“It’s all about instruction.” People involved in school reform often say this, meaning that raising student achievement depends on improving the quality of instruction. I’ve said it plenty myself in […]
A math teacher learns crowd control
The unfinished business of school improvement
Nine years ago, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts launched an historic initiative to improve the state’s system of public education. The set of strategies embodied in the Education Reform Act of […]
Doing the math on education reform
Education reform has long been the favorite pastime of Massachusetts state government. Since 1888, more than 100 commissions and official studies have put public education under the microscope. Many of […]
Counterpint
I am sincerely disappointed that my friend Mark Roosevelt, co-author of the Education Reform Act, has chosen this critical time not only to abandon his own efforts, but also to […]
The teachers waiting for a contract
INTRO TEXT When school committee members take out a newspaper ad claiming that teachers are overpaid and underworked, it’s a pretty good sign that contract negotiations aren’t going well. Indeed, […]
The student who sets educational policy
INTRO TEXT James Madden will be ousted from the state Board of Education in June, but it’s not because he asks too many questions. Madden’s term will end when he […]
Marathon Man
Surrounded by the auto body shops and waste haulers of Roxbury’s Newmarket section, the Samuel Mason Elementary School is a lonely educational outpost. But the brick schoolhouse is one of […]
Lost in translation
Today is all about the letter Y, announces Kathleen Harvey to the 15 Latino students who make up her kindergarten class. “Y for yo-yo,” she says slowly, pointing to the […]
Learning a new trade
In the welding shop at Minuteman Regional Vocational Technical High School, in Lexington, Jessica Antonelli, a 17-year-old junior from Woburn, peers through protective goggles and aims the spitting flame of […]
Eavesdropping
For almost nine years now, ever since passage of the Education Reform Act of 1993, there has been endless discussion- ranging from earnest talk to frantic hand-wringing- over the effort […]
Highschoolers get a sneak preview of college demands
Eija Ayravainen doesn’t have time to waste on educational reforms that are headed nowhere, and two years ago, when College Now came across her desk, it seemed to fit that […]
Toy towns
All Bay State cities and towns have children to educate, but the burden isn’t evenly distributed. The Kids Count Census, a project of the Annie E. Casey Foundation, used US […]
Exta Credit
In a commentary that begins on page 9 of this issue, S. Paul Reville calls education reform “the most important work of our time.” We couldn’t agree more. The job […]
Two authors go back to high school and find little to cheer about
Another Planet: A Year in the Life of a Suburban High School By Elinor Burkett HarperCollins, New York, 325 pages Doing School: How We Are Creating a Generation of Stressed […]
Great Barrington considers a building spree
Great Barrington, for the most part, has kept up with the times. A former textile mill-based community on the banks of the Housatonic River, it has developed a vibrant downtown […]
emEducation Weeksem annual report card
Massachusetts improved its grade point average in Education Week’s annual “Quality Counts” assessment, thanks to more tests for both students and teachers. Tough MCAS requirements prompted Education Week to upgrade […]
Gee monikers
Lots of people wish they could have filled out their own birth certificates, but no one is saddled with a name their parents picked in 1740. That burden falls upon […]
Weathering the perfect fiscal storm
One year ago, the Massachusetts Taxpayers Foundation warned of an impending “perfect storm” in the state’s finances that would spell the end of the generous spending growth of recent years. […]
Schools need more funds
Providing adequate resources for public education is not just a public policy goal, it is also the law. The Education Reform Act of 1993 made an unambiguous promise to public […]
Economists give their prognoses for recovery
Left to right: Adrienne Ortyl, Paul Harrington, and Alan Clayton-Matthews. Back in March, when economists and other observers were trying to figure out what kept consumers spending even as indicators […]
Bill Bratton on the new crime paradigm
In Boston and New York, Bill Bratton brought modern management to police work. We asked Bratton what he learned from combating urban crime, and the fear associated with it, that […]
Ten years after hospital deregulation the honeymoon is over
On December 31, 1991, then-Gov. William Weld signed into law Chapter 495 of the Acts of 1991, An Act to Improve Health Care Access and Financing. This law–which was supported […]
Terrorism boosts business for Lau
INTRO TEXT Six months ago, Joanna Lau was fending off skeptics who regarded her company’s face-recognition software as another iffy high-tech toy, an intriguing technology with an uncertain market and […]
