28%OFF
Stock image for illustration purposes only - book cover, edition or condition may vary.
Class Clowns: How the Smartest Investors Lost Billions in Education
Jonathan A. Knee
FREE Delivery in Ireland
Description for Class Clowns: How the Smartest Investors Lost Billions in Education
Hardback. Series: Columbia Business School Publishing. Num Pages: 288 pages, illustrations. BIC Classification: JN; KJB. Category: (P) Professional & Vocational. Dimension: 163 x 246 x 2. Weight in Grams: 508.
The past thirty years have seen dozens of otherwise successful investors try to improve education through the application of market principles. They have funneled billions of dollars into alternative schools, online education, and textbook publishing, and they have, with surprising regularity, lost their shirts. In Class Clowns, professor and investment banker Jonathan A. Knee dissects what drives investors' efforts to improve education and why they consistently fail. Knee takes readers inside four spectacular financial failures in education: Rupert Murdoch's billion-dollar effort to reshape elementary education through technology; the unhappy investors-including hedge fund titan John Paulson-who lost billions in textbook ... Read morepublisher Houghton Mifflin; the abandonment of Knowledge Universe, Michael Milken's twenty-year mission to revolutionize the global education industry; and a look at Chris Whittle, founder of EdisonLearning and a pioneer of large-scale transformational educational ventures, who continues to attract investment despite decades of financial and operational disappointment. Although deep belief in the curative powers of the market drove these initiatives, it was the investors' failure to appreciate market structure that doomed them. Knee asks: What makes a good education business? By contrasting rare successes, he finds a dozen broad lessons at the heart of these cautionary case studies. Class Clowns offers an important guide for public policy makers and guardrails for future investors, as well as an intelligent expose for activists and teachers frustrated with the repeated underperformance of these attempts to shake up education. Show Less
Product Details
Publisher
Columbia University Press
Series
Columbia Business School Publishing
Place of Publication
New York, United States
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 7 to 11 working days
About Jonathan A. Knee
Jonathan A. Knee is a professor of professional practice and codirector of the media and technology program at Columbia Business School. He is the author of The Accidental Investment Banker (2006) and coauthor of The Curse of the Mogul (2009).
Reviews for Class Clowns: How the Smartest Investors Lost Billions in Education
Class Clowns is more than a business book, or a book on the education industry. Filled with colorful characters and gripping narratives, it poses deep questions that should engage a broad audience. By bringing the keen insights of a veteran investment banker, Knee demonstrates that no matter the goals, any business is subject to the basic laws of economies of ... Read morescale, geographic advantage, and barriers to entry. This is an important lesson that many in the education sector seem to have ignored.
James B. Stewart, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Den of Thieves Class Clowns will be intriguing for educators who, while they may be skeptical of reforms borrowed from the business sector, do not actually know much about the business decisions underlying these reforms. Do market-inspired reforms that fall short educationally also disappoint investors and backers? Jonathan Knee makes a fervent and entertaining case.
Susan Fuhrman, president, Teachers College When business meets education the result is a succession of face-plants that will leave you wondering whether to laugh or cry. Class Clowns is a great read for anyone concerned about the future of education or perhaps hoping to invest in it.
Tim Wu, author, The Master Switch: The Rise and Fall of Information Empires Send in the clowns! In this case, the otherwise brilliant billionaires who were dumb enough to part with hundreds of millions of dollars in ill-conceived utopian education schemes. Jonathan Knee reveals how, despite the best of intentions, these edu-trepeneurs wound up getting schooled.
Paul Ingrassia, former Managing Editor of Reuters and Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Crash Course Jonathan Knee's Class Clowns is a funny and trenchant account of the misadventures of a cohort of celebrated investors in the for-profit education business. The stories Knee tells demonstrate that the power of markets works only when combined with rigorous analysis, not willy-nilly.
Nicholas Lemann, author, The Big Test: The Secret History of the American Meritocracy Class Clowns is, predictably, both a good read and provocative, and I think it will be a standard text for all those interested in investing in the educational ecosystem. This is a volume rich in insight and perspective. Knee delivers his clear objective-namely to highlight the common errors that have undermined progress in education and destroyed shareholder value along the way.
David Levin, president and CEO, McGraw-Hill Education Class Clowns performs an enormous public service by peeling back the underlying structure of educational markets and revealing the strategic imperatives for long-term success. The failure of many well-intentioned educational businesses and investors to heed these lessons has bred cynicism instead of hope in a sector that is crucial to social and economic progress.
Bruce C. Greenwald, co-author of Creating a Learning Society: A New Approach to Growth, Development, and Social Progress What I liked: This in-depth look into a segment of the investment world I'd never really given much thought to before... What I loved: How many parts of Class Clowns read just like a novel. Better Investing [Class Clowns] is as much about bone-headed bets on tech as it is about the challenges investors have in navigating America's educational system. The Street A tough-minded study that shows there's gold in them there halls, but getting to it is a problem-or, an entrepreneur might say, a challenge. KIRKUS REVIEWS A stunning new book. Radar Magazine It is easy to nominate irascible, contrarian, eloquent and, as well, one of the leading bankers in the media sector, Jonathan Knee, as the nation's best business writer.
Michael Wolff USA Today A valuable addition to our knowledge base regarding education markets... Class Clowns prosecutes a very sound case that investors must beware when entering the educational space.
John Warner Chicago Tribune Timely...filled with stories of hubris and myopia, of a failure to understand the field of education and, indeed, in some respects even the basis of success in business outside the celebrated investors' traditional field of dominance. GLOBE AND MAIL Show Less