Education Gadfly Weekly

Volume 7, Number 34

September 6, 2007

Opinion + Analysis


Risky business
By Chester E. Finn, Jr.


Wake up, Wake


WWAD?


Few plaudits for audits


Right point, wrong lesson


Dissed Down Under


Dressed for success?

Gadfly Studios


To the University of Harvard!
This week, Mike and Rick chat about the suburbs, the College Board, and Raleigh. We've got an interview with Liam Julian, who tells us about the newly launched Fordham Fellows program, and Education News of the Weird is less education, less news, less weird, more jokes!

Risky business

Chester E. Finn, Jr. / September 6, 2007

Economics sage Bob Samuelson (my college classmate, if you're interested) wrote last week a characteristically perceptive column, titled "The Economic Catch-22." Observing that "We are now in the ‘blame phase' of the economic cycle," he asked whether people concerned about present-day volatility, bubble bursts, market gyrations, mortgage defaults, margin calls, housing inventories, and such can legitimately assign responsibility to (take your pick) the Chinese, mortgage bankers, Messrs. Greenspan and Bernanke, credit-rating agencies, etc.

He concludes that, while these and others doubtless bear some responsibility, overall it's a mistake to search for culprits and scapegoats. "What seems to have happened," Samuelson writes, "was a broad and mistaken reappraisal of risk." Just about everyone suffered from a "false sense of confidence" that the U.S. economy "could overcome just about anything." So people and institutions took risks that they ought not have--"irrational exuberance," for sure. Above all, what happened is that they forgot about the business cycle itself: "The very fact that the economy has done well creates conditions in which it may--at least temporarily--do less well. Prosperity inevitably interrupts itself with losses, popped bubbles and recessions." Those who would minimize such downturns need to be more prudential on the upswing--which likely means there will be less short-term upswing--and more realistic in their appraisal of risks.

Meanwhile, though, people took chances precisely because it looked to them as if, in America's robust economy, "everything works," almost nothing craters, and therefore the risks

» Continued


Risky business

Wake up, Wake

September 6, 2007

Phi Delta Kappa's recent audit of the Wake County (North Carolina) Public School System should be viewed with healthy skepticism. Case in point: the educators group recommended that Wake tighten its "very liberal" policy on "site-based decision making" (i.e., the central office should give principals less autonomy). The full report points out that "Site-based decision making has... created inequalities among schools," because, well, some principals make better decisions than others. As lead auditor Rosanne Stripling so tautologically puts it, "The quality of the decision making relies on the quality of the principal." That much is obvious. But just because such disparities exist is no reason to shackle all principals. Indeed, as a recent Fordham report shows, imposing uniform strictures on school leaders is a good way to stifle innovation and stall progress in a district. Principals who repeatedly make bad decisions should have their decision-making abilities severely restricted (i.e., they should be asked to find a new job). But responding to uneven principal quality by limiting autonomy for everyone is bad thinking, and certainly no way to generate positive school change.

"Audit: Curtail Wake principals' power," by T. Keung Hui and Kinea White Epps, Raleigh News & Observer, September 5, 2007

» Continued


Wake up, Wake

WWAD?

September 6, 2007

The deadline to submit feedback on Congressmen George Miller's and Buck McKeon's draft NCLB proposal has come and gone. Still, it's never too late to have an impact on the reauthorization debate--if you're Al Shanker, that is. Richard Kahlenberg, whose biography of the late Shanker is now available, believes that, were the former AFT president still living, he would still be a powerful advocate for standards-based reform. But he would voice serious concerns about NCLB version 1.0. Kahlenberg, channeling Shanker, takes particular umbrage at the lack of accountability for students themselves. "Imagine saying we should shut down a hospital and fire its staff because not all of its patients became healthy," Shanker wrote in the early 1990s, "but never demanding that the patients also look out for themselves by eating properly, exercising, and laying off cigarettes, alcohol, and drugs." Unfortunately, rather than taking Shanker's advice and adding consequences for kids, Miller and McKeon seem more likely to subtract sanctions for adults--which means that the "hospital" will remain open, even as the patients grow sicker. Someone send these congressmen a copy of Kahlenberg's new book!

"No Child Left Behind: What Would Al Say?," by Richard Kahlenberg, Education Week, September 5, 2007

» Continued


WWAD?

Few plaudits for audits

September 6, 2007

The last several years have witnessed an explosion in the number of students taking Advanced Placement courses--a laudable trend, on the whole. The College Board, though, is worried that its AP label might be losing integrity because of the program's rapid expansion, so the organization is auditing AP courses to ensure that their syllabi and lessons are up to snuff. That well-intended review process may, however, be penalizing some of the better AP classes (and teachers) out there. David Keener teaches biology and was recently told that his curriculum didn't meet AP standards. Yet, none of his students scored below a ‘3'--the passing grade--on the 2007 AP biology exam. (In another instance, several teachers reportedly turned in the same syllabus to be graded; some of them were deemed acceptable, others weren't. The College Board said such scenarios are extremely rare.) The College Board is right to defend the rigor of its brand. But if most of a class's students make the grade on AP's challenging tests, it indicates that the teachers are doing a fine job. (That's precisely how Jaime Escalante became known as the best teacher in America.) Why not focus the College Board's magnifying glass on classrooms where most students aren't even taking--much less passing--the tests? Why not let the kids' results determine the worth of the teacher's syllabus (and pedagogy)? To do otherwise is akin to making grandma take off her shoes at the airport x-ray

» Continued


Few plaudits for audits

Right point, wrong lesson

September 6, 2007

Once upon a time, before U.S. schools were desegregated, the District of Columbia's Dunbar High School provided a top-flight education to the city's black elite and future leaders--so much so that families moved to Washington so their kids could go to school there. Over the years, much ink has been spilled reminiscing about the great days of Dunbar and the educational decrepitude that, for the most part, now envelops it. That familiar history was recently subjected to revisionism by Howard University law professor Brian Gilmore, who asserted in the Washington Post that Dunbar was never a place of entirely equal educational opportunity. Throughout the 20th Century, Gilmore says, Dunbar's lighter-skinned African-American pupils were considered "privileged" while dark-skinned blacks were not. Today's Dunbar High School has its high-achievers, its laggards, and its troublemakers, he writes, but so did the Dunbar of the 1930s. Romanticizing the education provided by pre-integration, all-black schools is unwise. On the other hand, plenty of data attests to a decades-long slippage in Dunbar's educational quality, even as the school remained almost 100 percent black. Gilmore concludes by wondering whether we should tolerate polices that allow extreme segregation. He ought instead wonder whether we should tolerate policies that allow shoddy education to be the modern-day norm at Dunbar High School and far too many other places, regardless of who's enrolled.

"Rose-Colored Views of an All-Black School," by Brian Gilmore, Washington Post, September 2, 2007

» Continued


Right point, wrong lesson

Dissed Down Under

September 6, 2007

Gadfly doesn't consider himself a moral crusader, much less a moral alarmist. But he is--and The Australian newspaper is his mouthpiece. That's reality according to University of Western Sydney education school professors Wayne Sawyer and Susanne Gannon, who in a recent article accuse the media--that's us--of promoting a "simplistic and demonised version" of whole language reading. They allege that The Australian and its political allies are wrongly rousing the public to "moral panic around literacy instruction in particular, and education in general." Well. Let's check the data. As The Australian pointed out in an editorial, a recent national report found that "a significant minority of children in Australian schools continue to face difficulties in acquiring acceptable levels of literacy." It also found (not uniquely) that phonics programs were notably more effective than whole language programs, which presume that struggling students can more or less teach themselves to read. Sometimes panic isn't such a bad thing--when it pushes us to act.

"‘Panic' over whole language," by Justine Ferrari, The Australian, September 4, 2007

"Reading the riot act," The Australian, September 5, 2007

» Continued


Dissed Down Under

Dressed for success?

September 6, 2007

Do not come to school in Indianapolis with your trousers sagging, your shirttail fluttering or your logo-flaunting apparel. For you shall be turned away. The city has just adopted a strict dress code. High school students, for example, must wear solid-colored shirts, either in white or their school's official color. Pants should be tan, black, or navy; go gray and go home. We're not sure what to make of these rules. For one, they encourage monochromatic ensembles, which worked for Michael Jackson and Regis Philbin but won't for the average 17-year-old. Nonetheless, we're sympathetic to the Indianapolis school leaders. Sir Richard Steele once wrote (in 1711 in The Spectator) that "The most improper things we commit in the conduct of our lives, we are led into by the force of fashion." Thus, a subdued dress code may occasion subdued behavior in the classroom, which in turn may catalyze some actual learning. That, or everyone will simply look dull.

"IPS buttons down its dress code," by Andy Gammill, Indianapolis Star, September 5, 2007

» Continued


Dressed for success?

Charter Schools: Hope or Hype?

Chester E. Finn, Jr. / September 6, 2007

Jack Buckley and Mark Schneider
Princeton University Press
2007

This thoughtful, scholarly volume probes the District of Columbia's charter-school experience (through 2005-6). It's not a study of school performance as gauged by test scores but, rather, of parental behavior: why families choose the schools they choose, how satisfied are they, why they're more content with some schools than others, how social capital gets built by and around schools, and much more. The findings are mixed--sobering, too--and the authors' comments on education markets are insightful indeed. Quoting from the last page: "While parents must exercise their expanded power to hold charter schools accountable from the bottom, these schools must also be held accountable from the top, by serious efforts to gather evidence about what works and for whom.... If simply unleashing choice and market forces was all that was required, then the results we observe for charter schools should be uniformly better. The problems facing charter schools (which all too often mirror the problems of traditional public schools serving the same communities) suggest that more is at work than simply too much bureaucracy and not enough market competition. Yes, markets are beautiful things, but they don't work without lots of information, without a developed infrastructure, and without an adjudicating and enforcement authority. And charter schools won't work without the corresponding mechanisms necessary to support school choice in an ever-expanding market for education." Indeed. This book (the authors of which currently head the National

» Continued


Charter Schools: Hope or Hype?

School Choice: The Findings

September 6, 2007

Herbert J. Walberg
Cato Institute
August 2007

Herb Walberg's timely primer is an informative who's who and what's what of the world of school choice. Starting from the premise that U.S. schools lag far behind their international counterparts, the book explores both the positive and negative results of school choice experiments. Separate chapters take up various versions of school choice (charter schools, education vouchers, private schools) and external dynamics (geopolitical realities, parental satisfaction). He conducts a thorough review of research on each of these topics--Hoxby, Greene, and Moe are omnipresent--but omits studies he finds less than scientifically rigorous. His compilations of studies on a given subject--the effects of charter school competition on local district schools, for example-- are particularly compelling. Walberg quietly (and not surprisingly) concludes that school choice is a preferable alternative to the traditional public school system. You can find his book here.   

» Continued


School Choice: The Findings

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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