Education Gadfly Weekly
Volume 11, Number 12
March 24, 2011
Opinion + Analysis
Opinion
Getting back on track
Learning to love student tracking
By
Michael J. Petrilli
Opinion
The down-low on innovation "uptake"
Why innovations rarely go to scale
By
Robin J. Lake
News Analysis
A proud day for the Buckeyes
Ohio rolls out the welcome banner for TFA
By
Jamie Davies O'Leary
News Analysis
NEA at war!
Going behind enemy lines
Reviews
Book
Special Interest: Teachers Unions and America's Public Schools
Terry Moe?s magnum opus
By
Chester E. Finn, Jr.
Research
Monitoring Progress: Response to Intervention's Promise and Pitfalls
RTI may be good, but how good is still in question
By
Janie Scull
Research
Projections of Education Statistics to 2019 (Thirty-Eighth Edition)
Peering into the education-statistics looking glass
By
Gerilyn Slicker
Gadfly Studios
Podcast
ESEA CBA and LOL
Mike and Rick explain the merits of student tracking, debate whether collective bargaining matters, and spar over ESEA reauthorization. Amber heads to the Land of Enchantment for a study on CBAs and student achievement. And Chris deplores drivers: Keep the cell phones in your pockets!
Getting back on track
Michael J. Petrilli / March 24, 2011
One of the dirtiest words in American education today is “tracking.” Reformers and ed-school types alike deride the approach as racist, classist, and worthy of eradication. And if they are talking about the practice of confining some kids—typically poor or minority or both—into dead-end tracks with soulless, ditto-driven instruction, they are absolutely right.
But they are dead wrong when they call for elimination of tracking en toto—of removing all “honors” courses, of putting all agemates in the same class regardless of their level of preparedness. That’s a recipe for failure for kids of all achievement levels—and more proof that today’s policy discussion is often devoid of common sense.
It doesn’t take a rocket scientist—or even a cognitive scientist—to know that kids (and adults) learn best when presented with material that is challenging—neither too easy so as to be boring nor too hard as to be overwhelming. Like Goldilocks, we want it just right. Grouping kids so that instruction can be more closely targeted to their current ability levels helps make teaching and learning more efficient.
Click to play video of AEI debate on
student tracking featuring Mike Petrilli
Thankfully, we’re getting close to going beyond tracking—not by grouping all kids together, but by moving in the opposite direction, by customizing instruction to individual students. With the advent of online-learning technologies and more
Getting back on track
The down-low on innovation "uptake"
Robin J. Lake / March 24, 2011
Taking promising reforms and innovations “to scale” is a challenge that has bedeviled public schools for decades. One prominent example was the multi-million dollar New American Schools program, which, supported through federal and private dollars, solicited proposals from around the country for novel or proven whole-school design programs—such as Success for All—and engaged school districts to adopt school-based professional-development programs designed to help schools replicate the programs. Like so many other efforts to replicate best practices, New American Schools failed due to uneven implementation. The New American Schools experience, like decades of similarly ineffective efforts to replicate successful education programs, should teach us that the “uptake problem” in public education warrants serious attention in order to foster innovation and improve productivity in U.S. education.
New instructional innovations using technology hold great promise for dramatically improving educational delivery systems and resource productivity. Schools, like Rocketship Education and School of One, that blend distance learning and computer-driven curriculum with on-site, teacher-based instruction demonstrate that smart uses of technology can allow public schools to use teacher time more productively, more effectively engage students, and save labor costs so that money can be invested in teacher salaries, social supports for students, or smaller class sizes. However, getting these and other innovations to take hold more broadly across the United States is far from a sure thing.
The same issues have come up when we look at how few districts have tried to replicate what works in high-performing charter schools. One Center for Reinventing Public Education study of charter-management organizations (CMO) has shown that only a few districts
The down-low on innovation "uptake"
A proud day for the Buckeyes
Jamie Davies O'Leary / March 24, 2011
Two days ago, the Ohio legislature affirmed their commitment to low-income children, to turning around failing schools, and to education reform writ large: Both the state House and Senate passed legislation that paved the way for a Teach For America site in the Buckeye State while also making it easier for TFA alums to gain teacher certification. Even in a Republican-controlled state like Ohio, opening the state to TFA wasn’t a sure thing, and the House and Senate proceedings leading up to the vote were a stark reminder of an underlying hostility toward change. Pre-vote, heated claims about TFAers being little more than dramatically underprepared “white missionaries” echoed through the House gallery. They were followed by asserted fears that TFA teachers would steal jobs from more “qualified” education-school graduates. It was a long time coming, and there’s still a long ways to go, but after this week, the Buckeye State is one step closer to ensuring that that every child receives the excellent education he or she deserves.
This piece originally appeared (in a slightly different format) on Fordham’s Flypaper blog. To subscribe to Flypaper’s RSS feed, click here.
“House backs Teach for America plan,” by Jessica Alaimo, Zanesville TimesRecorder, March 24, 2011.
“School-choice options advocated at rally,” by Catherine Candisky, Columbus Dispatch, March 23, 2011.
A proud day for the Buckeyes
NEA at war!
March 24, 2011
As some modicum of normalcy returns to Wisconsin, Ohio, and other Midwestern states that have been embroiled in collective-bargaining furor, it’s worth keeping watch on the NEA. As Mike Antonucci writes in his latest EIA communiqué: “There should be no mistake about it—NEA sees [this push-back] as a threat to its very existence.” And the union may be right. The 2010 elections—and the sea of red they ushered in at the state level—emboldened Republicans for the first time to attack, systematically, the NEA’s sacred cows. But don’t expect the nation’s largest teacher union to quietly fade away. The group has already begun launching a two-pronged response: Kill potential anti-union legislation and, when that isn’t possible, attack that selfsame legislation in courts (a la Wisconsin at present). A white flag, from either side, is far away yet, but the war, for better or for worse, has definitely begun.
“‘We Are at War’—NEA’s Plan of Attack,” by Mike Antonucci, Education Intelligence Agency, March 21, 2011.
NEA at war!
Special Interest: Teachers Unions and America's Public Schools
Chester E. Finn, Jr. / March 24, 2011

Hot off the Brookings Institution
press is Terry Moe's magnum opus on teacher unions. Magnum, indeed (at 500-plus
pages), it's deeply informative, profoundly insightful, fundamentally
depressing, and yet ultimately somewhat hopeful about an educational future
that unions won't be able to block—though they'll try hard—due to the combined
forces of technology and changing politics. Insights along the way—and there
are many—include the gaps between teachers and their union leaders, the false
promise of “reform unionism,” the strength of union influence even where
there's no collective bargaining, the many faces of Randi Weingarten, and the
mixed bag that is Race to the Top. This is a book you'll want for your shelf
and, one hopes, a book you’ll actually read and savor and learn from.
Terry M. Moe, “Special Interest: Teachers Unions and America’s Public Schools,” (Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institute Press, March 2011).
Special Interest: Teachers Unions and America's Public Schools
Monitoring Progress: Response to Intervention's Promise and Pitfalls
Janie Scull / March 24, 2011
Response to Intervention (RTI) has become a
buzzword in both general education and special education circles—yet
understanding of the approach remains superficial. Enter this EdWeek special report, which serves as a
solid primer on what RTI is, why it’s used, and what some of its common
pitfalls are. As articulated in the series of articles, RTI is an instructional
technique that educators use to assist students with academic or behavioral
problems; it entails providing these students with tiered and increasingly
intensive instruction to address problems in their infancy. RTI first appeared
on the scene as a special education diagnostic tool, and is now utilized in the
gen ed setting as a preventive measure for a host of potential student hang-ups,
both academic and behavioral. Yet despite the popularity of RTI, obstacles
remain: Few education schools adequately prepare teachers to effectively use
RTI, and some parents have reported that RTI led to unnecessary delay in
special education identification. Further, RTI’s fluidity can cause districts
ire, as appropriately doling out funding for the effort (often between Title I
and special education coffers) gets awkward. In the end, though, the greatest
obstacle facing RTI is the dearth of research conducted on the topic. The
report notes that, while RTI has gained many advocates, no rigorous study of
the entire RTI model has ever been conducted. And though special education
numbers have decreased as RTI has expanded its reach, a definitive link between
the two has yet to be proven. Though many agree that
Monitoring Progress: Response to Intervention's Promise and Pitfalls
Projections of Education Statistics to 2019 (Thirty-Eighth Edition)
Gerilyn Slicker / March 24, 2011
Put away your crystal balls—the National Center for Education Statistics has released their projections of education statistics for the next eight years. And they’re worth taking seriously; analyses of previous predictions showed them to be remarkably accurate. So let’s peer into the future: Between 2007 and 2019, K-12 enrollment will see a 6 percent increase overall—mostly coming from a boom in America’s school-aged Hispanic population. While white and black student enrollment will actually decrease, Hispanic student enrollment is projected to increase 60 percent over these thirteen years. In terms of graduation rates: Twenty-one states (including most of the Northeast) will see a decrease in their graduation rates by at least 5 percent, while seventeen states will see an increase by at least the same percentage. NCES further reports predictions on student-teacher ratios, education expenditures, college enrollments, and teacher qualifications. While the projections rely on a host of assumptions external to the education system (like fertility rates and migration), and don’t take political and fiscal climates into account, they’re still fun to explore.
William J. Hussar and Tabitha M. Bailey, “Projections of Education Statistics to 2019 (Thirty-eighth edition)” (Washington, D.C.: National Center for Education Statistics, March 2011).
Projections of Education Statistics to 2019 (Thirty-Eighth Edition)
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.





