New Era of Education, Metal Detecting

New Era of Education, Metal Detecting

Top of Mind with Julie Rose - Season 1, Episode 900

  • Sep 14, 2018 6:00 am
  • 1:42:44 mins
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A Look at New Flexibility for States in Education Guests: Mike Petrilli, President, Thomas B. Fordham Institute, Research Fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution, Executive Editor of Education Next; Alisa Ellis, Member of the Utah State Board of Education; Vance Randall, Professor, BYU McKay School of Education; Bryan Bowles, Associate Clinical Professor, BYU McKay School of Education  This school year, a new federal law called the Every Student Succeeds Act takes effect. It was passed as a replacement to No Child Left Behind – which lawmakers, teachers, administrators and parents all disliked for the way it graded schools and punished those that failed to meet federal standards. The new Every Student Succeeds Act puts the responsibility for grading schools squarely in the lap of state regulators. Two of the law’s biggest promises are more flexibility and more local control over education. So how is it working out?  Inside the Quirky World of Metal Detecting Guests: Ryan Houston, Utah Metal Detecting; Todd Yerks, cttodd.com; Allyson Cohen, DetectingDiva.com; Dawn Chipcase, Digger Dawn on YouTube  At least a thousand times a year somebody in the UK reports finding something historically important in a field somewhere, while out metal detecting. Could be a gold broach or a silver coin – or even a whole hoard of precious stuff buried by some wealthy Saxon during Medieval times. Such finds are on the rise as metal detecting equipment gets better and shows like The Detectorists on the BBC prompt people to try their hand at treasure hunting.

Episode Segments

A Look at New Flexibility for States in Education

Sep 14, 2018
51 m

Guests: Mike Petrilli, President, Thomas B. Fordham Institute, Research Fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution, Executive Editor of Education Next; Alisa Ellis, Member of the Utah State Board of Education; Vance Randall, Professor, BYU McKay School of Education; Bryan Bowles, Associate Clinical Professor, BYU McKay School of Education  This school year, a new federal law called the Every Student Succeeds Act takes effect. It was passed as a replacement to No Child Left Behind – which lawmakers, teachers, administrators and parents all disliked for the way it graded schools and punished those that failed to meet federal standards. The new Every Student Succeeds Act puts the responsibility for grading schools squarely in the lap of state regulators. Two of the law’s biggest promises are more flexibility and more local control over education. So how is it working out?

Guests: Mike Petrilli, President, Thomas B. Fordham Institute, Research Fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution, Executive Editor of Education Next; Alisa Ellis, Member of the Utah State Board of Education; Vance Randall, Professor, BYU McKay School of Education; Bryan Bowles, Associate Clinical Professor, BYU McKay School of Education  This school year, a new federal law called the Every Student Succeeds Act takes effect. It was passed as a replacement to No Child Left Behind – which lawmakers, teachers, administrators and parents all disliked for the way it graded schools and punished those that failed to meet federal standards. The new Every Student Succeeds Act puts the responsibility for grading schools squarely in the lap of state regulators. Two of the law’s biggest promises are more flexibility and more local control over education. So how is it working out?