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  • High-Stakes Game of Legislative Testing Chicken Nears Point of No Return0

    • April 30, 2015

    There’s nothing quite like the last-minute drama of a Colorado legislative session to fire up the creative juices. Last year at this time, I imagined the crazy showdown over transparency in the Student Success Act as an old gangster film. This time around, the big looming education issue is what to do about testing. No […]

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  • Education Goal Should Be Less Testing, Better Accountability0

    • April 30, 2015

    This legislative session’s monumental education debate has Colorado policymakers walking a dangerous tightrope. To benefit today’s K-12 students, they must promote wise policy that does not lean too far in either direction.

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  • How Not to Negotiate: Thompson’s Tepid Tentative Agreement0

    • April 29, 2015

    Last week, we dove into the ongoing ugliness in Thompson School District. The highlight of that post was CEA’s bogus petition against the board majority’s attempts to draft clearer MOU for negotiation. Certainly, CEA’s involvement in the district is a major issue and seriously alters the calculus as negotiations move forward. Reform board members were […]

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  • Compared with Real Samples, Dougco Union Survey Proves a Major Flop0

    • April 28, 2015

    Ironically, regular blogging here can make me grow up fast. While remaining perpetually 5 years old, I have learned the need to develop a healthy sense of skepticism. Otherwise, it might be time to start believing in time warps and magical survey fairies. Jane Reuter of the Douglas County News-Press reports on last week’s hocus […]

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  • Obamacare’s Constitutionality and the Origination Clause: New Evidence0

    • April 27, 2015

    This article originally appeared at the American Thinker. One of the constitutional disputes triggered by the Affordable Care Act, Obamacare, is whether by substituting new material for the original House-passed bill (H.R. 3590), the Senate exceeded its constitutional power to amend the original measure. This, in turn, has provoked a debate over whether the Founders

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  • Yes, It’s Hard to Be Humble — for Education Reformers and for This Blog0

    • April 23, 2015

    There have been more than a few times when I’ve gloated about an awesome blog idea that came to life here. On some occasions, my Education Policy Center friends warned me not to “get a big head.” At first, I was worried they meant little Eddie might turn out like this guy. Later I figured […]

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