Americans
. Theodor Adorno, Hans Morgenthau, Billy Wilder, and Arnold Schoenberg were among the hundreds of intellectuals and artists who escaped the horrors of Hitler’s Reich by fleeing to America. Many of these refugees ultimately returned to Europe. But others remained in the United States, adapting to and, in some cases, adopting America. More...
In search of the key to closing achievement gaps
By Michael Hansen. In early January 2016, Dr. John B. King Jr. stepped into the role of acting secretary of Education, following Arne Duncan's resignation last month. More...
Half the people working in schools aren't classroom teachers—so what?
By Susanna Loeb. When we think of elementary and secondary schools, many of us picture students in classrooms taught by lone teachers, overseen by a principal. In reality, many adults work in schools other than teachers and principals. It may be surprising to learn that there are as many non-teaching adults as there are teachers in U.S. public schools. More...
If we forgive your student loans, will you please come teach?
By Li Feng. The Wall Street Journal recently featured the rapid growth of student loan debt—outstanding debt has more than tripled in the 10 years ending in 2012. Total student loan balances now exceed those of auto loans and credit cards, the largest categories of consumer debt in prior years. Currently, the total amount of outstanding student loan debt is over $1.3 trillion and still growing every second as interest continues to accrue. More...
How to improve education for low-income students
By Stuart M. Butler. One is the changing structure of families, which can derail progress for some. Another is the challenge for many workers of making enough to support their families and move up the economic ladder. And yet another is that our education system is not delivering what is needed for millions of Americans to succeed. More...