Why don’t top private schools adopt corporate-driven reforms?

Posted at 07:00 AM ET, 02/18/2012
Why don’t top private schools adopt corporate-driven reforms?
By Valerie Strauss

This was written by Bruce D. Baker, a professor in the Graduate School of Education at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. This first appeared on his School Finance 101 blog.

By Bruce D. Baker

 Lately it seems that public policy and the reformy rhetoric that drives it are hardly influenced by the vast body of empirical work and insights from leading academic scholars which suggests that such practices as using value-added metrics to rate teacher quality, or dramatically increasing test-based accountability and pushing for common core standards and tests to go with them are unlikely to lead to substantial improvements in education quality, or equity.

Rather than review relevant empirical evidence or provide new empirical illustrations in this post, I’ll refer to the wisdom and practices of private independent schools – perhaps the most market-driven segment and most elite segment of elementary and secondary schooling in the United States.

Really… if running a school like a ‘business’ (or more precisely running a school as we like to pretend that ‘businesses’ are run… even though ‘most’ businesses aren’t really run the way we pretend they are) was such an awesome idea for elementary and secondary schools, wouldn’t we expect to see that our most elite, market oriented schools would be the ones pushing the envelope on such strategies?

If rating teachers based on standardized test scores was such a brilliant revelation for improving the quality of the teacher workforce, if getting rid of tenure and firing more teachers was clearly the road to excellence, and if standardizing our curriculum and designing tests for each and every component of it were really the way forward, we’d expect to see these strategies all over the home pages of web sites of leading private independent schools, and we’d certainly expect to see these issues addressed throughout the pages of journals geared toward innovative school leaders, like

Independent School Magazine
.  In fact, 
they
 must have been talking about this kind of stuff for at least a decade. You know, how and why merit pay for teachers is the obvious answer for enhancing teacher productivity, and why we need more standardization… more tests… in order to improve curricular rigor? 

So, I went back and did a little browsing through recent, and less recent issues of Independent School Magazine
 and collected the following few words of wisdom:

From Winter 2003, when the school where I used to teach decided to drop Advanced Placement courses:

A little philosophy, first. Independent schools are privileged. We do not have to respond to the whims of the state, nor to every or any educational trend. We can maximize our time attuned to students and how they learn, and to the development of curriculum that enriches them and encourages the skills and attitudes of independent thinkers. Our founding charters and missions established independence for a range of reasons, but they now give all of us relative curricular autonomy, the ability to bring together a faculty of scholars and thinkers who are equipped to develop rich, developmentally sound programs of study. As Fred Calder, the executive director of New York State Association of Independent Schools, wrote in a letter to member schools a few years ago: “If we cannot design our programs according to our best lights and the needs of our communities, then let the monolith prevail and give up the enterprise. Standardized testing in subject areas essentially smothers original thought, more fatally, because of the irresistible pressure on teachers to teach to the tests.”

Blasphemy? Or simply good education!

And from way, way back in 2000, in a particularly thoughtful piece on “business” strategies applied to schools:

Educators do not respond to the same incentives as businesspeople and school heads have much less clout than their corporate counterparts to foster improvement. Most teachers want higher salaries but react badly to offers of money for performance. Merit pay, so routine in the corporate world, has a miserable track record in education. It almost never improves outcomes and almost always damages morale, sowing dissension and distrust, for three excellent reasons, among others: (1) teachers are driven to help their own students, not to outperform other teachers, which violates the ethic of service and the norms of collegiality; (2) as artisans engaged in idiosyncratic work with students whose performance can vary due to factors beyond school control,teachers often feel that there is no rational, fair basis for comparison; and (3) in schools where all faculty feel underpaid, offering a special sum to a few sparks intense resentment. At the same time, school leaders have limited leverage over poor performers. Although few independent schools have unionized staff and formal tenure, all are increasingly vulnerable to legal action for wrongful dismissal; it can take a long time and a large expense to dismiss a teacher. Moreover, the cost of firing is often prohibitive in terms of its damage to morale. Given teachers’ desire for security, the personal nature of their work, and their comparative lack of worldliness, the dismissal of a colleague sends shock waves through a faculty, raising anxiety even among the most talented.

Unheard of! Isn’t firing the bad teacher supposed to make all of those (statistically) great teachers feel better about themselves? Improve the profession? [that said, we have little evidence one way or the other]

How can we allow our leading private, independent, market-based schools to promote such gobbledygook? Why do they do it? Are they a threat to our national security or our global economic competitiveness because they were not then, nor are they now (see recent issues: http://www.nais.org/) fast-tracking the latest reformy fads? Testing out the latest and greatest educational improvement strategies on their own students, before those strategies get tested on low income children in overcrowded urban classrooms? Why aren’t the boards of directors of these schools — many of whom are leaders in “business” — demanding that they change their outmoded ways? Why? Why? Why? Because what they are doing works! At least in terms of their success in continuing to attract students and produce successful graduates.

Now, that’s not to say that these schools are completely stagnant, never adopting new strategies or reforms. They do new stuff all the time (technology integration, etc.) – just not the absurd reformy stuff being dumped upon public schools by policymakers who in many cases choose to send their own children to private independent schools.

In my repeated pleas to private school leaders to provide insights into current movements in teacher evaluation and compensation, I’ve actually found little change from these core principles of nearly a decade ago.  Private independent schools don’t just fire at will and fire often and teacher compensation remains very predictable and traditionally structured. I’d love to know, from my private school readers, how many of their schools have adopted state-mandated tests?

Private independent schools pride themselves on offering small class sizes   (see also here) and a diverse array of curricular opportunities, as well as arts, sports and other enrichment – the full package.  And, as I’ve shown in my previous research, private independent schools charge tuition and spend on a per pupil basis at levels much higher than traditional public school districts operating in the same labor market. They also pay their headmasters well! More blasphemy indeed.

In fact, aside from “no excuses” charter schools whose innovative programs consist primarily of rigid discipline coupled with longer hours and small group tutoring (not rocket science), and higher teacher salaries (here, here and here) to compensate the additional work, private independent schools may just be among the least reformy elementary and secondary education options out there

.

That’s not to say they are anything like “no excuses” charter schools. They are not in many ways. But they are equally non-reformy.  In fact, the average school year in private independent schools is shorter not longer than in traditional public schools — about 165 days.  And the average student load of teachers working in private independent schools (course sections x class size) is much lower in the typical private independent school than in traditional public schools. But that ain’t reformy stuff at all, any more than trying to improve outcomes of low income kids by adding hours and providing tutoring.

None-theless, for some reason, well educated people with the available resources, keep choosing these non-reformy and expensive schools. Some of these schools have been around for a while too! Maybe, just maybe, it’s because they are doing the right things – providing good, well rounded educational opportunities as many of them have for centuries, adapting along the way.

Perhaps they’ve not gone down the road of substantially increased testing and curriculum standardization, test-based teacher evaluation – firing their way to Finland — because they understand that these policy initiatives offer little to improve school quality, and much potential damage.

Perhaps there are some lessons to be learned from market-based systems. But perhaps we should be looking to those market based systems that have successfully provided high quality schooling for centuries to our nation’s most demanding, affluent and well educated leaders, rather than basing our policy proposals on some make-believe highly productive private sector industry where new technologies reduce production costs to near $0 and where complex statistical models are used to annually deselect non-productive employees.

Just pondering the possibilities, and still waiting for Zuck (an Exeter alum) to invest in Harkness Tables for Newark Public Schools and class sizes of 12 across the board!

-0-

Follow The Answer Sheet every day by bookmarking http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet.

By Valerie Strauss
 | 
07:00 AM ET, 02/18/2012

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Parents protest schools turnaround plan

CHICAGO (CNN/ WLS) – Parents angry about the possibility their childrens school may be closed staged a sit-in Friday.

The halls and classrooms of Brian Piccolo Elementary were a temporary home to dozens of parents, students and activists armed with a message.

We want to hear from the mayor. Hear us. We are taxpayers. We have a right. We have a say so. These are our kids, said parent Latoya Walls.

It began Friday afternoon with people entering the school with sleeping bags and food, with no apparent security to stop them.

Theyre protesting Chicago Public Schools so-called turnaround plans for the school which, if approved, would lead to teachers and staff being replaced.

The teachers know us. If they come in here, they dont know our personalities, and they just dont know us, said eighth grader Yshanda Hudson.

Piccolo has been on academic probation for the last five years.

lsquo;We need to make difficult, but necessary, decisions to boost student achievement throughout the district and put their needs above all else, CPS said in a statement released Friday.

Under the turnaround plan, management of Piccolo would be turned over to the Academy for Urban School Leadership, or AUSL, a private, non-profit that already runs 12 CPS schools.

We need our school. If theyve got the funding, give us the money and well do what weve got to do for Brian Piccolo, said parent Nedra Martin.

Piccolo is just one of ten underperforming CPS schools slated for turnaround, six of which would be run by AUSL.

Parents question CPSs claims that the organization improves schools quicker, and they said test scores are up under Piccolos new principal who was hired last summer.

Shes doing a turnaround. We dont need their turnaround. Shes doing the turnaround, said Walls.

Copyright 2012 CNN / WLS. All rights reserved.

Tours.com’s Travel-Intel Examines Cruise Industry in Wake of the Concordia

SAN FRANCISCO, CA, Feb 17, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) –
The new issue of Tours.com’s Travel-Intel newsletter looks at what
practices and policies are afoot in the wake of last month’s
foundering of the Costa Concordia. Statements by industry brass, such
as Royal Caribbean’s Richard Fain and Cruise Line Industry
Association head Christine Duffy, show a laser focus on refining
muster regulations and also produce a well-deserved nod to the
industry’s overall excellent safety record.

The issue also looks at recent decisions by the US Department of
Homeland Security to install the Global Entry program as a permanent
part of U.S. Immigration at international airports. The program
recently completed a five-year pilot run at 20 airports around the
country allowing frequent flying U.S. citizens to by-pass lengthy
customs lines with pre-approved status read biometrically at arrival
area kiosks. The article provides links to the registration site,
which can result in great time savings for international travelers.

These articles are among several new features in the February 15
issue of Travel-Intel, a newsletter sent to more than 100,000 opt-in
travel agents in the U.S. and Canada. Travel-Intel is then posted on
Tours.com for those seeking answers in Tours.com’s comprehensive
directory of tour companies and travel information.

The new issue of Travel-Intel also features a look at wild Las Vegas,
which is experiencing a solid resurgence of visitor interest as the
U.S. recession loses strength. Similarly, the newsletter talks to
Beth Whitman, owner of the Wanderlust and Lipstick travel site and
WanderTours, to see just how travelers can go from passionate
bloggers to passionate tour operators, in this instance, one that
offers women-only tours to exotic locales.

And for travelers hooked on the art of travel, Travel-Intel features
a pair of luxury properties on the southern tip of Uruguay devoted to
art as hospitality, if not the art of hospitality. Estancia Vik and
Playa Vik, both properties included in the Kurtz-Ahlers collection,
create a living canvas for guests with stays unlike anywhere else in
the world.

“Travel is a constantly moving landscape so we try to keep up with
the news, updates and changes with twice monthly newsletters that put
sense and depth to what we see happening around us,” says Lark Ellen
Gould, content director for Travel-Intel. “In this issue, for
instance, we ask tough questions about the Concordia and we learn
from a travel blogger just what it takes to turn a passion into a
profit making venture. These topics hit a note with a broad swath of
people who travel or work in the travel industry.”

Gould, a veteran travel journalist who has been covering the travel
industry for more than 20 years, brings her incisive perspective to
the publication and emails it on the 1st and 15th of each month to
more 103,000 travel agents in the U.S. and Canada, before posting the
travelzine on Tours.com and Sightseeing.com. Travel-Intel also
partners with CanadaScope and Britain Magazine for easy access to
added sources of information.

Tours.com is the Official Directory of Tours & Vacations Worldwide.
On-line since 1995, Tours.com has a deep and searchable database of
tour and vacation companies searchable by company name, destination
and/or activity. Also a one-stop resource for major Travel Channels
such as travel insurance, passport & visa information, major travel
booking sites by categories such as hotels, air, cars, cruises,
barges, yachts & ferries, railroad & rail travel, etc. plus all other
pertinent travel categories/channels. The Find a Travel Agent search
field allows one to search for travel agents certified with in-depth
knowledge in their chosen specialty.

For more information visit
www.tours.com

Press Contact:

Maria Polk
President & CEO Tours.com
Phone: 415-332-7916
maria@tours.com

SOURCE: Tours.com

mailto:maria@tours.com

Copyright 2012 Marketwire, Inc., All rights reserved.

Jeffco schools budget plan saves teachers for a year

Marissa Ritter, middle, reads her sheet music as she plays a song during band practice on Dec. 14, 2011 at Maple Grove Elementary School. (YourHub | Seth A. McConnell)

Qualcomm wants its chips in ultraportable notebooks

As Intel tries to enter the smartphone space with its Medfield Atom SoCs, Qualcomm will reportedly attempt to capture some of x86s territory. Currently in over 300 devices and shipping soon in about 350 more, Qualcomms Snapdragon chipsets have long seized their slice of the handset and tablet business. However, with Windows 8s support for ARM architectures, the mobile firm has its crosshairs on ultraportable notebooks — a segment dominated by Intel, especially now with its Ultrabook initiative.

We havent seen any names mentioned, but Qualcomm is talkingwith PC makers about building compact notebooks based on its Snapdragon S4 chips, which are expected to ship in devices later this year. The new chips will come in single, dual and quad-core variants running between 1.5GHz and 2.5GHz. Qualcomm CEO Paul Jacobs showed a Windows 8 tablet powered by his companys chips at CES, but we havent seen any reports of early S4-based notebook prototypes displayed at the event.

Forbes chats with Qualcomm CEO Paul Jacobs

Interestingly, the S4 is also scheduled to appear in various smart TVs, including Lenovos 55-inch 240Hz IPS K91 HDTV. The television uses Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich to deliver entertainment apps, lets you use your Android smartphone or tablet as a remote, and an integrated 5MP webcam uses ICS Face Unlock feature to provide easy parental controls. Theres plenty of potential for casual gaming between ICS, Qualcomms speedy SoC and the ability to purchase a gaming controller accessory.

Along with announcing its plans to invade the notebook market, Qualcomm introduced its first chips supporting Wi-Fi Display, a standard that lets devices such as TVs, tablets and smartphones connect directly to share media. In that same vein, Qualcomm also unveiled its Skifta Media Shifting Platform for streaming content across various DLNA-complaint devices. For instance, you can shift pictures from your PC to your TV or remotely stream music from your home network to your Android smartphone.

Ten @ 10: Food lit overload

A book that arrived last week sparked musings about the burgeoning industry of food lit titles, a category that has exploded in recent years and seems to keep building.

By food lit, we mean books that are not cookbooks, but instead tackle topics in the world of food from memoir (such as Heat, by Bill Buford) to food activism (Michael Pollan) to history. That last category includes the excellent work of Mark Kurlansky, author of several works that tell the history of the world through a single foodstuff: Cod: A Biography of the Fish that Changed the World, Salt: A World History and The Big Oyster: History on the Half Shell. Kurlansky may not have invented the genre, although we cant recall, right off, such a book before his Cod, published in 1997, but he owns it, wed argue.

Which brings us to the point and the new book. With its title, the book postions itself as in the vein of Kurlanskys work, but it comes off like parody: In Pursuit of Garlic: An Intimate Look at the Divinely Odorous Blub. Isnt that something youd think up if you were ranting about the glut of these titles, spawned by Kurlanskys success?

Now, dont get us wrong. There have been plenty of other excellent books following in Kurlanskys wake, and forging courses of their own. And we readers are all the richer for them. And, again, this book on garlic may be a great read, which well find out as soon as we can get to it, that is, as soon as we stop making fun of the glorification of the tomato, the lobster, the vanilla bean.

Which, now, brings us to the product of our musings, that is, the Stew staffs list of 10 books wed like to see in the history-as-told-through-a-single-foodstuff genre:

Water: How Something That Tastes Like Nothing Became the Worlds No. 1 Drink

Popcorn: The Snack that Saved Hollywood

Toro! Toro! Toro! The Tremendous Tale of the Tuna from Trawler to Table

Chipotle chilies: How a Smokin Hot Jalapeno Infiltrated Everything from Caramel Candies to Hummus to Potato Chips

On the Sweet lsquo;n Low: My Secret Life with a Sugar Substitute

Some Tripe about Tripe: How the Humble Honeycombed Belly of a Cow Saved a Culture from Hangovers

Bruschetta: The Appetizer Whose Pronunciation Divided a Nation

Pondering Poi: How Polynesias Most Disgusting Foodstuff Defined a People

Escargot: The Key to Understanding Why the French Act Like They Do

Truffle: The Fungus that Lightened Wallets and Ruined Dishes across America

Partial Subsidy: Prices Of Foodstuff Still High

Despite the reduction in the price of fuel from N141 to N97 by the federal government, prices of foodstuff are yet to reduce, LEADERSHIP findings can reveal.

The prices of foodstuff shot up two weeks ago, following the removal of fuel subsidy and the subsequent increase in the price of fuel from N65 to N141.

On Monday, President Goodluck Jonathan announced the reduction in the pump price of fuel.

But a visit to Wuse Market, one of the biggest markets in Abuja yesterday showed that prices of many staples were still high.

A cross-section of traders who spoke with our correspondent said they had already bought and stocked foodstuff when the cost of transportation was still high and would therefore be running at a loss if they reduced that prices of their commodities.

AMD ‘Ultrathin’ Notebooks to Undercut Intel Ultrabooks by $200: Report

AMD is readying its upcoming ?Trinity? platform for its ?ultrathin? thin-and-light notebooks, which will cost less than Intel?s high-profile ultrabooks, according to reports.

Germany: Bio, regional and fair trade products are the trend

Germany: Bio, regional and fair trade products are the trend

In the German foodstuff branch the trend of organic products grows further. The market volume of organic products has doubled since 2002. The annual turnover of this segment is approximately 6 billion Euro. This development is mainly the result of retailers having increased their assortment with organic products, amongst which are organic products of their own brand.The market share of retailersin the organic segment amounts to more than 50%.