Posted by Aaron Eyler on March 24, 2010
The letter below was sent to the New Jersey Star Ledger on Friday, March, 19th, 2010 at 5:42 P.M. They have not published it, and I am assuming at this point that they won’t. Even though it is framed to specifically discuss New Jersey, the topic and my points in this article can be attributed [...]
Posted by Aaron Eyler on March 21, 2010
I am not anti-Charter Schools in the least, and I do not want anyone who reads this article to think such. My point here is to explain how the system is going to be altered over the next several years as states are cutting school funding throughout the country. We are about to enter the [...]
Posted by Aaron Eyler on March 18, 2010
At some point, society needs to realize that getting an education is not the prerequisite for being successful. Education should be viewed and utilized as a facilitator to achieving success. In other words, students should be working on “academic” knowledge in school while paving their career path simultaneously such to provide relevance to what they [...]
Posted by Aaron Eyler on February 20, 2010
A lot of politicians and business elitists seem to think that there is some severe crisis in American education as a result of scores on international tests like the NAEP and the TIMMS. There are a number of reasons why we should be wary of this kind of assertion in doing a statistical analysis, but [...]
Posted by Aaron Eyler on February 18, 2010
In another post I wrote about how assignment structure is detrimental to teaching kids “how” to think and how we are creating a generation of students that are incapable of completing a task without an assignment sheet, rubric, models, or constant guidance. I think it is important we take that one step further and investigate [...]