[Photo of Michael Van Beek]

Michael Van Beek

Director of Education Policy

Michael Van Beek joined the Mackinac Center in June 2009 as director of education policy. In this position, Van Beek oversees the Center's education research and publications, including Michigan Education Digest and Michigan Education Report.

For four years prior to working at the Center, Van Beek taught political philosophy, government, economics and history at North Hills Classical Academy, a private primary and secondary school in Grand Rapids. He also served one year as a North Hills assistant administrator, assisting with a wide variety of school issues, including budgets, curriculum and teacher-administrator relationships.

Van Beek obtained his Master of Arts in American history in 2005 from Purdue University, where he also held teaching assistantships. He received his Bachelor of Arts in 2003 from Hope College and was twice honored as the top student in the history department. In his senior year, Van Beek was voted captain of the Hope College varsity baseball team, and he was later selected the league's most valuable player by the baseball coaches of the Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association.

Van Beek lives in Midland, Mich., with his wife, son and daughter.

Union's Scare Tactics Exposed

Myths about privatization fail to materialize. … more

Michigan Lags Nation on School Choice

Progress in Great Lake State, but more can be done. … more

Educrats Spin Conspiracy Theories

Charter public schools, parental choice threaten monopoly. … more

Where A Pay Freeze Is a Pay Raise

Teacher contracts use interesting math. … more

Charter Schools Average Smaller Class Sizes

Less top heavy than conventional schools, too. … more

The Source of Schools' Pension Problems

Misleading comments a disservice to taxpayers. … more

Two Bills, Two Standards

Helmet laws and "cyber" schools. … more

'Flipped Classrooms' Aid Student Learning

"Results speak for themselves" … more

How Cost Effective Are Michigan’s Universities?

What they spend per degree completed. … more

Why the 'Michigan2020' Plan is a Poor Investment

More subsidies for college won't increase graduation rates. … more

School Districts in Deficit are Top Heavy

Spend 43 percent more on administration than state average. … more

Remove Needless Mandates on Teachers

Additional training has shown no impact on student performance. … more

Public School Welcomes All

(Unless they're from Detroit.) … more

Digital Learning Day

How schools are using technology to improve education. … more

MEA's Hyperbole About Cyber Charter Schools

Teachers union math gets a failing grade. … more

Online Charter School Spending Trends

How do they compare to brick-and-mortar schools? … more

The Unequal School Funding Myth

The latest in an ongoing video series. … more

The Debate About Online Charter Schools

Objections are easily refuted. … more

National School Choice Week

Good for parents, student, teachers and taxpayers. … more

Opposition to Online Charters Misguided

Savings can benefit students and educators. … more

A Digital Learning Success Story

Suttons Bay Schools an innovation leader. … more

Connecticut School Leaders Propose Bold Reforms

Michigan counterparts should take notice. … more

Arbitrary Cap on Charter Schools Lifted

Mackinac Center introduced concept in 1988. … more

Cherry-Picking Charter School Research

Broader look at data needed. … more

Charters Increase Special-Ed Enrollment

Decrease in special-ed enrollment for conventional schools. … more

The Difference With Charter Schools

Parents, not politicians, should make the choice. … more

Free Press Misleads on Charter Schools

Editorial claims parental choice is "dangerous." … more

Brookings Institution: Expand School Choice

Michigan should pay attention to study's findings. … more

It's for the Children

Does the MEA only care about certain students? … more

Digital Learning Growth in Michigan

Legislators should pay attention to increased enrollment. … more

Nation's Report Card

Bad news for Michigan. … more

Michigan's 'Very Best' Schools Only 'Above Average'

Global report card paints stark picture. … more

Jalen Rose: An Education Entrepreneur

Former basketball star opens charter public school. … more

If It Ain't Broke, Don't Spend $25 Billion to Fix It

Virtual learning should mean less money, not more, spent on schools buildings. … more

Professionalizing the Teaching Profession

Right-to-work law for teachers on the horizon. … more

A Smaller Cadillac Is Still a Cadillac

New government employee insurance cap is still 46 percent higher than private-sector average. … more

More Schools Save by Ditching Unionized Insurance, Busing, Food and Janitors

Money saved can be devoted to educating students. … more

August in Michigan Is Teacher Freedom Month

How teachers can resign from their union. … more

No Cutting and Complaining Here: Oxford Schools Bucks the Trend

One school district in Michigan is expanding learning opportunities for kids through online learning. … more

Will Schools Keep Ignoring Teacher Effectiveness When Setting Pay?

Make student learning and teacher effectiveness count more than than mere longevity. … more

Politicians: Stop Blocking the Online Charter School Door!

Just one group benefits from state caps on online charter school enrollment. … more

Measuring Charter Public School Performance

Measuring charter school performance is fundamentally different than measuring conventional school performance. … more

Saline Schools’ ‘Last in, First out’ Victims

Union's interests trumps those of teachers, students and parents. … more

Michigan School Spending Hits All-Time High

Per-pupil public school spending set a new record in 2010. … more

School Districts Ignoring Labor Market Signals

Schools need to apply law of supply and demand to teachers. … more

Should Education Money Only be for K-12?

The truth behind the School Aid Fund. … more

Average Teacher Salary in Michigan Rises Again

According to new data just released by the Michigan Department of Education for the 2009-2010 school year, the average teacher salary in Michigan has risen for the 13th consecutive year. This most recent data puts the figure at $63,024. … more

'Controlling' School Health Insurance Costs, Local Style

Four days after Gov. Rick Snyder recommended a 2011-2012 budget that would reduce state aid for schools by $300 per pupil from this year’s levels, the Petoskey school board proposed a plan to reduce the district’s teacher and support staff health insurance costs. Its timidity reveals why the public school establishment finds even the prospect of modest state funding reductions so traumatic. … more

Michigan Schools Still Well-Funded Under Governor's Plan

Even if Gov. Rick Snyder's proposed spending reductions on K-12 schools passes the Republcian Legislature, Michigan taxpayers will still supply schools with more money per pupil than taxpayers in 28 other states. … more

The MEA's Mob Mentality: If We All Strike, You Probably Won't Be Fired

In contemplating a statewide teacher strike, the Michigan Education Association appeals to peer pressure in advising its members on whether to approve an illegal strike. … more