-
Analysis — Championing high-quality literacy instruction: Inside Knowledge Matters’ new curriculum review tool

Today, the Knowledge Matters Campaign is unveiling a new K-8 English language arts curriculum review tool to advance the understanding of truly high-quality, content-rich literacy instruction. It has felt like a necessary, even urgent, resource at this pivotal moment in time. The last year has witnessed a surge in focus on the importance of background...
By Barbara Davidson | November 6, 2023
-
Analysis: Schools could lose 136,000 teaching jobs when federal COVID funds run out

Objectively speaking, it’s a weird time to be talking about layoffs in schools. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2021 had the fewest layoffs in public education in the last two decades. Last year was just a bit higher, and so far 2023 is tracking about the same. There are still pockets of layoffs due to...
By Chad Aldeman | November 2, 2023
-
In Los Angeles, a tiny school lets young people direct their own education

From the outside, the headquarters of Alcove Learning looks like any small home in the largely Latino Boyle Heights section of Los Angeles. Flanked by similar houses and located among varied storefronts and restaurants, this self-directed learning center for teens and tweens offers young people the freedom to direct their own education. It is part...
By Kerry McDonald | October 31, 2023
-
Analysis — Not-back-to-school time for homeschoolers: As support systems strengthen, more families embrace new approach to education

It’s back-to-school time across America, but millions of families have stepped away from a traditional classroom. Instead, they have chosen to stick with homeschooling, an option that grew in popularity during COVID school closures and has remained above pre-pandemic levels ever since. “COVID put things under a microscope,” said Amber Okolo-Ebube, a Texas homeschooling mother....
By Kerry McDonald | September 28, 2023
-
What Gen Z teens are asking about education, work and their future

Debates about education policy and the workplace are typically carried out by people far removed from high school classrooms. There’s good reason for that, since age and experience often bring clearer insights not visible to the young. But education today is in a time of disruption and transition. In many respects, it’s not meeting the...
By Bruno Manno | September 7, 2023
-
Kids cartoon characters that use AI to customize responses help children learn

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work. The big idea When the main character of a kids TV show can both listen and respond to viewers by using advances in artificial intelligence, youngsters learn more from the program. That’s what my colleagues and I found in a series of peer-reviewed studies. We are...
By Ying Xu, The Conversation | August 9, 2023
-
Educators Beware: As budget cuts loom, now is NOT the time to quit your job

For several years there have been lots of available jobs in school districts. Employees could take a year off and, with all the openings, take comfort in the knowledge that districts would always be hiring if and when they wanted to come back. But those days are over. Thinking of quitting in the next few...
By Katherine Silberstein and Marguerite Roza | June 22, 2023
-
Analysis: The promise of personalized learning never delivered. Today’s AI is different

Over the last decade, educators and administrators have often encountered lofty promises of technology revolutionizing learning, only to experience disappointment when reality failed to meet expectations. It’s understandable, then, that educators might view the current excitement around artificial intelligence with a measure of caution: Is this another overhyped fad, or are we on the cusp...
By John Bailey | June 5, 2023
-
The terrible truth: Current solutions to COVID learning loss are doomed to fail

Most of the programs school districts have implemented to address COVID learning loss are doomed to fail. Despite well-intended and rapid responses, solutions such as tutoring or summer school will miss their goals. Existing policies have failed to consider the unique needs of the students these services seek to help, and thus are destined to...
By Margaret Raymond | June 1, 2023
-
Analysis: Los Angeles pays a steep price for labor peace. Will the war continue anyway?

Los Angeles teachers have much to cheer about. Less than a month after the district’s school support workers received a contract with 30% salary increases, United Teachers Los Angeles came away with a mammoth deal of its own. On April 13, the district made what it called a “historic offer” of 19% in pay hikes...
By Mike Antonucci | April 27, 2023