Montgomery County Public Schools could soon become a global brand, the Washington Post reports. The school system will be paid $2.25 million to develop an elementary school curriculum that an education company will augment and sell around the world. The school system will also receive a small percentage of sales revenue once the curriculum is completed. The deal, rare in size and scope in the United States, was approved by the school board 6 to 2 Tuesday. Under the terms, Pearson, the world’s largest education publisher, will acquire the expertise of one of the nation’s top school systems and the right to use its name and its top employees as sales tools. “I tend to look at it from the standpoint that we are broke,” Montgomery Superintendent Jerry D. Weast said. “You have to have new ways of doing things when you don’t have money…”
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