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Howell, William G.; West, Martin R. – Education Next, 2009
Most people express strong opinions about public education. Only a few know the basic facts about the public schools: (1) how much they spend; (2) how well teachers are paid; and (3) what schools can and cannot do. What happens when the public learns the facts about schools and deliberates responsibly about public education? A series of…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, Charter Schools, Public Opinion, Educational Finance
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Howell, William G.; West, Martin R. – Education Next, 2008
In the contentious world of education politics, the need to spend more on public schools stands out as a rare point of agreement. The authors' recent national survey of American adults ("What Americans Think about Their Schools," Fall 2007) found that those who support increased spending on public schools in their district outnumber…
Descriptors: National Surveys, Educational Finance, Financial Support, Teacher Salaries
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Whittle, Chris – Education Next, 2006
In this article, the author discusses how, despite of the advances in today's technology, the way children are educated now is remarkably similar to how they were educated decades ago. More than any other modern-day institution, schooling is nearly impervious to change. He notes that America's "old school design" is not working with high degree of…
Descriptors: Middle Schools, Independent Study, Federal Government, High Schools
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Hess, Frederick M.; West, Martin R. – Education Next, 2006
Four decades after collective bargaining came to public education, school boards and the superintendents they hire still routinely blame teacher unions for causing massive inefficiencies, stifling innovation, and preventing change designed to promote student learning. "Our hands are tied," school boards commonly complain when school…
Descriptors: Unions, Role, Conflict of Interest, Teacher Salaries
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Solmon, Lewis C. – Education Next, 2005
For more than a century, public education has worked under a single salary schedule that compensates teachers for college credits, education degrees, and years of experience, but not for their effectiveness in the classroom. In fact, research shows that the degrees, courses, and experience that teachers have, beyond the first few years of…
Descriptors: Student Improvement, Teacher Salaries, Public Education, College Credits