19/11/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 19/11/2024 11:34
The public education system insufficiently incentivizes its leaders to prioritize student academic achievement. Examples from beyond the K-12 sector reveal how schools can adopt and maintain focus on student learning. Mission-driven organizations succeed by respecting governance-management boundaries, planning thoughtful leadership transitions, emphasizing operational coherence, and focusing narrowly on core tasks. By embracing sector agnosticism, public education will be better positioned to return student learning to the fore.
Key Takeaways
Michael T. Hartney is the Bruni Family Fellow at the Hoover Institution, an associate professor of political science at Boston College, a nonresident senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, and a research affiliate at Harvard University's Program on Education Policy and Governance. Hartney earned his PhD in political science from the University of Notre Dame.
Hoover fellows have been and remain at the forefront of education reform research, including school choice and accountability. The Hoover fellowship conducts extensive research in education policy. Specific issues of focus include expanding school choice, boosting American K-12 student achievement, ensuring school accountability, and increasing teacher effectiveness. Hoover's education experts also engage the larger community of state and local policymakers, parents, and other stakeholders to develop solutions that are relevant, meaningful, and actionable.
The Education Futures Council unveils report 'Ours to Solve - Once, and For All' highlighting path to revitalize public education in America.