About that Time magazine education poll
Guest blog by Matthew Di Carlo/Washington Post
A recent education poll conducted by Time magazine has gotten a lot of attention. Many of the questions are worded so badly that the results are rather meaningless. The question on merit pay, for example, defines the practice as “paying teachers according to their effectiveness” (who would oppose that, if it could be accurately measured?). Other questions elicited interesting responses, such as the one asking whether respondents would pay higher taxes to improve public schools (56 percent would). Or the finding that, when asked what will “improve student achievement the most,” more than twice as many people choose “more involved parents” (54 percent) over “more effective teachers” (24 percent). (more…)
Also: Time Magazine