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Jean Johnson
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Jean Johnson writes frequently about public opinion and public policy and has authored a series of books devoted to increasing citizen understanding of major issues.Writing with Scott Bittle, she is co-author of Where Did the Jobs Go--and How Do We Get Them Back?, a guide to the national debate over jobs and unemployment, Where Does the Money Go?, a book designed to help typical Americans understand the debate over the national debt, and Who Turned Out the Lights?, a citizen's guide to the energy debate, all from Harper Collins. She is also the author of You Can't Do It Alone: A Communications and Engagement Manual for School Leaders Committed to Reform.

Johnson serves on the board of the National Issues Forums Institute, a national, nonpartisan organization that convenes citizens in communities across the country to discuss major issues. She and Bittle are both senior fellows at Public Agenda, a nonpartisan research and engagement organization.

Johnson has also written articles for USA Today, Educational Leadership, and Education Week. She has appeared in the media on Bill Moyers' Journal, the Dylan Ratigan Show, the Today Show, and CNN among others.

Blog Entries by Jean Johnson

Can Parents Save American Education?

(6) Comments | Posted May 22, 2013 | 11:13 AM

Research suggests that students whose parents are involved in their schooling make better grades and are more likely to go to college, and some states -- with California leading the way of course -- are passing parent trigger laws that give parents much more power to...

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The Big Gamble in Health Care: Would Competition Outdo Government in Controlling Costs?

(11) Comments | Posted March 28, 2013 | 11:49 AM

The Obama administration recently opened talks with officials in Arkansas and Ohio on plans to allow the states to use federal Medicaid money to buy private health insurance for their low-income residents. Several other states seem ready to follow suit. If this all goes through, it...

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Medicare: The Quotable Quotes Only Get You So Far

(1) Comments | Posted March 1, 2013 | 10:03 AM

If you're one of the 50 million Americans on Medicare -- or one of the 77 percent who say Medicare is important to them and their families -- these are confusing times.

President Obama talked about Medicare at his inauguration arguing that "every citizen deserves a basic...

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Will the Public Buy Into a Budget Deal -- and What Questions Will They Have?

(0) Comments | Posted November 15, 2012 | 7:56 PM

So let's say that President Obama and enough members of Congress avoid the "fiscal cliff" and finally agree on a budget deal--one that puts us on a sustainable path over the long haul. Will voters applaud, or will our country see the kind of turmoil that has swept through Greece...

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Let's Try This Again: Questions for the Candidates on Reforming Health Care

(4) Comments | Posted October 16, 2012 | 8:30 AM

The presidential and vice presidential candidates spent a lot of time on health care in their last debates -- for all the good it did the voters. The comforting generalities and sleep-inducing statistics may have helped the voters get a sense of personalities. When it comes to actually sorting out...

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Graduate From College, Get a Great Job... Is That All There Is to Higher Education?

(2) Comments | Posted September 24, 2012 | 2:53 PM

With large majorities of Americans concerned about college costs, student debt, and the still pitiful job market, it certainly seems time for higher education to reinvent itself. And since a diploma and a good job can shape a person's entire future, shouldn't higher education's number one mission be...

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Power Failure: What Voters Should Ask Obama and Romney on Energy

(20) Comments | Posted July 31, 2012 | 12:35 PM

In a gentler era, the word "Keystone" summoned up images of a dozen or so portly and inept cops blundering their way through Max Sennett comedies. Today, Keystone means the proposed Keystone XL Pipeline which, if built, would carry crude oil from Canadian "tar sands" to...

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The Question Project: What Obama and Romney Should Tell Us About Job Creation

(7) Comments | Posted July 12, 2012 | 6:07 PM

It's hard to put a good face on the June jobs report. Unfortunately, 80,000 new jobs a month isn't even enough to keep up with population growth and new people coming into the labor market. Even if we were gaining jobs at three times that rate, we wouldn't...

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Dr. Shaq and the Nation's Real Dropout Problem

(14) Comments | Posted May 7, 2012 | 4:03 PM

This past weekend, basketball legend Shaquille O'Neal graduated from Barry University with a doctorate in education. That makes him not just an exceptional athlete, but an exceptional college graduate as well. O'Neal dropped out of Louisiana State University in 1992 to play pro basketball, but he promised his...

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The Long and the Short of It: America's Jobs Problem Now and for Years to Come

(2) Comments | Posted April 16, 2012 | 4:07 PM

When it comes to jobs, can the U.S. walk and chew gum at the same time?

After several months of robust, promising job creation, the economy only added about 120,000 jobs in March, barely enough to keep up with population growth. Last week,

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Is Regulation Really Strangling Start-ups, and How Much Would the JOBS Act Do to Keep It Under Control?

(6) Comments | Posted March 30, 2012 | 4:51 PM

Here are two facts that should be attracting a lot more attention than they are.

  • Over the last decade, nearly two-thirds of new jobs in the U.S. economy came from businesses less than five years old. That's a big hint on how to rev up job...

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For Younger Workers, the News Gets Worse and Worse

(37) Comments | Posted March 11, 2012 | 12:27 PM

A new analysis from the Economic Policy Institute shows what a lot of younger Americans have probably noticed for themselves: even if you're lucky enough to have a job, it's still tough to get ahead. Over the last decade, wages for younger male college grads have...

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Election Year Follies: The Disingenuous Jobs Debate

(63) Comments | Posted February 12, 2012 | 6:52 PM

You know how sometimes when you repeat a word over and over again, it starts to lose its meaning? If you listen to our current crop of presidential candidates, they're doing their best to do that with the most important word in this election: Jobs.

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Are All Rich People Job Creators, or Does It Take Something More?

(32) Comments | Posted February 3, 2012 | 1:55 PM

You can't get very far in watching the presidential primaries without hearing this line: "we've got to help the job creators."

Well, of course. We all need jobs. Just look at the unemployment numbers, the grim projections, or the people who aren't even...

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The Questions Parents Have for Officials Who Propose Closing Schools

(21) Comments | Posted December 26, 2011 | 11:23 AM

It's hard to argue that a high school where half the students drop out is serving the students or the community, and officials nationwide are taking tough measures to tackle the problem, including closing some of the worst-performing schools. New York City recently announced plans to close or phase out...

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Fiscal Follies: The Leaders, the Led and the Gridlock on the Budget

(9) Comments | Posted August 7, 2011 | 5:59 PM

It seems hard to disagree with the 8 in 10 Americans who say Congress is doing a terrible job in wake of the dismal, dispiriting debate over raising the debt ceiling. We dodged a needless and potentially devastating government default, but aside from that, this debt deal is...

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We're Poised to Leave a Pitiful Legacy on Debt and Energy Crises

(2) Comments | Posted July 18, 2011 | 10:10 AM

There's an old movie comedy called Support Your Local Sheriff , with James Garner playing a gunslinger hired to clean up a Western mining town. When he's hired to replace the latest of a long line of short-lived lawmen, the mayor hands him a tin star with a...

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Fiscal Follies: The Debt Ceiling and the 48 Percent Solution

(20) Comments | Posted May 27, 2011 | 10:02 AM

With the debate over the nation's debt ceiling continuing to rage, research conducted by our organization, Public Agenda, shows a real chasm between Washington and the rest of the country. Two-thirds of Washington leaders say we need to raise the debt limit, while surveys of the...

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Fiscal Follies: No New Taxes? So Now What?

(145) Comments | Posted May 8, 2011 | 4:51 PM

As of this weekend, it looks like Congress will hammer out some sort of deal to extend the federal debt ceiling and avoid pushing the country to the brink of default. The response from the Washington Post's Ezra Klein is the best we've read so far. "Whew," Klein...

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Fiscal Follies: S&P, Groucho Marx, and the Bond Vigilantes

(5) Comments | Posted April 21, 2011 | 2:48 PM

Admittedly, we may have an odd sense of humor when it comes to the federal budget. But after an initial shiver of fear, our first reaction to the news that Standard & Poor's had issued a "negative outlook" for the U.S. national debt was: "Oh, no. Mrs. Teasdale...

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