Publication Date
In 2025 | 0 |
Since 2024 | 7 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 20 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 55 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 131 |
Descriptor
Source
Education Next | 150 |
Author
Peterson, Paul E. | 14 |
West, Martin R. | 14 |
Meyer, Peter | 7 |
Henderson, Michael B. | 5 |
Howell, William G. | 5 |
Kronholz, June | 4 |
Finn, Chester E., Jr. | 3 |
Houston, David M. | 3 |
Jacobs, Joanne | 3 |
Lake, Robin | 3 |
Russo, Alexander | 3 |
More ▼ |
Publication Type
Journal Articles | 150 |
Reports - Descriptive | 85 |
Reports - Research | 34 |
Opinion Papers | 20 |
Reports - Evaluative | 17 |
Information Analyses | 3 |
Numerical/Quantitative Data | 1 |
Reports - General | 1 |
Education Level
Audience
Policymakers | 1 |
Location
California | 14 |
New York | 14 |
District of Columbia | 10 |
Louisiana | 9 |
Colorado | 7 |
Michigan | 7 |
Florida | 6 |
Massachusetts | 6 |
Arizona | 5 |
Illinois | 5 |
New York (New York) | 5 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
No Child Left Behind Act 2001 | 14 |
Elementary and Secondary… | 2 |
Every Student Succeeds Act… | 1 |
Improving Americas Schools… | 1 |
Individuals with Disabilities… | 1 |
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Bush-Mecenas, Susan; Marsh, Julie A. – Education Next, 2020
Facing the typical challenges of urban schooling, including overcrowded schools, mediocre academic outcomes, and high dropout rates, the Los Angeles Unified School District has been at the epicenter of big-city education reform over the past decade. This article takes a look at the past 10 years of reform strategies in Los Angeles, and how…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, School Districts, Educational Change, Change Strategies
Kearns, Larry – Education Next, 2017
Blended Learning uses school time in a unique way, combining online instruction with traditional methods and giving students more agency over how, when, and where they learn. That third variable, the "where," calls for some serious rethinking of how school space is organized and deployed. Design either supports or frustrates a school's…
Descriptors: Blended Learning, Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Conventional Instruction
Jacobs, Joanne – Education Next, 2017
The Chicago International Charter School (CICS) Irving Park's middle school is one of 130 schools nationwide piloting the Summit Learning Program (SLP), developed--and offered entirely free--by Summit Public Schools, a high-performing charter network based in California. Summit's eight schools, two of them in Washington State, are known for an…
Descriptors: Individualized Instruction, Charter Schools, Middle Schools, Models
Gill, Brian P.; Tilley, Charles; Whitesell, Emilyn; Finucane, Mariel; Potamites, Liz; Corcoran, Sean P. – Education Next, 2019
Education in the United States has a foundational public purpose: to prepare students for effective citizenship. The idea that an educated and engaged citizenry is essential to the health of a democracy motivated the creation of government-run "common schools" in the early decades of the nation and remains an important value in modern…
Descriptors: Civics, Charter Schools, Democracy, Citizenship Education
Sahm, Charles – Education Next, 2016
This article reports on the fine results being experienced by students from the South Bronx (New York), at one of the seven Icahn Charter Schools. Jeff Litt, superintendent of Icahn's network of charter schools, has been instrumental in seeing that the learning about history, other cultures, and other countries--subjects fascinating to…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Superintendents, School Districts, Teaching Methods
Ladner, Matthew – Education Next, 2018
The point at which the corners of Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah meet is the only spot in the United States where the borders of four states converge. Beyond geography, the Four Corners states share a similar approach to charter schooling. All four states have adopted relatively freewheeling authorization policies, and charter schools…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, State Legislation, State Policy, Educational Policy
Cheng, Albert; Peterson, Paul E. – Education Next, 2017
All four sectors in K-12 education compete for the support of their customers--that is, the parents of their prospective students. Those parents have more choices today than in decades past: they may send their children to the public school automatically assigned to them by their school district, or opt for a private school, charter school, or…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Parent Attitudes, School Choice, School Districts
Dreilinger, Danielle – Education Next, 2021
In post-Hurricane Katrina New Orleans, control of the public schools was wrested from the seven-member Orleans Parish School Board (OPSB). Unheard-of academic gains followed the city's switch to a near-universal charter-school system, yet returning to failure always felt as close as the next hurricane. Give OPSB power again, people said, and the…
Descriptors: Educational Practices, Boards of Education, Board of Education Policy, Board of Education Role
Podgursky, Michael; Aud Pendergrass, Susan; Hesla, Kevin – Education Next, 2018
Public school districts are facing twin challenges: maintaining a labor supply of qualified teachers while shoring up the deteriorating system that compensates them. Keeping public-school teachers' pensions plans flush is expensive, and it accounts for a growing share of education spending. In some states, public charter schools provide an…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Innovation, Teacher Retirement, Retirement Benefits
Cordes, Sarah A. – Education Next, 2018
Charter Schools represent a small share of the national education market: just 6.2 percent of all public schools and 4.6 percent of all students. But their rapid growth over the past two decades has captured an outsized measure of public attention, especially in communities where district and charter schools operate side by side. At New York…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Elementary Secondary Education, Public Schools, Program Effectiveness
Shakeel, M. Danish; Peterson, Paul E. – Education Next, 2021
The number of charter schools grew rapidly for a quarter-century after the first charter opened its doors in 1992. But since 2016, the rate of increase has slowed. Is the pause related to a decline in charter effectiveness? To find out, the authors tracked changes in student performance at charter and district schools on the National Assessment of…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Student Characteristics, Educational Trends, Trend Analysis
Henderson, Michael B.; Peterson, Paul E.; West, Martin R. – Education Next, 2021
President Joe Biden has made reopening a majority of K-8 schools for in-person instruction a priority for his administration's first 100 days, with the goal of getting more American students safely back into the classroom. Yet neither information gathered so far by researchers, nor data reported by the federal government and the states, can say…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, In Person Learning, Elementary Secondary Education
West, Martin R.; Peterson, Paul E.; Barrows, Samuel – Education Next, 2017
Over the past 25 years, charter schools have offered an increasing number of families an alternative to their local district schools. The charter option has proven particularly popular in large cities, but charter-school growth is often constrained by state laws that limit the number of students the sector can serve. The charter sector is the most…
Descriptors: Private Schools, Charter Schools, Public Schools, Comparative Analysis
Henderson, Michael B.; Houston, David M.; Peterson, Paul E.; West, Martin R. – Education Next, 2020
With the 2020 presidential election campaign now underway, education-policy proposals previously at the edge of the political debate are entering the mainstream. Support for increasing teacher pay is higher now than at any point since 2008, and a majority of the public favors more federal funding for local schools. Free college commands the…
Descriptors: Public Opinion, Teacher Salaries, School Choice, Educational Policy
Whitmire, Richard – Education Next, 2015
The rise in middle-class students attending charter schools is largely masked by the overall growth of charter schools: over the last five years, the number of charter schools has grown nationally from 4,690 to just over 6,000. There are now 43 communities where at least 20 percent of the students attend charters, reports the National Alliance for…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Middle Class, School Choice, Politics of Education