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Re: AP's Ben Feller: Media Stooge for Privatization




On May 10, 2006, at 8:25 PM, Horn, James wrote:
From Feller:


When a school reaches the end of the line, its district has five choices:

1. Hire an outside organization to run the school.

2. Reopen the school as a charter school, with new leadership and less regulation.

3. Replace most or all of the school staff with any ties to the school's failure.

4. Turn operation of the school over to the state, if the state agrees.

5. Choose any other major restructuring that will fundamentally reform the school.

I'm not clear on who is actually authorized by the law to make these kinds of decisions. State departments of ed? School districts? School building principals? And does this vary from state to state? In the Feller piece (http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/ 6420AP_School_Makeovers.html), the following info appears:

--snip--


Most districts are opting for the last choice, a wide-open category. It allows for approaches that are easier to pull off than firing teachers or opening under new management. "Most schools are not doing radical things," said Jack Jennings, president of the Center on Education Policy, which has studied restructuring efforts in California and Michigan. "They are offering professional development, rethinking the curriculum, bringing coaches in, and trying to improve the school without wiping the slate clean," he said. In Michigan, many schools improved their test scores by using a mix of strategies, a good lesson for other states, Jennings said.


The Education Department monitors whether districts are restructuring schools and aims to help them assist. But it does not get involved in how they do it. "I don't know that we have a preferred way," said (Assistant Education Secretary Henry) Johnson, the Education Department official. "Whatever way that works is the preferred way."

Maryland tried a get-tough approach. The state schools chief ordered a state takeover of 11 struggling schools in Baltimore, invoking the federal law. But Democratic state lawmakers halted the plan, then overrode the Republican governor's veto when he intervened.

--snip--

So from the above, we see districts acting, schools acting, and a state department of education acting. Does the law have any language on this?

It appears to me that option 5 (above) does not represent a loophole so much as a sign of hope in the Bush administration's plans to scuttle public schools as we know them. If schools can make it through the gauntlet of public shaming that failure to make AYP involves, and if districts really are empowered to make decisions about how to address their needs, then perhaps NCLB was just a bad dream. After all, if the end of the line really is, "Choose any other major restructuring that will fundamentally reform the school," then what do schools have to fear?

But do all school districts really have the freedom to exercise this kind of autonomy and judgement? In Feller's frame, schools are taking advantage of a loophole, as mouthed by Fordham's Petrilli. But what are the actual data saying on this? Jack Jennings says that "most schools (in California and Michigan) are not doing radical things," ("offering professional development, rethinking the curriculum, bringing coaches in, and trying to improve the school without wiping the slate clean.") Even if this is the case, what are most schools doing in other states, not just California and Michigan? As the Feller piece notes, "Seven states - California, Georgia, Illinois, Michigan, New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania - account for almost 70 percent of all schools ordered to restructure." What will the other 43 states do as their schools inexorably reach the failure zone? And as the Feller piece cryptically concludes, "Education Department officials caution that the current numbers are still being verified."

I smell a rat here.

As we have seen in Baltimore, Philadelphia, the SF Bay Area, Chicago, and more and more in St. Louis, certainly urban school districts have nothing like this kind of autonomy and ability to exercise professional judgement. As we have seen, it's usually a Broad/Edison/ Gates/KIPP style headlock that schools are subjected to. And while school boards themselves are penetrated by Broad, et al (see http:// www.wweek.com/editorial/3226/7507 for a report on Broad and Portland public schools), we see the public being whipped into a "I hate public schools" frenzy that pieces like Feller's only serve to foment. If schools are depicted as basically thumbing their noses at accountability -- "If parents get information that their school is failing for six straight years, and everyone keeps their job, how is that a restructuring?" --, they cannot expect to enjoy public support much longer.

Therefore, to hasten the demise of public schools, it's the same old bash and chip strategy that right-to-lifers have put to such effective use.




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