How Good Is the Best Edujournalism?
A recurring theme running through my blog posts—one that could be addressed daily—is that education journalism is almost always significantly misleading and way too often completely inaccurate....
View ArticleOutliers Never Evidence of Normal in Education
In Money, Race and Success: How Your School District Compares, the NYT, like most of mainstream media, is begrudgingly coming to admit that race and class inequity in the U.S. has a profound impact on...
View Article9 June 2016 Reader: School Choice, GPA v. SAT/ACT
I. School Choice, Charter Choice Choosing a School for My Daughter in a Segregated City, Nikole Hannah-Jones When the New York City Public Schools catalog arrived in the mail one day that spring, with...
View ArticleEducation Reform in the Absence of Political Courage: Charleston (SC) Edition
Words matter, and thus, I must apologize by opening here with a mundane but essential clarification of terms. As I have written over and over, everything involving humans is necessarily political, even...
View Article6 April 2017 Reader: Segregation and James Baldwin
But it’s also a country where if you’re running and you’re black there is a high chance you’ll be shot in the back. Then there will be a brief and cinematic fuss but no justice. Baldwin’s beautiful and...
View ArticleInnovative Deception: The Charter Scam Chronicles Continue
The school choice movement has its roots in mid-twentieth century, and was bolstered by some ugly truths about racism in the U.S. during the Civil Rights movement and public school integration. While...
View ArticleSegregation Surprise?: How Public and Charter Schools Have (Always) Failed
On social media, I witnessed charter advocates try to justify the exact failures Andre Perry unmasks in his Charter school leaders are complicit with segregation, and it’s hurting their movement, where...
View ArticleCharter Schools Fail SC: A Reader
Nationally, momentum has been building toward political and public recognition that the education reform movement begun in the early 1980s has fallen well short of promises. This failure was identified...
View ArticleNicholas Buccola’s The Fire Is Upon Us: “For the American Right, the price of...
William F. Buckley, I suppose, would have wanted to be remembered as a powerful and charismatic public intellectual for conservatism and one of the foundational thinkers in the late 20th-/early...
View ArticleClarifications: Greenville desegregation: Academic achievement gap slowly...
Ariel Gilreath offers a strong overview in her Greenville desegregation: Academic achievement gap slowly closing, but inequities persist. A key point in this look at desegregation confronts the...
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