Thursday, April 30, 2015

The EM Drive - Don't Forget It

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EmDrive

The EM Drive - Don't Forget It

Monday, April 27, 2015

Baltimore - Breakdown of Social Contract

This is a breakdown of the social contract. 

Why are folks willing and eager to destroy their own neighborhood.

While not surprising, it is sad and unfortunate that folks are willing to (literally and figuratively) feed the fire in intersections and buildings, rather than work together to put the fires out.

Do these people who are looting and even those observing and just “screwing around”….do they understand that they are responsible for holding their own selves accountable. That when a window is broken or a fire started in their neighborhood, or in Baltimore city proper, that they are the ones who should be first in line to fix that window and put out that fire. I understand that when seeing a fire or looting, they might say: where are the police and firefighters? But what they should realize is that they..as individuals living in a community...that they are the police and firefighters and that in a democracy, we grant others the power and means to take care of issues the need addressing. Firefighters and police are supposed to be an extension of our own selves…they are our representatives.

The Mayor is right - for some reason these school kids and older looters don’t understand that bringing in a CVS to their community is an asset, and then destroying that asset as a “protest” and in anger is actually supporting their enemies. And in fact, by destroying that CVS they are their own worst enemies. 

It is clear, anyone who uses violence in this endeavor is a sellout. They are fools. They are doing as much, if not more, damage to blacks than any white supremacist or racist organization might do. Many whites AND blacks, both  liberal and conservative, look at what the looting blacks are doing and say - look at those thugs, they are criminals and they are destroying the city. And then there are some liberals and conservatives who (depending on their perspective) likely see this for what it is….blacks unconsciously seeding their own demise and doing more damage (or inflicting more damage) than any anti-black group might imagine being able able to do on their own. 

To be blunt - It is sad, in that blacks are doing more damage to the city, and to their own cause, than any white supremacy group could even imagine doing on their own.  

So the question is why? Why don’t these individuals understand the social contract, even at a foundational level? Is the social contract so broken that they don’t even see its value in their OWN COMMUNITY? A thinking person, regardless of their formal education, should be able to understand that they have their own community and that they should be responsible for their own community? They are poisoned…or ignorant….or stupid….or intentionally crippling their own positions, and their own cause. As the mayor said….it’s idiotic. As the newscasts and leaders says, this is an embarrasment, and there are cowards out there, and any young adult or adult engaging in violence is the enemy.

This situation is due to a major lack of leadership. An absence…a leadership vacuum…that allows blacks to turn protests into violent opportunities to feed self-interested actions….looting, destruction, and a hijacking of a window of opportunity to make a real difference. There is a dearth of leadership that can proactively mobilize non-violent protests that appeal to young adults with passion and energy …. a passion that can energize and legitimize a non-violent and lasting protest but a passion that left undirected can quickly feed uncontrolled and destructive looting and violence.

Clearly, there was not any semblance of an organized or strategic organizing of stakeholders that included communities…meaning, peer leaders in schools, local communities, and “gangs” that maintain considerable social networks and social capital within urban communities. The question is…who has a direct line into the social networks within which young adults operate and communicate. 

This could have been an opportunity for social networks to be more actively used.


But what is even more critical is leadership….someone like Dr. Martin Luther King Jr….. to take control of the protests and maintain a non-violent approach leading to real outcomes. 

Friday, October 5, 2012

Interesting, but incomplete analysis of Turnaround

Interesting article out of National Education Policy Center, a critique of school turn around efforts.

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.


- The authors' portrayal of turnaround as a market-based movement is too simplistic and doesn't reflect the complexity of school improvement efforts (and failures) over the past 30 years. My impression is that Title I (and the use of the SIG supplemental funds) has slowly integrated three related movements - the standards movement with its focus on accountability (not markets - but accountability); the choice movement (markets and charters and SES); with Title I's original focus on improving opportunity. Turnaround is definitely more choice/market oriented, but on a continuum. It's not as if Turnaround = Markets. 

- I think that the authors missed an opportunity to discuss the connection of SIG with previous efforts, mainly Comprehensive School Reform. Personally, I think that this is the really interesting story. To that point:

- Among all the reasons that CSR wasn't successful, it's clear to me that the inability of states/districts/schools to fully change the operating conditions (yes, tied to unions) was the real reason for CSR's inability to have success at scale. My impression of Mass Insight's contribution to the emergence of Turnaround (the concept and policy) is that it correctly identified that dramatically CHANGING CONDITIONS was essential/necessary for the successful implementation of whole school reform models. While SIG focused more on changing conditions (and seemingly ignored CSR models and the focus on research), what SIG did do was make sure that districts/schools couldn't make excuses for the failure of turnaround/improvement efforts. I spent a good 8 years studying CSR in multiple states, and it is clear to me that institutionalized state and district policies, in combination with intractable collective bargaining agreements, were the real reason that many hard working leaders and teachers burned out in trying to improve schools. In other words, the point of Turnaround is to guarantee that there are no structural obstacles to the implementation of dramatic improvement efforts (whether they be whole school or a collection of interventions).

Anyway - I really like the brief and I think we need even more of this type of analysis.

And on a final note - I am working with Massachusetts on all things SIG and turnaround, and I would say that MA is definitely implementing the recommendations that you pose at the end of the report. So there are states already addressing the community and social-emotional aspects of school improvement.

Brett


Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Feds defining District Capacity

It will be interesting to see how the final Race to the Top District initiative will actually play out. Need to do some additional reading, but it looks like there are a variety of pet projects in the specs - such as personal learning plan. http://www.ed.gov/race-top/district-competition

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

I am pleased to announce that our report on "Emerging Practices in Rapid Achievement Gain Schools" is now available for dissemination. Focusing on the 10 Level 4 schools that demonstrated rapid achievement in student academic achievement between 2010 and 2011, the purpose of this report was to identify and then clearly articulate key practices being used by these "Rapid Achievement Gain" schools. This report is intended to inform the ongoing efforts of districts and schools in Massachusetts engaged in turnaround efforts. Given the importance of turnaround as a part of the national school reform effort, we think that the practices identified in this report will be meaningful and applicable to districts and schools across the country.

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:

  • Memo to the Massachusetts Board of Elementary and Secondary Education
  • Announcement of Gains Made by Level 4 Schools, 2011
  • Level 4 District and Schools
  • Tuesday, March 20, 2012

    Increased federal role in education

    At Center for American Progress session on the role of federal government 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

    For those who were intimately involved in the comprehensive school reform movement, between 1997 and 2004, I'm sure you've asked many of the same questions:
    - 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