
Dan Carr
1.2K posts

Dan Carr
@danmcarr
Edu researcher + microeconomist. Once a teacher (via @TeachForAU) now at @EdResearchAU with @D_AccessEcon, @EduPolicyInst & @B_I_Team in between




Part of my job as a teacher in the last few years has been as a learning support specialist, focussed on helping students who are struggling with skills and content in the intermediate and middle school grades. It's hard to calculate the damage done to kids' lives and learning by education professors like this one, who have spent years discouraging teachers from teaching, leaving thousands of kids drowning in more difficult material for which they were never prepared. Private tutoring options like Kumon, Oxford Learning, etc., are absolutely booming across Canada, and it's because too many of our publicly funded schools have adopted the kind of thinking on display here. But parents should not have to pay extra to have their kids learn their times tables--that is the job of the education system we all pay for. Kudos to @rastokke and her team for drawing attention to this nonsense, which we need to get out of our schools yesterday, and for proposing solutions that actually work.




Honestly, the huge focus on getting into a good college, PhD program, Goldman Sachs, etc. seems to reflect a deep disbelief in the eventual efficiency of labor markets. Nobody seems to believe any more that if you just develop skills, the skills will pay off eventually

WASPI women never had a case. Language of outrage around decision devalues where real outrage appropriate. MPs in opposition or on backbenches have been cynical in offering support for billions of compensation that was never going to be paid. thetimes.com/article/74a2a0…



Adults really need to take responsibility for themselves and understand that the world does not bend to accommodate every potential situation. If you’re triggered by social media stay off it. Her GP refused these drugs and she knowingly went around that. abc.net.au/news/2026-02-0…


"First conceived of over 30 years ago, the Harry Potter books are very much a product of 1990s liberalism: a moment when World War II still occupied a central space in the cultural imagination, and when it was still possible to believe that the best bits of the old political order could be retained alongside a gentle incorporation of the new. That’s why millennials like Harry Potter a whole lot more than younger generations do. The story captures a worldview that is no longer attractive to young people jaded by the experiences of economic decline, political polarization and spiraling identity politics. They have fallen out of love with Harry Potter because they have fallen out of love with the worldview the series represents. Which is to say that young people have fallen out of love with liberalism." I wrote about Harry Potter for @nytopinion nytimes.com/2026/01/26/opi…




🚨🚨🚨Today @SilviaGriseld and Jack Buckley release new research on the state of teacher workforce, with a particular focus on attrition. 🌟The main message? 🌟Teacher attrition isn’t rising — in fact, it’s now the lowest of any occupation in Australia. But challenges remain. [1/n] Here to read the report and a summary below e61.in/who-stays-who-…





EXCLUSIVE: The Albanese government says it intends to press ahead with plans to increase the tax on superannuation accounts worth more than $3 million. #Echobox=1746650050" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">afr.com/politics/feder…

Slides for my keynote speech at the Florence EUI conference "Future of Regulation and Competitiveness in Europe – Making the Draghi Report Actionable". Some stuff familiar to SiliconContinent readers, with new diagnosis and proposals. More to come soon! dropbox.com/scl/fi/xtsflm0…











