Reports

  • The Digital Learning Imperative: How Teaching and Technology Meet Today’s Educational Challenges  Report (PDF)
    January 4, 2012

    This report outlines how digital learning can connect middle and high school students with better teaching and learning experiences while also addressing three major challenges facing the nation’s education system—access to good teaching, tight budgets, and boosting student achievement. But simply slapping a netbook on top of a textbook will not lead to improvements. Effective educational technology strategies must link the “Three Ts”—teaching, technology, and use of time—with overall whole-school reform strategies and proven pedagogical practices to accelerate the pace of improvement and ensure that all students benefit from the opportunity that digital learning offers.



  • Informing Writing: The Benefits of Formative Assessment  Report (PDF)
    September 15, 2011

    Informing Writing Cover Image Although some progress has been made in improving the writing achievement of students in American schools, most students do not write well enough to meet grade-level demands. One tool with potential for improving students’ ability to effectively convey thoughts and ideas through text is classroom-based writing assessment. Such formative assessments allow teachers to gauge the effectiveness of their instructional practices, modify instruction as needed, and provide students with feedback on writing strengths and areas in need of further development. This report provides evidence that formative writing enhances students’ writing, as well as best practices for assessing writing in the classroom.



  • Education as a Data-Driven Enterprise: A Primer for Leaders in Business, Philanthropy, and Education  Report (PDF)
    March 22, 2011

    Education as a Data Driven Enterprise Report CoverWith advances in research, technology, and assessments, and with a focused effort, the U.S. education system can lead the world in becoming a data-driven enterprise. This publication provides leaders from business, philanthropy, and education with background on data issues; describes challenges that must be overcome; and makes recommendations for moving forward.



  • Teacher and Leader Effectiveness in High-Performing Education Systems  Report (PDF)
    March 16, 2011

    Teacher and Leader Effectiveness report coverThe issue of teacher effectiveness has risen rapidly to the top of the education policy agenda, and the federal government and states are considering bold steps to improve teacher and leader effectiveness. One place to look for ideas is the experiences of high-performing education systems around the world. Finland, Ontario, and Singapore all have well-developed systems for recruiting, preparing, developing, and retaining teachers and school leaders, and all have attained high levels of student performance and attribute their success to their teacher-effectiveness policies. This report examines lessons from these high-performing systems that the United States can apply, and provides detailed descriptions of the policies from each system.



  • PISA 2009 Results: What Students Know and Can Do Student Performance in Reading, Mathematics, and Science, Vol. 1 (OECD report)  Report (PDF)
    December 7, 2010

    PISA 2009 report coverThe 2009 Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) results were released by the Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD) on December 7 in Paris, France. PISA is one of the few mechanisms for regularly and directly comparing the quality of educational outcomes in the seventy countries that make up almost 90 percent of the world's economy. PISA measures the capacity of fifteen-year-old students to apply what they have learned in the classroom in order to analyze, reason, and communicate effectively.



  • 10 Elements of High-Quality Digital Learning  Report (PDF)
    December 1, 2010

    On December 1, 2010, Jeb Bush, governor of Florida 1999-2007, and Bob Wise, governor of West Virginia 2001-2005, released the "10 Elements of High-Quality Digital Learning." The ten elements represent the recommendations of the Digital Learning Council (DLC), a diverse group of more than one hundred leaders in education, government, philanthropy, business, technology and policy, and is meant to serve as a roadmap of reform for local, state, and federal officials to advance digital learning. On December 2, 2010, the Alliance for Excellent Education hosted a live webinar to talk about the release of the "10 Elements." Gov. Wise was joined by Lisa Gillis of DLC and Susan Patrick of iNACOL to discuss why digital learning can improve student learning and how it can help transform the education system. Following the discussion was an interactive conversation using questions submitted by participants from the around the country. The DLC is cochaired by Gov. Bush, chief executive officer of the Foundation for Excellence in Education, and Gov. Wise, president of the Alliance for Excellent Education.



  • Bipartisan National Public Opinion Poll on the Need for Immediate Education Reform
    July 14, 2010

    Improving the quality of public high schools through the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) is a voting issue for over eight in ten voters, according to a new national poll released July 14, 2010 by the Alliance for Excellent Education. Additionally, over half of voters say that their decision to vote for a current elected official in the 2010 congressional elections will be affected if Congress takes no action to reform the law currently known as the No Child Left Behind Act. The poll was conducted by Lake Research Partners and Bellwether Research and Consulting for the purpose of gaining insight into Americans' views of the public education system, the concern over the growing problems with the nation’s high schools, and the urgency to enact meaningful education reform through reauthorization of ESEA.



  • Writing to Read: Evidence for How Writing Can Improve Reading  Report (PDF)
    April 14, 2010

    Report Cover: Writing to ReadAlthough some progress has been made in improving the literacy achievement of students in American high schools during the last twenty years, the majority of students still do not read or write well enough to meet grade-level demands. Poor literacy skills play a role in why many of these students do not complete high school. Among those who do graduate, many will not be ready for college or a career where reading and writing are required. These young people will find themselves at a serious disadvantage in successfully pursuing some form of higher education, securing a job that pays a living wage, or participating in social and civic activities. One often-overlooked tool for improving students’ reading, as well as their learning from text, is writing. This report identifies instructional practices in writing shown to improve students’ reading abilities and recommends ways that teachers can improve students’ reading skills through teaching writing.



  • Don’t Leave Accountability Behind: A Call for ESEA Reauthorization  Report (PDF)
    March 1, 2010

    Report Cover: AEE/Commission's Don't Leave Accountability BehindWhile the federal government and the states have implemented some promising education reform efforts in 2010, these efforts will have limited long-term impact and risk undermining accountability if they continue to be pursued without updating and improving the bedrock of federal education policy-the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA, the current version of which is known as the No Child Left Behind Act, or NCLB). Only an ESEA reauthorization can address the aspects of NCLB that time, experience, and research have shown need to be significantly improved or updated. This report from the Alliance for Excellent Education and the Aspen Institute's Commission on No Child Left Behind, Don't Leave Accountability Behind: A Call for ESEA Reauthorization, describes four distinct reasons ESEA reauthorization is necessary to support long-term reform and ensure strong accountability for student outcomes and improvement.



  • Current Challenges and Opportunities in Preparing Rural High School Students for Success in College and Careers: What Federal Policymakers Need to Know  Report (PDF)
    February 5, 2010

    Cover: Current Challenges and Opportunities Feb 2010On February 5, the Alliance released Current Challenges and Opportunities in Preparing Rural High School Students for Success in College and Careers, a new report that is intended to give federal policymakers a detailed understanding of the challenges facing rural high schools as well as the inherent assets that rural schools bring to the national education reform debate.

    The report notes that current federal education policies and research tend to favor urban and suburban high schools with the largest student populations and pay too little attention to the unique needs and circumstances of rural high schools. As a result, high schools-and high school students-in too many rural communities are in trouble.

     



  • The High Cost of Low Educational Performance: The Long-Run Economic Impact of Improving PISA Outcomes (an OECD report)
    January 28, 2010

    OECD High Cost report coverRelatively small improvements in students’ educational performance can have large impacts on a nation’s future economic well-being, according to The High Cost of Low Educational Performance: The Long-Run Economic Impact of Improving PISA Outcomes. PISA, the Program for International Student Assessment, was created by the Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD) in1997 to monitor the outcomes of education systems in terms of student achievement on a regular basis and within an internationally greed-common framework. This PISA report, presented on January 28 at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, uses economic modeling to relate cognitive skills (as measured by PISA) to economic growth. The report shows that achievable gains in educational performance yield tens of trillions of dollars in gains in a nation’s gross domestic product.



  • The Economic Benefits from Halving the Dropout Rate: A Boom to Businesses in the Nation's Largest Metropolitan Areas  Report (PDF)
    January 12, 2010

    Econ Benefits Booklet Cover

    Few people realize the impact that high school dropouts have on a community’s economic, social, and civic health. Business owners and residents—in particular, those without school-aged children—may not be aware that they have much at stake in the success of their local high schools. Indeed, everyone—from car dealers and realtors to bank managers and local business owners—benefits when more students graduate from high school. To better understand the various economic benefits that a particular community could expect if it were to reduce its number of high school dropouts, the Alliance, with the generous support of State Farm®, analyzed the local economies of the nation’s fifty largest cities and their surrounding areas to calculate economic projections that estimate the gross increase in important local economic factors such as individual earnings, home and auto sales, job and economic growth, spending and investment, tax revenue, and human capital.



  • Meaningful Measurement: The Role of Assessments in Improving High School Education in the Twenty-First Century  Report (PDF)
    June 23, 2009

    Meaningful Measurement report cover

    As the nation embraces the goal of graduating all students college and career ready, there is a growing movement to realign standards, assessments, and accountability systems to that goal. Meaningful Measurement: The Role of Assessments in Improving High School Education in the Twenty-First Century, is a collection of essays by leading experts that discuss important assessment issues, examines promising assessment practices from across the globe, and offers recommendations on how the federal government can support an assessment agenda for the twenty-first century. Topics include: assessments that measure students’ college and career readiness, performance assessments, the role of benchmark assessments, assessing high school students who are English Language learners and students with disabilities, the benefits of international assessments, the role of technology in improving assessments and their use, and how assessment design affects the implementation of a growth model at the high school level.

     

    Full Report

    Introduction and Chapters

    Press Release

    April 14, 2009 Event



  • From No Child Left Behind to Every Child a Graduate  Report (PDF)
    August 28, 2008

    Cover: From No Child Left Behind to Every Child a Graduate: Defining a Federal Role in Improving America’s Secondary SchoolsThis report outlines the Alliance for Excellent Education’s Framework for Action to Improve Secondary Schools, which reflects the consensus among educators, researchers, policymakers, and other authorities on the specific problems of secondary schools, as well as on the research- and best-practice-supported solutions to those problems. Taken together, the seven policy areas contained within the framework offer a comprehensive and systemic approach to secondary school reform.

     

     

     



  • Dropouts, Diplomas, and Dollars: U.S. High Schools and the Nation’s Economy  Report (PDF)
    August 27, 2008

    Dropouts, Diplomas, and Dollars: U.S. High Schools and the Nation’s Economy cover imageThe United States can no longer absorb the costs and losses associated with an education system that produces more than 1.2 million dropouts every year. This report examines the impact of this crisis on the dropouts themselves, as well as its effect on the economy, social fabric, and security of the nation, states, and local communities.

     

     

     

     



  • Literacy Instruction in the Content Areas: Getting to the Core of Middle and High School Improvement  Report (PDF)
    June 12, 2007

    Today, more than six million of the nation’s secondary school students fall well short of grade-level expectations in reading and writing. Recognizing the urgency of this literacy crisis among middle and high school students, policymakers in all parts of the country have begun to implement a wide range of new programs and services designed to help struggling adolescent readers catch up in essential literacy skills, particularly reading fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension. However—and as this report argues—if students are to be truly prepared for the sophisticated intellectual demands of college, work, and citizenship, then these reforms will not be enough. Even as their schools help them to catch up in the basics, students also must be taught the advanced literacy skills that will enable them to succeed in the academic content areas—particularly the core content areas of math, science, English, and history.



  • Double the Work: Challenges and Solutions to Acquiring Language and Academic Literacy for Adolescent English Language Learners  Report (PDF)
    November 2, 2006

    Over the past several years, education leaders and policymakers have come to understand that the nation needs to dramatically improve the literacy levels of its adolescents. But the policy discussion has focused, in large part, on the literacy needs of native English speaking students – to date, much less attention has gone to the specific challenges involved in teaching reading and writing to adolescents for whom English is not a first language. Commissioned by Carnegie Corporation of New York, written by Deborah Short and Shannon Fitzsimmons of the Center for Applied Linguistics, and published by the Alliance for Excellent Education, this report makes a powerful case for particular teaching practices and educational policies designed to help English language learners master the reading and writing skills they need to succeed in high school, college, and the workforce.



  • Writing Next: Effective Strategies to Improve Writing of Adolescents in Middle and High Schools  Report (PDF)
    October 19, 2006

    Along with reading comprehension, writing skill is a predictor of academic success and a basic requirement for participation in civic life and in the global economy. Yet every year in the United States, large numbers of adolescents graduate from high school unable to write at the basic levels required by colleges and employers. Writing Next: Effective Strategies to Improve Writing of Adolescents in Middle and High Schools, commissioned by Carnegie Corporation of New York and published by the Alliance for Excellent Education, discusses eleven specific teaching techniques that research suggests will help improve the writing abilities of the country’s 4th- to 12th-grade students.

     

     



  • Who’s Counted? Who’s Counting? Understanding High School Graduation Rates  Report (PDF)
    June 27, 2006

    Who’s Counted? Who’s Counting? Understanding High School Graduation Rates explains the reasons why so many different graduation rate formulas and statistics exist, addresses why states report them differently, discusses the limitations and benefits of each method, and – most importantly – defines the policy changes needed to assure that educators, school officials, parents, and the public receive timely and accurate information about how many students are actually graduating so that they can assess their schools’ current effectiveness and make improvements.

     

     



  • Reading Next: A Vision for Action and Research in Middle and High School Literacy  Report (PDF)
    June 11, 2006

    Reading Next is a cutting-edge report that combines the best research currently available with well-crafted strategies for turning that research into practice. Informed by five of the nation's leading researchers, Reading Next charts an immediate route to improving adolescent literacy. The authors outline 15 key elements of an effective literacy intervention, and call on public and private stakeholders to invest in the literacy of middle and high school students today, while simultaneously building the knowledge base.

     

     

     



  • Improving Adolescent Literacy in Arizona: A Report to the Governor’s P20 Council  Report (PDF)
    December 8, 2005

    Cover image of Improving Adolescent Literacy in Arizona: A Report to the Governor’s P20 Council reportOver the last few decades, an enormous amount of attention has been directed toward the reading difficulties of America’s young children. For instance, researchers have engaged in countless skirmishes over the relative merits of phonics and whole-language instruction in grades K–3. Pundits have lamented over and over again the fact that Johnny still can’t read. And federal policymakers have made greater and greater investments in Title I, with its heavy emphasis on teaching reading in the elementary schools.

     

     

     



  • Profiles in Leadership: Innovative Approaches to Transforming the American High School  Report (PDF)
    October 3, 2004

    Out of Print. A PDF of the report is still available for download.

    Profiles in Leadership: Innovative Approaches to Transforming the American High School is a collection of essays written by some of America's foremost education innovators, including former Virginia Governor Mark Warner, former U.S. Secretary of Education Richard Riley, and Melinda French Gates. It presents valuable perspectives from a range of influential educators, foundation executives, and public officials.

    Some of America’s foremost education innovators lay out a bold vision for secondary school leadership in a collection of essays released by the Alliance for Excellent Education. Profiles in Leadership: Innovative Approaches to Transforming the American High School presents valuable perspectives from a range of influential educators, foundation executives, and public officials.

     



  • Tapping the Potential: Retaining and Developing High-Quality New Teachers  Report (PDF)
    June 23, 2004

    American schools spend more than $2.6 billion annually replacing teachers who have dropped out of the teaching profession. At a Capitol Hill briefing on June 23, the Alliance for Excellent Education released a new report which cites comprehensive induction, especially in a teacher's first two years on the job, as the single effective strategy to stem the rapidly increasing teacher attrition rate.

    The report, Tapping the Potential: Retaining and Developing High Quality New Teachers includes federal policy recommendations, in-depth analysis of new teacher induction practices, and four case studies: Connecticut BEST, Santa Cruz New Teacher Project (California), Tangipahoa FIRST (Louisiana), and The Toledo Plan (Ohio).

     

     



  • Adolescents and Literacy: Reading for the 21st Century  Report (PDF)
    November 10, 2003

    NOTE: Print copies no longer available. Please download report in pdf format.

    Examines the reliable, empirical research that exists on how to improve the literacy of children in grades four through 12. It brings together the key findings of the best available research on issues related to adolescent literacy. It also offers policymakers and the public a better understanding of the challenges and opportunities that confront the nation as it begins to work to improve the literacy levels of older children. The report demonstrates that we already know a great deal about reading comprehension and about effective methods for helping students of all ages become better readers.

     

     



  • The Literacy Coach: A Key to Improving Teaching and Learning in Secondary Schools  Report (PDF)
    November 9, 2003

    Helps to develop an understanding of what works in successful programs, as well as successful strategies for training effective literacy coaches.