Tag: Financial Sustainability

Apple effectively teaches customers on $100/yr

The senior vice president of retail for Apple Computer recently described how Apple successfully brings thousands of customers each year from inexperience to proficiency with their software, for a relatively small cost. In the One-to-One program, for one hundred dollars per year customers get one hour per week with a Mac Genius.

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New technologies require a rethinking of school models

A senior administrator from a major public university said recently, about technology, “We could say we use technology, that it’s in all our classrooms and labs—we spend enormously on IT—but really it’s not an effective improvement.”

He was alluding to a point that there really are two fundamentally different ways of applying technology. The first is in support of existing practice. The second way to apply new technologies is to use them to enable fundamentally new kinds of learning. To be successful this often requires combining innovations in technology with innovations in school models.

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Guest Post: Control over resources affects innovation

The schooling system of the United States needs to live within its means—now more than ever. In this post Jim Wartman, an advisor (teacher) at Minnesota New Country School, describes how teacher-control in decision making at that school leads to better management of money in times of financial stress.

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The big payoff of the four-day school week: Unplanned innovation?

In this budget climate the four-day school week is hot. Districts across the country are moving to it, in an attempt to cut costs. Instead of rethinking school, the four-day week represents a simple continuation of the squeezing of the five-day week. It is not strategic, and in fact decreases productivity - the worst possible outcome.

Yet the onset of the four-day week may have an entirely different effect, releasing students from 20 percent of their obligatory time to instead pursue learning in other areas.

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Guest Post: To save money in tight financial times, one teacher says -- Decentralize!

During this Great Recession a system that was already being squeezed is following the instinct of centrally-managed systems to harden. This may be the precise wrong thing to do. In this post a teacher-manager of a school argues more discretion should be given to the ‘users’ of the system to figure out how to best meet learning goals with the resources available.

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New paper from CRPE seeks productivity gains in K-12

In this new paper from the Center on Reinventing Public Education (CRPE), Paul Hill and Marguerite Roza look to other industries to see what it takes to begin improving productivity in K-12 schooling.

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Guest Post: The EdVisions Story

Doug Thomas, Executive Director of EdVisions, describes how the EdVisions cooperative organizes its members into site teams to run schools, and supports teacher-run schools throughout the country.

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Cristo Rey schools treat young people as adults

By their early teens many young people today are already living quite adult lives—in the home, on the street—looking not only after themselves but often siblings, neighbors, and their parents. The Cristo Rey model of schools works for inner-city youth, in part, because they treat them as adults and give them real, adult responsibilities.

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