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ED

Recommended Reading: ED Clarifies Its Intent on State Authorization Reciprocity

By Phil Hill. Posted on January 10, 2017

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Last year Russ Poulin from WCET and I wrote an essay for Inside Higher Ed (also published at e-Literate) describing and countering attempts by the Century Foundation and other activists who were arguing against the State A A coalition of consumer groups, legal aid organizations and unions object to the state of New York joining […]

Forbes Fantasies: Why Hillsdale College is not in the College Scorecard (hint, boring reasons)

By Phil Hill. Posted on September 20, 2015

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Richard Vedder wrote a particularly uninformed article in Forbes on Friday about the Education Department (ED) not including Hillsdale College in the new College Scorecard. Freed from the burden of facts or research, Vedder let loose the dogs of conspiracy [emphasis in original]. The Obama Administration, with much hype, released its College Scorecard recently, designed to […]

Ed Tech Evaluation Plan: More problems than I initially thought

By Phil Hill. Posted on August 24, 2015

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Late last week I described the new plan from the US Department of Education (ED) and their Office of Educational Technology (OET) to “call for better methods for evaluating educational apps”. Essentially the ED is seeking proposals for new ed tech evaluation methods so that they can share the results with schools – helping them […]

US Department of Education: Almost a good idea on ed tech evaluation

By Phil Hill. Posted on August 21, 2015

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Richard Culatta from the US Department of Education (DOE, ED, never sure of proper acronym) wrote a Medium post today describing a new ED initiative to evaluate ed tech app effectiveness. As increasingly more apps and digital tools for education become available, families and teachers are rightly asking how they can know if an app actually […]

ED and CBE: Example of higher ed “structural barrier to change” that is out of institutions’ control

By Phil Hill. Posted on August 13, 2015

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There has been a great conversation going on in the comments to my recent post “Universities As Innovators That Have Difficulty Adopting Their Own Changes” on too many relevant issues to summarize (really, go read the ongoing comment thread). They mostly center on the institution and faculty reward system, yet those are not the only sources of […]
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The views expressed here are solely my own and may or may not reflect those of my employer.