Monthly Archive for April, 2011

The Impact of Educational Entrepreneurship on Traditional Public Education

By Matthew Lynch, Education News opinion

“What if there were total free markets in education in the United States, and traditional public education systems as we know them today did not exist? Education would be a product for sale, just like any other product on the U.S. market.

The idea may be mindboggling, but many education entrepreneurs would likely see an opportunity that fits with their vision of how education systems ought to work. With such an opportunity unavailable, they must be content to effect change in education by working within the current system.

Education entrepreneurs are driven by the belief that public education organizations are agricultural- and industrialization-era bureaucratic entities, far too enmeshed in familiar operational customs and habits to lead the innovation and transformation needed for schools today. They see themselves as change agents who are able to visualize possibilities. They want to serve as catalysts for change that will deliver current public educational systems from a status quo that results in unacceptable educational outcomes for too many children.”

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The New Way to Write

By: Cynthia Schweigert,WCIA

“New software developed by the U of I is being tested in area schools  It’s a new way for students to work on their writing skills. U of I developers created it in hopes of eliminating standardized testing. They think teachers are putting too much class time into the test. The new software would put the spotlight back on the students.

“You get to type it and you get to do stuff on the computer, along with helping out your peers and you usually don’t get to do that in a lot of other classes,” said eighth grader Quala Hayes.”

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Disruption, Delivery and Degrees

From Doug Lederman, in Inside Higher Ed

Washington – Many college professors and administrators shudder at comparisons between what they do and what, say, computer or automobile makers do. (And just watch how they bristle if you dare call higher education an “industry.”) But in a new report, the man who examined how technology has “disrupted” and reshaped those and other manufacturing industries has turned his gaze to higher education, arguing that it faces peril if it does not change to meet the challenge.

The report, “Disrupting College,” was also the subject of a panel discussion Tuesday at the Center for American Progress, which released the report along with the Innosight Institute. (A video recording of the event is available here.)

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