Showing posts with label Michael Winerip. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Winerip. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

In Lists of Best High Schools, Numbers Don't Tell All

From Michael Winerip at the NYT.  For the full story go here.  Thanks Mr. Winerip!

This is the time of year when the lists of best high schools in the United States are published. For anxious consumers, the number of lists can be daunting, whether national in scope (U.S. News & World Report; The Washington Post; Newsweek and The Daily Beast) or local (Boston magazine; New Jersey Monthly; The Chicago Sun-Times).

No one in his right mind would take these lists lightly. Property values rise near best high schools. Parents will fight to the death for best high schools. Best teachers and best principals want to work in best high schools.

And:

What schools score highest on Newsweek’s index? Of the top 50, 37 have selective admissions or are magnet schools, meaning they screen students using a combination of entrance exam scores, grade-point average, state test results and assessments of their writing samples.
In short, to be the best, high schools should accept only the highest performing eighth graders, who — if the school doesn’t botch it — will become the highest performing 12th graders.
Put another way: Best in, best out, best school.

And:

At all costs, avoid Scarsdale, N.Y. It didn’t even make the top 1,000. Though its average SAT score of 1935 would rank it 21st among the 100 best, the school does not offer A.P. courses, and Newsweek counts A.P. data as 40 percent of the rating.
Why no A.P.? Scarsdale officials find that A.P. courses encourage students to go a mile wide and an inch deep, so the high school has created its own advanced courses. Instead of spending all their time working out of A.P. textbooks, students visit the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Boston and the Franklin D. Roosevelt National Historic Site in Hyde Park, N.Y., to do field research.
Two-thirds of Scarsdale seniors are accepted to colleges that the Barron’s Guide to the Most Competitive Colleges ranks as the “most competitive” in the country. Of course, Newsweek doesn’t own Barron’s, so it wouldn’t make any sense to use that as a criterion.

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Pearson Foundation: Please answer simple question

This is our fourth request to The Pearson Foundation to answer one, very simple question:  
How many trips did our past superintendent [Jerry Weast] take that were paid for by The Pearson Foundation?


We asked that question on our blog after Mark Nieker, President and CEO of The Pearson Foundation posted a comment on our blog.  His comment was in response to the posting of two New York Times (NYT) articles by education reporter Mike Winerip on the funding of international trips for state school superintendents by The Pearson Foundation. 




The NYT articles are here and here
We then followed up with an e-mail to The Pearson Foundation on October 18, 2011, and then again on November 15, 2011, asking the same question.  
We also asked that if there were any trips taken by our past superintendent, did the superintendent's spouse also travel?  If so, who paid for the spouse's travel? 

Easy questions for a foundation that believes there is no problem with superintendents taking trips paid for by their organization, right?
As of today, we have had no response to our very simple question to The Pearson Foundation.
We think the public deserves an answer to this question.  We hope The Pearson Foundation will respond. 
But, if The Pearson Foundation does not answer the question by Monday, December 5, 2011, then we will post what we have learned.


As a reminder, Pearson Education, Inc. is a supplier of education products to MCPS and, the Board of Education entered into a surprise agreement in 2010 to sell curriculum to Pearson. 
Some of the past MCPS payments to Pearson companies:  
FY 2010
Pearson Education Inc $1,039,217

Pearson Learning Group $33,984


FY 2011
Pearson Education Inc $ 774,702