The right to school choice is also about the right to stay put
Fordham’s latest report, "New Home, Same School," analyses the relationships among residential mobility, school mobility, and charter school enrollment. It finds, among other things, that changing schools is associated with a small decline in academic progress in math and a slight increase in suspensions—and that residentially mobile students in charter schools are less likely to change schools than their counterparts in traditional public schools.
David Griffith, Amber M. Northern, Ph.D. 1.25.2024
NationalFlypaper
Measuring What Matters: The Effects of National Board Certification on Advancing 21st Century Teaching and Learning
Amber M. Northern, Ph.D. 8.13.2008
NationalBlog
Summertime, and the learning's easy
8.13.2008
NationalBlog
Sweating the small stuff
Chester E. Finn, Jr., Marci Kanstoroom, Ph.D. 8.13.2008
NationalBlog
Overruling itself
8.13.2008
NationalBlog
Turning schools into prisons?
Stafford Palmieri 8.13.2008
NationalFlypaper
Why teach evolution?
8.13.2008
NationalFlypaper
"For Most People, College Is a Waste of Time"
8.13.2008
NationalFlypaper
Wow! We Made AYP!
Michael J. Petrilli 8.13.2008
NationalFlypaper
Day Four of the 2008 Education Olympics
8.13.2008
NationalFlypaper
Debbie Phelps's school didn't make AYP
Michael J. Petrilli 8.13.2008
NationalFlypaper
Advisor-palooza
Michael J. Petrilli 8.13.2008
NationalFlypaper
Ed ideas down under
Stafford Palmieri 8.12.2008
NationalFlypaper