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Common Sense School Reform A Measure of the Need for Reform Americas schools are in a state of crisis. Few of our schools are excellent, many are mediocre, and yet we, the adults responsible, are content to tinker and theorize. Demands for radical change are consistently met by protestations of good intentions, pleas for patience, and an endless stream of ineffectual reforms. The dimensions of the problem are straightforward. Researchers have estimated that in 2001 just 32 percent of all 18-year-olds graduated from high school with basic literacy skills and having completed the courses needed to attend a four-year college. The figure was just 20 percent for African-American and 16 percent for Latino 18-year-olds. The 2003 National Assessment of Educational Progress reported that just 31 percent of fourth graders and 32 percent of eighth graders were proficient in reading. Fully 37 percent of fourth graders and 26 percent of eighth graders scored below basic. Were not talking a high bar here, to suggest that children be able to read on grade level. In 2002, three-quarters of employers expressed serious doubts about the basic skills of public school graduates in the areas of spelling, grammar, and writing clearly. More than 60 percent reported that public school graduates had fair or poor math skills. College professors teaching a self-selected group of the nations graduates expressed similar concerns at almost identical rates. Perhaps most distressing, our children lose ground during their years in school. While our 9-year-olds score above international norms, our 13-year-olds slip below average, and our 17-year-olds avoid the bottom only by eking past nations like South Africa, Cyprus, and Lithuania. The common culprit blamed for our educational travails is a lack of spending. However, by any reasonable standard American schools are funded exceptionally well. In 2000, the most recent year for which international comparisons are available, the OECD reported that the U.S. spent significantly more per pupil than any other industrial democracy, including those famous for the generosity of their social programs. From 1995-96 to the current school year, U.S. education spending grew by more than 53 percent, from $287 billion to more than $440 billion. The problem that policymakers and education officials are loath to address is a system of schooling seemingly designed to frustrate competence. Teachers are hired, essentially for life, through haphazard recruiting procedures. There is little systemic recognition for excellence. Compensation and desirable assignments are treated as rewards for longevity. Advances in technology and testing have made accountability and information available in a manner unimaginable even 15 years ago. Yet informing decisions with data is considered a novel, nifty idea, while the very words efficiency and productivity are derided as alien to education. The result is a culture of incompetence, in which educators learn to keep their heads down, avoid causing waves, and play defense. Educational leaders routinely complain that they dont get the resources they need and therefore cannot reasonably be held responsible for educating all our children. Ken Baker, principal at the Wyoming High School in Cincinnati, told Ed Week last year, Were supposed to drive all the kids toward success, and we have to do it with one hand behind our backs. The fact is, there are going to be children left behind. Cincinnati spent $10,328 per attending pupil in 2001-02. In Buffalo, Marion Caņedo, the superintendent of a district spending well over $11,000 per pupil, opined, I dont know how to make services multiply with decreased revenues. I dont know how thats humanly possible. Unless its like the loaves and the fishes. In fact, one-quarter of the nations superintendents told Public Agenda last year that a lack of funding means that, only minimal progress can be made, in their schools. A police officer charged with apprehending a serial murderer who warned, Unless we get extra funding, dont expect us to catch the killer, would be dismissed or held up to ridicule. Yet in schooling we are so used to these justifications and excuses that they dont even faze us. We take them as the facts on the ground. The leaders of all organizations, even worthy ones, must make hard choices and find ways to do more with less. Organizations transform themselves by refocusing on the essentials, by tackling contract language and staffing routines once viewed as untouchable, and finding ways to use new technological and management tools to rethink their work. Companies on the verge of bankruptcy cut salaries, find ways to make due with less, or find a way to scale back services in an intelligent fashion. Service sector organizations like law firms and newspapers have slashed a majority of the support positions that 40 years ago were required to maintain files, handle correspondence, and prepare documents. When pressed, educational leaders have largely rejected such steps. Take the case of John Wilhelmi, a principal in Portland, Oregon. After No Child Left Behind enabled students to transfer out of his low-performing Marshall High School, he lost a lot of students and more than one-third of the incoming freshman class. How did Wilhelmi respond? By overhauling his school? No. He wrote an open letter to President Bush: We can only do good things to the extent that we have the staff to do them. If we lose staff then we lose the capacity to do good things. Only in education are leaders allowed to imagine that there is no fat to cut and no employees to spare, to believe it is impossible to deliver new services without new resources, or to assume that existing inefficiencies are a natural state of being. What Is Common Sense School Reform? Confronting this grim reality, there are two paths to education reform. Status quo reformers believe that the nations millions of teachers and administrators are already doing the best they can. Status quo reformers presume the way to improve Americas schools is to provide more money, expertise, training, and support. They embrace new pedagogies, smaller schools, smaller classes, new assessment strategies, and any number of widely endorsed educational reforms, but steer away from radical changes to job security, accountability, compensation, compe-tition, or work conditions. The only substantive changes the status quo reformers embrace are those that would occur outside of the schoolhouse. Issues like economic inequality or racial division have a tremendous impact on childrens opportunities and must be addressed by policymakers. But we should not allow musing on public housing or welfare reform to stand in for tough-minded attention to improving schools. Common sense reform rests on two precepts: accountability and flexibility. Centuries of experience in fields from architecture to zoology tell us that people work harder, smarter, and more efficiently when they are rewarded for doing so. People do their best work when goals are clear and they know how theyll be evaluated. Smart, educated, motivated people will find ways to succeed. Common sense reform seeks
to construct a culture of competence in schoolsa
culture where success is expected, excellence is
rewarded, and failure is not tolerated. Absent the
pressure of markets or centralized accountability, it is
not hard for mediocrity or inefficiency to seem the norm.
Absent such pressure, even the best-intentioned educator
may shy away from pursuing efficiencies when they require
dislocation or wrenching adjustments. The common sense
reformer assumes that educators, like attorneys,
journalists, doctors, professors and think tankers, will
be more effective when held accountable for performance,
when rewarded for excellence, and when given the
opportunities to devise new paths to success.
Accountability forces managers and leaders to rethink
systems and practices. It relies on toothy testing
systems and market competition working in tandem to
compel educational leaders to make hard choices. Send your questions
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