Leadership Blog

Inside School Research

The Inside School Research blog covered education research behind big policy debates and daily classroom concerns. This blog is no longer being updated, but you can continue to explore these issues on edweek.org by visiting our related topic pages: research, teaching research, and leadership research.

School & District Management Education Researchers to Advise White House Officials on Better, Cheaper Studies
Researchers meet with White House officials this morning to discuss ways to make high-quality, experimental research less expensive and quicker to turn around to educators in the field.
Sarah D. Sparks, July 28, 2014
1 min read
Federal Can States Make Student Data Useful for Schools?
State leaders sitting on mountains of student data are merging on Washington D.C. next week to share ways to make it more useful to educators.
Sarah D. Sparks, July 25, 2014
1 min read
School & District Management Some Nuance in the Image of the School-Hopping Turnaround Principal
Are successful principals school-hopping, or staying put?
Sarah D. Sparks, July 24, 2014
1 min read
Science After 20-Year Hiatus, U.S. to Rejoin International Math and Science Test
American 12th graders didn't do so well back in 1995, but they'll get another shot next spring to prove their mastery of advanced physics and math.
Sarah D. Sparks, July 24, 2014
2 min read
School & District Management What's the 'Opportunity Cost' of Doubling Down on Math?
Studies of the effects of "double dose" classes rarely take into account students' lost opportunity for electives.
Sarah D. Sparks, July 23, 2014
1 min read
Student Well-Being & Movement Is Your School Looking Out for Students After Trauma? How Long After?
Parent death can lead to higher risk of their children struggling or even dying into young adulthood, but longterm support for students in schools can be spotty.
Sarah D. Sparks, July 23, 2014
2 min read
Early Childhood In 25 Years, U.S. Children Make Fragile Progress, Kids Count Analysis Finds
Economic instability and racial disparities threaten American children's educational and health progress, according to a new study.
Sarah D. Sparks, July 22, 2014
3 min read
School & District Management What Happens to the Kids Who Ruled Middle School?
Middle school popularity wanes, but the early drug use and criminal behavior stick around.
Sarah D. Sparks, July 18, 2014
2 min read
Science Exit Exams Need Overhaul, Report Says
A report critiquing high school exit exams continues a series of recent studies looking at the unintended consequences of boosting graduation requirements.
Sarah D. Sparks, July 16, 2014
1 min read
Education Tougher High School Exit Criteria May Not Boost College Prospects, Study Says
State efforts to toughen science and mathematics requirements for graduation may mean fewer students make it through high school and to college, according to a new study in the journal Education Researcher.
Sarah D. Sparks, July 15, 2014
2 min read
Teaching Grants Awarded for Three Low-Cost Randomized Trials
The White House and the Coalition for Evidence-Based Policy in Washington are doubling down on the use of experimental studies to find what works in policy and practice, with a pilot competition funding three low-cost randomized trials in education, health, and workplace safety and a White House summit on how to use them.
Sarah D. Sparks, July 11, 2014
3 min read
Science Education Department Launches $3 Million Evaluation of Khan Academy
The U.S. Department of Education has launched a $3 million randomized control trial to gauge the effectiveness of Khan Academy, the now-ubiquitous online-learning site that popularized the "flipped classroom" model.
Sarah D. Sparks, July 11, 2014
1 min read
Science Happy Atoms and Math Games: New Ed Businesses Win Federal Seed Money
The U.S. Department of Education's research agency will help 15 new education entrepreneurs conduct research and development for interventions in science, language and other areas.
Sarah D. Sparks, July 10, 2014
1 min read
School & District Management Want More Kids to Graduate? Report Suggests Starting with Mom and Dad
A new report suggests "dual generation" anti-poverty programs could boost the achievement and prosperity of parents and children alike.
Sarah D. Sparks, July 9, 2014
3 min read