Education Gadfly Weekly

Volume 4, Number 5

February 5, 2004

Resisting the Tyranny of the Exception

Phil Handy / February 5, 2004

Over the course of the past several years, education policy makers have increasingly looked to non-traditional education reforms as means both of correcting traditional public education inequities and of improving the state of education overall. In Florida, one of the first states to implement statewide accountability and reform measures, the results have been encouraging. Both white and minority students have demonstrated consistent, year-to-year learning gains since the full implementation of reforms, with the gains of minority students outpacing those of white students, thus narrowing the achievement gap.

This year, Florida entered its fourth straight year of consistent, measurable improvements in public education, and evidence continues to mount that Florida's reforms are an effective antidote to years of institutionalized racial and socioeconomic injustices in education. Yet despite our success, media reporting remains stubbornly fixated on a handful of exceptions, while the larger story of Florida's success goes unreported. Policy makers and practitioners must remain sensitive to the exceptions; however, state policy must be formulated and implemented with the perspective of providing the greatest gains to the greatest number of students. We will never be fully satisfied; but we cannot allow the exceptions to undermine the success of our results.

In 2003, Florida began using its 10th grade Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test (FCAT) as a graduation requirement for high school seniors. Throughout the spring of 2003, media reports focused on the plight of students who had failed the FCAT test, frequently minority youngsters who

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Resisting the Tyranny of the Exception

Georgia's new standards are peachy

Holly Robinson / February 5, 2004

The Georgia Performance Standards, the new curriculum proposed by the Department of Education for the public schools of Georgia, is a giant step forward for students and teachers in the Peachtree State. The culmination of many months of study and writing by Georgia teachers, leaders from around the state in the specific content areas, and national experts, these standards set high expectations.

Joseph Jarrell, a teacher at McIntosh High School, has taken issue with the new social studies standards (see http://www.edexcellence.net/gadfly/issue.cfm?issue=132#1645). I couldn't disagree more. 

The proposed framework for social studies is centered on studies of history, geography, civics, and economics. Students are introduced to these four essential content areas in kindergarten and the rigor and depth grows each year. These subjects are not treated in isolation, because events occur in specific time and place. In every civilization, people live under specific forms of government and find ways to produce the goods and services others want and need.

Not everything can be contained in a year, or even 13 years of study, but under these standards students learn about key events, ideas, people, and trends that have influenced major human civilizations and have produced the world as it is today.

The present Quality Core Curriculum has been widely criticized as "a mile wide and an inch deep." The analysis by Phi Delta Kappa believes it would take 23 years to teach the present QCC. No wonder Mr. Jarrell noted, "I feel

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Georgia's new standards are peachy

Self-serving civics lesson

February 5, 2004

We're all for civics in our schools but this version is outrageous. Next week, schools in the two big districts in the Maryland suburbs of D.C., Montgomery and Prince George's counties, will close two hours early so their students and teachers can attend a rally in the state capital to protest planned cuts in the state education budget. And they'll provide free bus service to the rally. And they'll give students credit toward community service requirements for attending. Irony of ironies, the event was originally scheduled for last week, but was cancelled because of a snowstorm that shut down schools across the region. (In fact, between snow days and last fall's hurricane, many Maryland students have missed almost 10 days of instructional time already this year.) So, in an era when schools complain loud and long that they don't have enough time and money to do their jobs, they will spend some of that time and money turning students into little activists who toe the party line. (We'd be interested to see the reaction if a student demanded time off and credit for attending a rally in favor of the cuts.) If anything demonstrates the bankruptcy of most mandatory service requirements, it's foolishness like this.

"Buses will take students to rally," by Matthew Cella, Washington Times, January 31, 2004 

"Schools to give students credit for attending Thornton rally," by Sean R. Sedam, Montgomery County Gazette, February 4, 2004

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Self-serving civics lesson

Is Utah leaving NCLB Behind?

February 5, 2004

Since the adoption of No Child Left Behind two years ago, several states have threatened to reject federal Title I money so they can sidestep the new law's accountability provisions. In early 2002, just after it was signed, then Vermont governor Howard Dean urged his state's superintendent and lawmakers to consider turning down Title I dollars, which he said amounted to far less than they would need to successfully implement the new accountability provisions. Since then, officials in Hawaii, Alaska and Virginia have made noises about dropping out. (Most recently, Virginia lawmakers passed a resolution condemning the provisions, arguing that they hurt Virginia's own school accountability efforts.) But legislators in Utah this week turned the heat up a few degrees. The education committee of the Utah house voted unanimously to send House Bill 43 - which prohibits the state's public schools from "any further participation in the No Child Left Behind Act" - to the floor. It remains to be seen whether the bill will get a vote and if so, how it will turn out, but Education Department officials have already been dispatched to meet with state lawmakers. Both sides seem to be leaving themselves a way out of the brinkmanship, with

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Is Utah leaving NCLB Behind?

The voucher virtuoso

February 5, 2004

When all the shouting - and litigation - is done, we assume that the D.C. voucher program will go forward. If it does, much of the credit belongs to Virginia Walden-Ford, profiled recently by William McGurn in the Wall Street Journal. Walden-Ford, who used private vouchers to get her own son out of a violence-ridden D.C. public school and onto a successful course--now into the Marines, and recently off to serve in Iraq - heads D.C. Parents for School Choice. The group raised the stakes during the months-long D.C. voucher debate by running tough ads that likened anti-voucher Senators to segregationist Bull Conner - in many cases, in the Senators' home states. "We decided we had to do something to make them take us seriously," she says. As McGurn notes, they now certainly do. And Ms. Walden-Ford gets a lot of the credit.

"Yes, Virginia, there is a voucher," by William McGurn, Wall Street Journal, February 2, 2004, (subscription required)

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The voucher virtuoso

Hard looks at NCLB

February 5, 2004

Two articles put us in mind of the old but trusty clich??, it's all about the kids. In the Washington Post, Bruce Fuller of UC-Berkeley offers a few suggestions for fixes to No Child Left Behind, some of which strike us as sensible. He also foresees that, if the battle over the law isn't quelled, "voters may grow skeptical of government's ability to improve the schools," which would be a disaster for kids in failing schools. In the same paper, columnist Jay Mathews asks for students, teachers, and parents to send him stories about how NCLB has impacted real schools and children, for better or worse. "Just give me the facts," he writes. "No dissertations on the need for accountability or the bankruptcy of top-down reform." Though Gadfly is wary of the idea that a law with a 14-year horizon should be judged by its first-year effect on schools, we applaud Mathews's desire to get beyond the rhetoric and look at NCLB where the rubber hits the road - the classroom.

"Only the politicking gets an 'A'," by Bruce Fuller, Washington Post, February 1, 2004

"Seeking clarity on No Child Left Behind," by Jay Mathews, Washington Post, February 3, 2004 (registration required)

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Hard looks at NCLB

From the Capital to the Classroom

Chester E. Finn, Jr. / January 9, 2003

Jack Jennings, Center on Education Policy
January 2003

Jack Jennings's Center on Education Policy is the source of this report, on the second year of NCLB, a useful service (underwritten by a quartet of foundations) that last month yielded this 240-page document. It does a respectable job of setting forth many relevant facts (as seen from the state education agency perspective) with the predictable amount of editorializing and rationalizing. Because most states responded to the project's survey, the report offers data not previously available. It has four main sections: general "perceptions" of NCLB; testing and accountability; public school choice and supplemental services; and teacher quality. A fifth chapter addresses lesser provisions (scientifically based research, Reading First, English language learners.) The headline version of all this is that states and districts are trying hard and want NCLB to succeed, but that it's painful and costly to implement correctly, mainly because of the huge number of schools being identified as "in need of improvement" (or "corrective action"). A particular grievance: the obligation to assess LEP and disabled youngsters on the same tests and hold them to the same standards is widely viewed as unrealistic. If this isn't dealt with in Washington, says Jennings, "There is a risk of losing the commitment of states and school districts to achieving the Act's goals." One bone to pick: in discussing why NCLB's public-school choice provisions are "rarely used," he fails to note the foot-dragging, resistance, and bureaucratic

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From the Capital to the Classroom

Organizational Improvement and Accountability: Lessons for Education from Other Sectors

Eric Osberg / February 5, 2004

Brian Stecher and Sheila Nataraj Kirby, editors
RAND Education
2004

In the face of NCLB's increased demands - and simply because our schools could be much better than they are - it would seem wise for public education to examine how other sectors develop processes, cultures, and accountability mechanisms that actually work. In that spirit, this report offers insight into the worlds of manufacturing, job training, law, and medicine. Each chapter focuses on a specific aspect of one of these sectors - for example, the clinical practice guidelines used in health care - to explain how it works and what lessons it offers schools. The authors acknowledge that education has unique challenges, so not all lessons are directly transferable. But school people would be wise to heed the central theme of this book, namely that, with some care and thought, they could indeed learn from other organizations. They also must be willing to focus on outputs, not inputs; to evaluate teaching on a "value-added" basis; to readily admit what we know

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Organizational Improvement and Accountability: Lessons for Education from Other Sectors

Announcements

March 25: AEI Common Core Event

March 21, 2013

While 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.

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