This post is an essay by one of my favorite historians, Johann Neem, which appeared two years ago Hedgehog Review. Here's a link to the original. His topic is the critically important question of how we can create a shared narrative for the American people -- one that incorporates the bad parts without denying the good … Continue reading Johann Neem — A Usable Past: Providing a Narrative to House the Facts of American History
Month: December 2024
You Don’t Need to Kill Yourself Trying to Get into the Ivies
This post is a piece I wrote recently about an issue that's been on my mind for a while. Here's a link to the article, and here's a link to the slide talk I gave on the subject. The story is in the title. You Don’t Need to Kill Yourself Trying to Get into the Ivies: … Continue reading You Don’t Need to Kill Yourself Trying to Get into the Ivies
Bruce Kimball and Sarah Iler — College Leaders as Cookie Monsters
This post is an essay by Bruce Kimball and Sarah Iler that was published recently in Inside Higher Ed. Here's a link to the original. Drawing on their new book -- Wealth, Cost, and Price in American Higher Education -- they argue that leaders of elite universities are engaged in an endless pursuit of financial resources, … Continue reading Bruce Kimball and Sarah Iler — College Leaders as Cookie Monsters
Exceptionalism in US Higher Education
This post is an op-ed I published on my birthday (May 17) in 2018 on the online international opinion site, Project Syndicate. The original is hidden behind a paywall; here are PDFs in English, Spanish, and Arabic. It’s a brief essay on what is distinctive about the American system of higher education, drawn from my book, A Perfect Mess: The Unlikely Ascendancy … Continue reading Exceptionalism in US Higher Education
India’s Education Problem
This post is a piece from a recent edition of The Economist. Here's a link to the original. It focuses on a key issue in educational policy in the developing world. When you expand educational opportunity to a population that has had little access in the past, where do you focus your efforts? As the … Continue reading India’s Education Problem
Links to All My Publications and Course Materials — An Update List
For anyone who’s interested, I’m posting below an updated list of all my publications and course syllabi, including links to these works and to full course materials. Here’s a link to the list as a Word document, which is way more useful. Feel free to share. David Labaree Links to Publications and Course Materials December 8, … Continue reading Links to All My Publications and Course Materials — An Update List
Jon Zimmerman — A Trump Voter Walks Into My Office
This post is an op-ed by Jon Zimmerman that was recently published in the Wall Street Journal. Here's a link to the original. A Trump Voter Walks Into My Office It’s no joke—universities impoverish themselves by suppressing conservatives. By Jonathan Zimmerman Despite what you might have read about left-wing monoculture in academia, we really do … Continue reading Jon Zimmerman — A Trump Voter Walks Into My Office
The Lure of Statistics for Educational Researchers
This is a paper I published Educational Theory back in 2011 about the factors shaping the rise of quantification in education research. It still seems relevant to a lot of issues in the field educational policy. Here's an overview of the argument: In this paper I explore the historical and sociological elements that have made educational researchers … Continue reading The Lure of Statistics for Educational Researchers
Robin Lee Mozer — I Would Rather Do Anything Else than Grade Your Final Papers
If the greatest joy that comes from retirement is that I no longer have to attend faculty meetings, the second greatest joy is that I no longer have to grade student papers. I know, I know: commenting on student writing is a key component of being a good teacher, and there's a real satisfaction that … Continue reading Robin Lee Mozer — I Would Rather Do Anything Else than Grade Your Final Papers
