New Motto for a Leaner Washington: Pay for What Works
It sounds too good to be true: Rather than pay up front, we would agree to pay the philanthropists and private-sector funders behind a new program only after it succeeds.

It sounds too good to be true: Rather than pay up front, we would agree to pay the philanthropists and private-sector funders behind a new program only after it succeeds.

Education leaders often act lazily, blaming union contracts and federal regulation rather than confronting the problems they have the capacity to solve.