Education Gadfly Weekly
Volume 5, Number 5
February 3, 2005
Opinion + Analysis
Opinion
The state of the charter movement, 2005
By
Chester E. Finn, Jr.
News Analysis
When to shut the schoolhouse doors
News Analysis
Who's in charge?
News Analysis
Highly qualified in North Dakota
News Analysis
How do you spell "missing the point"?
Reviews
Research
A Tough Nut to Crack in Ohio: Charter Schooling in the Buckeye State
By
Terry Ryan
Research
Charter School Achievement: What We Know
Research
School Violence and No Child Left Behind: Best Practices to Keep Kids Safe
By
Eric Osberg
Research
Raising the Bar: Policy Recommendations for High School Reform
By
Chester E. Finn, Jr.
Gadfly Studios
The state of the charter movement, 2005
Chester E. Finn, Jr. / February 3, 2005
The President reported last evening on the state of the union. Allow me to appraise the state of America's charter-school movement in early 2005.
Now fourteen years old, it strikes me as a typical adolescent, full of promise and with some accomplishments to its credit, but also the source of exasperation and frustration to those who want it to be more and better than it is. It's headstrong, ornery, disorganized, and insistent on its independence and its rights even when not quite ready to exercise them wisely.
Like every teenager I've known, the charter movement deserves a mixed report. But it's only fourteen, for Pete's sake, and nobody should pass final judgment at this stage of its development any more than one would a boy or girl at this age. So much remains to be determined, to be developed, to be tried - and so many more mistakes are waiting to be made en route to maturity.
Six things are especially worth knowing about the charter movement in 2005.
First, the man in the street still knows next to nothing about it, maybe hasn't yet even heard of charter schools and, if he has, is unsure what they are. ("Some sort of private school, maybe?" "A school for kids with problems?") Recent polling, nationally and in California, shows that participants in the charter movement naturally have a fair notion what it is, as do many other educators and policy makers, but this entire
The state of the charter movement, 2005
When to shut the schoolhouse doors
February 3, 2005
Nothing is more challenging than opening a charter school except for closing it, which can be a public relations disaster. Of course, not closing a failing school can also be a disaster when it implodes: Recall the scandal that accompanied the shuttering of the California Charter Academy this past summer, leaving thousands of students in the lurch. But, as Education Week notes, "most authorizers who take their responsibilities seriously agree that weeding out bad schools is a vital component of the autonomy-for-accountability bargain at the heart of the charter school concept" and are now "getting serious about sharing their experiences and finding better ways to pull the plug." According to Mark Cannon, executive director of the National Association of Charter School Authorizers, authorizers are working on ways "to develop a triage team that swoops in quickly before an unscrupulous operator is able to do damage" so that they can protect both "the kids and the money." Of course, one major obstacle to closing weak charter schools is parents. Notes Jim Goenner, head of the charter schools office at Central Michigan University and one of America's foremost authorizers, "When you preach the accountability message - if they don't perform, we'll shut them down - it's a complete red flag to parents. Parents of the kids say, 'If the school's not performing, change the leadership, don't put my child on the street.'" So the challenge becomes convincing the public that sometimes
When to shut the schoolhouse doors
Who's in charge?
February 3, 2005
Two related stories this week touch on issues of school leadership and reform, in particular, who's in charge of setting school policy and who should be. In the Charlotte-Mecklenburg (North Carolina) school district, Superintendent James Pughsley wants principals to have the flexibility and autonomy to run their schools as they see fit. Toward that end, he hopes to institute a new plan to draw stronger leaders to struggling schools by offering incentives - in the form of pay and increased autonomy - to take on these high-risk positions. According to the Charlotte Observer, the district would use "national headhunters and hefty signing and retention bonuses to recruit principals for high-poverty schools" and would give these new school leaders the flexibility to replace a "high percentage" of the staff, by firing ineffective teachers or transferring "decent teachers" who aren't succeeding in that type of school. In addition, the plan would offer incentives to teachers who choose to work in these schools. By contrast, in Rockford, Illinois, Superintendent Dennis Thompson seems hell-bent on consolidating power for himself, rather than affording successful principals the freedom to set policy for their schools. Specifically, he decided to transfer Tiffany Parker, the principal at an elementary school with a student body that is 80 percent nonwhite and 85 percent poor, because she dared use "direct instruction" and phonics instead of the district's mandated "balanced literacy" approach to teaching reading. Never mind that, on a reading test,
Who's in charge?
Highly qualified in North Dakota
February 3, 2005
This week, the U.S. Department of Education confirmed in writing the message it conveyed to North Dakota educators in December: that state's plan for designating elementary teachers as "highly qualified" does not meet NCLB requirements. In December, legislators were "shocked" that their plan was not in compliance with NCLB, despite an earlier warning from the state's own Department of Public Instruction. Now it seems that education officials and lawmakers are beginning to heed the ruling and tweak their "highly qualified teacher" definition. It remains to be seen just how serious they are, and whether they will seek to exploit some of the loopholes that have allowed other states to maximize the number of existing teachers who are labeled "highly qualified" even though they're not really.
"State must comply with federal education ruling," by Sheena Dooley, Bismarck Tribune, January 25, 2005
Highly qualified in North Dakota
How do you spell "missing the point"?
February 3, 2005
A local district administrator tells the Woonsocket (Rhode Island) Call that the district has cancelled the annual spelling bee because of . . . the No Child Left Behind act. You overlooked that NCLB spelling bee ban, huh? So did we, but Woonsocket assistant superintendent Linda Newman told reporters that the spelling bee doesn't pass NCLB muster since "it's about one kid winning, several making it to the top and leaving all the others behind. That's contrary to No Child Left Behind." Give Ms. Newman points for plodding literal-mindedness. As you know, NCLB has been blamed for the demise of social studies, for cheating teachers, and even for hastening the Rapture. But when it goes after the spelling bee, that's just too far!
"School district cancels spelling bee," by Ronald R. Blais, Woonsocket Call, January 27, 2005
How do you spell "missing the point"?
A Tough Nut to Crack in Ohio: Charter Schooling in the Buckeye State
Terry Ryan / February 3, 2005
Alexander Russo, The Progressive Policy Institute
February 2005
The charter school scene in Ohio is akin to the classic spaghetti Western, "The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly." As Alexander Russo reports, the "Good" in the Buckeye State's charter saga are: politicians who put themselves on the line to create space for charter schools in a hostile political environment, decent school operators who have started schools with minimal taxpayer support in some of the state's toughest neighborhoods, families who elect to enroll their children in these schools, and the 60,000+ students now attending one of the state's 230+ charter schools. The "Bad" include the Ohio Federation of Teachers (OFT) and Ohio Education Association (OEA). Their weapons of choice are the lawsuit (both in state and federal court), the public smear campaign ("these bad [charter] schools are like 700-pound hogs at the dinner table eating everything in sight," seethed the Cleveland Teachers Union president in 2003), and relentless legislative action to curtail and set back charter schools. The "Ugly" are the few charter school operators who are cheating children by offering an abysmal education while paying themselves handsomely, the ineptness and inertia that prevents authorizers from closing bad schools, and paucity of decent data that prevents supporters and opponents alike from really knowing what's right and what's wrong with charter schools. In the movie "Good" eventually beats both "Bad" and "Ugly," but it's fascinating to watch the complexities of the struggle play out.
A Tough Nut to Crack in Ohio: Charter Schooling in the Buckeye State
Charter School Achievement: What We Know
February 3, 2005
Bryan Hassel, Charter School Leadership Council
February 2005
The short answer to the implied question in this report's title is: not enough but much of what we know is brighter than the New York Times wants you to think. Bryan Hassel of Public Impact looked at 38 studies of charter school achievement that meet certain criteria for timeliness, analytic seriousness, and scope. His report finds that the studies are all over the map, both in their usefulness and their findings. Some have serious methodological shortcomings (especially in looking at aggregated school performance rather than disaggregated student performance). About half, including the infamous AFT study from last August are less-useful snapshots rather than appraisals of performance over time. Of the 21 that do look at data over time, 12 find charters outpacing public school achievement gains generally or for specific at-risk populations, five call it a draw, and three say charters are behind. A murky picture, though on balance
Charter School Achievement: What We Know
School Violence and No Child Left Behind: Best Practices to Keep Kids Safe
Eric Osberg / February 3, 2005
Lisa Snell, Reason Foundation
January 2005
This short but useful report exposes yet another game states play to avoid the spirit of No Child Left Behind: finding ways to label few or none of their schools as "persistently dangerous" - partly because students are supposed to be given exit visas from such schools. In 2003-2004, if you believe these state reports, only 52 schools in America were dangerous, including none in New York City or California, not even the schools where "three male students . . . forced a girl into a closet and sexually assaulted her," or "a student . . . smashed his ex-girlfriend's head through a trophy case." (Click here for more.) Though this report won't solve this particular NCLB problem, other than perhaps to shame the least honest states, it does offer a number of suggestions to reduce violence in schools - the point, after all, of this provision. A starting point is to create incentives for schools to reduce crime. If better data were available to parents about crime at each school, and if parents were able to exercise real choice among schools, market forces would focus schools' attention on this problem. For school leaders already focused, Snell suggests the "broken windows" approach that has been credited with reducing ordinary crime in New York City: promptly address the little things that go wrong so as to create an environment less conducive to more serious crimes. There's
School Violence and No Child Left Behind: Best Practices to Keep Kids Safe
Raising the Bar: Policy Recommendations for High School Reform
Chester E. Finn, Jr. / February 3, 2005
Commission for High School Improvement
January 2005
This January 2005 report from the Colorado Commission for High School Improvement, a project of the Colorado Children's Campaign, is very short and, within its limits, an interesting take on how to reshape the state's approach to high-school education. And it's much needed for, while Colorado has lots of well-educated adults who arrived from elsewhere, its own track record in secondary education is weak. This commission is a cross section of the public-school establishment, however, and that helps account for its limits. Most striking to me: they have a very interesting section on expanding school choice and alternatives, and another one on enhancing "school-level flexibility." Yet so far as I can tell they never even once use the phrase "charter school" despite Colorado's sizable and rather successful charter movement. Could it be because most commission members represent establishment organizations? What they recommend is worthy, as far as it goes. One wishes it went further. See for yourself here.
Raising the Bar: Policy Recommendations for High School Reform
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.





