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  • Who Picked Gore?

    Published April 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    A recent nationwide survey of teachers by the Alexis de Tocqueville Institution revealed Texas Governor George W. Bush as their first choice for the next President of the United States, with almost as many undecided.
  • TesseracT Assures Parents: Schools Will Stay Open

    Published April 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    With its stock delisted from Nasdaq, two of its top officers resigned, one-quarter of its central office staff laid off, and three of its schools outside of Arizona closed, the TesseracT Group, Inc.
  • Administrators Wrong on Choice

    Published April 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    Parents who took advantage of Wisconsin's public school choice program were not driven by convenience, but were seeking a better education for their children, according to a new study from Milwaukee's Public Policy Forum, a private, nonprofit public
  • Inkster Gets the Message

    Published April 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    As Detroit Free Press reporters Peggy Walsh-Sarnecki and Sheryl James noted recently, no one took it seriously a few years ago when the Mackinac Center for Public Policy proposed the idea of privatizing public school districts.
  • Troubled Districts Face Takeover . . . By Private Firms

    Published April 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    While it's relatively easy for state policy makers to identify a failing school district and then take it over, legislators around the country are beginning to realize it's another matter entirely to turn the performance of that district around.
  • 04/2000 School Choice Roundup

    Published April 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    California * Colorado * Connecticut * Florida * Georgia * Indiana * Kansas * Kentucky Maryland * Michigan * Missouri * New Hampshire * New Jersey * New Mexico New York * Pennsylvania * South Carolina * South Dakota * Utah Vermont * Virginia *
  • Competition Necessary for Sustainable School Reform

    Published April 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    The estimated $360 billion U.S. K-12 education market makes up almost 10 percent of GDP, the second largest sector after health care.
  • McCain Takes On Teacher Unions

    Published April 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    In a major education speech in Spartanburg, South Carolina on February 10, Republican presidential candidate John McCain renewed his call for a massive national voucher experiment, and then delivered a stinging attack against the teacher unions and
  • Parents Can’t Get Enough of Vouchers

    Published April 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    Sophisticated statistical techniques aren't needed to prove that parents of Cleveland voucher students are overwhelmingly satisfied with their children's new schools.
  • Scholarship Fund Gives Teachers a Voice

    Published April 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    When the Children's Scholarship Fund offered half-cost tuition vouchers for children in low-income families to go to private schools, it provided megaphone amplification to the voices of over one million parents and children around the country who were
  • Who Chooses?

    Published April 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    One of the favorite arguments raised by voucher opponents in an attempt to show the supposed unfairness of school choice is the question, "Who chooses?
  • Cheating Is Lying

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    Cheating by students is on the rise, with students taking their cues from adult attitudes, says Michael Josephson, who heads California's Josephson Institute for Ethics.
  • ‘Accountable’ Public Schools Squander Funds

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    When an Ohio state audit recently revealed that a voucher school in Cleveland had bilked the state out of more than $85,000, state legislators proposed passing a law to prevent any reoccurrence of such incidents.
  • Federal Agency Not Following Federal Law

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    Frustrated at the Bureau of Indian Affairs' lack of progress in carrying out its responsibility to bring its schools into compliance with the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, lawyers with the Native American Protection and Advocacy
  • What About the Children? an interview with John E. Berthoud

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    If the "New Unionism" did mean something--if it wasn't just a lot of rhetoric coming from a big public relations firm--then you might expect to see an organization that now was a little more interested in qualitative reforms rather than just the same
  • Can Americans Trust Their National Report Card?

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    Testing data tumble out of the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), the so-called “Nation's Report Card,” with great regularity. But can the numbers always be trusted?
  • Reading is Key Science Skill

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    How do scientists acquire most of their knowledge? Surprisingly, it's not by "observing," "measuring," or doing "hands-on" investigations. It's by reading.
  • Reading Is Not Enough

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    A new Canadian study has found that children do not learn to read simply by having their parents read to them. Parents must accompany reading with teaching the alphabet in order for children to grasp the mechanics involved in reading.
  • Education and Choice: What Does America Think?

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    Pollsters are working overtime these days, plumbing the public's attitudes towards Presidential candidates in upcoming primary states. But many other important polls have taken place.
  • TAAS Tests Nudge Up Achievement

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    In his January 7 ruling on the case involving the tenth-grade Texas Assessment of Academic Skills test, U.S. District Court Judge Edward C. Prado made it clear that "unequal education is a matter of great concern and must be eradicated.
  • Texas Academic Standards Upheld

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    Who should issue driver's licenses to teenagers? Should it be the driving instructors who are responsible for teaching teens to drive?
  • Math Lite Feels Better

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    A recent Wall Street Journal editorial noted that the Everyday Math program not only promotes the use of calculators from kindergarten on but also brings a new set of feelings to math classes.
  • Why NASA Lost the Mars Probe?

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    “What will be the effect on all of us when we must deal with the consequences of physicians, airplane designers, or architects who were indoctrinated in school with hostility to mathematical precision?” This question was raised recently by U.S.
  • Time for Whole Language to Surrender?

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    "Whereas speaking is natural, reading is not. Children do not automatically read. They have to learn how to do it. . . . There really is a difference in brain activation patterns between good and poor readers.

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