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Displaying 1-30 of 35 results
Commentary
3.24.2022
Evidence-Based Learning, Career & Technical Education

What hiring ads indicate about the skills that employers want in a college major

Amber M. Northern, Ph.D.

Not all college majors are created alike, but it turns out that employers want their new hires to exhibit many of same skills regardless of what they major in. A recent study examines online job ads as a proxy for what employers view as the skills inherent in various college majors.

Commentary
3.17.2022
Career & Technical Education, Curriculum & Instruction, Governance, Teachers & School Leaders

Work instead of school: A better approach for our lowest-performing students?

Michael J. Petrilli

High school-age Americans struggling mightily with academics aren’t well served by our current approach to secondary education. But there may be a better model that would give them a more worthwhile experience and lead to better long-term outcomes: Let them take jobs while still in high school—during the school day, during both their junior and senior years, full pay included, no strings attached.

Commentary
3.10.2022
Evidence-Based Learning, Career & Technical Education, Curriculum & Instruction, Governance

The casualties of “college for all”

Arthur Samuels

A couple of weeks ago, I shared some ideas about how schools and districts can move away from the well-intentioned but deeply flawed “college for all” mindset that has permeated the education reform world and has, in turn, harmed many of the disadvantaged students whom the approach is m

Podcast
3.9.2022
Career & Technical Education, Curriculum & Instruction

Education Gadfly Show #810: College for all or college for some?

  On this week’s Education Gadfly Show podcast (listen on

Commentary
3.3.2022
Evidence-Based Learning, Career & Technical Education, Curriculum & Instruction, Teachers & School Leaders

The upside of the downward trend in college enrollment

Michael J. Petrilli

The media have been full of

Commentary
2.24.2022
Evidence-Based Learning, Career & Technical Education, Charter Schools, Curriculum & Instruction, Governance, Teachers & School Leaders

A principal explains how to repair the harm of “college for all”

Arthur Samuels

As Michael Petrilli wrote in these pages a few weeks ago, the education reform movement has come to the realization that its belief in “college for all,” while well-intended, was misguided.

Commentary
2.10.2022
Evidence-Based Learning, Career & Technical Education, Curriculum & Instruction, Governance, Teachers & School Leaders

Of course there’s tracking in high schools. Get over it.

Michael J. Petrilli

Tracking in our high schools is simply a fact, and we would do well to stop pretending otherwise or believing that it could be any other way. At the very least, we should allow for diverging paths after tenth grade, and we need to completely rethink our approach for our lowest-performing kids.

Podcast
2.2.2022
Career & Technical Education, Curriculum & Instruction, Personalized Learning

Education Gadfly Show #805: High schools didn’t get the memo that college isn’t for everyone

  On this week’s Education Gadfly Show podcast (listen on

Commentary
1.27.2022
Evidence-Based Learning, Career & Technical Education, Curriculum & Instruction, Teachers & School Leaders

We all agree that college isn’t for everyone. We should start acting like it.

Michael J. Petrilli

One of the biggest shifts in education reform in recent years has been widening acknowledgment that the “college for all” mantra was misguided. Yet so far our commitment to “multiple pathways” to opportunity is almost all talk accompanied by very little action. High school course requirements and accountability systems continue to push almost all students into the college-prep track.

Commentary
12.9.2021
Evidence-Based Learning, Career & Technical Education, Governance

Learning more about the use of industry recognized credentials

Amber M. Northern, Ph.D.

While the ubiquitous term “college and career readiness” assumes that twelve years of compulsory education could adequately prepare a student for both postsecondary and workplace settings, we know far more about readiness for the former than the latter.

Podcast
12.8.2021
Career & Technical Education

Education Gadfly Show #798: Which metro areas are accelerating student learning?

  On this week’s Education Gadfly Show podcast, Adam Tyner, Fordham’s Associate Director of Research, joins Mike Petrilli a

Commentary
12.2.2021
Career & Technical Education, Curriculum & Instruction, Governance, Teachers & School Leaders

Redesigning early college credit to reach underserved students

Jeff Murray

In 2012, Tennessee lawmakers created the Statewide Dual-Credit program (SDC) to help more students earn college credit while completing high school.

Commentary
10.29.2021
Career & Technical Education, Governance

The “big quit” is an opportunity to fix our broken education system

Bruno V. Manno

Covid-19 sent a shock wave through an already changing U.S. job market, provoking “a great reassessment of work in America.”

Podcast
10.14.2021
Career & Technical Education, High Achievers, Personalized Learning

Education Gadfly Show #791: Is this the end of gifted education in New York City?

  On this week’s podcast, Brandon Wright, Fordham’s editorial director and coauthor of

Commentary
8.26.2021
Career & Technical Education, Curriculum & Instruction, Teachers & School Leaders

Examining the benefits of career and technical education at scale

Olivia Piontek

When it comes to career and technical education, there’s one state that seems to be getting things just about right: Connecticut.

Commentary
2.25.2021
Evidence-Based Learning, Career & Technical Education

Assessing the value of community college credentials

Amber M. Northern, Ph.D.

The return on investment for four-year college degrees is fairly well-established in terms of graduates’ employment and

Commentary
1.28.2021
Career & Technical Education, Charter Schools

Career and technical education and the soft bigotry of low expectations

Tamar Jacoby

Beware the “soft bigotry of low expectations.” President George W. Bush’s trenchant warning resonated across the political spectrum when he voiced it to the NAACP in 2000, and it has more or less driven federal education policy ever since. For many, educators and noneducators alike, it remains a touchstone of how to think about racial equity.

Commentary
6.12.2020
Career & Technical Education, Curriculum & Instruction, Governance, High Achievers, Teachers & School Leaders

Why not eliminate at least one year of high school entirely?

Kalman R. Hettleman

Michael J. Petrilli’s recent article “Half-Time High School may be just what students need” is compelling. Yet proposals to cut school time in half in grades nine through twelve may be only half right.

Commentary
6.11.2020
Career & Technical Education, Governance, Teachers & School Leaders

Want to make your college degree count? Here’s where to live.

Tyler Ransom

Most people agree that a college education is a worthwhile investment for a young person. For example, across the U.S., bachelor’s degree holders earn on average 55 percent higher salaries than those with no education beyond high school. However, it is less well understood that there are stark geographical differences in how much return one gets on their educational investment.

Podcast
5.27.2020
Career & Technical Education, Personalized Learning

The Education Gadfly Show: The link between location and income

This week’s podcast guest is John V. Winters, Ph.D., associate professor of economics at Iowa State University and author of Fordham’s new report, What You Make Depends on Where You Live. He joins Mike Petrilli and David Griffith to discuss the report’s findings and implications.

Commentary
5.20.2020
Evidence-Based Learning, Career & Technical Education

What you make depends on where you live, not just whether you went to college

Amber M. Northern, Ph.D., Michael J. Petrilli

The COVID-19 pandemic and its economic fallout has yielded yet another cautionary tale about the perils of entering the workforce with nothing but a high school diploma. But that doesn’t mean that everyone needs a four-year college degree, or that we should build our high schools around that singular mission. In many American cities, workers with associate degrees earn middle-class wages.

Report
5.19.2020
Career & Technical Education

What You Make Depends on Where You Live: College Earnings Across States and Metropolitan Areas

John V. Winters, Ph.D.

Yes, what you make depends on what you know and what credentials you carry. But it also depends on where you live. That's what we find in our new report by John V. Winters. The first-of-its-kind analysis compares mean earnings for full-time workers with different levels of education in all 50 states and D.C., over 100 metro areas, and rural America. Read it to learn more.

Commentary
5.13.2020
Career & Technical Education, Curriculum & Instruction

The value proposition: On-the-job skills versus bachelor’s degrees

Amber M. Northern, Ph.D.

A skills gap occurs when the demand for a skilled workforce increases faster than the supply of workers with those skills. As the U.S. economy recovered from the 2008 Great Recession, that gap was evident in many economic sectors.

Commentary
11.20.2019
Career & Technical Education

How high school CTE programs affect outcomes after graduation

Tran Le

A new study by CALDER investigates how career and technical education (CTE) course-taking affects college enrollment, employment, and continuation into specific vocational or academic programs in college.

Commentary
10.30.2019
Career & Technical Education, Curriculum & Instruction

Opening STEM opportunities in Appalachia

Aaron Churchill

With the backing of Chevron and local philanthropy, the Appalachia Partnership Initiative (API) was launched five years ago.

Podcast
8.7.2019
Career & Technical Education

The Education Gadfly Show: Should all students be prepared for both college and career?

On this week’s podcast, Kate Blosveren Kreamer, deputy executive director of Advance CTE, joins Mike Petrilli and David Griffith to discuss whether we should change the conjunction in “college and career readiness” to “or.” On the Research Minute, Amber Northern examines how teachers and principals view social and emotional learning.

Event
4.30.2019
Career & Technical Education

Is Career and Technical Education Having an Identity Crisis?

Career and technical education (CTE) is enjoying its moment in the sun, with policymakers and educational leaders across the ideological spectrum embracing it as a solution to lagging upward mobility and distressed working class communities. On May 14, we posed these and other vexing questions to a panel of CTE experts. Watch the video now.

Event
4.17.2019
Career & Technical Education, Curriculum & Instruction

Education 20/20: Rod Paige and Peter Wehner

The Fordham-Hoover “Education 20/20” speaker series continued with our penultimate event on May 1, as we brought you another awesome duo. Rod Paige opened by arguing that tomorrow’s school reform needs to focus not just on changing schools, but even more on boosting student effort. Then Pete Wehner made a forceful, principled case for reviving old-fashioned character education in America’s schools.

Commentary
4.3.2019
Career & Technical Education

Are career-tech students preparing for jobs that actually exist?

Amber M. Northern, Ph.D., Michael J. Petrilli

To our knowledge, no study has empirically examined the degree to which CTE course-taking in high school aligns with the kinds of work available in local labor markets, as our newest report does. It shows that the country needs local business, industrial, and secondary and postsecondary education sectors to join hands. At the top of their to-do list should be better integration of what is taught in local high school CTE programs with the skills, knowledge, and positions needed in area labor markets, both now and in the future.

How Aligned is CTE
Report
4.3.2019
Career & Technical Education

How Aligned is Career and Technical Education to Local Labor Markets?

The recent reauthorization of the Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Act—the principal federal education program supporting career and technical education (CTE)—expressly aims to “align workforce skills with labor market needs.” Our latest report examines whether students in high school CTE programs are more likely to take courses in high-demand and/or high-wage industries, both nationally and locally.

How Aligned is CTE

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