kitchen table math, the sequel: Jonathan Alter on education

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Jonathan Alter on education

The United States now ranks 25th among 30 industrialized countries in math. "If I told you your basketball team finished in 25th place, you'd be outraged," says former West Virginia governor Bob Wise, president of the Alliance for Excellent Education. When the landmark "A Nation at Risk" report was issued 25 years ago, the education system was ailing, but the United States was still No. 1 in college-graduation rates. Now we are No. 21. "We simply have not progressed," says former Colorado governor Roy Romer, who heads a commission that recently updated the report. "The rest of the world has." For example, the average European nation has 13 more school days than we do.

The irony is, we know what works to close the achievement gap. At the 60 KIPP (Knowledge Is Power Program) schools, more than 80 percent of 16,000 randomly selected low-income students go to college, four times the national average for poor kids. While KIPP isn't fully replicable (not enough effective teachers to go around), every low-income school should be measured by how close it gets to that model, where kids go to school from 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. and part of the summer, and teachers are held strictly accountable for showing student improvement.

Railing against the tyranny of tests is fashionable, but it isn't going to save our children and our economy in the 21st century. Nor will more money for important programs like art and music. The more basic problem is that we have no way of determining which teachers can actually teach. That's right: teaching is arguably the only profession in the country with ironclad job security and a well-honed hostility to measuring results. Because of union resistance, NCLB measures only schools, not individual teachers. The result is that school districts fire on average only one teacher a year for poor performance. Before recent reforms (which have boosted test scores), New York City dismissed only 10 of 55,000 teachers annually. What business could survive that way?

Teachers unions bristle at the business comparison. But they should listen to Andy Stern, head of the nation's fastest growing union, the SEIU: "Education is like any business. You need a return on investment. Outcomes do matter. Paying people according to outcomes does matter. I don't care if a teacher has a high-school degree, college or a Ph.D. if he or she can produce results." Stern is worried that if his brethren in the teachers unions don't embrace accountability now, "parents will vote with their choices" [ed.: check] and the unions will begin dying, as they already are in reform-minded cities like Washington, D.C., and New Orleans.

[snip]

Obama's right that the NCLB-inspired testing mania is out of control, but wrong to give teachers "ownership over the design of better assessment tools." That's a recipe for no assessment, because the teachers unions, for all their lip service, don't believe their members should be judged on performance. They still believe that protecting incompetents is more important than educating children.

Obama claims that he's bold on this topic. But he hasn't been direct enough about reforming NCLB so that it revolves around clear measurements of classroom-teacher effectiveness. Research shows that this is the only variable (not class size or school size) that can close the achievement gap. Give poor kids from broken homes the best teachers, and most learn. Period.

[snip]

He should offer federal money for salary increases, but make them conditional on differential pay (paying teachers based on performance and willingness to work in underserved schools, which surveys show many teachers favor) and on support for the elimination of tenure. And the next time he addresses them, he should tell the unions they must change their focus from job security and the protection of ineffective teachers to higher pay and true accountability for performance—or face extinction.

Obama’s No-Brainer on Education
Newsweek
Published Jul 12, 2008

Wow.

5 comments:

ElizabethB said...

Maybe education journalism isn't hopeless!

Maybe he's been reading Kitchen Table Math.

Catherine Johnson said...

lolll!

that's funny ---- I'd forgotten that ONE POST EARLIER I'd said education journalism is hopeless!

This really is an amazing piece.

Ben Calvin said...

I pretty much don't see eye-to-eye with Jonathan Alter on anything....until now.

Only when his position is held to be a respectable one on the left (in US political terms) will there be any movement on the tangled knot of issues that have so damaged education in this country in the last 40 years.

ElizabethB said...

"the tangled knot of issues that have so damaged education in this country in the last 40 years"

Actually, try since 1826!

That's when the first form of whole word education came in. It just got worse with Mann a few years later. There was some return to sanity in the late 1800's and early 1900's, then along came Dick and Jane...

K9Sasha said...

There isn't going to be positive reform any time soon. Every single one of my classes for a Reading Endorsement has pushed whole language and many of them have also denigrated phonics and teaching skills systematically. The book for my current class is titled, Readers and Writers with a Difference:A Holistic Approach to Teaching Struggling Readers and Writers.

This is what new reading specialists are learning (at least in the state of Oregon) so this is what schools will be doing.