Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Making Money in K-12 Schools Is Hard To Do …for Some Companies | Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice

Making Money in K-12 Schools Is Hard To Do …for Some Companies | Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice:

Making Money in K-12 Schools Is Hard To Do …for Some Companies

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For all of the three-decade hype about how business practices applied to K-12 schools will make them more efficient and high performing, a short hop and skip through the past half-century of for-profit companies failing in the education market might illustrate how applying market-driven practices to improve schools and make money  at the same time is hard to do for even the shrewdish of entrepreneurs.
In 1969, Behavioral Research Laboratory, contracted with the largely black Gary (IN) district to raise test scores in reading and math in the Banneker elementary school. They failed. BRL is no more.
Dorsett Educational Systems in 1970-1971 took over a school in Texarkana (AR) contracting to raise 350 children one grade level in reading and math after