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Celebrating Liberty with George F. Will
11.12.2008 6:00:00 PM
"Celebrating Liberty"
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Cocktail Reception with Michael Medved
6.5.2008 6:00:00 PM
Confronting and Understanding Media Bias More

Upstream: The Ascendance of American Conservatism - with Al Regnery
6.2.2008 12:00:00 PM
PRI luncheon featuring Alfred S. Regnery, the publisher of The ... More

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5.28.2008 12:00:00 PM
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Education
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Demography Is Not Destiny: Reform Lessons from Florida on Overcoming Achievement Gaps
PRI Education Study
By: Vicki E. Murray, Ph.D, Matthew Ladner, Ph.D
8.11.2008

The Pacific Research Institute (PRI), a free-market think tank based in California, today released a report showing that a disadvantaged socio-economic background does not necessarily consign students to poor academic performance.
 
 The High Price of Failure in CaliforniaThe High Price of Failure in California: How Inadequate Education Costs Schools, Students, and Society
PRI Education Study
By: Vicki E. Murray, Ph.D
7.24.2008

More than a decade ago, in 1996, the California State University (CSU) trustees adopted a policy to reduce the need for remediation to no more than 10 percent of incoming freshmen by 2007. Results to date are not encouraging.
English Immersion or Law Evasion?
PRI Publication
By: Lance T. Izumi, J.D., Rachel Chaney, Jennifer Nelson
6.27.2008

A 10th-Anniversary Retrospective on Proposition 227 and the “End” of Bilingual Education Read more
 

Middle ClassNot as Good as You Think: Why the Middle Class Needs School Choice
By: Lance T. Izumi, J.D., Vicki E. Murray, Ph.D, Rachel Chaney with Rosemarie Fusano, Ruben Peterson
9.24.2007

Right now, many middle-class parents complacently believe that things are great in their neighborhood public schools. Is that belief largely true or an illusion? If the latter, then bold action on the part of middle-class parents is overdue.

 California Education Report Card 2007California Education Report Card, Index of Leading Education Indicators, Fourth Edition
By: Lance T. Izumi, J.D., Rachel Chaney, Xiaochin Yan
2.15.2007

Since the Pacific Research Institute (PRI) released its first California Education Report Card in 1997, parts of the education landscape in California have changed dramatically. The state now has a full set of rigorous academic content standards that serves as a guide for what students should know in core subjects such as mathematics and English. Curriculum and the testing regime are now aligned to the standards, and there is greater focus on student outcomes than a decade ago. Yet, despite these positive and encouraging reforms, there are still aspects of education in California that are hardly different today than they were 20 years ago. 

Failing Our Future Failing Our Future: The Holes in California’s School Accountability System and How to Fix Them
By: Lance T. Izumi, J.D., James S. Lanich, Xiaochin Yan
10.1.2006

Research shows that state school accountability systems have a positive impact on student achievement, but only when states attach significant consequences to the performance or non-performance of schools. California’s school accountability system, unfortunately, is severely deficient in this crucial area of consequences.

 Prop 88

No Bang for the New Tax Buck, The Many Flaws of Proposition 88
By:
Lance T. Izumi, J.D. Rachel Chaney
10.1.2006 

Proposition 88, the “Classroom Learning and Accountability Act” on the November 7, 2006 ballot, embodies the timeworn trope from the education bureaucracy: Increased government spending on public education will improve the system and produce better results. The initiative would impose a statewide parcel tax on every property owner in California, and funnel the revenue into programs in five different areas of education.

Overall, government spending on education in California is running at record levels. The recently approved 2006-2007 state budget allocates $55.1 billion to education — by far the largest part of the budget. That amount represents a 17-percent increase over state education spending just two years earlier. If local and federal tax dollars are added to state funding, then $11,264 is spent per pupil per year in California, an increase of more than $2,000 over per-pupil annual spending in 2002-2003.

No Magic Bullet

No Magic Bullet: Top Ten Myths About the Benefits of Government-Run Universal Preschool

By: Lance T. Izumi, J.D., Xiaochin Claire Yan
5.1.2006

A majority of California’s K-12 students are not proficient in English and math, roughly a third of high-school students fail to graduate, and up to 80 percent of incoming freshmen at a number of state university campuses need remedial instruction. These dismal realities confirm that California’s public education system is broken and it isn’t surprising that some seek a magic bullet to fix it.

 Paycheck Protection

Giving A Voice To Workers: Why California Needs Paycheck Protection
Lance T. Izumi, J.D., Rachel Chaney
10.1.2005

Public-employee unions spend their members’ dues money to support political candidates and ballot measures. If members disagree with that political spending, they must ask the union to give back their money. Paycheck protection empowers union members by requiring that their union obtain permission prior to funds being deducted from the members’  aychecks for political purposes. In other words, unions must ask for the consent of the governed.

 Free to LearnFree to Learn: Lessons from Model Charter Schools
By: Lance T. Izumi, J.D., Xiaochin Yan
9.1.2005

Charter schools, unlike traditional public schools, must demonstrate that they can meet the bottom line – student performance. To reach this goal, they must adopt practices that are proven to work. As a result, they are making tremendous strides in boosting student achievement, often in low-income communities where most of the other district schools are failing. Free to Learn: Lessons from Model Charter Schools shares stories from successful charter schools, and discusses how these schools can be models for the nation.

  
  
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