Showing posts with label Megan McArdle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Megan McArdle. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Whadaya Call 5000 Lawyers at the Bottom of the Ocean?

Are there too many laws in education?

...too many lawyers?
Those questions are under consideration over at EdJurist:

Megan McArdle at The Atlantic reminded me of a topic I have been wanting to come back to ... the amount of law in education. At ELA this year, we had Philip K. Howard give a general session on his book Life Without Lawyers, the general premise of which is that there is too much law (and relatedly too many lawyers) in society and that we would all be better off if we generally reduced the amount of rules...

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Next Up For Edublogging: Full-Time, Professional, Mainstream

This ditty from This Week in Education:

Hard as it may be to believe, all this education blogging that's going on is still so far part-time and/or amateur (unpaid), and little of it part of mainstream news sites.

But that won't last for much longer, I don't think. Someone will soon get hired to blog about education full-time on a mainstream site.

Things have already gone far beyond the first fulltime mainstream hire in other areas. For example, many of the best bloggers who cover economics have already been hired, writes Megan McArdle on the Atlantic blog (Blogging goes professional). Ditto for politics. It could be ether someone new we've never heard about or someone already on the scene.

McArdle says,

I was at lunch with some blog people today, one of whom wants to recruit an economics blogger and asked for names. I basically drew a blank. All of the high-traffic economics bloggers I read are either professors, in some similarly rewarding profession, or already tied up by a media organization.

I think this is becoming broadly true of the wider blog world: the biggest bloggers are either professionals, or they have an even more lucrative job...

...I'm not sure what this means for the blogging world. It's still largely an amateur medium, but it's hard to see how many new bloggers can compete with someone who gets paid to do it, unless they are independently wealthy or have a job, like journalism or academia, that routinely throws them a lot of bloggable material....

Hummm. Sounds familiar. Show me the money.