Publications

Advanced Placement and International Baccalaureate: Do They Deserve Gold Star Status?

Deborah Adkins , Michael Dahlin , John Cronin / November 13, 2007

This report examines whether the reputation the Advanced Placement and International Baccalaureate programs have for academic excellence is truly deserved. Our expert reviewers looked at the four AP and IB courses most similar to the core content areas in American high schools--English, history, math, and science--and found that, in general, the courses do warrant praise. In a few cases, they deserve gold stars.

The Proficiency Illusion

Deborah Adkins , G. Gage Kingsbury , Michael Dahlin , John Cronin / October 4, 2007

NCLB allows each state to define proficiency as it sees fit and design its own tests. This study compares state tests to benchmarks laid out by the Northwest Evaluation Association to evaluate proficiency cut scores for assessments in twenty-six states. The findings suggest that the tests states use to measure academic progress and student proficiency under NCLB are creating a false impression of success, especially in reading and especially in the early grades.

Beyond the Basics: Achieving a Liberal Education for All Children

yes Chester E. Finn, Jr. , yes Diane Ravitch / July 11, 2007

America's true competitive edge over the long haul is not its technical prowess but its creativity, its imagination, its inventiveness. And those attributes are best inculcated not by skill-drill or 'STEM' but through liberal arts and sciences, liberally defined. Thus argues this new Fordham volume, edited by Chester E. Finn, Jr. and Diane Ravitch, which also explores what policymakers and educators at all levels can to do sustain liberal learning and sketches an unlovely future if we fail.

Whole-Language High Jinks

yes Michael J. Petrilli , yes Coby Loup / January 29, 2007

If you thought whole-language reading instruction had been relegated to the scrap heap of history, think again. Many such programs (proven to be ineffective) are still around, but they're hiding behind phrases like 'balanced literacy' in order to win contracts from school districts and avoid public scrutiny. Louisa Moats calls them out in Fordham's new report, Whole-Language High Jinks.

Items 25 - 28 of 60  Previous12345678910Next