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Monday, December 31, 2012

The year in education—a look back at 2012 | Hechinger Report

The year in education—a look back at 2012 | Hechinger Report:


The year in education—a look back at 2012

In 2012, new teacher-evaluation systems and merit pay spread across the country. Technology continued to transform classrooms, and presidential candidates made education an unexpected focus on the campaign trail. Yet widespread problems in America’s education system persisted, and the nation remained behind much of the international competition.
At The Hechinger Report, we traveled from coast to coast to examine new approaches to improving U.S. schools and to answer important questions about what’s working and what isn’t.
On the eve of 2013, we’ve selected 13—a baker’s dozen—of our top stories from the past year to highlight what we found in 2012. These stories provide insight into some of the most staggering problems facing U.S. public education today, and look at promising strategies for solving them.
1. In India, a college building boom
In 2011 and 2012, Hechinger reporters traveled the globe to find lessons for America from the higher-education systems of CanadaChinaPolandSouth Korea and other countries. In India, we found a massive college building spree under way. A third of India’s 1.24 billion people are under the age of 14. Acknowledging that the country’s youth could be an asset in efforts to become a world power or a disaster that drains resources and fuels social unrest, the Indian government has responded by rapidly expanding access to higher education.
2. New teacher-evaluation systems in Tennessee have rough road ahead
More than two-thirds of states are in the process of overhauling how they evaluate their teachers in an effort to