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How Stakeholders Can Support Teacher Quality compiles the
proceedings from the Milken Family Foundation's National Education
Conference (NEC), which took place in Washington, D.C., in May
2006. Each year, the NEC brings together practitioners,
policymakers and private sector representatives to focus on
critical issues in education. This work expands on the ideas and
themes discussed in the first three volumes in this series on
education policy: The first volume-Talented Teachers: The Essential
Force for Improving Student Achievement-examined the importance of
teacher quality. As the second in the series, Improving Student
Achievement: Reforms that Work, introduced reform ideas and
programs that positively impact both teacher quality and student
work. The Challenges of School Reform: Implementation, Impact and
Sustainability deepened these discussions by exploring the answers
to questions regarding ensuring the longevity and sustained success
of effective school reform. How Stakeholders Can Support Teacher
Quality examines the roles of teachers, the education sector, the
government sector and the private sector in enhancing teacher
quality. From the building level to the federal level, panelists
sought to provide insight from their individual and collective
endeavors to improve the quality of today's teaching force to
significantly impact the future.
Improving Student Achievement: Reforms that Work expands on the
first volume in the Milken Family Foundation series on education
policy, ""Talented Teachers: The Essential Force for Improving
Student Achievement."" The series explains to policymakers,
parents, business leaders, and teachers the importance of teacher
quality in increasing student achievement. This volume is based
primarily on the proceedings from the 2004 Milken National
Education Conference (NEC), which was held in Washington, D.C., in
May 2004. Reform of any kind is an arduous process. It requires
forward thinking, hard work, collaboration, and commitment on the
part of teachers, administrators, policy leaders, and other
supporters of the endeavor. Education reform in particular can be
especially difficult due to the many ingrained features of our
current K-12 system; however, it is vital to learn from our past
mistakes and break the cycle of failed efforts in order to fix the
system that is the lifeblood of our country's future success. These
proceedings provide insights into some of those past efforts as
well as some of the current initiatives that provide optimism and
hope in schools across the country. From these examples, we
recognize that it is imperative that we improve student achievement
by embracing reforms that work.
This book, The Challenges of School Reform: Impact, Implementation,
and Sustainability, explores why reforms todate have failed to live
up to expectations, and it discusses promising practices and
strategies for sustaining increased student achievement. This work
expands on the ideas and themes discussed in the first two volumes
in this series on education policy: The first book-Talented
Teachers: The Essential Force for Improving Student
Achievement-examines the importance of teacher quality. Years of
research have repeatedly confirmed what we inferred to be
true-outside of the home environment, the quality of a student's
teacher has the strongest impact on learning. After talented
teachers were found to be a powerful component for bettering
education, the second book-Improving Student Achievement: Reforms
that Work-introduces reform ideas and programs that positively
impact both teacher quality and student work. Now, The Challenges
of School Reform: Implementation, Impact, and Sustainability
deepens these discussions by exploring the answers to questions
regarding ensuring the longevity and sustained success of effective
school reform.
Here is a short edited volume that brings together in one place,
the best scholarly articles in charter schooling by national
experts and leaders, written in a user-friendly fashion. It is the
ideal introduction for those interested in the charter school
movement with numerous insights for and by charter operators,
administrators, and teachers as well as the academic community. The
volume starts with essays explaining the history of education
reforms past, in particular why their failures make charters a
necessity. Additional essays examine such research questions as
whether class size matters, how to end the teacher shortage, routes
to alternative certification, why urban school reform fails, and
how to make merit pay work. The second section includes essays
outlining the key research on charter schools. Chapters examine
such questions as how charter schools compare to district schools,
how non-profit charters compare to for-profit charters, what
determines teacher quality, and how the small size of charters
makes for complex questions of accountability. The final section
includes personal reflections, tips and horror stories from charter
operators. In particular, essays examine why most charters have a
tough first year, the difficulties of converting a private school
to a charter, how to manage facilities, how to obtain grant money,
and how to do good charter marketing.
How Stakeholders Can Support Teacher Quality compiles the
proceedings from the Milken Family Foundation's National Education
Conference (NEC), which took place in Washington, D.C., in May
2006. Each year, the NEC brings together practitioners,
policymakers and private sector representatives to focus on
critical issues in education. This work expands on the ideas and
themes discussed in the first three volumes in this series on
education policy: The first volume-Talented Teachers: The Essential
Force for Improving Student Achievement-examined the importance of
teacher quality. As the second in the series, Improving Student
Achievement: Reforms that Work, introduced reform ideas and
programs that positively impact both teacher quality and student
work. The Challenges of School Reform: Implementation, Impact and
Sustainability deepened these discussions by exploring the answers
to questions regarding ensuring the longevity and sustained success
of effective school reform. How Stakeholders Can Support Teacher
Quality examines the roles of teachers, the education sector, the
government sector and the private sector in enhancing teacher
quality. From the building level to the federal level, panelists
sought to provide insight from their individual and collective
endeavors to improve the quality of today's teaching force to
significantly impact the future.
This book, The Challenges of School Reform: Impact, Implementation,
and Sustainability, explores why reforms todate have failed to live
up to expectations, and it discusses promising practices and
strategies for sustaining increased student achievement. This work
expands on the ideas and themes discussed in the first two volumes
in this series on education policy: The first book-Talented
Teachers: The Essential Force for Improving Student
Achievement-examines the importance of teacher quality. Years of
research have repeatedly confirmed what we inferred to be
true-outside of the home environment, the quality of a student's
teacher has the strongest impact on learning. After talented
teachers were found to be a powerful component for bettering
education, the second book-Improving Student Achievement: Reforms
that Work-introduces reform ideas and programs that positively
impact both teacher quality and student work. Now, The Challenges
of School Reform: Implementation, Impact, and Sustainability
deepens these discussions by exploring the answers to questions
regarding ensuring the longevity and sustained success of effective
school reform.
Improving Student Achievement: Reforms that Work expands on the
first volume in the Milken Family Foundation series on education
policy, ""Talented Teachers: The Essential Force for Improving
Student Achievement."" The series explains to policymakers,
parents, business leaders, and teachers the importance of teacher
quality in increasing student achievement. This volume is based
primarily on the proceedings from the 2004 Milken National
Education Conference (NEC), which was held in Washington, D.C., in
May 2004. Reform of any kind is an arduous process. It requires
forward thinking, hard work, collaboration, and commitment on the
part of teachers, administrators, policy leaders, and other
supporters of the endeavor. Education reform in particular can be
especially difficult due to the many ingrained features of our
current K-12 system; however, it is vital to learn from our past
mistakes and break the cycle of failed efforts in order to fix the
system that is the lifeblood of our country's future success. These
proceedings provide insights into some of those past efforts as
well as some of the current initiatives that provide optimism and
hope in schools across the country. From these examples, we
recognize that it is imperative that we improve student achievement
by embracing reforms that work.
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