The School Perceptions Podcast

37. Why Involve Your Community At All?

46 min · 19 de may de 2026
portada del episodio 37. Why Involve Your Community At All?

Descripción

Jack Schneider joins us from UMass-Amherst to talk about what community members have to offer local schools beyond tax dollars, and what schools have to offer community members beyond test scores [https://www.amazon.com/Beyond-Test-Scores-Measure-Quality/dp/0674976398] (to coin a phrase). You can email him [schneider@educ.umass.edu] with follow-ups, as he offers in the episode. We talked about an article ("In Praise of Ordinary Measures" [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/356473795_In_Praise_of_Ordinary_Measures_The_Present_Limits_and_Future_Possibilities_of_Educational_Accountability]) on the show, so here is that resource, and here are a few other pieces we've collaborated on over the past several years. * "Democracy in Action" (2023) [https://sc.lib.miamioh.edu/items/acee1d1c-360b-4843-892c-2fd90315e629] American School Board Journal * Educational Accountability 3.0: Beyond ESSA [https://nepc.colorado.edu/publication/resource-document-beyond-essa] (2023). National Education Policy Center * "Are Locally Elected School Boards Really Failing? [https://www.educationnext.org/are-locally-elected-school-boards-really-failing-work-in-progress-multiple-purposes-forum/](2022). Education Next

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38 episodios

episode 37. Why Involve Your Community At All? artwork

37. Why Involve Your Community At All?

Jack Schneider joins us from UMass-Amherst to talk about what community members have to offer local schools beyond tax dollars, and what schools have to offer community members beyond test scores [https://www.amazon.com/Beyond-Test-Scores-Measure-Quality/dp/0674976398] (to coin a phrase). You can email him [schneider@educ.umass.edu] with follow-ups, as he offers in the episode. We talked about an article ("In Praise of Ordinary Measures" [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/356473795_In_Praise_of_Ordinary_Measures_The_Present_Limits_and_Future_Possibilities_of_Educational_Accountability]) on the show, so here is that resource, and here are a few other pieces we've collaborated on over the past several years. * "Democracy in Action" (2023) [https://sc.lib.miamioh.edu/items/acee1d1c-360b-4843-892c-2fd90315e629] American School Board Journal * Educational Accountability 3.0: Beyond ESSA [https://nepc.colorado.edu/publication/resource-document-beyond-essa] (2023). National Education Policy Center * "Are Locally Elected School Boards Really Failing? [https://www.educationnext.org/are-locally-elected-school-boards-really-failing-work-in-progress-multiple-purposes-forum/](2022). Education Next

19 de may de 202646 min
episode 36. Why Integrity > Fidelity in Research Implementation artwork

36. Why Integrity > Fidelity in Research Implementation

Cara Jackson [https://obc.southerneducation.org/members/cara-jackson/], recent President of the Association of Education Finance and Policy (AEFP), joins us to talk about her presidential essay [https://direct.mit.edu/edfp/article/21/2/193/136229/Presidential-Essay-AEFP-s-Role-in-an-Evidence]and what she's learned over two decades of work in the "evidence-informed education ecosystem" about what it takes for policymakers, school leaders, and classroom teachers to their very best for their students. Additional links to things we talked about: * High-dosage tutoring implementation [https://sdp.cepr.harvard.edu/high-dosage-tutoring-toolkit] * Immigration enforcement and student outcomes [https://edworkingpapers.com/ai26-1453] * Standards of Excellence for Outcome-Based Contracting [https://connect.obc.southerneducation.org/SoE]

5 de may de 202635 min
episode 35. How Does Career Education Work Out for Students? artwork

35. How Does Career Education Work Out for Students?

Professor Jay Plasman, of Ohio State, joins us to talk about a recent report he published with the Fordham Institute [https://fordhaminstitute.org/ohio/research/college-or-career-readiness-postsecondary-and-labor-market-outcomes-ohio-high-school], entitled "College or Career Readiness: Postsecondary and Labor Market Outcomes for Ohio High School Students Earning Industry-Recognized Credentials." The full report [https://fordhaminstitute.org/sites/default/files/publication/pdfs/college-or-career-readiness-reportweb-final.pdf] is available for download, as well. It turns out that industry-recognized credentials pay off in some industries more than others, that they pay off bigger when credential-earning is tied to CTE course-taking, and that IRCs do not necessarily lead students to enroll in college at higher rates. Interesting findings!

28 de abr de 202634 min