Education Gadfly Weekly
Volume 3, Number 9
March 13, 2003
Opinion + Analysis
Opinion
Is Alternative Certification Perishing?
By
Chester E. Finn, Jr.
News Analysis
Linking elementary and secondary education to college
News Analysis
Budget shortfalls fuel the anti-charter fire
News Analysis
Colorado legislators ready to approve K-12 voucher program
News Analysis
New online college for teachers offers certification and degrees
News Analysis
Save Everyday Math for another day
News Analysis
Standards-based reform leads to gains in Virginia
News Analysis
Teachers union may dominate L.A. school board again
Reviews
Research
Achieving More: Quality Teaching, School Leadership, Student Success
By
Chester E. Finn, Jr.
Research
At the Starting Line: Early childhood education programs in the 50 states
By
Terry Ryan
Research
Big City School Boards: Problems and Options
By
Chester E. Finn, Jr.
Research
Capitalization under School Choice Programs: Are the Winners Really the Losers?
By
Eric Osberg
Book
Getting it Wrong from the Beginning: Our Progressivist Inheritance from Herbert Spencer, John Dewey, and Jean Piaget
By
Chester E. Finn, Jr.
Research
Miles to Go& Reflections on Mid-Course Corrections For Standards-Based Reform
By
Eric Osberg
Research
True Private Choice. A Practical Guide to School Choice after Zelman v. Simmons-Harris
By
Kathleen Porter-Magee
Gadfly Studios
Is Alternative Certification Perishing?
Chester E. Finn, Jr. / March 13, 2003
You might have thought that alternative certification of teachers was more vibrant, robust and widespread than ever, considering how many states now claim to have some form of it--45 of them plus D.C., reports alt-cert watcher Emily Feistritzer--and its warm embrace last June by Education Secretary Rod Paige.
Think again. In truth, something bad is happening to alternative certification: it's being turned into a teacher-preparation "program"--and regulated into a near facsimile of traditional programs.
In its original, uncorrupted form, alternative certification is a status conferred on individuals who satisfy their states that they are fit to be turned loose in public-school classrooms despite NOT having passed through teacher-preparation programs. It was to be public education's way of liberating itself to do what private schools and most charter schools have long been free to do, namely to hire the best people they can find, with or without formal teacher training. It was also a way of saying to able liberal-arts graduates and career changers who are willing to try teaching that yes, you are welcome in our classrooms without first having to go back to study in a college of education and jump through a lot of regulatory hoops.
The key point is that alternative certification is conferred on individuals based on evidence that they know their stuff and pose no danger to children. It's what would enable a former governor to teach civics in a public high school, a bright MIT chemistry
Is Alternative Certification Perishing?
Linking elementary and secondary education to college
March 13, 2003
Today, 88 percent of 8th graders expect to attend college, but many of these students will either not qualify for admission, not be permitted to enroll in credit-bearing courses, or never complete a degree. Why are so many high school graduates unprepared for college- level work? A new report released by the Bridge Project at Stanford points the finger at the disjuncture between K-12 and postsecondary sectors of education. According to the report, students and their parents are sent conflicting and vague messages about what students need to know and be able to do to enter and succeed in college. High school assessments stress different knowledge and skills than do college entrance exams, and the coursework in high school often bears little relationship to college courses. The disconnect between K-12 and postsecondary education undermines student aspirations to attend (and succeed in) higher education, the report charges.
While the overall picture may be depressing, a number of states and organizations are making efforts to get the K-12 and higher ed systems to work together to unify the signals sent to students about what they need to learn in high school. In Texas, for instance, students who take the high school exit exam will soon be told whether their scores are high enough to indicate that they are ready to handle college level work. The Standards for Success project launched by researchers at the University of Oregon will soon release a report outlining
Linking elementary and secondary education to college
Budget shortfalls fuel the anti-charter fire
March 13, 2003
With many states being forced to slash education budgets because of the overall economic downturn, opponents of charter schools are trying to seize the opportunity to kill new charter laws, to put a moratorium on the granting of new charters, and to reduce funding for already cash-strapped existing charter schools. Their argument is that the experiment with charters is a luxury that we cannot afford when economic times are tough. Of course, proponents have long argued that charters are not a luxury, but rather are central to efforts to introduce competition and choice into our traditional public school system--and most charter schools are funded at lower levels than traditional district schools, anyway, thus saving money for the state.
"Charter laws are targeted in fiscal tilts," by Caroline Hendrie, Education Week, March 5, 2003
Budget shortfalls fuel the anti-charter fire
Colorado legislators ready to approve K-12 voucher program
March 13, 2003
Two school voucher bills have won approval in the Colorado Legislature, one each in the House and the Senate. Both bills would make publicly-funded vouchers available to low-income, low-achieving students trapped in failing public schools who would like to switch to private school, including religious schools. A handful of prominent Democratic and Hispanic leaders in the state, notably Attorney General Ken Salazar, have broken ranks to support vouchers as a way of addressing the achievement gap. Louisiana and Texas are also considering voucher proposals.
"Colorado Poised to OK Vouchers for Needy Pupils," by Erik Robelen, Education Week, March 12, 2003
"Colorado nears voucher approval," by Valerie Richardson, The Washington Times, February 27, 2003
Colorado legislators ready to approve K-12 voucher program
New online college for teachers offers certification and degrees
March 13, 2003
Teachers (or prospective teachers) wishing to earn certification or degrees can now take advantage of an online program offered by Western Governors University (WGU) and partially financed by the U.S. Department of Education. The Teachers College at WGU, a virtual university that received accreditation last month, will offer associate's, bachelor's, and master's degrees in education. The university itself does not offer any courses; it awards degrees based on evaluations of student competencies, which can be gained through experience or by taking online courses through institutions that have formed partnerships with WGU. U.S. Secretary of Education Rod Paige praised the program, which he said would help school districts meet the "highly qualified teacher" requirement of the No Child Left Behind Act.
"Western Governors U. Opens a New Online College for Teachers," by Dan Carnevale, The Chronicle of Higher Education, March 11, 2003
New online college for teachers offers certification and degrees
Save Everyday Math for another day
March 13, 2003
New York City schools chancellor Joel Klein has been getting a lot of grief from reading experts about Month by Month Phonics, the reading curriculum he has selected for all but the top 200 of New York City's elementary schools. Now he's beginning to hear from math experts about problems with Everyday Math, the math curriculum he has mandated for all but the top schools in the system. In this month's City Journal, former Teach for America corps member (and former Fordham intern) Matthew Clavel describes what it was like to try to teach Everyday Math to fourth graders in the South Bronx. He questions the focus of the program on "critical thinking skills" that his students simply couldn't exercise since they had yet to master basic skills. He also wonders why the curriculum dips into algebra and geometry before students can multiply or do long division. He saves his fiercest criticism for Everyday Math's emphasis on "cooperative learning" exercises, which he said regularly caused his classroom to degenerate into chaos. Clavel eventually scrapped Everyday Math entirely and focused on trying to teach his students the basic skills they needed.
"How now to teach math," by Matthew Clavel, City Journal, March 7, 2003
Save Everyday Math for another day
Standards-based reform leads to gains in Virginia
March 13, 2003
Since Virginia introduced its Standards of Learning (SOL) curriculum and exams in 1995 and 1998, respectively, not only have pass rates on the state exams risen steadily for all ethnic groups, but students in the state have scored higher on several national achievement tests, according to a study conducted by StandardsWork. Average state scores on the SAT and the Stanford 9 achievement tests have risen in this period and more students have taken Advanced Placement tests and enrolled in International Baccalaureate programs since the SOL program began.
"Scores reported up with SOL test," by Rosalind Helderman, The Washington Post, February 27, 2003
"Study of the Effectiveness of the Virginia Standards of Learning (SOL) Reforms," StandardsWork, Inc., February 2003
Standards-based reform leads to gains in Virginia
Teachers union may dominate L.A. school board again
March 13, 2003
In 1999 Los Angeles Mayor Richard Riordan and billionaire Eli Broad helped elect a new reform-minded school board for the L.A Unified school district. The teachers unions have fought back, though, and on March 4, two union-backed candidates defeated reformist incumbents supported by Riordan and Broad (and their political action committee, the Coalition for Kids) for seats on the school board. Another race, involving union-backed incumbent David Tokofsky, is still too close to call, but if he retains his seat, union-supported candidates would control four seats on the seven-member board. The success of the union-backed candidates was attributed to the union's willingness to outspend the Coalition for Kids, $1.4 million to $1.1 million. Union-backed board members have already promised to win teachers pay raises and to reduce class sizes in grades four through 12, despite state budget cuts.
"Teachers Union Wins Back the Power in L.A. Schools," by Solomon Moore and David Pierson, Los Angeles Times, March 6, 2003
"Runoff looms in narrowing schools race," by David Pierson, The Los Angeles Times, March 7, 2003
Teachers union may dominate L.A. school board again
Achieving More: Quality Teaching, School Leadership, Student Success
Chester E. Finn, Jr. / March 13, 2003
The Governor's Commission on Teaching Success, Ohio
February 20, 2003
In November 2001, Ohio governor Bob Taft appointed a blue-ribbon "Commission on Teaching Success" to rethink teaching and teachers for the Buckeye State's public schools. Ably chaired by Nationwide CEO W.G. Jurgensen, it had 46 members, mostly representative of public education's so-called "stakeholders." Parents, employers, private-school people, newspaper editors and other informed agents of the "general public" were in short supply. Given its slanted and establishmentarian make-up, some of this group's 14 recommendations (contained in its newly issued 48-page report) are unexpectedly visionary, such as differentiated compensation for teachers, tying teacher standards to the state's academic standards for schools, a pilot "career ladder" and greater use of alternative certification (in the upper grades). Unfortunately, most of the rest of its conclusions and suggestions are predictable, conventional and either banal or wrong-headed, above all the suggestion that policies for training, certifying and setting standards for teachers and administrators should be set by a new "educator standards board" to be comprised entirely of--what else?--stakeholders. Aaargh. Talk about urging the governor and legislature to place the foxes in charge of the poultry. In sum, a mixed bag of a report, like most such sprawling committee efforts. If you'd like to see it anyway, visit http://www.teaching-success.org/documents/AchievingMore.pdf.
Achieving More: Quality Teaching, School Leadership, Student Success
At the Starting Line: Early childhood education programs in the 50 states
Terry Ryan / March 13, 2003
The American Federation of Teachers
December 2002
Early childhood education is the new frontier of education reform. This is as it should be. As noted in our earlier review of The Keys to Literacy, (see http://www.edexcellence.net/gadfly/issue.cfm?issue=13#314) reading scores in the 10th grade can be predicted with surprising accuracy from knowledge of the alphabet in kindergarten. Early years learning matters enormously. As a result, there has been much debate recently in statehouses across the country, and in Washington, about how to help parents and professionals better prepare the nation's youngest children for success in schools. In At the Starting Line, the AFT enters the debate by arguing for the extension of policies it has long-favored in K-12 education to pre-school education--improved teacher pay, more teacher training, more certification, and a more intensive curriculum. One cannot dispute the goal of helping all children develop the crucial pre-literacy skills needed for success in school. One has to question the logic, though, of extending a system that has not worked for many of the nation's older children pretty much "as is" downward to younger and younger children. Nowhere in this report is there a call for getting parents involved in their children's learning; in the view of this report, the experts will solve the problem if they are simply given enough money and training. The report urges "another $25 billion to $35 billion to extend free preschool programs of acceptable quality to all 3-
At the Starting Line: Early childhood education programs in the 50 states
Big City School Boards: Problems and Options
Chester E. Finn, Jr. / March 13, 2003
Paul T. Hill, Kelly Warner-King, Christine Campbell, Meaghan McElroy, Isabel Mu??oz-Col??n, The Center on Reinventing Public Education, The University of Washington
December 2002
Paul Hill and colleagues at the University of Washington's Center on Reinventing Public Education authored this 28-page report, sponsored by the Annie E. Casey Foundation. Several of its points parallel those that Hill set forth in a recent paper for the Progressive Policy Institute. [See http://www.edexcellence.net/gadfly/issue.cfm?issue=10#360.] Some are different, however, and they're well worth your time, for this paper's implications are far-reaching indeed. Beginning with the unarguable assertion that many of today's urban school boards are dysfunctional, ineffectual and afflicted with "mission confusion," Hill & Co. offer three bold remedies. First, broaden the board's constituencies (via district-wide election or mayoral appointment) to reduce the extent to which members are beholden to narrow interests. Second, limit their powers to policy and oversight, getting them out of day-to-day management and patronage. Third, and most revolutionary, end their exclusive franchise to oversee schools in their areas--and add additional public-school sponsors via multiple boards or other "entities" that will engender competition and choice. The package is striking. You can find it at http://www.crpe.org/pubs/pdf/schoolBoard_Final.pdf.
Big City School Boards: Problems and Options
Capitalization under School Choice Programs: Are the Winners Really the Losers?
Eric Osberg / March 13, 2003
Randall Reback, University of Michigan
National Center for the Study of Privatization in Education, Teacher's College, Columbia University
December 3, 2002
This paper, by PhD candidate Randall Reback of the University of Michigan, analyzes the impact of public school choice on school finances. Specifically, he is interested in the effect that implementing a choice program will have on the tax base (in other words, housing prices, real estate taxes and ultimately school funding). It's no secret that in areas without choice programs, choosing a house serves as a form of school choice, and as a result, housing prices tend to be higher in districts with good public schools. In theory then, if a public school choice program is implemented, housing prices should fall in those districts with the best schools, because one no longer must live there to access those schools. The opposite is also true: districts with the worst schools should see an increase in housing prices, as the fear of confining one's child to a sub-standard school no longer deters potential home buyers in that area. Under a public school choice program, these lower-achieving districts will surely lose students (who transfer elsewhere) and will thus lose enrollment-based state revenue. However, Reback wonders if this loss in revenue will be offset by an improvement in the tax base (due to higher home values and new home construction). To answer this question, he analyzes Minnesota, which has had a statewide public school choice
Capitalization under School Choice Programs: Are the Winners Really the Losers?
Getting it Wrong from the Beginning: Our Progressivist Inheritance from Herbert Spencer, John Dewey, and Jean Piaget
Chester E. Finn, Jr. / March 13, 2003
Kieran Egan, Yale University Press
September 2002
Canadian educationist Kieran Egan authored this provocative new book. For once, the dust jacket does a competent job of summarizing its essence: the book "traces the nineteenth century sources of many of our notions about education...shows how progressivist ideas have been responsible for the general ineffectiveness of our schools, and...assails the central progressive belief that to educate children effectively it is vital to attend to the nature of the child, particularly the child's mode of learning and stage of development." It's a worthy volume. One wonders, though, why Egan fails to mention those who have plowed this ground before, often with greater depth and insight, analysts such as E.D. Hirsch, Arthur Bestor and Diane Ravitch. Should you want a copy, the ISBN is 0300094337, the publisher is Yale University Press and you can get more information at http://www.yale.edu/yup/books/094337.htm.
Getting it Wrong from the Beginning: Our Progressivist Inheritance from Herbert Spencer, John Dewey, and Jean Piaget
Miles to Go& Reflections on Mid-Course Corrections For Standards-Based Reform
Eric Osberg / March 13, 2003
Pew Forum on Standards-Based Reform
2002
This volume represents the final work of the Pew Forum on Standards-Based Reform, which after twelve years in existence held its final meeting in June 2002. Here, the Forum presents a collection of short essays on standards-based reform topics written by a diverse set of authors. From Sandra Feldman of the AFT to Deborah McGriff of Edison, and from Stanford's Linda Darling-Hammond to our own Checker Finn, these writers each tackle a unique aspect of standards-based reform. In fact, the essays generally stray from discussing standards themselves to delve into topics such as public engagement, parental involvement, and union contracts. However, in doing so the authors make clear that in fact all aspects of our education system are impacted in one way or another by the movement toward more rigorous and well-defined standards. Their basic message is that simply imposing standards from above will not be sufficient; rather, those inside the system need the training, leadership, resources and curricula to meet these standards. The variety of viewpoints presented here lends credence to the basic message that there is still a long way to go before standards-based reform can be declared a success. Informative and easy to read, this work provides a neat summary of some of the challenges facing American education today as well as a varied set of viewpoints on the ideal solutions. The Education Week Press is the publisher and copies are available by
Miles to Go& Reflections on Mid-Course Corrections For Standards-Based Reform
True Private Choice. A Practical Guide to School Choice after Zelman v. Simmons-Harris
Kathleen Porter-Magee / March 13, 2003
Marie Gryphon, The Cato Institute Policy Analysis No. 466
February 4, 2003
In this report, Marie Gryphon, an attorney for the Cato Institute, summarizes the details of the Zelman Supreme Court case and offers school choice advocates what is essentially a how-to guide for developing a choice program that would likely pass constitutional muster. In addition to clearly explaining the test the Court used to determine whether the Cleveland case offended the establishment clause of the First Amendment, Gryphon advises choice advocates to avoid plans that would not pass the Zelman test, even if in theory they would be protected by the free exercise clause of the same Amendment. To read this analysis, go to http://cato.org/pubs/pas/pa-466es.html.
True Private Choice. A Practical Guide to School Choice after Zelman v. Simmons-Harris
Announcements
March 25: AEI Common Core Event
March 21, 2013While most discussion about the Common Core State Standards Initiative has focused on its technical merits, its ability to facilitate innovation, or the challenges facing its practical implementation, there has been little talk of how the standards fit in the larger reform ecosystem. At this AEI conference, a set of distinguished panelists will present the results of their research and thoughts on this topic and provide actionable responses to the questions that will mark the next phase of Common Core implementation efforts. The event will take place at the American Enterprise Institute in D.C. on March 25, 2013, from 9:00AM to 5:00PM. It will also be live-streamed online. For more information and to register, click here.





