Do Politicians Know Anything About Schools and Education? Anything?

Diane Ravitch poses a dozen piercing questions on education and school policy. Some of them turn conventional thinking on its ear, and each could be a starting point for reporting on elections, from the presidency on down to local school boards

1. Both Republican candidates and President Obama are enamored of charter schools - that is, schools that are privately managed and deregulated. Are you aware that studies consistently show that charter schools don't get better results than regular public schools? Are you aware that studies show that, like any deregulated sector, some charter schools get high test scores, many more get low scores, but most are no different from regular public schools? Do you recognize the danger in handing public schools and public monies over to private entities with weak oversight? Didn't we learn some lessons from the stock collapse of 2008 about the risk of deregulation?

2. Both Republican candidates and President Obama are enamored of merit pay for teachers based on test scores. Are you aware that merit pay has been tried in the schools again and again since the 1920s and it has never worked? Are you aware of the exhaustive study of merit pay in the Nashville schools, conducted by the National Center for Performance Incentives at Vanderbilt, which found that a bonus of $15,000 per teacher for higher test scores made no difference?

3. Are you aware that Milwaukee has had vouchers for low-income students since 1990, and now state scores in Wisconsin show that low-income students in voucher schools get no better test scores than low-income students in the Milwaukee public schools? Are you aware that the federal test (the National Assessment of Educational Progress) shows that - after 21 years of vouchers in Milwaukee - black students in the Milwaukee public schools score on par with black students in Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, and Louisiana?

4. Does it concern you that cyber charters and virtual academies make millions for their sponsors yet get terrible results for their students?

5. Are you concerned that charters will skim off the best-performing students and weaken our nation's public education system?=

6. Are you aware that there is a large body of research by testing experts warning that it is wrong to judge teacher quality by student test scores? Are you aware that these measures are considered inaccurate and unstable, that a teacher may be labeled effective one year, then ineffective the next one? Are you aware that these measures may be strongly influenced by the composition of a teacher's classroom, over which she or he has no control? Do you think there is a long line of excellent teachers waiting to replace those who are (in many cases, wrongly) fired?

7. Although elected officials like to complain about our standing on international tests, did you know that students in the United States have never done well on those tests? Did you know that when the first international test was given in the mid-1960s, the United States came in 12th out of 12? Did you know that over the past half-century, our students have typically scored no better than average and often in the bottom quartile on international tests? Have you ever wondered how our nation developed the world's most successful economy when we scored so poorly over the decades on those tests?

8. Did you know that American schools where less than 10% of the students were poor scored above those of Finland, Japan and Korea in the last international assessment? Did you know that American schools where 25% of the students were poor scored the same as the international leaders Finland, Japan and Korea? Did you know that the U.S. is #1 among advanced nations in child poverty? Did you know that more than 20% of our children live in poverty and that this is far greater than in the nations to which we compare ourselves?

9. Did you know that family income is the single most reliable predictor of student test scores? Did you know that every testing program - the SAT, the ACT, the NAEP, state tests and international tests - shows the same tight correlation between family income and test scores? Affluence helps - children in affluent homes have educated parents, more books in the home, more vocabulary spoken around them, better medical care, more access to travel and libraries, more economic security - as compared to students who live in poverty, who are more likely to have poor medical care, poor nutrition, uneducated parents, more instability in their lives. Do you think these things matter?

10. Are you concerned that closing schools in low-income neighborhoods will further weaken fragile communities?

11. Are you worried that annual firings of teachers will cause demoralization and loss of prestige for teachers? Any ideas about who will replace those fired because they taught too many low-scoring students?

12. Why is it that politicians don't pay attention to research and studies?

Add end And another question that came to mind after the initial posting of this article:

13. Do you know of any high-performing nation in the world that got that way by privatizing public schools, closing those with low test scores, and firing teachers? The answer: none.

Diane Ravitch is Research Professor of Education at New York University and a distinguished historian of American education.

Education News for 02-10-2012

Statewide Education News

  • School ascends to the top of state list (Salem News)
  • Breaking away from tradition, Gov. John Kasich gave the first ever State of the State speech delivered away from the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus. He couldn't have picked a better place. Regardless of your political bent, regardless of whether you agree or disagree with what the governor said on Tuesday, you would have to agree that his choice of Steubenville for his speech was a good one. Read More…

  • Education law signed locally fading away (Journal-News)
  • As President Barack Obama prepared to announced a plan Thursday to give 10 states flexibility from the mandates of No Child Left Behind Act, Republicans introduced legislation to revise some of the law’s controversial provisions. The President said the education act, which was originally signed at Hamilton High School in 2002, is driving the wrong behaviors, from teaching to the test to federally determined, one-size-fits-all interventions. Read More…

  • Emphasis on STEM fields helps students, businesses (Dayton Daily News)
  • DAYTON — In the past two weeks, Ohio has been lauded for receiving good grades in K-12 science education, listed as one of the states driving the nation’s recovery from the recession through manufacturing and singled out as a reinvestment site for U.S. automakers. Given that kind of buzz, it makes sense that Jay Williams, director of the U.S. Department of Labor’s Office of Recovery for Auto Communities and Workers, would stop in Ohio to discuss the importance of pursuing careers in STEM fields: science, technology, engineering and math. Read More…

  • White Hat must give records to charters (Dispatch)
  • A Franklin County judge has ordered the state’s largest for-profit manager of charter schools to turn over detailed financial records, including tax returns, building leases and transactions with its subsidiaries, to show how it spent millions in tax dollars received each year. “Public money must be accounted for,” Common Pleas Judge John F. Bender wrote in a 19-page order. He gave White Hat Management, owned by Akron businessman and major Republican donor David L. Brennan, until March 6 to comply with the order. Read More…

  • More Ohio students taking Advanced Placement tests, but fewer earning credit (Times-Recorder)
  • Fewer Ohio students are earning college credit for Advanced Placement tests than the national average. However, more Ohio students are taking the tests than in previous years, according to a study released by the College Board, which administers the exams. Ohio Superintendent of Education Stan Heffner said the state can do better. "Despite being encouraged by the slight gains we are making in Ohio in regards to student participation, we must do more," Heffner said in a news release. Read More…

  • Retired Cleveland Browns players talk to high school students about breaking racial barriers (Plain Dealer)
  • CLEVELAND - Five retired Cleveland Browns players told Cleveland high school students today about early racism in the National Football League and how they, and others, helped overcome it. They also urged the students to work at building better race relations for the future. Four black former players -- Walter Beach, Reggie Rucker, Sam Tidmore and John Wooten -- and one white retiree, Dick Schafrath, told students that while racism still exists today, there was more unequal treatment in their days as players. Read More…

National Stories of the Day

  • Broad Changes Ahead as NCLB Waivers Roll Out (Education Week)
  • The waivers being granted to 10 of 11 states that applied for flexibility under the No Child Left Behind Act would allow them to make potentially broad changes in how school performance and the performance of student subgroups are judged under the decade-old law. Some advocates for disadvantaged students are questioning whether the waivers granted Thursday by the U.S. Read More…

Local Issues

  • Huber Heights to cut $1.3 million from budget (Dayton Daily News)
  • HUBER HEIGHTS — The Huber Heights Board of Education voted Thursday night to cut about $1.3 million from its 2012-13 budget, but spared its JROTC program and two teaching positions. The board made cuts from 21 areas, including administrative assistants, transportation and junior high school athletics. It also eliminated art in the elementary schools. Eighteen positions were designated to be cut, including a nurse, a counselor and an assistant principal. Read More…

  • Worthington schools need law changed for bond issue (Dispatch)
  • Worthington schools want the right to make a rarely used type of tax even more unusual. The district is one of only eight in Ohio that has levied an incremental property tax, in which the rate escalates in later years. Now Worthington is asking the legislature for the option of combining a new incremental tax with a bond issue, so voters would see just one issue on the November ballot instead of separate ones to raise money for operations and buildings. Read More…

  • Youngstown won’t rule out school closings (Vindicator)
  • Youngstown - Everything is on the table as the city schools try to address the loss of $4 million in anticipated state funding, Superintendent Connie Hathorn said. That includes the possibility of closing schools. “We’re looking at everything,” Hathorn told members of the Academic Distress Commission on Thursday. The district learned last week that because of a loss of more than 500 students as determined by the state’s official October enrollment count, it would receive about $4 million less from the state than it expected. Read More…

  • Groveport Madison board OKs cuts: $3.6 million, 24 jobs (Dispatch)
  • Groveport Madison students will have to find their own way to high school and pay more to participate in athletics and other extracurricular programs starting next school year. The district’s school board also agreed last night to cut French from the high-school’s foreign-language program and eliminate 24 jobs — including seven special-education positions. District leaders say the cuts amount to $3.6 million, close to the $4 million needed to bring the budget into the black for the 2012-13 school year. Read More…

  • Olentangy Schools Approves Redistricting (WBNS 10 CBS)
  • POWELL - Nearly 600 Olentangy Local Schools students will be transferred to Heritage Elementary School next school year because of district growth. District Superintendent Wade Lucas said that Heritage Elementary previously was a kindergarten school but will soon house kindergarten through fifth grade. Lucas said that the district is expected to grow by more than 800 students each year, 10TV’s Jason Frazer reported. Read More…

Read Across America, partners with OSU

Read Across America, the national initiative by the National Education Association honoring Dr. Seuss' birthday and supporting youth literacy is coming to Central Ohio, in partnership with OSU.

The College of Education and Human Ecology Alumni Society is teaming up with the Arts and Sciences Alumni Society to support the South-Western City and Upper Arlington School Districts by participating in the Read Across America celebration.

The four day celebration of Dr. Seuss' birthday will be held at the following:

  • March 1 and 2, 2012
    • Stiles Elementary School (SWC) 4700 Stiles Ave. Columbus, OH 43228
    • Barrington Elementary School (UA) 1780 Barrington Rd Upper Arlington, OH 43221
  • March 5 and 6, 2012
    • Prairie Norton Elementary School (SWC) 117 Norton Rd. Columbus, OH 43228
    • Wickliffe Progressive Community School (UA) 2405 Wickliffe Rd. Upper Arlington, OH 43221

We would very much enjoy having you come and read to a classroom on any day. You can read one book or two depending on your time. Most books take 15 to 20 minutes to read.

To register for Southwestern City Schools, please email Annie Gordon at gordon.421@osu.edu with a preferred date and time. School starts at 8:20 a.m. and ends at 2:35 p.m.

To register for Upper Arlington Schools, please email Sean Thompson at thompson.1355@osu.edu with a preferred date and time. School starts at 8:15 a.m. and ends at 2:50 p.m.

Mutual trust and respect

It's a simple, honest message, "As long as there is mutual trust and respect, Unions representing teachers can work well with school administrators to improve schools while still honoring the principles of collective bargaining." ~ OEA spokeswoman Michele Prater.

As opposed to "Gov. Kasich Supports Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson's Plan to Overhaul Schools Because it is Similar to SB 5".

Mayor Frank Jackson and the state legislature, having consistently failed to show trust and respect on this issue, should begin to do so before moving any further forward with this corporate education plan. If this sentiment has any substance, the Governor should ensure that happens.

Education News for 02-09-2012

Statewide Education News

  • Ohio sees uptick on AP exams (Dispatch)
  • More Ohio students took Advanced Placement exams last year, and the rate nudged up of students earning a score high enough to earn college credit at most schools. In last year's graduating class, 24.585 seniors from Ohio's public high schools took exams associated with AP courses. That's a 6.7 percent increase from the year before. The tests aren't a required part of taking the class, but many colleges offer credit to students who earn a 3 or better. Last school year, 62.8 percent of the test-takers got at least a 3. The year before, the number of 62.1 percent. Read More…

  • Kasich pushing plan as model in education overhaul (Middletown Journal)
  • COLUMBUS — Gov. John Kasich loves Cleveland’s ambitious plan to overhaul the city’s failing public schools by resetting collective bargaining agreements, championing high-performing charter schools, expanding preschool to all 4-year-olds, and increasing the hours students spend in classes. “I’m counting on Cleveland to deliver the goods,” Kasich said in his 83-minute State of the State speech delivered at a public school in Steubenville on Tuesday. “We can change urban education in Ohio and change the urban education in America. And that is worth fighting for and risking for.” Read More…

Local Issues

  • Bantam Ridge hosts state superintendent (Herald Star)
  • WINTERSVILLE - Bantam Ridge Elementary School hosted Stan W. Heffner, state superintendent of public instruction, on Tuesday morning. Heffner was accompanied by Sarah Dove, teacher liaison to the governor's office, during a meet and greet with local superintendents, where they were given the chance to field questions and concerns to Heffner, and a tour of the facility. "There is terrific teaching going on here, and you can feel the synergy between the teachers and children," said Heffner. Read More…

  • University of Akron aims to offer free tuition to qualified graduates of Akron schools (Plain Dealer)
  • AKRON - The University of Akron plans to offer full-tuition scholarships to eligible Akron public school students under an innovative deal that would allow the university to acquire an almost vacant city high school on campus. University of Akron President Luis Proenza and Akron Superintendent David James appeared today before the House Education Committee seeking support for legislation that would require a public school district planning to sell a building to first offer it to a state university with a campus within the district. Read More…

  • Area districts applauding new regulations for school meals (News-Herald)
  • As part of the nation’s growing battle against childhood obesity, the government announced new regulations for school meals for the first time in 15 years. The new meal requirements are a part of the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act that became law in December 2010. Schools must offer at least 3/4 cup of vegetables and 1/2 cup of fruit for each meal, as opposed to at least 1/2 cup of combined fruits and vegetables. Vegetables also have to include certain types of food, including dark green and legumes. Read More…

  • School’s pilot program encourages learning (Journal-News)
  • FAIRFIELD — At Fairfield West Elementary School, kids hustle through their classrooms, moving from desk to desk, playing games and high-fiving each other. One might think they’re making too much noise and having too much fun to learn. Not so, according to the teachers and the principal. Not only are the children getting an education, but they are behaving better through a system called Kagan Learning, which the school has adopted as a pilot program in all of its classrooms. Read More…

  • Licking Heights Local Schools gets clean state audit for 2010-11 (Newark Advocate)
  • PATASKALA - Licking Heights Local Schools received a clean state audit for fiscal year 2011. Ohio Auditor of State Dave Yost's office released the report on Jan. 20. The audit, which covers the fiscal year that ended June 30, 2011, revealed Heights complied with the rules governing its major federal programs. The audit also revealed no material control weaknesses involving Heights' financial statements or deficiencies in Heights' internal financial controls. Heights, according to the findings, is a "low-risk" auditee. Read More…

Editorial

  • A Cleveland school plan worth fighting for (Plain Dealer)
  • Reforming the Cleveland public schools has been a work long in progress. But more is needed to repair the travesty of a district where most youngsters attend schools ranked at the bottom of the heap. That's why it's critical that local legislators move quickly to embrace Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson's daring road map for state and local reforms aimed at tripling the number of Cleveland children who attend the most effective schools -- from 11,000 to about 40,000, covering almost all of the district's students. Read More…

  • Urgency in Cleveland (Beacon Journal)
  • Mayor Frank Jackson’s plan to reinvent public education in Cleveland offers ample evidence that he is not afraid to kick a hornet’s nest. The plan submitted on Tuesday cited “a fierce sense of urgency” and “an informed sense of hope” as the basis to push a package of broad reforms certain to provoke heated discussion. If there’s a school district that can afford to tinker at the edges of change, it isn’t Cleveland. Alone among Ohio school districts, Cleveland is under mayoral control, its financial and academic problems extensive. Read More…

How Bad Education Policies Demoralize Teachers

We often hear the term “teacher burnout” to describe how some educators feel overtaken by the pressures of the classroom. But are these really cases of burnout or have many educators become “demoralized”? These are similar but also distinct forces, says Doris Santoro, Assistant Professor of Education at Bowdoin College, and both are driving dedicated and talented teachers out of the profession.

In a recent article for the American Journal of Education, Santoro argues that demoralization at the hands of rigid education “reforms” is often misdiagnosed as burnout, a condition that has more to do with how an individual responds to everyday stress. Demoralization, according to Santoro, occurs when much of the value of teaching has been stripped away by rigid, ill-conceived education reforms, creating a high level of frustration and helplessness among teachers. “Burnout” is not the issue. As she explains to NEA Today, the work of teaching has changed and it is therefore up to school communities and policymakers to help restore the “moral rewards” of teaching.

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