Posted on 10/20/2008 1:55:06 PM PDT by bs9021
Old School Policies Challenged
by: Jesse Masai, October 20, 2008
A new book, The Future of Educational Entrepreneurship: Possibilities for School Reform, is now laying out the future of educational entrepreneurship, including possibilities for school reform.
In the timely volume, the American Enterprise Institutes director of education policy, Frederick Hess, and a select team of analysts and reformers examine how to create conditions favorable to K-12 education reform.
The most intriguing reforms in K-12 education today are entrepreneurial ventures such as the New Teacher Project, New Leaders for New Schools, the KIPP Academies, and New Schools for New Orleans, which provide an alternative to traditional education models by creating innovative frameworks for schooling, Hess said at the launch of the book.
He also said that demand for quality education does not necessarily produce high-quality supply and that familiar efforts have failed to foster the necessary climate for breakthrough advances in K-12 schooling.
The authors consider barriers to entry in their analysis of various obstacles to innovative and productive entrepreneurial activity in American education.
Dramatic improvement in K-12 schooling will require the emergence of new problem-solvers, and the number, scope, and success of these will depend on the environment in which entrepreneurs are able to operate, Hess said in highlighting the books key findings and insights.
And he added: Making K-12 education a magnet for talent will demand rethinking assumptions about hiring and recruiting. While Teach for America, the Broad Residency in Urban Education, and the Academy for Urban School Leadership, for example, have made great progress in attracting teachers and administrators from nontraditional career paths, more emphasis must be placed on developing professional networks that help entrepreneurs meet and recruit talented employees, connect with mentors, and discover business opportunities."....
(Excerpt) Read more at campusreportonline.net ...
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.