Ronak Bhatt
651 posts

Ronak Bhatt
@RonakAtHome
School founder. Physicist taking a first-principles approach to K-12 education. Believer that children can do hard things. My job is building heroes.
















I've spent over 20 years working closely with current and former gifted students. 90% of them would have started looking for exits the second anyone came in with a heavy handed emotional literacy lesson. It's junk like this that gives gifted Ed a bad rep.




@natellewellyn @PSkinnerTech It matters when the definition is the basis for comparison. If you say your car is faster than mine, but you actually have a jet, but that’s OK because a jet is a kind of car and speed is all that matters, obviously that’s an incoherent claim that misses the point of comparison.









We need to normalize PhDs teaching high school. That solves at least two problems: absorbs some of the elite overproduction and put subject-matter experts (rather than ed school grads) in hs classrooms. (I know there are other problems.)





One of the most common questions I get when describing school choice is "I support parents having a choice, but what about the public schools?" Excited to share a new study out today that examines these (potentially) competing policy alternatives directly: Does funding school choice harm public schools by taking away needed funding? Or Does funding school choice create competitive accountability which also benefits public school students? I've been thinking through this work for the last few years and am grateful to @EducationNext for publishing my piece based on the study. Here's what I found:




Tightly age-based academic grade levels are faced w scylla of "social promotion" + charibydis of rampant retention/above age for grade This has NEVER been navigated successfully. Grade levels were a disaster in major American cities by 1909. new stack: abovegradelevel.substack.com/p/grade-levels…







