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Monday, April 30
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Mon 30 Apr 2007 10:23 PM EDT
Better. Faster. Cheaper. Review a sample. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Mon 30 Apr 2007 10:17 PM EDT
If Nicholas Negaoponte is really on the verge of selling his under $200 laptop to 19 states, it may not change school, but it will certainly change how we think about education. more »
Sunday, April 29
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Sun 29 Apr 2007 03:37 PM EDT
No joke. Tom Horne equates the Bush Administration's Department of Education and No Child Left Behind with Soviet Russia. The day the world turned upside down? Not exactly, just as good an example as one could ask for of public educations' established constituencies' desperate need to kill this bill in re-athorization - and the role of propaganda in its campaign. With Senator Clinton accusing Bush of using K-12 as a chance to abuse the taxpayer with runaway, Halliburton-style capitalism, and Republican Horne seeing echoes of Leninism - NCLB must be doing something right. more »
Saturday, April 28
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Sat 28 Apr 2007 07:59 AM EDT
Normally, a summary would be part of New Education Economy®, but there's already something of a backlog of important material, so here are quick observations and key excerpts. more »
Friday, April 27
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Fri 27 Apr 2007 04:43 PM EDT
A glimpse into the politicization of "Scientifically-Based Reading Research" as practiced by the Bush Administration under Reading First.
An email uncovered by Title I Monitor reporters Andrew Brownstein and Travis Hicks links major publishers to Reading First through Reid Lyon to Spellings via Beth Ann Bryan, reportedly the White House link to the Department of Education. The communication contains protests from a senior publishing official of New York City's impending decision to purchase "whole language and incidental phonics window-dressing", when that publisher was in the midst of becoming a "true believer" in Reading First. Now, as far as anyone watching Reading First knows, no major publisher actually developed programs demonstrated to improve student achievement by rigorous evaluations. So - what gives? more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Fri 27 Apr 2007 01:09 PM EDT
The idea that teachers are more like infantry soldiers or assembly line workers than health care professionals or athletics coaches - suggests that sudents are more like a faceless enemy or cars than unique people. The idea that the nation's largest and most diverse set of teachers and students is amenable to one best way is a form of arrogance bordering on idiocy. more »
Thursday, April 26
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Thu 26 Apr 2007 06:12 PM EDT
A "must read" that underlines the industry's grave challenge - overcoming its apparent irrelevance to presidential candidates' positions on k-12 reform. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Thu 26 Apr 2007 12:17 PM EDT
Where school partnerships are not working, a provider's only moral choice is to exit. But the high costs of finding partners demands close attention to the initial selection process. KIPP's decision is a sign of the whole school design provider's maturity. more »
Wednesday, April 25
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Wed 25 Apr 2007 09:01 PM EDT
Over at This Week in Education, former Hill education staffer and problog/journalist Andrew Russo has gotten hold of a fax sent by House Education Committee Chair George Miller... more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Wed 25 Apr 2007 05:43 PM EDT
Most of themes in this essay, written with Paul Hill and Robin Lake, were not welcomed by the movement's leadership when it was first published by Education Week in 1996. Escape was their policy; reform was ours. Today, as the essay is included in The Last Word: the Best Commentary and Controversy in American Education, most of its ideas are "what the best people think" albeit, unattributed and honored in the breach. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Wed 25 Apr 2007 12:03 PM EDT
April 17: Our Industry's Interests in NCLB II: (V) Preserve Higher Standards and Accountability
April 24: Reading First Hearing Offers Investors A Rare Political Opportunity more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Wed 25 Apr 2007 10:37 AM EDT
Whether the school improvement industry will benefit or be lost in the controversy is a matter strategic positioning. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Wed 25 Apr 2007 01:00 AM EDT
Essential reading for the school improvement industry executive.
Free download until June 1. more »
Tuesday, April 24
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Tue 24 Apr 2007 11:02 PM EDT
Let's start with EdNet's upcoming Impact Award, and then SIIA's Codies.... more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Tue 24 Apr 2007 08:36 PM EDT
What does it say? What does it really mean?
An exercise in "content analysis." more »
Monday, April 23
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Mon 23 Apr 2007 05:18 PM EDT
If the testimony given in Friday's House Education and Labor Committee hearing represents the Department of Education's capacity to manage the transition to the research-based market inherent in NCLB, no right-minded investor should be putting money into school improvement providers. And pro-NCLB members of Congress must understand that without investment, the innovation required to literally leave no child behind and hold the high ground of the global economy will not occur. Congress needs to fix the glitch. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Mon 23 Apr 2007 01:45 AM EDT
But the high school arena is fragmented by 50 states, and a host of other structural factors. Nothing like the test prep or online higher ed markets where one standardized offering can serve a national market. A nice business, yes. Highly scaleable, doubtful. more »
Saturday, April 21
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Sat 21 Apr 2007 12:58 PM EDT
The people of New Orleans deserve to be more than the background of well-intentioned but unrealistic announcements promising help. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Sat 21 Apr 2007 11:35 AM EDT
Consultants working for the Department of Education and with states on the implementation of the program collectively benefited to the tune of $1 million by steering district purchases their way. The Justice Department is investigating criminal charges. Now maybe editors in the mainstream media will focus some journalistc resources on a story that speaks volumes about the sham passing for regulation of the school improvement industry. more »
Friday, April 20
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Fri 20 Apr 2007 12:28 PM EDT
Free download of monthly listing/hotlinks from Washington k-12 agencies and interest groups until June 1. more »
Thursday, April 19
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Thu 19 Apr 2007 10:08 PM EDT
The better to deflect attention from the real problems: 1) people in positions of authority who either abused their public trust or were not competent to exercise it according to any reasonable standard of care; 2) the Department's utter incapacity to behave differently as the federal role in public education becomes one of fueling a school improvement industry, and 3) the Administration's lack of any strategy to turn the Department around so it can handle an emerging market implicit in No Child Left Behind. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Thu 19 Apr 2007 02:06 PM EDT
Any school improvement provider with a corporate culture committed to ongoing research as part of product development should be giving this trade group a careful look. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Thu 19 Apr 2007 01:26 PM EDT
Forget this as a “education” story – why haven’t newspaper editors seen it as a political story and a real humdinger of a tale? Why are they not outraged at the abuse of our government for personal and ideological ends? Your editor just doesn’t get it, and would appreciate someone in journalism setting him straight. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Thu 19 Apr 2007 10:56 AM EDT
The SES providers' trade group was pleased with the House Education and Labor subcomittee hearing's testimony. more »
Tuesday, April 17
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Tue 17 Apr 2007 03:49 PM EDT
Our weekly review of important reading for school improvement industry executives - and those who think strategically. more »
Monday, April 16
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Mon 16 Apr 2007 10:41 PM EDT
Still, who would you rather have as principal of your kid's school - Chamberlain or Churchill? more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Mon 16 Apr 2007 10:16 PM EDT
In the words of Voltaire, "the best is the enemy of the good." more »
Sunday, April 15
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Sun 15 Apr 2007 12:05 AM EDT
Your editor deconstructs a press release. It happens to be this release, but it could have been any. more »
Saturday, April 14
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Sat 14 Apr 2007 11:08 PM EDT
A company that will lose its contract has a greater institutional incentive to make sure its employees do right by these wards of the state than any agency that monoplizes the function. more »
Friday, April 13
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Fri 13 Apr 2007 12:27 PM EDT
Sorry, but "Data Driven Decision Making" is Coming to Capitol Hill. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Fri 13 Apr 2007 11:25 AM EDT
The basics of who we are, what we do and why we do it. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Fri 13 Apr 2007 08:10 AM EDT
No Retreat, No Surrender... Or Tired Out? more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Fri 13 Apr 2007 03:00 AM EDT
In their discussion of a new Fordham/AIR report on public school principals, Finn and Petrilli convey the unsurprising and not exactly new finding that most are not all that thrilled about the prospect of real managerial autonomy. It is still worth reading. more »
Thursday, April 12
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Thu 12 Apr 2007 11:18 PM EDT
Our monthly listing of announcements from the research and development community. Every item hotlined to the press page. Free dowmload until June 1. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Thu 12 Apr 2007 01:59 PM EDT
The reason reporters don't understand education research is not so much because education reporters don't take the time to understand - although they don't. It is because education research has not been important to education reporting - in the sense that covering it well has not been important to the sale of newspapers or the field's trade reports. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Thu 12 Apr 2007 10:48 AM EDT
The first question for the industry is whether this means the end of Edison in Philadelphia... and maybe time to sell off the company for parts and re-brand what's left. If you were a superintendent, would you propose the firm to your board? more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Thu 12 Apr 2007 10:04 AM EDT
If you've got it (scientifically based research), flaunt it. But note as well that the standard of beauty is rising in this market. What's glamorous this year will soon seen quaint. Firms need to look beyond compliance with an evaluation requirement to the role of evaluation in program quality and ongoing development. more »
Wednesday, April 11
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Wed 11 Apr 2007 07:39 PM EDT
Your editor did not plan on becoming a playing field for this contest, but Brian Gill - who led RAND's study of contract schools in Philadephia, has provided the thnk tank's response to Paul Peterson's critique. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Wed 11 Apr 2007 03:31 PM EDT
The voucher debate noted in the article is an example of how today's debates in education research too often resemble a wild clash of tribal shamans wielding magic talismans around an ancient campfire instead of the rational presentation of evidence to a finder of fact, followed by cross-examination, in the calm of a 21st century courtroom. For this reason alone, the school improvement industry should neither hestitate to join the conversation nor feel itself unqualified to participate in discussion. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Wed 11 Apr 2007 10:43 AM EDT
There is a potentially serious flaw in RAND's approach. School improvement program providers need to stop and think about whether the direction evaluation is taking is setting them up for mediocrity - or even asking the right question. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Wed 11 Apr 2007 08:45 AM EDT
All good points, all worth thinking about. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Wed 11 Apr 2007 02:00 AM EDT
Our Industry’s Interests in NCLB II: (IV) A Closer Look at School Improvement more »
Tuesday, April 10
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Tue 10 Apr 2007 08:38 PM EDT
Unless you work for the President, it is a very bad idea to make Congress issue a subpoena for your appearance. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Tue 10 Apr 2007 07:40 PM EDT
Our Weekly Report Providing Professional Reading for Industry Leaders.
Until June 1 it can be downloaded for free. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Tue 10 Apr 2007 01:02 PM EDT
The "evaluation wars" expand to school contracting. more »
Monday, April 9
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Mon 09 Apr 2007 07:00 PM EDT
If the parent pays for the service, the typical story on the provider is generally positive. If the taxpayer foots the bill, the reporter generally casts the provider in a negative light. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Mon 09 Apr 2007 06:24 PM EDT
Today's announcement by RAND of a $6 million grant from the Department of Education for a "gold standard" review of Cargegie Learning's Cognitive Tutor is welcome, but industry leaders should not see it as a chance to buy time or kick the political can of evaluation down the road. The study is welcome, but it should also be mildly worrisome. more »
Sunday, April 8
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Sun 08 Apr 2007 01:17 PM EDT
Another pundit catches up with NCLB's real prospects. Its time to start making your own political assessments. more »
Saturday, April 7
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Sat 07 Apr 2007 08:42 AM EDT
A year ago, six months ago, even six weeks ago, the "experts" were telling the school improvement industry not to worry about reauthorization .... more »
Friday, April 6
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Fri 06 Apr 2007 12:25 PM EDT
The joint press release. Each organizations' recommendations will be excerpted in the 4/9 New Education Economy®. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Fri 06 Apr 2007 12:02 PM EDT
Is the Administration moving down a slipperly slope or drawing a line in the sand? more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Fri 06 Apr 2007 11:17 AM EDT
After the Reading First fiasco, expect the Inspector General to remain a part of the Department's halting movement towards a market mindset. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Fri 06 Apr 2007 08:43 AM EDT
With four years of experience in the business, we can safely say that on any given week, between 75 and 200 new RFPs are issued, and perhaps 600 more are still open. It's a much smaller number than most marketing professionals would like. More important it places a premium on information systems that find all the opportunities a firm knows it will follow, and identify all the opportunities a firm should follow. more »
Thursday, April 5
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Thu 05 Apr 2007 03:30 PM EDT
Reading First, the gift that keeps on giving (reporters' new stories).... more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Thu 05 Apr 2007 11:06 AM EDT
It is the single most important investment in managing the school improvement industry's political risks. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Thu 05 Apr 2007 07:59 AM EDT
It is unlikely that the media will treat this report with much subtlety, but the study may tell us much more about the state of the evaluation art than the efficacy of technlogy-based software programs. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Thu 05 Apr 2007 07:16 AM EDT
School Improvement Industry is moving to monthly publication of its three announcement reports covering Politics, Providers and Research. more »
Wednesday, April 4
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Wed 04 Apr 2007 10:55 PM EDT
If you've got it (research), flaunt it. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Wed 04 Apr 2007 10:36 PM EDT
There are three kinds of programs that embody Scientifically Based Research.... It's no surprise that while other firms are having a difficult time, Carnegie is adding sales staff. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Wed 04 Apr 2007 09:37 PM EDT
Is anyone other than a major publisher making (good) money? If you are, please let us know with a comment. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Wed 04 Apr 2007 08:54 PM EDT
Annual reports are not only a source of financial data, they offer insights to corporate self-image, perceptions of the business environment, strategy, and risk assessment. Its generally a good idea for even the smallest firms to understand the dominant players' view of the world. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Wed 04 Apr 2007 04:08 PM EDT
If you are a school improvement provider looking for investment, expect to wait. On the other hand, there's no reason not to invest in one of the big publishers. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Wed 04 Apr 2007 03:36 PM EDT
Perhaps there is a bit of air between Mrs. Clinton's Senate and campain staffs. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Wed 04 Apr 2007 02:53 PM EDT
Our Industry’s Interests in NCLB II: (III) Back Kennedy and Miller on a Bigger Budget more »
Tuesday, April 3
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Tue 03 Apr 2007 07:59 PM EDT
Every child is important, but school systems are really designed for most students. If a child falls outside of some comfortable norm, mean or average, most school systems have a hard time meeting their needs. Good business practice argues for leaving the hard to serve customer to providers who can serve them well and efficiently. Many school systems have a hard time doing either with students who have any kind of special needs. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Tue 03 Apr 2007 07:15 PM EDT
From Your Editor: When the phrase “education industry” arises in conversations among educators, policy analysts, politicians, reporters and even the interested public, it usually said with a tone of skepticism and often in the pejorative. This is soon followed by “privatization,” the label for private firms operating public schools. From here, it is a short leap to “vouchers” and the idea of private firms running private schools with public money outside the accountability regime that applies to public schools.
Employed in a few sentences, these phrases invariably create the impression of something unprecedented and amiss in public education. To whit - a monolithic movement of companies taking on the core teaching and learning functions of schools - and earning profits that might otherwise be going to “educate the kids.” more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Tue 03 Apr 2007 07:07 PM EDT
The attached e-mail from Software and Information Industry Education Division VP Karen Billings is the first evidence of any k-12 trade group ("old industry" or "new industry") adressing federal evaluation of k-12 programs as more than a communications challenge. The substance of its premptive comments on the Department of Education's forthcoming study of the value added by technology to student achievement is less important than the decision to comment. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Tue 03 Apr 2007 12:16 PM EDT
Prof. Richard Allington of the University of Tennesse at Knoxville, a Reading Recovery defender and former President of the International Reading Association asks the most important question in his remarks to Education Week on the program's postive rating by the Department of Education's What Works Clearinghouse: “[A]re we going to take all the interventions off the Reading First Web sites that don’t meet the What Works criteria?... I don’t have a lot of confidence that anyone in Washington actually cares about the evidence.”... This is the point Cong. Miller needs to keep foremost in mind during the House education committee's upcoming hearings on Reading First.... And in the end, this question is the key issue for those betting on the school improvement industry as a good investment. The What Works' bar is pretty low, and if its results don't matter to the use of federal funds, the new firms can't compete against the established players or the unfettered discretion of department officials. Meaningful standards of performance are the only basis of their competive advantage. Remarkably, the research-driven providers have not organized themselves to bring their expertise to bear on this question. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Tue 03 Apr 2007 11:42 AM EDT
Every school improvement provider is not automatically viewed with scepticism by the press. The determining factor seems to be whether the firm is perceived to work within the system or against its constituencies.... It also helps when the firm is seen to have roots in education and research rather than business and finance. It also helps if the firm has made ongoing evaluation a priority.... If you are the CEO of a school improvement provider, or an investor, or a communications firm with these clients, the pattern deserves close study. more »
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Tue 03 Apr 2007 09:57 AM EDT
Every district that goes all-digital takes an important step in separating substance from media (i.e., educational content from paper) and breaking up a market controlled by a handful of publishers.... Now all we need to do is figure out how to iden | |||