she’s a 10 but Excel thinks she’s October
she’s a 10 but Excel thinks she’s October
More broadly, I'd love to get your thoughts on the post I have up this morning on next steps for the evidence-based policymaking movement!
fas.org/publication/...
Screenshot from APPAM program describing living evidence session to be hosted Saturday, November 15 at 1:45pm
Attending #2025APPAM? Come check out my session this Saturday where I'm partnering with colleagues to talk about the future role of evidence synthesis and AI in powering better policy- and decision-making.
(disclaimer: I'm not an economist! just a policy person who reads a lot of research 😅)
I feel like the overall evidence on co-requisite education is pretty mixed, and there's a lot of variation in how these programs are designed/implemented. So hard to say if these results would replicate! Jill Barshay did a good write up on this a few years ago hechingerreport.org/proof-points...
cuny asap, of course! www.mdrc.org/work/publica...
but on your second question, I think this paper on co-requisite math/stats courses is interesting. they suggest that the earnings impact that they find is driven by reduced time to degree. journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.3102/...
also worth noting that TX-18, a heavily democratic district, has been without a rep since January...
This is illegal. www.gao.gov/blog/what-po...
Rep. Wesley Hunt has spent months trying to get officials to hire Elon Musk’s The Boring Co. to build a major flood control project in Houston. The company has pitched tunnels that are far smaller than what may be needed to address the flooding issues.🤔
@lmcgaughy.bsky.social @chengyilun.bsky.social
Truly wild that this entire story doesn't mention the fact that DOGE nuked USDS and 18F, which actually did this work for years. Including online passport renewal and the creation of Direct File to make filing taxes easier! www.washingtonpost.com/politics/202...
Ever since the former commissioner of the National Center for Education Statistics was dismissed by the Trump administration in February, I wanted to hear her story. Peggy Carr was among a string of Black senior officials fired in early 2025. (1/3)
Posted in the State Department. The resistance always grows. Tomorrow there will be more of us.
It’s true, FEMA doesn’t serve people as well as it should. But it’s also clear that in large part the tragedy unfolding in Central Texas was exacerbated by a failure of local and state officials’ response. So why should Texans trust those same people to manage their recovery?
for my #edusky people, highly recommend this resource the HEDCO institute just dropped that is tracking research on four-day school weeks (and all their research dashboards!): hedcoinstitute.uoregon.edu/dashboards/f...
real bummer finding out that literally everything was on the honor system this whole time
Yesterday, June 2, was an interesting day at work. I was reporting a story about how the Education Department hadn't delivered a report to Congress on the Condition of Education, despite the June 1 deadline mandated by law. 🧵 (1/9)
A blast from my past: New evidence on the program Skew the Script finds promising impact of the curriculum on AP test scores. This resource helped me bring Beyonce, influencer salary, and food deserts into the conversation into my math classroom! skewthescript.org/blog/harvard...
#edusky #mathsky
Delighted to see this piece with Victor Ambros, @carlbergstrom.com, Carol Greider, @michaelemann.bsky.social, and @briannosek.bsky.social in the wild.
Trump’s new ‘gold standard’ rule will destroy American science as we know it
@standupforscience.bsky.social
www.theguardian.com/commentisfre...
The Trump administration’s “Make America Healthy Again” report misinterprets some studies and cites others that don’t exist, according to the listed authors
Exactly what we’ve been SCREAMING about since this whole mess started. This was inevitable. It’s not fault of the office itself. It’s entirely the fault of the current administration.
"For me, the answer now lies in refusal, the withdrawal of participation from systems that require dishonesty as the price of belonging."
Today I am resigning from the National Science Board and the Library of Congress Scholars Council.
I wrote about my decision in TIME.
time.com/7285045/resi...
And you can read more thoughts from me about why this report holds more salience than ever in the current circumstances here: fas.org/publication/...
You can read more about how we propose IES use this innovative model to bring evidence-based practice to those who need it, when they need it here: fas.org/wp-content/u...
IES’s mission is to equip teachers, school leaders, parents, and more with the tools backed by rigorous research that might help them do their jobs best. Living evidence is an approach that supports bringing knowledge to communities faster, better, and more efficiently.
The report comes at a crossroads: the Trump administration has taken steps to dismantle the Institute of Education Sciences, attacking it for a perceived failure to improve student achievement.
But here’s the thing: the small, mighty IES team is not on school campuses teaching kids to read.
THREAD | Today, our team from the @scientistsorg.bsky.social and the Future Evidence Foundation shared a report sharing learnings and recommendations from a year-long design sprint that explored potential use of an innovative approach, living evidence, at the federal What Works Clearinghouse.
This is just the beginning. At FAS, we’re building bridges between science and public policy—at every level of government, now and for the future.
Some of our best ideas still need a home. If you’re in a position to act on science-backed policies across climate, tech, state capacity & more—we’ve got memos for you: fas.org/accelerator/...
For example, @mayaforcouncil.bsky.social's memo on Science and Technology Hubs for Congress has influenced GAO's development of an expert network to support legislators: fas.org/publication/...