PolitiFact is mostly made up

PolitiFact Ohio, a "fact checking" operation ran by the Cleveland Plain Dealer decided to check out the following statement by Cleveland teachers

"The (Jackson) plan (for reforming Cleveland schools) lacks any data or methods proven to raise student achievement."

PolitiFact goes through a number of cases, based upon assertions made by CEO Gordon

"And while Gordon conceded "there is no empirical study that shows the portfolio strategy is the one strategy" he said there is some evidence that some of the approaches in the Jackson plan have worked to raise test scores."

PolitiFact looked at some "evidence", and so shall we.

For example, Gordon mentioned research that has been done by the Center on Reinventing Public Education. The non-profit group recently issued a report on a number of big city school districts trying reforms similar to those in Jackson’s plan.

The group’s report looked at Denver schools, where many teachers voluntarily opted for a merit pay system instead of the standard teaching contract. Known as the ProComp program, it ties teacher pay to education levels and offers bonus pay to teachers who work in the toughest schools and whose students score higher on tests.

Researchers at the University of Colorado found "significant and positive ProComp effects at both middle and high school for both math and reading, and the effects are larger at high school than middle school." The researchers cautioned, however, that it generally was the more effective teachers who opted into the program.

ProComp was funded by voters to the tune of $25 million in order to pay teachers more. Unless there's a provision in Frank Jackson's plan to ask voters for an additional $25 million on top of the $65 million deficit, we can see straight away that the Jacksons plan and the Denver ProComp system are not at all similar and worthy of comparison.

But let us pretend Frank Jackson's plan does involve giving teachers up to almost $4,000 a year in bonuses. According to a recent study of the ProComp system, researchers found

DPS has experienced significant student learning gains across grades and subjects, but it is not clear that this was the result of ProComp. There was not a consistent pattern across grade levels and subjects in the relationship between ProComp and observed achievement gains. In some cases, the gains appeared primarily among students with ProComp teachers, while in other cases it is NonKProComp teachers who appeared to be more effective. Though puzzling, these findings are consistent with research on other well known interventions that include elements similar to ProComp.

Clearly there is no evidence, as the Cleveland teachers said, that this kind of compensation improves student performance. Gordon and PolitiFact are WRONG.

PolitiFact's next step was to look at the Colorado Innovation Schools Act

Another approach tried in Colorado — a 2008 law called the Innovation Schools Act — gives school officials who opt into the program greater school autonomy and flexibility in operations and academic decisions. "The innovation schools are experiencing growth in test scores but many were exceeding state averages prior to being innovation schools," said a recent report from researchers who have studied the schools.

There are just 21 innovation schools - an incredibly small sample, but according to a recent report

Innovation schools did not tend to look drastically different than other schools.
[...]
Innovation schools have experienced high rates of mobility among teachers and principals. Their teachers tend to be somewhat less experienced and are less likely to have master’s degrees than teachers in comparable schools
[...]
There are not yet clear trends to help us understand how Innovation will affect student achievement.

They sound an awful lot like most Cleveland charters, and like most Cleveland charters they rely upon less experienced, less qualified teachers, and are not producing better results than traditional schools. Gordon and PolitiFact are WRONG to look at Innovation Schools as evidence of successful reforms.

Next PolitiFact uses this

The Baltimore school district — after working hand in hand with the union — implemented a reworked teacher contract largely based on teacher evaluations and student test scores. That contract only went into effect last year so it’s too soon to say whether it has improved student test scores.

In their own words, there is no evidence this works to improve student achievement, exactly what the teachers in Cleveland claim. Why did PolitiFact even introduce this as evidence? Moving on.

The Jackson plan also calls for increased learning time through either longer school days or a longer school year, a hot topic among educational academics. Research on the subject is mixed — a fact Gordon acknowledged. "Well, no one factor in of itself is a magic bullet solution," he said. "You are going to find time studies where it did work and time studies where it didn’t work."

Now we're getting desperate. So how does PolitiFact rule on this mountain of evidence?

Ohio AFT union head Melissa Cropper said Mayor Frank Jackson’s sweeping plan to improve Cleveland schools "lacks any data or methods proven to raise student achievement" as she labeled the proposal an attack on teachers. For PolitiFact Ohio, a key part of that statement is "lacks any."

While the specific approach Jackson mapped out for Cleveland hasn’t been proven, it does clearly contain elements that researchers suggest may work — at least in some cases -- such as merit pay for teachers, greater flexibility for schools in how they go about their business and longer school days or school year.
[...]
On the Truth-O-Meter, the claim by the Ohio Federation of Teachers rates Mostly False.

Huh? "Elements", "may work", PolitiFact contort their own piece to arrive at this ridiculously tortured conclusion. There is no evidence based on research that shows that what is proposed in the "Cleveland Plan" will work (though we hope some of it does!), to then arrive at a conclusion that the teachers are "mostly wrong" is absurd. This should come as no surprise as the Plain Dealer has been carrying the water for Frank Jackson and his SB5 plan on their opinion pages from the gitgo - and that's a Fact, totally true.

Education News for 03-29-2012

Statewide Education News

  • Kasich gets bill requiring teaching of founding documents (Dispatch)
  • Ohio students in grades four to 12 would have to be taught the original texts of the U.S. Constitution and other founding documents, and high-school students would take end-of-course exams for American history and government under a bill that won final legislative approval yesterday. The bill was sparked by a February 2011 report from the Fordham Foundation that was critical of Ohio’s history-education standards. Supporters argue that children cannot be expected to defend the rights and freedoms the Founding Fathers intended without an understanding of the documents. Read More…

  • Ohio lawmakers hoping for compromise before introducing Cleveland schools plan (Plain Dealer)
  • COLUMBUS - Despite pressure from Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson's office, the Democrat's sweeping plan to transform Cleveland schools didn't reach the Statehouse launching pad Wednesday. For Statehouse Democrats, the main sticking points holding up introduction of the legislation were a pair of provisions fiercely opposed by the Cleveland Teachers Union and the Ohio Federation of Teachers. A so-called "fresh start" provision would begin future contract negotiations without carryover items from previous contracts. Read More…

  • Bill shortening school year revised to give districts flexibility (Dispatch)
  • Sorry, kids, but it doesn’t look like you’re going to get a longer summer break after all. A state legislator has dropped a proposal to require school to start after Labor Day and end before Memorial Day. Instead, a new version of the legislation unveiled today would give school districts more flexibility with their school calendars. House Bill 191, introduced by Rep. Bill Hayes, R-Harrison Township, would change state laws regarding the minimum time that students must spend in school: from 182 days to 1,001 hours for grades seven through 12. Read More…

  • Lawmakers honor Chardon ‘heroes’ (Dispatch)
  • Just a month after a high-school shooting in Chardon left three dead and two seriously wounded, Gov. John Kasich and the General Assembly honored law-enforcement, firefighters, school officials and other first responders for their efforts. Kasich spokesman Rob Nichols said the governor wanted the 47 men and women, whom Kasich called “ real heroes” in a tweet yesterday, to share their experiences with his cabinet. After the emotional meeting, Nichols said, the group had lunch with the governor, before receiving commendations from the Ohio House and Senate. Read More…

Local Issues

  • Tax panel seeks info on Columbus schools employee salaries (Dispatch)
  • A citizens committee looking at whether Columbus City Schools should ask voters for more property-tax money wants a wide range of detailed financial information, including how employees’ salaries and benefits size up in today’s jobs market. Committee member Alex Fischer urged Superintendent Gene Harris to “dream big,” not only on what she wants to preserve but also on what should be cut. Fischer is president and CEO of the Columbus Partnership, a group representing the leaders of about 30 local businesses. Read More…

  • Rachel's Challenge event coming to Perry Schools (News-Herald)
  • In the wake of the deadly Chardon school shooting, Perry Schools will bring Rachel’s Challenge to the district on Thursday. The presentation, which promotes positive change in treating others, is named after Rachel Scott, the first person killed in the Columbine school shooting in 1999. Shortly after the event, her family began speaking about the incident using drawings and writings from Rachel’s diaries to help spread positive messages. Read More…

  • Ohio Federation of Teachers says Cleveland reform plan lacks any proven methods for success (Plain Dealer)
  • When Mayor Frank Jackson introduced his plan to radically reshape Cleveland public schools, it was almost inevitable that the union representing Cleveland teachers would push back. Condemning the proposal as a crackdown on the collective bargaining rights of teachers akin to last year’s controversial Senate Bill 5, both the Cleveland Teachers Union and the larger group they belong to — the Ohio Federation of Teachers — spoke out. Read More…

  • Literacy program seeing results (WKYC 3 NBC)
  • CLEVELAND - The Literacy Cooperative has received and analyzed data measuring the first year pilot of SPARK (Supporting Partnerships to Assure Ready Kids) in Cuyahoga County and the results are very promising. As part its mission to improve lives by enhancing literacy, The Literacy Cooperative is piloting SPARK in selected communities in Cuyahoga County as a model for increasing early childhood literacy and school-readiness. Read More…

  • 3 elementary schools would merge in Buckeye Valley tax plan (Dispatch)
  • RADNOR — School officials in the Buckeye Valley School District are capitalizing on the attention elementary schools are receiving in a budget crisis as the district prepares to ask voters to pass another income-tax increase and bond issue. Tonight, Superintendent Jamie Grube presented the board with a plan to tear down not only the previously targeted Buckeye Valley North Elementary School, but also the other two elementary schools in the Delaware County district. Read More…

  • Field Trip Helps Students Think About the Future (WJW 8 FOX)
  • ASHLAND – Forget recess and finger paints. Garfield Elementary students ditched their schoolbooks for a taste of higher learning. “We’re visiting Ashland University to mostly to visit our pen pals and mostly to know what it’s like at Ashland University,” said fourth grade student Kristen Lyons. Kristen was one of 70 fourth grade students touring campus. The biggest highlight, for many, was meeting their college pen pals. Read More…

  • Chardon heroes welcomed home after visit with state leaders (News-Herald)
  • The Chardon Walmart parking lot was populated by many community members wearing red and black on Wednesday afternoon. Hundreds lined up to shake hands, hug or simply say thanks to the first responders who worked to save lives and limit bloodshed during the Feb. 27 shootings at Chardon High School. Leadership Geauga and United Way Services of Geauga County helped organized the event dubbed "Hearts for Our Heroes," which welcomed home the heroes after they were honored earlier Wednesday at the Ohio Statehouse. Read More…

Misconceptions and Realities about Teacher Evaluations

A letter, signed by 88 educational researchers from 16 universities was recently sent to the Mayor of Chicago regarding his plans to implement a teacher evaluation system. Because of some of the similarities of the Chicago plan to that of Ohio, we thought we would reprint the letter here.

In what follows, we draw on research to describe three significant concerns with this plan.

Concern #1: CPS is not ready to implement a teacher-evaluation system that is based on significant use of “student growth.” For Type I or Type II assessments, CPS must identify the assessments to be used, decide how to measure student growth on those assessments, and translate student growth into teacher-evaluation ratings. They must determine how certain student characteristics such as placement in special education, limited English-language proficiency, and residence in low-income households will be taken into consideration. They have to make sure that the necessary technology is available and usable, guarantee that they can correctly match teachers to their actual students, and determine that the tests are aligned to the new Common Core State Standards (CCSS).

In addition, teachers, principals, and other school administrators have to be trained on the use of student assessments for teacher evaluation. This training is on top of training already planned about CCSS and the Charlotte Danielson Framework for Teaching, used for the “teacher practice” part of evaluation.

For most teachers, a Type I or II assessment does not exist for their subject or grade level, so most teachers will need a Type III assessment. While work is being done nationally to develop what are commonly called assessments for “non-tested” subjects, this work is in its infancy. CPS must identify at least one Type III assessment for every grade and every subject, determine how student growth will be measured on these assessments, and translate the student growth from these different assessments into teacher-evaluation ratings in an equitable manner.

If CPS insists on implementing a teacher-evaluation system that incorporates student growth in September 2012, we can expect to see a widely flawed system that overwhelms principals and teachers and causes students to suffer.

Concern #2: Educational research and researchers strongly caution against teacher-evaluation approaches that use Value-Added Models (VAMs).

Chicago already uses a VAM statistical model to determine which schools are put on probation, closed, or turned around. For the new teacher-evaluation system, student growth on Type I or Type II assessments will be measured with VAMs or similar models. Yet, ten prominent researchers of assessment, teaching, and learning recently wrote an open letter that included some of the following concerns about using student test scores to evaluate educators[1]:

a. Value-added models (VAMs) of teacher effectiveness do not produce stable ratings of teachers. For example, different statistical models (all based on reasonable assumptions) can yield different effectiveness scores. [2] Researchers have found that how a teacher is rated changes from class to class, from year to year, and even from test to test. [3]

b. There is no evidence that evaluation systems that incorporate student test scores produce gains in student achievement. In order to determine if there is a relationship, researchers recommend small-scale pilot testing of such systems. Student test scores have not been found to be a strong predictor of the quality of teaching as measured by other instruments or approaches. [4]

c. Assessments designed to evaluate student learning are not necessarily valid for measuring teacher effectiveness or student learning growth. [5] Using them to measure the latter is akin to using a meter stick to weigh a person: you might be able to develop a formula that links height and weight, but there will be plenty of error in your calculations.

Concern #3: Students will be adversely affected by the implementation of this new teacher-evaluation system.

When a teacher’s livelihood is directly impacted by his or her students’ scores on an end-of-year examination, test scores take front and center. The nurturing relationship between teacher and student changes for the worse, including in the following ways:

a. With a focus on end-of-year testing, there inevitably will be a narrowing of the curriculum as teachers focus more on test preparation and skill-and-drill teaching. [6] Enrichment activities in the arts, music, civics, and other non-tested areas will diminish.

b. Teachers will subtly but surely be incentivized to avoid students with health issues, students with disabilities, students who are English Language Learners, or students suffering from emotional issues. Research has shown that no model yet developed can adequately account for all of these ongoing factors. [7]

c. The dynamic between students and teacher will change. Instead of “teacher and student versus the exam,” it will be “teacher versus students’ performance on the exam.”

d. Collaboration among teachers will be replaced by competition. With a “value-added” system, a 5th grade teacher has little incentive to make sure that his or her incoming students score well on the 4th grade exams, because incoming students with high scores would make his or her job more challenging.

e. When competition replaces collaboration, every student loses.

You can read the whole letter below.

Misconceptions and Realities about Teacher and Principal Evaluation

Education News for 03-28-2012

Statewide Education News

  • Legislators fear reading mandate in Kasich proposal will cost schools too much (Dispatch)
  • State lawmakers raised concerns yesterday about Gov. John Kasich’s plan to help students who struggle with reading and hold back youngsters who aren’t reading at grade level by the end of third grade. While no one questioned the goal of ensuring that third-graders read proficiently before being advanced, many asked where cash-strapped school districts were supposed to come up with the money to pay for tutoring, summer school and other services that would be required. Read More…

  • TPS board seeks delay of new state report card (Blade)
  • The Toledo Board of Education Tuesday collectively blasted a proposed new state school report card system that would drop the grade for most districts and would especially hit Toledo Public Schools hard. The proposed system would do away with designations such as "academic emergency" and "excellent" that rate schools and districts, and would use an A through F scale instead. Had the new system been used last year, TPS would have been one of only two districts in the state to receive an F. Read More…

  • Ohio wants to expand free online tutoring (Dayton Daily News)
  • Free tutoring will soon be just a click away for more Ohio college students. The Ohio Board of Regents has invited all Ohio universities and colleges to join the Ohio eTutoring Collaborative. The goal is for all 107 institutions of higher learning in the state to join, making the service available to more than 600,000 students. About 2,400 students at 21 participating schools used the tutoring service in fall 2011. Central State University, Sinclair Community, Clark State Community and Edison Community colleges are among participants statewide. Read More…

Local Issues

  • Youngstown schools Board eyes cost-cutting options (Vindicator)
  • Youngstown - Closing buildings, cutting all overtime and instituting pay-to-play are among the options city school board members must consider as ways to save money. Lock P. Beachum Sr., school board president, said at a school board meeting Tuesday that the possibilities he listed aren’t his recommendations. “These are the things you’ve got to look at,” he said. “I probably won’t be here. This is my last term.” Beachum said he wants to leave office with the district in stable financial shape. Read More…

  • Job cuts likely if $450,000 budget trim gets OK at Paint Valley (Chillicothe Gazette)
  • BAINBRIDGE - Five teachers and a secretary likely will lose their jobs if the Paint Valley Board of Education approves about $450,000 in proposed budget cuts at a special meeting Monday. Superintendent Gary Uhrig said the reduction in force, which also would eliminate two positions currently being filled by long-term substitute teachers, is necessary because the district stands to lose $363,000 in federal funding that was doled out in 2010 for schools to hire, re-hire and retain school employees. Read More…

  • Hamilton board continues to shuffle administrators (Journal-News)
  • HAMILTON — The Hamilton City School District continues to shuffle administrators as it has appointed five new principals and six elementary deans of students for the 2012-13 school year. The new principals include two elementary principals — Katherine Huber and Victoria Kowalk — two middle/freshman principals — Jeffrey Miller and Brandon Stanfill — and one secondary assistant principal — Robyn Jordan. Read More…

  • T.J. Lane to undergo competency evaluation (News-Herald)
  • T.J. Lane, the suspect in the Chardon High School shooting, will undergo a competency evaluation to determine if he is fit to face charges. Geauga County Juvenile/Probate Judge Tim Grendell ordered the evaluation Tuesday. Due to the evaluation, the probable cause/bindover hearing set for next Tuesday will be held at a later date. The bindover hearing will decide if there is enough evidence to move the case to adult court. It is not known whether Lane’s defense requested the evaluation or if the prosecution opposed it. Read More…

Editorial

  • Full speed ahead on Cleveland school reform (Plain Dealer)
  • Mayor Frank Jackson's school reform initiative is making clear progress toward a broad consensus -- welcome news to anyone concerned about the future of this community and an incentive to keep working, full speed ahead. Those efforts must continue even as Jackson and his allies aim to introduce their still-evolving legislation to the Ohio General Assembly this week. No significant bill ever emerges from the legislative process exactly as presented. But introducing legislation will compel all parties to keep searching for consensus. Read More…

The real Cleveland crisis

The Cleveland Municipal School District currently faces a large deficit of approximately $65 million, according to the Mayor. Because of poor economic conditions and the demographics of the district, Cleveland schools receives a majority of its money from the state, but as we have highlighted many, many times - state aid to public schools was slashed by the Governor to the tune of almost $2 billion. According to projections, for fiscal year 2012 this results in a net loss of $31.7 million for Cleveland and another $19.3 million in FY2013.

The bulk of the deficit faced by Cleveland public schools is a direct result then, of the draconian budget enacted by columbus politicians and supported by Governor Kasich. Why Mayor Jackson has not called upon the Governor to restore funding to his schools, instead of seeking his help in denying teachers basic collective bargaining rights, remains a deep mystery.

The real crisis in Cleveland Schools, is and has been the ability of the community and the willingness of the state to financially support it

"I think what's going to happen in Cleveland (if the legislation doesn't pass), I've been told the business community is walking away," Mr. Kasich said. "They're not going to support levies; they're done; they're finished with what's happening there."

If business support for Cleveland Schools is to be judged by the passage of levies, the Cleveland business community walked away decades ago. Cleveland has passed only 1 levy since 1983, and that was in 1996. 30 years. One levy.

Cleveland has also undergone many "transformations" to turn around its financial and academic performance. In the 1990's vouchers were introduced, but the majority of recipients never attended public schools, charter schools were also introduced in the late 1990's, and continue to have a very mixed record. Some perform well, but are able to select their students, while most (including White Hat ran schools) produce abysmal results and serve only to extract valuable dollars from the traditional public schools. Administration of the schools has undergone many transformation, including a 1997 decision to make Cleveland the first, and only, district under mayoral control.

The decision to grant to Cleveland’s mayor control of the city’s schools was a reaction to a system that had been failing and dysfunctional for years. Immediately prior to mayoral control, Cleveland’s public schools had been under control of the state. In 1995 federal district judge Robert Krupansky issued an order requiring the state superintendent to take over all aspects of the district’s operation including finances, personnel decisions and educational policies. According to Judge Krupansky, the Cleveland school district was a “rudderless ship mired in mismanagement, indecision and fiscal irresponsibility.”

Judge Krupansky’s decision came after more than twenty years of state and federal intervention aimed at desegregating Cleveland’s schools, the aftermath of a 1976 court decision which found the system plagued by de jure and de facto segregation.

Reading the history of Cleveland public schools is like listening to a record, broken and stuck on failed leadership, failed administration, lack of state support and a community financially in decline with serious socioeconomic problems.

Case Western Reserve University and Western Reserve Historical Society have an excellent article on the history of Cleveland schools, which we hope they won't object to use excerpting at length.

In 1963 the Program for Action by Citizens in Education (the PACE ASSN.), organized with the support of the Cleveland Associated Foundation, and advocated a variety of school reforms: early reading assistance, libraries in elementary schools, a human-relations curriculum, black teacher recruitment, a tutor corps, interdistrict vocational training and summer schools, and the establishment of an agency to promote its recommendations, which became a foundation-supported organization developing a wide variety of programs improving public education, before its demise in 1974. ALTERNATIVE SCHOOLS such as the Cleveland Urban Learning Community of St. Ignatius High School, the United Independent Schools of E. Cleveland, and the Urban League's Street Academy, provided non-traditional options in the 1970s and demonstrated the need for reform. In 1964 PAUL BRIGGS†, head of the PARMA schools, became superintendent and the board ended the "dual system" of administration that existed since 1904 by making the Business Dept. report to him. Briggs announced that the schools would have "a new look" through federal assistance that would expand preschool education and a new center for adult education. The enrollment of adults in literacy classes almost doubled. Antipoverty programs and the Elementary & Secondary Education Act of 1965 funded many new programs. Assisted by PACE, 105 elementary libraries opened in 1966. Briggs launched an ambitious building program in 1968 that included a downtown Supplementary Education Ctr. for students throughout the city and an extensive school-building program. The public passed another bond issue to build schools for the over 150,000 students.

After a survey demonstrated that two-thirds of high school dropouts were unemployed, the federal government established a Student Neighborhood Youth Corps, providing after-school jobs. In 1965 the government's Manpower & Training Ctr. was established, including basic or remedial courses and vocational education. Programs in cooperative and distributive education in high schools provided students with on-the-job work experience. A vocational Occupational Program was to reduce the number of dropouts without marketable skills. In addition, the school cooperated with the Bureau of Vocational Rehabilitation to provide workstudy programs for boys who qualified. An Occupational Work Experience Program, including a work laboratory with wood- and metal-working equipment, began for below-average high school students. Under contract with the U.S. Dept. of Labor, the Woodland Job Training Ctr. enrolled over 1,000 in a factory school in 1968, training hard-core, unemployed city residents.

Briggs recruited black teachers and administrators, appointed Jas. B. Tanner, a black educator, as his assistant superintendent, and helping organize a Master of Arts in Teaching at JOHN CARROLL UNIVERSITY He declared that the federal government's Aid to Dependent Children would provide over $1 million in the first 6 months of 1968 to finance 11 new programs for 29,289 disadvantaged learners in 81 schools. But in 1973, the NAACP filed a suit claiming that quality education was not legal or possible in a segregated environment. On 6 Feb. 1978, Federal Judge FRANK J. BATTISTI† issued a remedial order as a result of his finding the previous year that the Cleveland school system and State Board of Education were guilty of de facto and de jure segregation of black students in Cleveland. Briggs and the school board, headed by Arnold Pinkney, a black businessman, defended neighborhood schools and claimed that segregation was the result of residential housing patterns they were not obligated to correct. The desegregation case demonstrated that the board's actions, which included busing, constructing schools, and reassigning students for the purposes of segregation, had racially isolated and violated the 14th Amendment rights of the city's black children. Briggs predicted the court order would increase both white flight from the city and the dual system of public education that left schools in central cities with predominantly disadvantaged minority children. His problems were increased when the public rejected by an almost 2-to-1 margin a request for a school levy to remedy the school system's deficits, and he resigned his position. In Sept. 1978 the system obtained a $20 million loan from Ohio's Emergency School Assistance Fund. The state also found Cleveland's public schools below minimum standards and made compliance and the appointment of a financial administrator the basis of a second loan in 1981.

The federal court established a Dept. of School Desegregation Relations to eliminate the effects of prior desegregation and to provide an integrated educational environment. The Office of School Monitoring & Community Relations was established to foster the public's understanding of desegregation and to report on its progress. Chas. Leftwich, the court-appointed deputy superintendent, had the school department report directly to him. After Leftwich resigned, the court approved the board's appointment of Margaret Fleming in Nov. 1978. The Monitoring Commission reported to the court that the school system had resegregated black students transported from the Addison Jr. High district and should be held in contempt for obstructing the court's desegregation plan. The court removed Fleming from her position and appointed Donald Waldrip to head the Dept. of Desegregation in 1980. The court order led to crosstown busing, massive teacher transfers, a mandatory reading program, and other measures to equalize the schools.

Superintendent Peter Carlin, Briggs' successor, described his efforts as "Working Together for Excellence." He and the school board addressed the teachers' needs after Cleveland's United Fed. of Teachers, organized in 1933, struck in 1978 and 1979. Carlin reported that the schools made progress toward integration by daily transporting over 30,000 students in 550 vehicles. The schools now served over 12 million free or reduced meals, had a computerized scheduling program, School Community Councils and Parent Awareness Project, human-relations training for staff and teachers, improvement in elementary reading scores, compliance with the state's minimum standards except for facilities, repayment of both state loans, and a Code of Rights, Responsibilities & Discipline for students. But conflicts among school board members, school closings and program reductions, layoffs, the continuing poor performance of students, and declining enrollment diminished the public's confidence. In 1982 Carlin left the system, suing for its failure to evaluate him before his non-reappointment. Two years later, Waldrip departed under a dark cloud for both his inability to obtain funding for the expansion of magnet schools and his purchase of a million reading programs from a firm he had represented.

The cost per pupil, up more than 100% between 1971-80, ranked the expenditures of the Cleveland public schools in the top 10% of districts in Ohio. The percentage of the system's budget spent on educational programs and teachers declined, but the expense of maintenance, administration, and non-teaching personnel increased as enrollment dropped. In 1980 Judge Battisti ordered the State of Ohio as a co-defendant in the desegregation case to bear half the cost of the court order. Faced with resistance from the school board, Battisti had to issue 4,000 orders between 1976 and 1984 to implement desegregation of the public schools. Strikes by teachers and other employees further complicated matters. But the desegregation order was not met with the mob violence that had occurred in other cities. In 1983 an accounting firm's study estimated that the board expected to spend $1.3 million for custodial employee overtime. A coalition to reform the school board budget continually criticized the board's spending priorities.

The debate about the role and performance of the public schools revolves around the larger question of how America can live up to its commitment to human rights and equality. The court's desegregation order reaffirmed the importance of the schools as part of the nation's democratic heritage. But their poor performance eroded the belief that schools can cure the problems of American society. Cleveland's public schools freed themselves of political control and the image of being a charity organization before the Civil War but were, by the 1980s, reverting to these conditions. The continued crisis of public education in Cleveland prompted proposals for its takeover by either the state or the mayor. After Carlin's departure, Superintendent Frederick Holliday committed suicide, and his successor was forced to resign. Alfred Tutela, who came from Boston as a member of the court's desegregation team in 1978, was appointed superintendent in 1986. He announced that the system needed over $50 million to repair facilities. With diminishing federal support and local taxes, prospects for such massive rehabilitation looked remote. Diminishing resources jeopardized the school system's ability to survive its escalating problems.

The Cleveland voters approved a bond issue to repair the schools but refused to pass a tax levy for their operation, despite the fact that the district had to borrow money from the state on 3 occasions between 1977 and 1983. Some school leaders and citizens saw the busing program for racial integration as an unwanted financial burden that had to be removed before the passage of a new levy. Due to conflicts with the school board over the use of the newly acquired bond money, Tutela left the system after the school board bought out his contract for more than $300,000. In 1991 Superintendent Frank Huml predicted a $30 million deficit, but the board refused to put a levy on the ballot. Cleveland's per pupil expenditures were still higher than most districts in its region. The Plain Dealer and educational summits under the sponsorship of Mayor Michael White's office, the business community, and community leaders pointed to the deficiencies of the educational system. The majority of students were not able to pass Ohio's new proficiency test for 9th grade students. Many graduates couldn't qualify for entry level jobs. Governor Voinovich called for a state take-over. The majority of Cleveland's residents gave the school system a D or F grade in a poll taken by the Citizen League's Research Institute.

In 1991 Mayor White successfully campaigned for a reform slate to become the majority of the school board. John Sanders, the new state superintendent, endorsed the proposal for a state take-over. Governor Voinovich also proposed a plan to appoint the state school board rather then allow the public to elect its members. Faced with the threat of a court suit to equalize school funding in Ohio, the governor advocated taking funds from wealthy school districts for redistribution to poorer areas and to allow parents to use school vouchers to attend schools of their choice.

Despite the loss of tax revenue from tax abatements for downtown projects, the Cleveland School Board refused to close schools and to make necessary financial cuts to balance the budget. The state superintendent predicted a school deficit of $55 million by 1993 and $114 million by the following year. The state controlling board approved a $75 million emergency loan without state receivership of the schools. The school board promised to ask the public for additional funds.

Supported by the new school board, Superintendent Sammie Campbell Parrish proposed "Vision 21" as a plan to renew the educational system during the summer of 1993. It made crosstown busing voluntary so parents could choose either magnet or community-based schools. Special reading and conflict resolution programs were also emphasized. Cleveland's NAACP praised the plan and advocated greater emphasis on the educational program than on busing, since the overwhelming majority of students were African American. But fears and conflicts arose over the high cost of more than $90 million per year to finance the plan and its possible negative impact on desegregating students. Critics also argued that Superintendent Parrish was too distant from the financial and administrative operation of the school system. Parents and teachers also felt that they were not consulted about what was needed to improve the schools. After the failure of another school levy in May 1994, the school board angered parents by threatening to eliminate 300 to 400 employees to prevent a $51 million dollar deficit. Despite the threat of severe cuts, the public refused to pass another levy in Nov. 1994.

With a budget of $500 million, the district's debt was 25% higher than other large school systems in the state. Another levy was cancelled after Parrish resigned in Feb. 1995, as a result of conflicts with Mayor White and the school board and the imminent state takeover. After the death of Judge Battisti in Oct. 1994, Judge Robert Krupansky was appointed to oversee the desegregation case. In May 1994 Judge Battisti had announced that the schools would be self-governing by the year 2000 and accepted "Vision 21" as the blueprint for the future. Judge Krupansky initially gave the impression that the district would be gradually relieved from busing, but in Feb. 1995 he ordered a state take-over in the face of the financial woes and administrative chaos that had subverted the court's remedial orders for desegregation of the school system. The state superintendent was empowered to seek a $29 million loan and to appoint a new superintendent of the Cleveland schools. The court cited the school district's inability to account for the use of previous state funds as evidence of its financial mismanagement. It was ordered to close 14 schools to help remedy the deficit.

The second half of the 1990s witnessed several new initiatives aimed at helping the struggling schools. The state allocated $5.5 million to provide vouchers of up to $2,250 to allow district students to attend private independent or religious schools beginning in the fall of 1996, but the voucher program stirred heated opposition from the Cleveland Teachers Union and civil libertarian organizations, facing repeated judicial challenges ultimately leading to a Supreme Court hearing, slated for June of 2002. By April of 1999, the district had established 10 charter schools. In November 1996, voters passed a 13.5-mill operating levy, the first since 1983. In the summer of 1997, the Ohio state government approved House Bill 239, vesting the Cleveland mayor with control of the city schools, a move opposed by the teachers union and the NAACP. In March of 1998, Judge White declared that U.S. federal court oversight of the school district would end in July 2000. Barbara Byrd-Bennett, a respected New York City educator, was appointed CEO of the Cleveland schools in November 1998.

But the problems of the schools were deeply rooted in the challenging social and economic conditions of the central city. More than 70% of Cleveland's school children now receive some form of public assistance as single-headed, impoverished families became the norm for many inner-city children by the mid-1990s. Integration became more elusive as the percentage of minority enrollment increased from 58% in 1976 to 71% in 1994. Almost 50% of the system's students were failing to graduate from high school, while employers increasingly require secondary and post-secondary degrees. For those remaining, their performance on reading-comprehension tests became poorer the longer they stayed in school. Attendance in the junior and senior divisions was the second-worst in the state. Only 37% of the city's adults had a secondary education in 1986. Nancy Oakley, director of Project Learn, a volunteer tutorial program, estimated that 47,000 illiterate persons lived in Cleveland. Poverty and the culturally different learner had been inextricably bound with illiteracy and student failure throughout the history of public education. The consequences of the shortcomings of the schools were a direct result of confused priorities resulting in public reluctance to bear the responsibility for providing a system of universal education that included those who have the greatest needs but the least resources. The condition of public education reveals society's values and priorities. What supported schools in the past was the belief that they were more important than any other institution outside the family and could meet the needs of different learners; this belief/priority seemed sadly lacking in the 1990s.

Edward M. Miggins

Cuyahoga Community College

Cleveland has tried many things, but few ideas seem to have involved true democratic control, with full state support.

Education News for 03-27-2012

Statewide Education News

  • Ohio making strides in Race to the Top (Dispatch)
  • Ohio is “meeting expectations” on implementing changes under its $400 million Race to the Top grant, a study released yesterday says. The Center for American Progress, a Washington-based nonprofit, found that “despite weathering major changes in leadership, Ohio has made significant progress” toward putting the law into effect. The state is one of 19 that have gotten federal money in exchange for promising a variety of changes in how it oversees education and measures success. Read More…

  • Educators work to improve students’ college, career readiness in Ohio (News-Herald)
  • Schools in Lake and Geauga counties have begun work on aligning K-12 curriculum with the expectations of area colleges and universities in hopes of better preparing students for the future. As part of the Ohio Department of Education’s High School-Higher Education Alignment Initiative, the Lake and Geauga group was one of 14 in the state that received a grant in February to help with this alignment. Read More…

  • School, safety officials who responded to Chardon High shooting to be honored at Statehouse (News-Herald)
  • About 50 school and law enforcement officials from Chardon and Geauga County will be honored at the Ohio Statehouse Wednesday for their response to the Feb. 27 shootings at Chardon High School. The group, traveling by bus, will meet with Gov. John Kasich and his Cabinet; be served lunch; visit with state legislators John Eklund and Mary Brigid Matheney, both of Geauga County; and be recognized with presentations before the Senate and House of Representatives. Read More…

Local Issues

  • Retirees soften cuts at Dublin schools (Dispatch)
  • Two central Ohio school districts are finalizing layoffs for next school year after November levy failures. The Dublin school board voted last night to cut 46 teaching jobs –– though only 16 people will lose jobs –– and 133 supplemental contracts, mainly sports coaches and advisers to student clubs. Westerville school officials have yet to propose layoffs to the school board, but a tentative list of reductions includes 71 teachers, about 7 percent of the teaching staff. That could be lower based on retirements, officials said. Read More…

  • District will transition to new standards (Vindicator)
  • BOARDMAN - The Boardman School District, like every other school district in the state, will transition to the Common Core Standards by the 2014-15 school year. The standards have been adopted by 44 other states and the District of Columbia. In Ohio, they will replace the current Academic Content Standards. The common core is K-12 standards in mathematics and English language arts/literacy. Ohio has also revised its social studies and science standards. Read More…

  • Chardon leans on each other for support a month after deadly school shooting (ONN)
  • CHARDON - Chardon residents tell ONN's Cristin Severance that not a day goes by that they don't think about the victims or their families. A group of Chardon women who meet at a local coffee shop every week said they've needed each other's support since the shooting. "We support each other in this special sisterhood we have going," said Vera Erasmus. The women are Chardon's version of "The View," and they volunteer at organizations and work out together every day. "I really can't believe it’s been a month," said Erasmus. Read More…

  • Lakota approves preschool venture with county ESC (Journal-News)
  • LIBERTY TWP. — The Lakota Local School District and the Butler County Educational Service Center have reached an agreement to jointly provide preschool services to students in the district. The board approved the one-year contract agreement by a vote of 4-1 Monday night. It is part of an effort by the district to help reduce an estimated $9 million deficit for the 2012-13 school year. Board Member Julie Shaffer voted against the plan. Read More…

  • Poland board takes no action on pay-to-play (Vindicator)
  • POLAND - School-board members continued discussions of pay-to-participate athletic fees, but they did not make a decision. The board heard from Athletic Director Brian Banfield, who said the average cost of pay-to-participate athletics at Ohio schools is $140 per high-school sport. “I would support a fee of $150 for high-school athletes and $75 for middle-school athletes and a family cap,” Banfield said at Monday’s board session. Read More…

  • Cleveland Teachers Union and Mayor Frank Jackson move closer to agreement on mayor's schools plan, but hurdles remain (Plain Dealer)
  • CLEVELAND - Mayor Frank Jackson and the Cleveland Teachers Union worked through several issues involving Jackson's schools plan Monday morning, reaching one major understanding but remaining far apart on two issues. The major accord came with how to handle the layoff and recall of teachers, with Jackson agreeing Monday to use the plan suggested by teachers last week. The compromise plan would rely on teacher evaluations first, and tenure and seniority second. Currently, layoffs and recalls are based mainly on seniority and tenure. Read More…

  • City schools consider health clinics within district buildings (Chillicothe Gazette)
  • CHILLICOTHE - The Chillicothe City School District is seeking a medical provider for a partnership that would blur the line between visiting the school nurse and visiting the doctor's office. The school district is looking to open clinics in the high school/middle school building and Mount Logan Elementary School, each offering a wide range of medical care provided by an on-site nurse practitioner or physician assistant. The goal for these clinics, or school-based health centers, is to improve overall student health while also boosting attendance and test scores. Read More…

  • Emergency response training planned at Stow-Munroe Falls schools (Beacon Journal)
  • STOW - In the wake of last month’s fatal shootings at Chardon High School, the Stow-Munroe Falls school district plans to train its employees on what to do if an armed intruder comes into one of its buildings. “We are all mindful of the fact that things like that can happen in any community, and then it does,” Stow Mayor Sara Drew said. “It really makes you remember that you need to be prepared.” Teachers will undergo training in the ALICE program this week. Read More…

  • Bay Village school board OKs superintendent's retire-rehire plan (Sun News)
  • The Bay Village school board agreed March 26 to a retire-rehire plan for Superintendent Clint Keener. The plan calls for Keener to resign effective the end of the workday July 31, and the board will rehire him effective Aug. 2 at a lower salary. The plan will allow Keener to begin collecting his pension from the State Teachers Retirement System. The new four-year contract will pay Keener $108,000 during the 2012-2013 school year with gradual increases in subsequent years. At the end of the pact, during the 2015-2016 school year, Keener will earn $126,500. Read More…

Editorial

  • The ‘community’ in community learning (Beacon Journal)
  • The first time I heard the phrase “community learning center,” my brain played one of those word-association tricks. Somewhere between the sound of the sequence of words and comprehension, it locked in on “community learning,” not the more usual and rational “learning center.” This led to a moment of puzzlement: What will the community be learning? Idiosyncratic? Probably. But with time that initial word link has been like some sort of trace element, casting its own shade of meaning on the phrase. Read More…

  • Student tests prove poverty (Plain Dealer)
  • As I write this, a good number of my 11th-grade economics students have taken the Ohio Graduation Test in reading for the third time. Twice before, they have failed to perform on the test that state officials say is a basic indicator of a 10th-grader's ability to read and comprehend. I have worked with struggling readers most of my career. Each student's story is unique. However, many come with common histories of abuse, neglect or both. Our classroom houses three teachers to help these students: an English teacher, a special education teacher and myself. Read More…