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Showing 1 to 15 of 64 results Save | Export
Adam Kho; Shelby Leigh Smith; Douglas Lee Lauen – Thomas B. Fordham Institute, 2024
As the sector's gatekeepers, charter school authorizers are responsible for ensuring that schools in their purview set students up for success. To that end, they provide various forms of scrutiny and technical assistance, decide whether existing schools' charters should be renewed, and--perhaps most important--set the bar for the approval of new…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, School Administration, Institutional Survival, Elementary Secondary Education
Sadie Nicole Coffey – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Rural school success is crucial for the Nebraska education system. Without rural schools, many students and families would be without access to high quality educational opportunities. Despite the importance of rural education, the number of rural schools in Nebraska continues to decline, and "one thing is clear from academic research on rural…
Descriptors: Rural Schools, Rural Areas, School Community Relationship, Institutional Survival
Billings, Karen J.; Blaschke, Charles L. – Educational Technology, 2016
The authors review past and current funding/support for U.S. K-12 educational technology companies. They review both who provided the funding for product development and the reasons why. They look back to the 1960s and 1970s, when federal government agencies helped produce computer-based materials, then how the schools' access to technology…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Financial Support, Barriers, Elementary Secondary Education
Carr, Chad R. – ProQuest LLC, 2017
Columbus Preparatory Academy (CPA) was a school in Academic Emergency and in jeopardy of being closed in 2007. In 2016, CPA was ranked "Excellent with Distinction" and has been the top-ranked academic school for five consecutive years. There have been many "how-to" books written about how to turn schools around, but few…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Charter Schools, Institutional Survival, School Turnaround
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Nespor, Jan; Voithofer, Rick – Teachers College Record, 2016
Background: Virtual schools--free, state-funded, credit-awarding elementary and secondary schools offering curricula and programs exclusively online--are a rapidly expanding sector of U.S. education. Some of the largest of these schools have low graduation rates and receive "failing" rankings on state accountability metrics. They…
Descriptors: Virtual Classrooms, Online Courses, Accountability, School Effectiveness
McShane, Michael Q.; Kelly, Andrew P. – Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice, 2014
For decades, Catholic schools, particularly inner-city Catholic schools, have seen declines in enrollment and an increasing need for subsidies from their dioceses. Many dioceses, however, have been unable to shoulder that burden, forcing schools to close. In response to difficult financial circumstances, the archdioceses of Indianapolis, Miami,…
Descriptors: Catholic Schools, Charter Schools, Urban Schools, Organizational Change
Cavanagh, Sean; Hollingsworth, Heather – Education Week, 2011
States are finally arriving at the "funding cliff"--the point where about $100 billion in federal economic-stimulus aid for education runs out. The loss seems certain to compound severe budget woes and could mean thousands of school layoffs and the elimination of popular programs and services in districts across the country. The bulk of…
Descriptors: School District Spending, Elementary Secondary Education, Job Layoff, Retrenchment
Goering, Barton L. – School Administrator, 2012
During the summer of 2010, school districts across the country reported almost daily on their plans to lay off staff because of sharp declines in aid. Hundreds of thousands of teachers' jobs were on the line. If these losses materialized, class sizes would skyrocket and educational enrichment activities would be lost. Some districts shortened…
Descriptors: Enrichment Activities, Elementary Secondary Education, Advocacy, Educational Finance
Finkel, Ed – District Administration, 2012
Kansas City (Missouri) Public Schools is at a crossroads. The district has struggled for decades with poor academic achievement, dwindling enrollment and budget, and short-term superintendents--27 in the past 40 years. Most recently, after a two-year stint during which he helped the district get its financial house in order, closing nearly half of…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Graduation Rate, Academic Achievement, Academic Standards
Kober, Nancy; Rentner, Diane Stark – Center on Education Policy, 2012
Cuts in state funding for elementary and secondary education in recent years have taken a toll in many vital areas, including teaching jobs and student services. State budget cuts have also affected a less visible target--state education agencies (SEAs), which are responsible for supervising elementary and secondary education in each state and…
Descriptors: Expertise, Educational Finance, State Surveys, Educational Change
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Brown, Daniel J. – Educational Administration Quarterly, 1991
According to the reviewer, Coleman claims that many current social policies deliberately or inadvertently undermine families, clans, religious organizations, and community institutions that have been sustaining social structures for thousands of years. Coleman suggests that "modern corporate actors" (even schools) cannot replace…
Descriptors: Educational Administration, Elementary Secondary Education, Human Capital, Institutional Survival
Greely, Andrew – Phi Delta Kappan, 1998
David Baker and Cornelius Riordan mistakenly claim that Catholic schools failed in the 1950s because they were mediocre. Their article is a house of cards built on a distortion of history and a single new finding that Catholic schools' social-class composition has changed. The "elitism" problem, stemming from rising costs, can be remedied by more…
Descriptors: Catholic Schools, Elementary Secondary Education, Elitism, Failure
Urschel, Jane W. – American School Board Journal, 1998
Public deliberation is a little-used concept that gets people talking about education and working together to improve it. Study circles discuss each solution's pros and cons, explore people's deeper motivations, weigh others' views carefully, work through conflicting emotions, and identify common ground. Pueblo, Colorado's process is profiled.…
Descriptors: Boards of Education, Community Involvement, Discussion, Elementary Secondary Education
Baker, David P.; Riordan, Cornelius – Phi Delta Kappan, 1998
Catholic schools' improved fortunes stem mostly from socioeconomic changes beginning in the 1970s and their role in the national debate over educational quality. A study assessing the state of Catholic education shows that Catholic common schools are becoming a system of proprietary schools that educate growing numbers of non-Catholic children…
Descriptors: Catholic Schools, Educational Change, Educational History, Elementary Secondary Education
Rudnac, Michael J. – American School Board Journal, 2000
To survive the 21st century, schools must internalize new technologies and expand their capacity for using technology to improve teaching and learning. They must adopt certain corporate change principles: examine mental models, think of a different way to think, and continuously improve and refine technology's role. (MLH)
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Elementary Secondary Education, Institutional Survival, Internet
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