Education Gadfly Weekly
Volume 4, Number 16
April 22, 2004
Opinion + Analysis
Opinion
Secrecy vs. sunshine
By
Chester E. Finn, Jr.
Opinion
Taking short cuts on teacher quality
By
Kate Walsh
News Analysis
D.C.: Back to the drawing board
News Analysis
Robin Hood files for bankruptcy
News Analysis
Fighting violence in schools the PC way
News Analysis
Washington Education Association snubs its own
Reviews
Research
World History Textbooks: A Review
By
Chester E. Finn, Jr.
Research
Focus on the Wonder Years: Challenges Facing the American Middle School
By
Terry Ryan
Research
How District Leaders Can Support the New School Strategy
Gadfly Studios
Secrecy vs. sunshine
Chester E. Finn, Jr. / April 22, 2004
Some of us expect the greatest education reform benefit that No Child Left Behind is likely to yield to be the onrushing flood of information about school, district, and state performance. Even if NCLB's various top-down interventions don't work as intended, parents, voters, and taxpayers across the land will be empowered by these "report cards" of various sorts to press for action at the building, local or state levels. Bravo. With rare exceptions (e.g. defense, social security), most of a democracy's worthwhile decision-making occurs close to home.
But information is essential, and its handmaiden is transparency: the information's ability to be accessed by people who might use it to do something to improve their schools. Transparency, however, often is a policy that must be imposed from above, for the simple reason that the custodians of any given unit, mindful of the power that information confers on their critics, are apt to be as secretive as possible and to want to put their own spin on whatever information comes out. (How well I remember the tussles of the 1980's over whether NAEP results would be made available for individual states. For the longest time, most state "chiefs" were mightily opposed. It took a federal law.)
That's why it was so disappointing to learn that the Pennsylvania Department of Education is refusing to release district-by-district data on how many middle-school teachers failed (and passed) the state's (federally mandated) certification exams in core academic
Secrecy vs. sunshine
Taking short cuts on teacher quality
Kate Walsh / April 22, 2004
After months of increasingly shrill criticisms directed at No Child Left Behind, recent news out of Pennsylvania (see "Secrecy vs. sunshine" below for more) offers a painful but healthy reminder of what motivated anyone to pass such a law in the first place. The state is requiring its middle school teachers to take tests in their subject areas, not because it suddenly got religion about the importance of teachers' subject matter knowledge, but because NCLB is making states get serious about teachers' academic credentials, particularly middle school teachers.
The Pennsylvania results were both bad and all too predictable. One out of every four teachers, all of them already state-certified, couldn't pass a test aimed at a 10th-grade skill level. Even more damning, Philadelphia's teachers weren't included in these numbers. (That city's failure rate was far higher.) Suburban districts cannot assume this is exclusively a big-city problem.
My guess is that these low pass rates won't be unique to Pennsylvania. We haven't really begun to mine the depths of this national problem, a problem caused by states' willingness to certify teachers who lack a fundamental prerequisite for effective instruction: subject-matter knowledge. It was this lack of basic knowledge that led the architects of No Child Left Behind to make the startling distinction between state certification of a teacher and proof that said teacher is adequately educated in his/her discipline.
The federal law gives new teachers little wiggle room: either earn a
Taking short cuts on teacher quality
D.C.: Back to the drawing board
April 22, 2004
This week, the District of Columbia City Council rejected Mayor Anthony Williams's proposal to take control of the District's public school system (the wretchedness of which we have spilled much electronic ink documenting; see http://www.edexcellence.net/gadfly/issue.cfm?issue=124#1554, http://www.edexcellence.net/gadfly/issue.cfm?issue=141#1738, and http://www.edexcellence.net/gadfly/issue.cfm?issue=27#149 for some of the lowlights). The council, a collection primarily of - dare we speak the truth? - political hacks, spiced its rejection with vicious denunciations of the mayor's performance in a number of areas. (It may be worth noting that several members of the same council have, or plan to, run for the mayor's job themselves.) We aren't certain that mayoral control would have been the silver bullet Williams suggested (Mr. Bloomberg, call your office). After all, what's important is not who controls what but what the person in charge does. But the nation's capital is surely one place where just about anything would be preferable to the status quo. Let's hope that the new D.C. voucher program will provide at least some children with a way out of schools that are the very definition of "failing."
"Williams's school plan defeated," by Justin Blum, Washington Post, April 1, 2004
"Williams' plan for schools rejected," by Matthew Cellis, Washington Times, April 21, 2004
D.C.: Back to the drawing board
Robin Hood files for bankruptcy
April 22, 2004
On Tuesday, lawmakers in Texas began a special 30-day session to discuss Republican Governor Rick Perry's sweeping new school finance and property tax cut plan. The proposal would reform the current system, which takes money from "property rich" districts and distributes it to "property poor" districts. In place of this so-called "Robin Hood" system, where a maximum of $1.50 of taxes is collected per $100 assessed value to help fund an educational equality initiative, the governor proposes a two-part property tax system with a small tax cut for commercial property (to $1.40 per $100 of assessed value) and a steeper cut for residential property taxes (to $1.25 per $100 of assessed value). The proposal would supplement lost revenue with higher "sin taxes" on cigarettes, gambling, and adult entertainment. While supporters argue that this new system will maintain the equity of the Robin Hood system while reducing the overall tax burden on home owners, critics maintain that it will open a larger hole in the state budget and hurt rural areas (which often have low residential property values, hence rely on commercial assessments to fund schools). Lieutenant governor Carole Keeton Strayhorn has predicted that the state will face a $10 billion budget shortfall over five years if implemented as-is. Everyone knows that there's no perfect answer to school financing, in Texas or elsewhere. The Perry plan deserves careful attention. So do others. The larger question is whether Texas policymakers will also
Robin Hood files for bankruptcy
Fighting violence in schools the PC way
April 22, 2004
After the massacre at Columbine High School five years ago, lawmakers and school boards across the land scrambled to prevent similar atrocities. In California, that led to Assembly Bill 537, the California Student Safety and Violence Prevention Act of 2000. Its purpose was to assure all students "the inalienable right to attend campuses that are safe, secure, and peaceful." Unfortunately, according to Kay Hymowitz of the Manhattan Institute, the law is grounded in "a serious misunderstanding about how to improve school discipline" that focuses more on trendy notions of protecting marginalized groups than on the real causes of school violence. Case in point: The state may withhold millions of dollars from Westminster Schools in Orange County this year because, writes Hymowitz, "three board members voted to reject the state's wording in an anti-discrimination policy designed to protect transgendered students (all .001 percent of them)." The problem with this, Hymowitz says, is that "there is little evidence linking school violence . . . with racism, sexism, and homophobia." The truth is that "laws, bureaucrats and legalistic, politically correct policies imposed from the top down can't stop harassment and violence in the schools of Orange County or elsewhere." Only committed educators, with the help of parents, administrators, and a sound, consistent discipline policy can do that.
"Silly laws are no way to fight bullying," by Kay Hymowitz, Los Angeles Times, April 18, 2004
Fighting violence in schools the PC way
Washington Education Association snubs its own
April 22, 2004
Last Saturday, the Washington Education Association's (WEA) political action committee voted to withhold support for Terry Bergeson, a former WEA president, now running for a third term as the state's school chief. According to the Seattle Times, the snub was "part of a tough-nosed new strategy of withholding its blessings from longtime allies who don't toe the party line on key issues." In the case of Bergeson, this punishment is being doled out for her support for the state's newly enacted charter school legislation (see http://www.edexcellence.net/gadfly/issue.cfm?issue=139#1720), the suspension of teacher pay and class-size initiatives, and the Washington Assessment of Student Learning (WASL), the state's graduation test. Though WEA president Charles Hasse insists that the move was an attempt to "express the frustration many school employees feel," he admits that Bergeson is popular with teachers and will likely win reelection. So much for union non-support.
"Bergeson smarts after WEA snubs her," by David Ammons, Seattle Times, April 20, 2004
Washington Education Association snubs its own
World History Textbooks: A Review
Chester E. Finn, Jr. / April 22, 2004
Gilbert T. Sewall, American Textbook Council
2004
For this report from the American Textbook Council, Gilbert Sewall reviews six popular world history textbooks used in grade 6-12 classrooms across the country. The review is somewhat akin to Diane Ravitch's Consumer's Guide to High School History Textbooks in both purpose and findings. Like Ravitch and her reviewers (who reviewed both U.S. and world history texts), Sewall evaluates a half-dozen widely used world history textbooks and finds that "bad writing compounds the loss of narrative, instructional confusion abounds, presentism is universal, diversity takes a toll, and a disturbing view of the future prevails." The methodologies differed, however. Ravitch used multiple reviewers with expertise in world history to scrutinize individual books, while Sewall reviewed the books himself and used outside experts to vet his draft. Sewall also generalizes about the books, taking examples from some of them to support his general points. His basic "design" was to look at the books' handling of specific issues, events, or topics, which then became his organizing frame. Ravitch went book-by-book, with multiple reviewers reviewing and "grading" each book according to ten specific criteria. Both reports are worthwhile, however, and both confirm that history textbooks as a whole are boring and ridiculously inclusive yet lack a central story line or anything else that would make you want to turn the page. They also tend toward the politically correct and are fraught with errors and dubious judgments. To access
World History Textbooks: A Review
Focus on the Wonder Years: Challenges Facing the American Middle School
Terry Ryan / April 22, 2004
RAND Education
2004
"Focus on the Wonder Years" is a euphemism for describing the lost years of middle schooling in the U.S., grades 6, 7 and 8, sometimes dubbed the "Bermuda Triangle" of American education. This RAND study, funded by the Edna McConnell Clark Foundation, reviews two decades of relevant literature and data to help explain the dismal academic performance of middle-schoolers and what can be done about it. The history of the middle school is dominated by demographics and educational theorists. Booms in student population provided a powerful incentive for building new schools for middle-school age students, thus relieving overcrowded elementary schools. Psychologists, fascinated by the cognitive and emotional changes of early adolescence, saw the middle-school years as a swell place to insert their theories, often to detrimental effect. By the 1950s, the "best thinking of the time" emphasized "integration," "exploration," "differentiation," "socialization," and "articulation" for early teens. Fast-forward to 2004. This report argues for disbanding middle schools altogether and replacing them with K-8 schools, which should focus on academic interventions for the low performing students, comprehensive disciplinary models that deal with problems early, quality professional development for teachers, and parental engagement with their children's schooling. The recommendations are sound. They're also standard fare. But the report is rigorous and detailed, a solid synthesis of sensible thinking about middle schools. To check it out for yourself go to http://www.rand.org/publications/MG/MG139/.
Focus on the Wonder Years: Challenges Facing the American Middle School
How District Leaders Can Support the New School Strategy
April 22, 2004
Bryan Hassel, Valaida Fullwood, and Michelle Godard Terrell, Public Impact
January 2004
Facilities Financing: New Models for Districts that are Creating Schools New
Bryan Hassel, Katie Walter Esser, Public Impact
February 2004
These two reports, released earlier this year by Public Impact for Education/Evolving, discuss a "new schools reform strategy." "New schools" are defined as the "assortment of high-quality innovative public schools that are now being launched to serve the diverse educational needs of public school students." They can include charter schools as well as pilot, magnet, and community schools. How District Leaders Can Support the New Schools Strategy describes how school districts in seven cities implemented proactive strategies to start new, smaller schools more tailored to the needs of their students. Based on case studies of alternative schools in places like Baltimore, it advocates making the new schools strategy integral to a district's reform agenda, allocating a fair share of resources, establishing enforceable performance contracts between district and schools, and creating boards that use both district and community leaders to make the new schools initiatives work. The case studies are solid and reinforce the belief that new schools should emphasize both accountability and autonomy. Facilities Financing focuses more on innovative ways whereby school districts can obtain the funding to develop better buildings for new schools, whether via new facilities or renovation. Among the recommendations: tapping public-private partnerships or employer-based schools; rethinking the use of traditional facilities, including ideas like space-sharing
How District Leaders Can Support the New School Strategy
More Math, Please: The Surprising Consensus on Math Among Parents, the Public, and Business Leaders in Two "New Economy" States
April 15, 2004
Mass Insight Education
April 2004
Mass Insight Education has released a "bicoastal" poll that shows the public in two states wants more math in K-12 education - and has less "math phobia" than most people would believe. The poll, conducted by MIE and the Seattle-based Partnership for Learning, a business group, polled the public on attitudes toward math education in the Massachusetts and Washington State, and found that 75 percent believe that all students should take algebra and geometry, while one-third think all students should take trigonometry and calculus. The poll also looked at the attitudes of business leaders in both states, who say overwhelmingly that students' math skills aren't up to snuff, especially for work in high-tech industries. The public also likes standards-based accountability measures and thinks they've helped to raise student learning. The poll doesn't do much that the American Diploma Project (http://www.achieve.org/achieve.nsf/AmericanDiplomaProject?OpenForm) hasn't done in more detail. But it's a useful temperature-taking exercise and adds additional evidence to support that project's central contention: that a high school diploma is not the useful marker for skills and knowledge that it used to be. You can read the full report at www.massinsight.org.
More Math, Please: The Surprising Consensus on Math Among Parents, the Public, and Business Leaders in Two "New Economy" States
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.





