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Showing 76 to 90 of 113 results Save | Export
Robelen, Erik W. – Education Week, 2006
The author reports how the Knowledge Is Power Program (KIPP), a widely touted network of mostly charter schools that targets low-income communities, is adjusting both its growth and leadership-training strategies as it ramps up its work around the country. As part of those changes, the San Francisco-based nonprofit organization the week of April…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Organizational Change, Organizational Objectives, Leadership Training
Robelen, Erik W. – Education Week, 2008
Mayor Cory A. Booker, a rising star in the Democratic Party nationally, has high hopes for the role education in general, and charters in particular, can play in efforts to revitalize this long-struggling city. He says that, eventually, he would like to see one-fourth of Newark's public school students attend high-performing charter schools. The…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Educational Change, School Funds, Role of Education
Keller, Bess – Education Week, 2007
A major strand in the current national push to improve secondary education is the movement to scale down schools into smaller, more personalized units, especially for students facing the greatest obstacles to success. Hundreds of small schools and learning communities have cropped up in recent years, famously helped along by the Bill & Melinda…
Descriptors: High Schools, Urban Teaching, Small Schools, Urban Schools
Honawar, Vaishali – Education Week, 2006
The three-story building that was once the United Teachers of New Orleans' office is dark and deserted, the first floor damaged by Hurricane Katrina's floodwaters. The union membership, which numbered 4,700 before the storm, is now down to 300. Of the 25 schools that are now open in New Orleans, only five are regular public schools. The rest are…
Descriptors: Unions, Teacher Associations, Charter Schools, Collective Bargaining
Maxwell, Lesli A. – Education Week, 2008
Across New Orleans' still-emerging patchwork of regular public schools and charter schools, the emotional, social, and academic damage that the August 2005 hurricane inflicted on the city's children plays out daily, in disruptions to instruction, in schoolyard fights, and in classrooms half-empty because of chronic absenteeism. Over a three-month…
Descriptors: Health Services, Charter Schools, Social Work, Mental Health
Maxwell, Lesli A. – Education Week, 2006
This article reports how Detroit public schools struggle, amidst the problems that run in the nation's fastest-shrinking big-city school system, to stem the loss of students and improve academic achievement. Facing budget, achievement woes, the district tries to compete with charter schools. Since the fall of 2004, close to 12,000 students have…
Descriptors: Marketing, Educational Change, Charter Schools, Public Schools
Maxwell, Lesli A. – Education Week, 2007
John McDonogh Senior High School's challenges, and similar hardship at other public schools that have reopened in New Orleans, were not part of the vision advanced by politicians and educators who saw Hurricane Katrina's destruction as an unprecedented opportunity for schools. To them, Katrina, terrible though it was, had delivered a chance to…
Descriptors: Economically Disadvantaged, Urban Education, Parochial Schools, Charter Schools
Robelen, Erik W. – Education Week, 2007
New Orleans is looking for a few good teachers, principals and charter school operators. As state and local officials struggle to rebuild the city devastated by Hurricane Katrina 18 months ago, they are facing a severe shortage of talent willing and able to educate the fast-growing student population. The problem is especially stark in the schools…
Descriptors: State Officials, Principals, Charter Schools, Teacher Supply and Demand
Hendrie, Caroline – Education Week, 2005
With the nation's charter sector now encompassing some 3,200 schools in 40 states and the District of Columbia, shutdowns have become more common occurrences in the past few years. As estimated one in every 10 charter schools has now closed its doors, up from only about 4 percent four years ago. Most authorizers who take their responsibilities…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Sanctions, Charter Schools, School Closing
Davis, Michelle R. – Education Week, 2006
With the departure in January 2006 of the first head of the Department of Education's office of innovation and improvement, those who follow the 3 and a half-year-old-office are wondering whether it will continue to play a prominent role in federal policy or whether its influence will fade. Nina Shokraii Rees, a former aide to Vice President Dick…
Descriptors: Administrators, Educational Innovation, Educational Improvement, Public Agencies
McNeil, Michele – Education Week, 2009
As states scramble to spend and report on millions of dollars of education stimulus funds already flowing their way, they face another daunting task if they want a shot at even more money: navigating the complex application process for $4 billion from the Race to the Top Fund. Merely filling out the award application will take each state 642…
Descriptors: Statewide Planning, Charter Schools, Teacher Effectiveness, Recognition (Achievement)
Robelen, Erik W. – Education Week, 2007
The University of Chicago holds the charter for and runs four independent public schools. As a charter school operator, the University of Chicago is investing considerable resources in the venture, in faculty time and expertise, back-office support, and fundraising. It's also putting the highly selective university's good name on the line. The…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Experiential Learning, Public Schools, College Preparation
Education Week, 2007
"Technology Counts 2007" looks back, and ahead, after a decade of enormous upheaval in the educational technology landscape. This special issue of "Education Week" includes the following articles: (1) A Digital Decade; (2) Getting Up to Speed (Andrew Trotter); (3) E-Rate's Imprint Seen in Schools (Andrew Trotter); (4) Teaching…
Descriptors: Portfolios (Background Materials), Teaching Assistants, Educational Technology, Internet
Trotter, Andrew – Education Week, 2007
This article reports on two Mideast-themed schools which have attracted fierce controversy amplified in the news media and the blogosphere. A new public school with a focus on Arabic language and culture is set to open in New York City this week, after being assailed for months by opponents who claim it will be a taxpayer-funded Islamic school…
Descriptors: Constitutional Law, News Media, Charter Schools, Semitic Languages
Hendrie, Caroline – Education Week, 2005
When teachers at Thomas Gardner Elementary School voted in fall 2003 to join Boston's network of "pilot" schools, they had no inkling of the political firestorm that lay ahead. A few months after they moved to become part of the city's nationally watched experiment with small, autonomous public schools, the president of the Boston Teachers Union…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, School Restructuring, Pilot Projects, Charter Schools
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