News, Announcements and Analysis from School Improvement Industry Week Online
View Article  Investment Bank Signal Hill’s Strange Take on Reading First
The Baltimore-based investment firm's k-12 specialists have an unusual perspective on Senator Kennedy’s report on the connections between consultants like Edward Kame' ennui and the major publishing firms – one that doesn’t serve the investment community’s need for information and analysis all that well.   more »
View Article  Does AYP Create "Perverse Incentives”?
Two items in Time magazine’s otherwise bland summary of the issues around NCLB reauthorization deserve a closer look. What is meant by “perverse” and what consequences were "unintended"?   more »
View Article  5/29 New Education Economy®
Your last free issue of essential reading for serious industry watchers. (With Special Offer for New Clients.)   more »
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View Article  Thank You to Fordham's Mike Petrilli
Your editor can't remember too many times he has agreed with one of the Fordham Foundation's most important gadflies. Still, he owes Mike Petrilli one for telling Education Next's editors that they might consider asking yours truly to comment on an article about education technology providers. (This post includes what Ed Next edited down for inclusion and the original "long" version.")   more »
View Article  The Case of the Eggshell-Thin Corneas or "Education Policy is a Contact Sport"
If you have something to say about a posting, the best way is to make a comment on the relevant page. If you are likely to be the subject of an edbizbuzz posting and your ego is not very robust, you may want to avoid reading the blog.    more »
View Article  SES in Chicago: How Much Will You Pay To Move Students' Tests Scores By One Percent?
The private sector is no more entitled to waste federal tax dollars than the public schools. When it comes to poor student performance, the defense that that parents feel good about their children’s teachers is no more relevant for SES providers under NCLB than it is for schools or districts. Applying the rule of student performance equally to schools and providers is about “accountability” to the taxpayer, “equal protection under the law” between schools and providers, and, in the end, the credibility of the entire school improvement industry. Is the taxpayer getting real value here?   more »
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View Article  Why the School Improvement Industry Does (or Does Not) Have a Place in the Discussion Between Researchers and Policy Makers in Public Education
Judging from AEI’s insider confab, you’d never know there was an industry. This time, blame the wonks for their blind spot, but the industry bears responsibility too.   more »
View Article  SII • The Podcast: Resources for Navigating the Industry's "Evaluation Shoals"
Notice to Mariners: A guide to essential logs, charts, and navigators on these dangerous waters. Our weekly podcast.   more »
View Article  5/22 New Education Economy
Until June 1 download our weekly professional reading for free.   more »
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View Article  School Improvement Providers' Blogs - Carnegie Learning
Every corporate blog is part of the firm’s marketing operations. That doesn’t mean they aren't worth reading. Content analysis of posts and press releases often yields useful information on a provider’s values, priorities, fears and strategy.   more »
View Article  Program Evaluation 101: What AIR’s Study of CSR Can Teach All School Reform Providers
Understanding the “program” in program evaluation. School improvement providers who want to get a handle on program evaluation should read Education Week’s Debra Viadero’s May 16 article. To your editor it illustrates two important points on “what” exactly is being evaluated, and how “the what” affects evaluation outcomes.   more »
View Article  K-12Leads & Youth Service Markets Report
125 New RFPs!   more »
View Article  Edison's New Ad: From "Here's What We Think" to "What Do You Think?"
The firm's adrift. Will listening help all that much?   more »
View Article  Should Spellings Resign?
Measured morally, without doubt, yes. Measured in terms of industry interests, it's not so clear.   more »
View Article  Respecting the Troops in K-12 Education
The “pointy-tip of the spear” in public education is the classroom teacher. The implications for the school improvement industry?   more »
View Article  Will Pearson Become the School Improvement Industry?
On top of so many other acquisitions relevant to k-12 the purchase of eCollege demonstrates that Pearson can buy major players in every segment of the new education industry. What’s next? What are the strategic issues?   more »
View Article  Adequate Yearly Progress Through Better Central Management?
When the "product" is people, the imposition of uniformity and top-down directives is no way to achieve high quality outcomes consistently. Seattle's Santorno and DC's Reinoso disagree. Is anyone familiar with the fate of East Germany's Kombinats?   more »
View Article  5/17 SII Announcements: Politics and Policy
Download this service for free until June 1. Every item hotlinked to its source.   more »
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View Article  SII • The Podcast: The School Improvement Industry's "Evaluation Shoals"
Must SES and Ed Tech providers follow charter schools, EMOs and CSR providers? Our weekly podcast.   more »
View Article  5/15 New Education Economy
Until June 1 download our weekly professional reading for free.   more »
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View Article  5/14 K-12Leads and Youth Service Markets Report
Our better, faster, cheaper way to find relevant RFPs.   more »
View Article  One Education Industry or Two?
You can't understand the market for school improvement services without appreciating the a struggle between k-12's old and new industries.   more »
View Article  Why Is Edward Kame' ennui Still Working for the Taxpayers?
The evidence in his emails is unambiguous: While Kame' ennui was working for the Department as a key consultant on Reading First regulation and implementation - a matter that required not only the reality of impartiality but the appearance of impartiality – he was also engaged in high-level lobbying on behalf of Pearson’s corporate position on Reading First. It's a hell of a story. Plus a footnote.    more »
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View Article  Senate Reading First Report Offers a Glimpse into Old v. New Education Industry
The report reveals details on the earnings of Reading First advisors, their engagement with publishers, and their decision to distance themselves from new industry Voyager in favor of the old industry publishers. It's worth pointing out that Voyager paid consulting fees while the publishers are still paying royalties. The authors/advisors' incentive to "work the system" clearly ran toward the publishers. This may explain why, from the materials investigators have uncovered so far, Voyager does not seem to have benefitted in any overt way in from its relationship with the group.    more »
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View Article  Checker Finn Explains Why Investing in K-12 Should Be Like Investing In Russian Oil
Quoting right-of-center Finn's defense of Reading First's peer review process in the "Political Risks" subsection of your business plan will do more to discourage investment than a thousand anti-privatization quotes from NEA's Reg Weaver.   more »
View Article  5/10 School Improvement Industry Research and Evaluation Announcements
Our monthly review of government and private sector research and evaluation organizations' announcements.   more »
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View Article  How Should We Value SES? LAUSD on Inputs and Outcomes
LAUSD’s study of SES providers’ performance begins to give us a sense of the likely contribution of tutoring to student achievement. Under the best conditions it is likely to be very small. The question then is value – results at a price. How should we price improvements in student performance? We still pay for inputs, but are starting to condition a provider’s right to remain eligible for the SES program on outcomes. Maybe we should pay for performance. So consider... how much should we pay for an average gain of three scale score points on the California Standards Test for English Lanuage Arts?   more »
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View Article  Tutor.com Raises $13.5 Million for Marketing
Tutor.com has raised $13.5 million to expand its marketing activities for Tutor.com Direct. $9.5 million comes in the form of equity from a gruop led by Intel Capital, $4 million in secured debt. By the standards of the emerging school improvement industry, its a lot of money. Compared against the national market where Tutor.com operates it's not. The real question is how much founder and CEO George Cigale intends to grow the company, how fast and how.   more »
View Article  Alexander Russo Reports on Venture Philanthropy's New Orleans Confab
To paraphrase President Kennedy’s characterization of Washington, venture philanthropy – sometimes called “the new philanthropy,” combines the humility of venture capital with the hands on capacity of the “old” philanthropy. After ten years in the field, does it matter to the school improvement industry?   more »
View Article  5/8 New Education Economy®
Essential reading for professionals in the school improvement industry. Free trial download here.   more »
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View Article  Pearson Acquires Harcourt’s Assessment and International Units from Reed Elsevier
The big get bigger. So what? There are implications.   more »
View Article  5/7 K-12Leads and Youth Service Markets Report
Our weekly report of grant and contract RFPs.   more »
View Article  SES Providers - The Way Off the Horns of a Dilemma
If the best prospect for tutoring having an impact on student performance is when it is closely tied to the classroom, many providers would also rather work for the district as a contractor than compete with it under SES. Herein lies the basis of an entirely new strategy for SES in NCLB II.   more »
View Article  Vallas to Run Louisiana RSD
The state's announcement and our earlier take on the effects of the move for the Big Easy and the City of Brotherly Love   more »
View Article  Wishful Thinking: EIA's Steve Pines Responds to edbizbuzz on the Tennessee Study of SES
The reaction of Education Industry Association Executive Director Steve Pines more or less tracks what your editor suggested to expect from most SES providers. Read the response. Then let's deconstruct it. Then read TN SES study co-author Steve Ross' reaction.    more »
View Article  Tennessee SES Study: "the prospect of a hanging" or "just another study?"
THIS IS NOT "JUST ANOTHER STUDY." It is a devastating evaluation of SES providers' value-added to student performance in Tennessee. It is not a death blow, but it is a body blow. The industry simply can't stand to repeat the finding "yielded no statistically reliable effects for any of the SES providers" next year. Whether SES providers' managers, boards and investors will take heed of the warning and act is an entirely different matter. Don't bet on it.   more »
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View Article  5/3 School Improvement Industry Announcements - Providers
Monthly report of industry announcements. Hotlinked to their source.   more »
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View Article  S&P 500 Index Fund Outperforms K-12: Why?
Your editor started a k-12 information services firm because he was more confident in the school improvement industry than in any individual segment or firm. This month’s issue of Class Notes by Amy W. Junker and Neil Macker of stockbrokerage Robert W. Baird & Co., suggests investors would be much better off parking their money in an index fund based on the S&P 500. What they don't tell you is why.   more »
View Article  EdNext on EdSec Spellings and NCLB
The article by Michelle R. Davis offers a great opportunity for seeing how others read the tea leaves on NCLB reauthorization. The point (not) made with overwhelming clarity is that the school improvement industry plays no material role in its own legislative future.   more »
View Article  Could Michigan Make School District "Outsourcing" Part of Collective Bargaining?
Your editor is sympathetic to the idea that school districts might prefer to bargain over wages, salaries and working conditions with the representative of a teachers' union rather than set the rules by fiat or negotiate with every individual teacher. But the extension of bargaining to all variety of management decisions, for example, assigning teachers to schools based on their own choices according to seniority, rather than where managers believe they can do the most good, takes too much authority away from the citizens who elect school boards preceisely to make such high-level policy decisions. The proposal is bad public policy.   more »
View Article  Leftist Strike on SES Fails to Destroy Target - and Hands SES Providers a PR Win
It's a summary of the available research on the market that's worth reading. As an "academic weapon" employed by the left in the "SES wars," the study is a failure. Still, that's just politics. From an investor's or buyer's perspective, the report suggests that when it comes to evaluation, most SES providers' management teams have been asleep at the wheel.    more »
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View Article  5/1 New Education Economy®
Essential weekly reading for the industry professional. Download for free until June 1.   more »
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View Article  M-Stat: How School Systems Should Be Managed
You are entitled to your own opinions about policy, but not your own facts.    more »
View Article  4/30 K-12Leads and Youth Service Markets Report
Better. Faster. Cheaper. Review a sample.   more »
View Article  Does "One Laptop Per Child" Revolutionize Public Schooling?
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 »
View Article  AZ Republican Schools Chief Tom Horne Considers the Bush Administration a Bunch of Communists
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 »