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Report Release: Reforming Teacher Pensions for a Changing Work Force
New Education Sector report examines teacher pensions and details the problems facing current state pension programs.
Sport or Not? A Question for the Courts
Senior Policy Analyst Elena Silva interviewed by the New York Times on Title IX.
Teachers Unions as Agents of Reform
Brad Jupp, an architect of Denver's landmark performance-based teacher pay system, ProComp, is an outspoken advocate of both labor organizing and quality education for disadvantaged kids. In this interview, Jupp talks about ProComp, his views on teacher unionism, and the future of the teaching profession.
Education Sector Welcomes Three New Board Members
Education Sector's board of directors names three prominent leaders in the fields of education and journalism to the board: David W. Breneman, Richard Lee Colvin, and Peter McWalters.
For-profit colleges: Do they shortchange students?
Policy Director Kevin Carey comments on a recent Senate HELP Committee hearing on for-profit colleges.
A new study casts doubt on the widely held belief that there's a "boy crisis" in education. The study reports that boys' test scores and college attendance has improved significantly over the past three decades.
The report, called "The Truth About Boys and Girls," was prepared by Education Sector, a think tank that used information gathered by a federally funded survey of educational progress since 1971.
The real story is not bad news about boys doing worse; it's good news about girls doing better. In fact, with a few exceptions, American boys are scoring higher and achieving more than they ever have before. But girls have just improved their performance on some measures even faster, the report said.
"Widespread paranoia about a crisis for boys is basically overblown," Education Sector's Sara Mead told CBS News correspondent Wyatt Andrews.
Mead said the strictly by-the-numbers academic achievement gap between boys and girls actually hasn't changed much for 30 years – that boys generally do better at math, girls at reading, and in some age groups, boys are narrowing even that gap.
The report said black and Hispanic boys do have serious educational issues, but that the problem should be viewed as mainly one of race and income rather than gender.
"Closing racial and economic gaps would help poor and minority boys more than closing gender gaps, and focusing on gender gaps may distract attention from the bigger problems facing these youngsters," the report said.
Doug Anglin, who attended Milton High School in Massachusettes, is not convinced. He thinks that girls are favored over boys in school, and he and his father have filed a federal civil rights complaint, Andrews reports. He'll soon join a college scene that is 57 percent female and 43 percent male.
"I think there is a systematic flaw that is favoring girls and negatively impacting boys," Anglin said.