Online Learning: A Solution to Three Looming Crises in Education

Released on Februrary 16, this brief tells how using online technology in today's secondary school classrooms can strengthen the teacher workforce, improve student outcomes, and allow states to do more despite flat education budgets.

Download The Online Learning Imperative.

President Obama Announces Commencement Challenge

On February 18, President Obama announced the Race to the Top High School Commencement Challenge open to all public high schools in the U.S. The winning high school will have President Obama deliver the commencement address to its Class of 2010. Application deadline is March 15.

Click here to learn more.

Raising the Grade

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Obama Administration Releases a Blueprint to Overhaul NCLB

Blueprint to overhaul NCLBThis morning, the Obama administration released its blueprint to overhaul the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, currently known as No Child Left Behind (NCLB). In a March 13 video address to the nation previewing the blueprint, President Obama said the plan sets an ambitious goal that all students should graduate from high school prepared for college and a career - no matter who they are or where they come from. Obama acknowledged that achieving the goal will be difficult, but is essential for the country and its children.

"As a nation, we are engaged in many important endeavors: improving the economy, reforming the health care system, encouraging innovation in energy and other growth industries of the 21st century," Obama said. "But our success in these efforts - and our success in the future as a people - will ultimately depend on what happens long before an entrepreneur opens his doors, or a nurse walks the rounds, or a scientist steps into her laboratory. Our future is determined each and every day, when our children enter the classroom, ready to learn and brimming with promise. It's that promise we must help them fulfill."

In a statement, Bob Wise, president of the Alliance for Excellent Education and former governor of West Virginia, said the blueprint places an important focus on the lowest-performing schools, including the lowest-performing high schools. "Half of the nation's dropouts come from 2,000 high schools," Wise said. "We know where these schools are, and we know how to fix them. The president's proposal sets us on a path for doing so."

Read the Gov. Wise's complete statement or download the blueprint.

Lowering High School Dropout Rate Significantly Increases Job Creation, Home Ownership, Spending and Investment Income, and Car Sales, Says New Alliance Study

Image of Economic Benefits City Card Booklet Cover Jan 2010As a result of a new game-changing study it released on January 12, the Alliance for Excellent Education said there was demonstrated evidence that lowering the high school dropout rate will have important positive implications for the economic vitality of the forty-five largest metropolitan areas in the United States.

The study, “The Economic Benefits from Halving the Dropout Rate: A Boom to Businesses in the Nation’s Largest Metropolitan Areas” measures on a city-by-city basis the growth in jobs, home ownership, levels of spending and investment, and car sales that will result from cutting the high school dropout rate in half.

“The report underscores the notion that the best economic stimulus package is a high school diploma,” he said. “If the U.S. is to improve its competitiveness in the global economy, it must have an education system that meets the fast-growing demand for high-level skills,” concluded Wise.

Find the results for your city or read the press release.

  • Common Core Standards Are Welcome, But with Some Questions
    District Administration
    March 15, 2010

    Just days after the nation’s governors, state commissioners of education, school administrators and education experts proposed draft common core standards for K12 in English and math, major education groups responded. The National Education Association, the National School Boards Association and the Alliance for Excellent Education tout the new standards as promoting 21st-century skills of collaborating, problem solving and critical thinking. “This will be a Good Housekeeping seal of approval,” says Bob Wise, president of the Alliance for Excellent Education.

  • Array of Hurdles Awaits New Education Agenda
    New York Times
    March 15, 2010

    In the blueprint for overhauling federal education policy that President Obama sent to Congress on Monday, his administration seeks to confront some of the major educational challenges that have developed during the eight years that President George W. Bush’s No Child Left Behind law has been a powerful influence on the nation’s public schools.

  • Quarter of state grads need help in college
    Journal Gazette (IN)
    March 14, 2010

    More than a quarter of Indiana high school graduates enter state universities or community colleges unprepared for higher learning, needing at least one remedial course on material they should have learned in high school, according to a new report...“Certainly, remediation is a huge problem around the country,” said Jason Amos, a spokesman for the Alliance for Excellent Education.

New Report Warns of Limited Impact of Race to the Top, Common Standards, Asserts Congress Must Reauthorize ESEA

Alliance and Commission LogosWhile the federal government and the states have implemented some promising education reform efforts in 2010, these efforts will have limited long-term impact and risk undermining accountability if they continue to be pursued without updating and improving the bedrock of federal education policy-the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA, the current version of which is known as the No Child Left Behind Act, or NCLB). Only an ESEA reauthorization can address the aspects of NCLB that time, experience, and research have shown need to be significantly improved or updated.

This report from the Alliance for Excellent Education and the Aspen Institute's Commission on No Child Left Behind, Don't Leave Accountability Behind: A Call for ESEA Reauthorization, describes four distinct reasons ESEA reauthorization is necessary to support long-term reform and ensure strong accountability for student outcomes and improvement.

Read the press release or download the report.

Find A Dropout Factory In Your State

Click on Image for Larger VersionA May 18 editorial in the New York Times calls attention to the approximately 2,000 high schools that produce more than half of the nation's dropouts and close to three-quarters of its minority dropouts.

By focusing on these "dropout factories," as they have been dubbed, the nation stands a good chance of keeping in school millions of students who would otherwise drop out, the editorial reads.

"The dropout problem is fixable. To do that, federal state and local governments must work together to remake the 'dropout factories.' That means putting public money into prevention programs that have been shown to keep children in school.

While not a graduation rate, a school’s “promoting power” is a good indicator of how well schools are educating their students. See how high schools across the country perform by going to the Promoting Power database. High schools with promoting power less than 60 percent are considered dropout factories.

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Thoughts on Education By Bob Wise

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Elements of a Successful High School

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Learn about the Ten Key Elements that every high school should have in place to ensure that all of its students are successful.

 

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