While ESEA waivers grabbed the headlines this week, Fordham bloggers offered up commentary on all of the week’s big education stories. Here’s a recap by the numbers:
- Mike made 3 bold predictions about the fallout from President Obama’s waiver announcement in a Gadfly Weekly editorial.
- Terry described the 5 key factors to Cleveland Mayor Fred Jackson’s plan to turn around the city’s schools on the Ohio Gadfly Daily blog.
- Only 25 percent of teachers described summative assessments as “extremely” or “very” valuable in a recent survey, but on the Common Core Watch blog Kathleen Porter-Magee argues that these tests are a crucial tool for measuring student achievement.
- 40 percent of D.C. public school students attend charter schools, but Adam Emerson warns on the Choice Words blog that increased collaboration between DCPS and charters carries risks.
- On the Board’s Eye View blog, Peter Meyer wonders why Deborah Meier sees fascism in a model of schooling that does a pretty good job educating 32,000 kids.
- Pennsylvania Governor Tom Corbett proposed raising state K-12 education spending to $5.4 billion this week, but Chris Tessone wrote on the Stretching the School Dollar blog that the Keystone State needs to make lasting changes to its school funding policies.
Stay on top of all of Fordham’s commentary and analysis by subscribing to our combined RSS feed and checking out all six of the Gadfly Daily’s blogs.