Thursday, April 30, 2015
Monday, April 27, 2015
Baltimore - Breakdown of Social Contract
Friday, October 5, 2012
Interesting, but incomplete analysis of Turnaround
First - I think it's great that this type of brief is out there - it is thoughtful and reflective and reflects a solid knowledge of the current context. That being said, I think it overstates the focus of school turnaround and doesn't fully acknowledge some of the reasons for the four turnaround models.
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Feds defining District Capacity
Once again, the federal government is defining what "district capacity" means. And while well-intentioned, this will likely lead to unintended consequences. Especially for states that have already put significant work into defining district standards.
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
A couple of key points to be made about this report:
1 - Because this report looks at schools after only one year of turnaround efforts, the findings must be considered tentative. We don't know if the 10 schools used to develop findings will continue to make rapid gains.
2 - Because many of these schools initiated reform efforts prior to receiving federal School Improvement Grant (SIG) funds, this report should not be used to make judgements about the usefulness or effectiveness of the federal intervention models, or the use of funds, external providers, or other aspects of school turnaround overall.
3 - The practices identified in this report are not new. Rather, what is important is (1) the focus and intensity of each practice and (2) that these practices worked in tandem; they are not isolated practices. To the point, rapid achievement gain schools had each of these practices in place, not just one or two; moreover, they were implementing the practices strategically, intentionally, and with a laser-like focus on improving instruction.
Additional resources on Massachusetts Level 4 Turnaround work:
Tuesday, March 20, 2012
Increased federal role in education
Very interesting that all of the panelists are strongly in favor of increasing the federal role. Particularly Paul Pastorek from Louisiana. I find it interesting that the panelists: (Cami Anderson, Superintendent, Newark Public Schools; Rayne Martin, Executive Director, Stand for Children-Louisiana; Paul Pastorek, Chief Administrative Officer, Counsel, and Corporate Secretary, EADS North America, and Emeritus Member, Chiefs for Change; and Amy Wilkins, Vice President for Government Affairs and Communications, The Education Trust) all seem to be avoiding the reality of federalism and local control. The fact it, much of federal regulation creates much more noise and fragmentation than actual coherence. Expectations are good - but regulations and "guidelines" represent the an overextension of the federal government that leads to silos and fragmentation.
I guess that I find it hard to extrapolate from the Recovery School District to other districts across the nation. The situation there required such dramatic intervention....
Finally - we get to the role of the district, and Newark in particular. Where there are 20 schools where 70 percent of students are below proficient in ELA. Ah - what Cami Anderson said is that charters are allowed to pick their teachers but traditional schools are not. So Paul says that the answer is to go charter across the district. But no one is mentioning the fact that state legislatures can CHANGE LAWS and create policies that dramatically impact the ability of schools to do what they need to do - so that they have the conditions in place to realize dramatic change.
Monday, December 26, 2011
Comprehensive School Reform and SIG
- What happened to all of the knowledge and lessons learned from that work? Was it incorporated into the current intervention models and the implementation of these models?
- What about efforts to learn from the current SIG efforts? Why isn't there a database (e.g., the SEDL database) and to what extent are Whole-School Reform models actually being used?
- How, if at all, did SEAs learn from the CSR program?
- What really are the key differences, and thus the key levers, in RTTT and SIG with respect to turning around chronically low performing schools?
As someone who was definitely in the mix with CSR, I find it interesting and somewhat puzzling that we can't access a database, in real time, that can tell us which schools are using which "intervention" model, by state and by district. And further, why we can't quickly access exactly which programs are being used by these schools (e.g., by whole school reform model, by provider, by other categories.) We were able to do this for CSR and it led to insights and accelerated learning. I think that AIR is compiling this data, but I'm not sure if it's accessible.
Gotta go take care of the kids - hope to write more SOMETIME this month.
Brett
