Education Gadfly Weekly
Volume 8, Number 25
June 26, 2008
Opinion + Analysis
Opinion
Is common sense really all that common?
By
Amber M. Winkler, Ph.D.
Opinion
Onward, charter soldiers
By
Chester E. Finn, Jr.
News Analysis
The broader and bolder Deval Patrick
News Analysis
Voucher victory
News Analysis
Texas for excellence
News Analysis
Separating the good, bad, and ugly
News Analysis
Classrooms to nowhere
Reviews
Research
Hard Times at Douglass High: A No Child Left Behind Report Card
By
Coby Loup
Research
Ensuring Equal Opportunity in Education: How Local School District Funding Practices Hurt Disadvantaged Students and What Federal Policy Can Do About It
By
Eric Osberg
Gadfly Studios
Podcast
End of an era
This week, Mike and Rick chat about reform in Massachusetts, alt-cert in Texas, and eighth-grade bacchanalia. Today, Jeff Kuhner considers himself the luckiest man on the face of the earth, and Education News of the Weird is tainted.
Is common sense really all that common?
Amber M. Winkler, Ph.D. / June 26, 2008
How dismaying to read about the 17 girls at Gloucester (MA) High School who, some say, made a pact to become pregnant together. What about finishing high school? Going to college? And then we learn that the high school intends to provide free daycare for their babies. I've been wrestling with this business of situating childcare centers in high schools for use by teen moms. (One has existed at Gloucester High since 1996.) Is it a good idea for public high schools to provide on-site childcare for their student-mommies?
First, some relevant research. Recent national teen pregnancy rates (girls ages 15-19) declined 5 percent between 2002 and 2004 and 38 percent from 1990 to 2004 (to 72 pregnancies per 1000 girls). This good news may be due, in part, to the programs out there aimed to prevent teen pregnancy--some of which have decent records of effectiveness relative to certain teen attitudes and behaviors (see here, here, and here). Still, according to 2005 data, most teens report being sexually active (62 percent of high school seniors have had intercourse at least once). And estimates by The National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancies indicate that teen childbearing cost taxpayers $9.1 billion in 2004 (based on factors such as lost tax revenue, public assistance, and health care for children), most of
Is common sense really all that common?
Onward, charter soldiers
Chester E. Finn, Jr. / June 26, 2008
New Orleans, June 25, 2008: In all the obvious ways, this week's National Charter Schools Conference resembled other major conclaves in big-city convention centers: thousands of people being beckoned by hundreds of "exhibitors" with their stands, stalls, slick pitches, and free samples, as well as by dozens and dozens of "break out" sessions on every imaginable topic. A couple of major "keynote" talks, including one by the governor and one by the organizing organization's own head. Award ceremonies with much applause. And innumerable corridor conversations, side meetings, job explorations, reunions, and such.
It also resembled other conferences in reviving New Orleans: sweaty walks to fabulous restaurants and lookalike hotels; much drinking; a surfeit of dubious jazz and (LOUD) music; a handy casino; and more tacky shopping opportunities than anybody needs. (Attendees were also given opportunities to volunteer on a couple of reconstruction projects.)
This was, however, a conference about charter schools, organized by the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, and it was dedicated to "achieving academic excellence at scale." That's an unimpeachably worthy goal and the conference did more than most to advance it. Here are a few glimpses:
- The Alliance issued its long-awaited, much-needed "framework for academic quality," the product of a major project to spell out academic benchmarks and metrics for successful charter schools, intended to be used by school operators and authorizers alike as a tool by which to monitor and--one hopes--evaluate school performance and enforce quality standards.
Onward, charter soldiers
The broader and bolder Deval Patrick
June 26, 2008
This is school-reform week in the Bay State, where Governor Deval Patrick is finally announcing a series of policy proposals that would amount to the biggest changes in state education law in fifteen years. What's not clear is whether these will be, ahem, changes we can believe in, or whether the legislature will even find the money to fund any of them. (Patrick is sketchy about the money part. "We're building a house," he said. "You design it first and then cost it out. We will pay for it.") Many of his proposals amount to "more": more pre-school, more supports for children aged zero to five, more pay for teachers in high-need schools or subjects. But a couple of ill-considered proposals amount to "less is more." First: it appears that he's reneging on his promise to snap the state cap on charter schools. Which is a shame, as the Massachusetts charter program is among the nation's best. Second, on teachers' contracts, he's proposing a single statewide agreement as a way to save local districts time and money. That's an intriguing notion; put into practice, however, we predict a huge give-away for the unions--among the governor's key backers. With all of these proposals, the devil's in Deval's details, but we have to thank to the governor for this: he's given America's ed-policy wonks lots to chew on in the dog days of summer ahead.
"Patrick rolls out plan
The broader and bolder Deval Patrick
Voucher victory
June 26, 2008
Louisiana governor Bobby Jindal (see above) earned a victory last week when the state legislature voted to implement a voucher program for New Orleans that he supports. The bill, which received bipartisan support, introduces a venture that will start small (maximum participation is 1,500) and offer vouchers only to students in grades k-3. But its accountability measures are promising. Voucher students will sit for Louisiana state tests, for one, and schools that have operated for less than two years will need to receive state permission for voucher pupils to compose more than 20 percent of their enrollments. Those seem like reasonable ways to ensure that public money is put to proper use. As state Representative Walter Leger III said, "When you spend public funds on private enterprises, you need to make sure you get what you pay for."
"Voucher bill wins final legislative passage," by Bill Barrow, New Orleans Times-Picayune, June 18, 2008
Voucher victory
Texas for excellence
June 26, 2008
Perhaps a few Texans have been reading our report on the flaccidity of most alternative-certification programs for teachers. The Texas State Board of Educator Certification is considering a rule that would standardize and raise the minimum entrance requirements for alternative certification (at least a 2.5 college GPA) and would require a certain amount of training before a teacher is handed a classroom full of students. This is a sound idea, provided the "training" is also sound. It's not a perfect idea, though. What about a middle-aged candidate who wasted his college years but then matured, learned more, and made millions in the oil business? Should that person be barred from teaching eleventh-grade economics because of a long-ago transcript? Raising standards is tricky, isn't it? Texas is one of the few states with robust alternative certification, and its idea to demand a minimum GPA from alternative certification candidates is the right one. We're less enthusiastic about the required training, though, and we hope the Lone Star State will reconsider that portion of its proposal.
"State pushes for stricter rules on alternative certification teacher programs," by Katherine Leal Unmuth, Dallas Morning News, June 22, 2008
Texas for excellence
Separating the good, bad, and ugly
June 26, 2008
Kristen Graham of the Philadelphia Inquirer begins her reportage about the city's experiences with private operators of public schools with this sentence: "In a blow to the Philadelphia School District's historic privatization experiment, the School Reform Commission voted yesterday to seize six schools from outside managers and warned them that they are in danger of losing 20 others if progress is not made." A blow to the experiment? Nay, Ms. Graham--the revocation of several management contracts is an indication that the experiment is in fact working as intended. Thirty-eight Philly schools are currently run by private companies, and under the current initiative 16 percent of these, those that have been chronically failing, will return to district control. Thirty-two percent had their contracts extended (boffo for them) and the remainder were told that they have another year to demonstrate significant performance gains or face possible loss of contract. Such a policy "puts providers on notice that we consider they have made just limited progress for children, and that's not good enough," the district's new chief executive, Arlene Ackerman, said. Doesn't sound to us like a blow to the experiment. Though it would be better if she were also adding some low-performing district schools to the "outsourcing" list.
"Phila. taking back 6 privatized schools," by Kristen A. Graham, Philadelphia Inquirer, June 19, 2008
Separating the good, bad, and ugly
Classrooms to nowhere
June 26, 2008
Construction workers hurting from the roiled real estate market should head to Los Angeles, where the school district is feverishly adding square footage even as its enrollment declines. The Los Angeles Unified School District has lost 57,000 students over the past decade; fewer families are moving to the city and the Latino birth rate has fallen. But this enrollment decline began after local voters approved, ten years ago, a $20-billion capital improvement project to deal with classrooms that were, at the time, genuinely overcrowded. Now, however, the district estimates that in 2012 its schools will seat only 560,000 pupils in facilities that could handle 670,000. The extra room will allow many schools to remove portable classroom trailers and give teachers more office space, of course. But money doesn't grow on palm trees, and according to the Los Angeles Times, the district is still moving forward "with plans to build some schools in areas of dwindling population and others that are too large...." That doesn't sound smart or flexible in an era when big-city school districts, to retain students, need to be smart and flexible--and when it's still next to impossible for Los Angeles charter schools to gain access to decent facilities.
"L.A. Unified will have more seats, but fewer students to fill them," by Evelyn Larrubia, Los Angeles Times, June 23, 2008
Classrooms to nowhere
Hard Times at Douglass High: A No Child Left Behind Report Card
Coby Loup / June 26, 2008
Directed by Alan Raymond and Susan Raymond
Home Box Office
June 2008
This documentary has already been dissected in several places, but it's almost two hours long so there's plenty more to say about it. Though it offers a few uplifting scenes, Hard Times at Douglass High is mostly a picture of failure and despair in one Baltimore school. The year before it was filmed, only 10 percent of Douglass students passed the Maryland state English exam and only one percent passed in algebra. By the end of their freshman year, 50 percent of the school's ninth graders will either drop out, move, or stop attending. That's despite the fact that the school's faculty and staff spend inordinate time and resources on these freshmen. For instance, we meet Audie, a ninth-grader who shows not an iota of interest in his class work or respect for the school's employees but nonetheless monopolizes their time. Finally, enough is enough and the administrators kick him out--but only after they have wasted untold hours chasing him through the hallways between classes. We also see the uninspiring workings of a city-mandated Saturday "attendance court," which parents of chronically-truant students (mostly freshmen, the principal tells us) are required to attend. The students sit there dumbly as their parents (or parent, more often) express either mild concern, helpless despair, or outrage at the school. In no single case does one get the feeling that
Hard Times at Douglass High: A No Child Left Behind Report Card
Ensuring Equal Opportunity in Education: How Local School District Funding Practices Hurt Disadvantaged Students and What Federal Policy Can Do About It
Eric Osberg / June 26, 2008
Center for American Progress
June 2008
Here the Center for American Progress offers four papers on "comparability," or the lack thereof, in school district spending practices. Comparability has a technical meaning: districts must fund schools "comparably" before federal Title I funds can be added. But comparability also has a colloquial meaning, which is that districts too often spend less on schools serving the neediest students. Marguerite Roza (who authored one of these papers) has previously written that district budgeting practices mask the true costs of teachers (the more experienced and expensive of whom gravitate toward less-needy schools) and can unevenly distribute other resources. In her paper for CAP, Roza revisits these challenges and argues that, within the context of Title I, simply "forcing districts to equalize dollar expenditures would restore the original intent of comparability." In another paper, Phyllis McClure offers a detailed, left-leaning history of Title I. Ross Wiener's paper analyzes where potential changes to Title I would foster comparability. He sides with McClure's activist approach and argues that Congress should "require states to assess and attain equity in curricular offerings, instructional support materials, and facilities to support instruction." The final chapter offers something different; Matt Hill of the Oakland Unified School District explains its use of weighted student funding (WSF), or "Results Based Budgeting," which has effectively eliminated funding disparities by allocating per-pupil budgets to schools rather than centrally distributing teachers and other resources. The volume,
Ensuring Equal Opportunity in Education: How Local School District Funding Practices Hurt Disadvantaged Students and What Federal Policy Can Do About It
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.





