Anonymous wrote:Wait — so Michelle Rhee wasn’t crazy after all?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mathematica is tied intimately to the Mayor and reform efforts. The Post's opinion section is uniformly in favor of Rhee-style education reform. A slightly broader perspective would give it more credibility.
It is great to see that student achievement is growing, though.
Have you read the report and refuting their methods and conclusions, or just suspicious because of the historic working relationship?
Look I am not reading the report. But they take a number of minor-significant points, associate them with school reform, cheerlead the Mayor's choices for doing those things and take a victory lap instead of saying "there are a host of results with minor effects that have cumulative benefit, which are hard to assign causation to." That's probably a reasonable alternative interpretation of what they're putting out, and yet we get the propaganda version.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mathematica is tied intimately to the Mayor and reform efforts. The Post's opinion section is uniformly in favor of Rhee-style education reform. A slightly broader perspective would give it more credibility.
It is great to see that student achievement is growing, though.
Have you read the report and refuting their methods and conclusions, or just suspicious because of the historic working relationship?
Anonymous wrote:I think it's pretty clear that a public service as vital and complex as schools needs a single point of contact for administration and legal control. An elected school board seems like a HORRIBLE way to oversee schools. The exact opposite of what we need.
Charter schools definitely seem to have proven themselves in DC. But, it does seem undeniable that they hollow out neighborhood schools.
Anonymous wrote:Mathematica is tied intimately to the Mayor and reform efforts. The Post's opinion section is uniformly in favor of Rhee-style education reform. A slightly broader perspective would give it more credibility.
It is great to see that student achievement is growing, though.
Anonymous wrote:This study was done by Mathematica. Enough said.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's pretty clear that a public service as vital and complex as schools needs a single point of contact for administration and legal control. An elected school board seems like a HORRIBLE way to oversee schools. The exact opposite of what we need.
Charter schools definitely seem to have proven themselves in DC. But, it does seem undeniable that they hollow out neighborhood schools.