Interesting paper on why people follow rules:
Intrinsic respect for rules and social expectations are the most important motives for rule-following ("55β70% of participants conform to an arbitrary costly rule"). Extrinsic incentives and social preferences play only a minor role.
@paulbz As a former startup CoS - I love the way this visual depicts the way an exec office team might operate.
I know it's been a minute since you were in this role - but curious if you have other slides / collateral you'd be willing to share? Eager to learn from you :)
While I strongly believe in the 90s-era purpose of charters as "labs" for improving school quality, this move by Indiana is just the latest in a decades-long journey of misaligned, bad actors exploiting lack of oversight regardless of the (well-studied) detriment to students
We should all be watching @educateIN right now as they begin laying groundwork to fully dismantle public schooling in favor of... you guessed it...
Private, for- or non-profit charters ... π§
π - https://t.co/IEeTK4GEQY via @The74
This may be delayed (perhaps uniformed, even) but to whomever ran lighting / light design for @broadwaychicago's HP Cursed Child... truly a case study in the magic of shapes and light and sound. Captivating.
The data are in and the cost of putting untrained teachers in TX is high --> up to 4 months of learning is lost vs classrooms led by trained, seasoned, certified teachers. Even an ounce of learning loss in our post-COVID world should be a huge red flag π¨
https://t.co/pW3Y6n6wbD