On this week’s Education Gadfly Show podcast, Joshua Dunn, Executive Director of the Institute of American Civics at the University of Tennessee, joins Mike and David to discuss how public schools will be affected by the end of the Chevron deference—the judicial doctrine in which courts defer to federal agencies’ reasonable interpretations of ambiguous statutes. Then, on the Research Minute, Amber examines a new paper criticizing the famous STAR class size study.
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#918: The broken pipeline of advanced education, with Adam Tyner
#916: The case for curriculum reform, with Robert Pondiscio
#915: Eliminating school boundaries, with Derrell Bradford
#914: A comprehensive vision for conservative education reform, with Rick Hess
#913: Advancing cross-partisan education policies, with Lorén Cox and Karen Nussle
#912: Predicting charter school success, with Adam Kho and Alex Quigley
#911: The flaws in school funding formulas, with Rebecca Sibilia
#910: Reforming Houston ISD, with Mike Miles
#909: Rethinking “equitable” grading, with Adam Tyner and Meredith Coffey
#908: The looming expiration of Covid relief funds, with Chad Aldis
#907: How to do tutoring right, with Alan Safran
#906: Does teacher licensing matter?, with Chad Aldeman
#905: Trump’s education agenda, with Lindsey Burke
#904: Residential mobility, student achievement, and charter schools, with Douglas Lauen
#903: Reducing poverty with the child tax credit, with Angela Rachidi
#902: Reforming New York’s Regents Exams, with Ray Domanico
#901: Charter schools just keep winning, with Debbie Veney
#900: The best and worst of ed reform in 2023, with Checker Finn
#899: The District of Columbia’s voucher program turns twenty, with Kara Arundel
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