The filmmaker’s passion and precision about ’70s cinema is worth adopting in education The post How to Really Know a Thing, Directed by Quentin Tarantino appeared first on Education Next.| Education Next
Paul E. Peterson interviews Clint Bolick, the 44th Justice of the Arizona Supreme Court The post The Education Exchange: After <em>Mahmoud</em>, How Far Will the Parent “Opt-Out” Movement Go? appeared first on Education Next.| Education Next
The school choice movement is winning the fight for universal eligibility. It must now set its sights on universal funding. The post Unleashing Education Freedom’s True Potential appeared first on Education Next.| Education Next
Our perpetual cycle of shutdowns, shakedowns, and deficits is teaching our youth all the wrong lessons about American principles The post The Wrong Kind of Civic Education appeared first on Education Next.| Education Next
How parental choice is reshaping special education in the Sunshine State The post Inside Florida’s Charter Schools for Exceptional Students appeared first on Education Next.| Education Next
Paul E. Peterson interviews Matt Sigelman, the President of the Burning Glass Institute The post The Education Exchange: How Valuable Are Credentials as an Alternative Career Pathway? appeared first on Education Next.| Education Next
Embrace competition and learn from private schools| Education Next
First causal study finds outsized impacts at “Core Knowledge” schools| Education Next
Middle-school scores preview college and career outcomes| Education Next
Profiles of the courageous few on the left who championed choice read today like ancient history The post The Progressive School Reform Voices Crying in the Wilderness appeared first on Education Next.| Education Next
Two books present distinct approaches to reforming local control of public schools The post School Governance Redux appeared first on Education Next.| Education Next
If Trump’s higher ed “compact” was good for the goose, AOC’s will be even better for the gander The post SecEd Maddow Makes College Presidents an Offer They Can’t Refuse appeared first on Education Next.| Education Next
Paul E. Peterson interviews Robert Henderson, Senior Fellow at the Manhattan Institute| Education Next
Part five of a five-part series on the new federal scholarship tax credit| Education Next
Has the use of digital technology impaired students’ ability to focus?| Education Next
Is a lack of principle making us thoughtless, or is thoughtlessness making us unprincipled?| Education Next
A new book has some ideas for how to get those leaders| Education Next
After intense scrutiny of higher education, federal government sets sights on K–12| Education Next
In school as at the pool, kids will sink if we don’t insist on excellence| Education Next
Massachusetts poised to toss out the nation's most successful reforms| Education Next
Big investments in labor and vendor contracts, but scant information on how the spending affects students.| Education Next
The question of the constitutionality of religious charter schools challenges the very identity of the public charter movement| Education Next
Addressing common queries about why diversity, equity, and inclusion is being targeted| Education Next
… So we can rewire schools for belonging and achievement| Education Next
Arizona offers a case study in how key variables of choice scholarships impact state budgets| Education Next
Does school spending matter after all?| Education Next
Policymakers have few useful tools to screen out “bad” teachers from the profession. The current screening tools are doing little more than unnecessarily limiting the supply of new teachers.| Education Next
How I lost faith in one of education research’s classic results| Education Next
Online mathematics programs may benefit most the kids who need it least| Education Next
The social price paid by the best and brightest minority students| Education Next