Showing posts with label Broad Academy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Broad Academy. Show all posts

Thursday, September 4, 2014

The Broad Academy Makes a Change

Last week the folks at the Broad Academy (motto: "You're a superintendent because we say you are") dropped some news on the education world. If you need a refresher (or just a fresher) on what the Broad Academy is, just click over to this tutorial. In the meantime, just remember that a dream is a wish your heart makes, and if your heart is wishing you were a school superintendent, you don't need a fancy education or an accredited program or education qualifications-- you just need a giant pile of money and powerful friends a lot of dedication, grit and hard work.

The nation's most prominent preparation program for urban school superintendents has been revamped, extending its scope, nearly doubly in length and placing greater emphasis on leadership development and helping leaders grow high-performing organizations.

"Most prominent" is a delightful set of weasel words, but I suppose it makes better copy than "the most high-profile unaccredited  professional program anywhere." It's also worth noting that without the words "school superintendent," this sounds pretty much as if it could be the description of any management training program anywhere.

But the Broadsters want you to know that they've been listening to the 150 fellows who emerged from their program. No word on whether they weighted this feedback according to whether the particular alum had previously resigned in disgrace, been fired, or faced allegations of various misbehaviors.

Managing director Christina Heitz tells the story

Over time, we consistently heard from our Fellows that the focus on best practices in leadership and management helped them make progress. But they wanted to do more. They wanted to develop breakthrough strategies that propel faster, greater improvements which are both systemwide and sustainable; to nurture the kinds of relationships and partnerships that help them do this work with people and communities; and to closely collaborate with colleagues across the nation, sharing resources and learning from each other's successes as well as their mistakes.

You would think that one of those 150 Fellows might have expressed an interest in learning something about education, schools, teachers, or students. But the Broad does not recognize education problems-- only management problems.


The new model includes some exciting changes!

* The program will now run 18 months instead of 10, adding "more than 100 hours of personalized learning on topics such as public engagement, student assignment patterns and funding equity." It would have been sweet if they were given personalized learning about personalized learning, but I am dying to know what form their personalization actually takes. For that matter, given that the first new cohort only has eleven members, I'm wondering what their IMpersonalized learning looks like. I'm also curious about "student assignment patterns." Is that like a Masters Degree in No Homework on Fridays?

* Broad is branching out from big city schools to high-performing public charter school systems, state and federal departments of education, and statewide turnaround districts. So basically, professional bureaucrats and disaster capitalists. Are they grooming the next Arne Duncan (who was on the Broad Board and hired several alumni to work at the DOE)? Good to know we'll keep providing the government with professional managers with no education background.

* No more requirement that you take a new job after graduating. Which is a sideways way of saying that they now take Fellows who are already in positions of power and just want to sharpen their power-claws.

* Sadly, there is no expanded curriculum about how to blow up schools so you can shut them down (a subject on which Broad literally wrote the book).

* I would also expect a class on How To Avoid Allegations of Misconduct, or at least How To Ride Out of Town By Transit Other Than a Rail. I suppose the modern business leader thought visionary doesn't really plan on staying in one place long anyway.

At any rate, now that the Academy now wants to create Master of the Universe (Education Division) rather than mere superintendents, they've switched from the former Broad Superintendents Academy to the Broad Academy. Meaning that their total lack of accreditation matters less than it used to.

The new class

The eleven shiny new world beaters each get a paragraph worthy of a Miss America introduction. Is there anybody special here?

Antwan Wilson was previously an assistant superintendent in Denver, but now "he is applying that laser-like focus on supporting student success in both the classroom and in life to his new role as superintendent of Oakland Unified School District. Broad has provided Oakland with leadership before; let's hope this one goes better.

Dacia Toll is co-CEO of Achievement First Charters, whose Hartford branch has posted impressively high numbers in the Suspension of Six Year Olds category. But hey-- you're never too young to start the process of being squeezed out of a charter school.

Marc Sternberg is getting ready to become director of K-12 for the Walton Family Foundation. Ka-ching.

John Schnur is founder and head of New Leaders, a group which has its own heartwarming story. Five buddies (including a TFA grad, a McKinsey management consultant, a charter school advocate, a former NYC teacher and Schnur, former ed policy analyst for Bill Clinton) at Harvard grad school got their business plan into the finals of Harvard Business School's annual competition. Funding followed, and they were soon cranking out urban principals in 11 cities (many, like New Orleans and Prince George's, already reformster faves and home to Broad alumni-- it's just a small world in reformsterland).

In addition, there are several folks in the charter school biz already, including the Grand Daddy of the Too-Wet Dream of Charterdom, New Orleans-- yes, NOLA RSD super Patrick Dobard is getting himself all Broaded up!

And let us not forget Andrea Castaneda, the chief of fiscal integrity and statewide efficiencies at the RI Dept of Ed. She "knows there is not a second or cent to spare when it comes to school improvement" [Correction. Earlier versions included an allegation that Castaneda was involved in shady investment ideas. That's one of her friends-- the state treasurer. But it's not Castaneda. My apologies form the error]

Change you can believe in

There are signs of a shift here, and what they say is that is that Broad is shifting from training superintendents who can run schools like a business to training business chiefs who can make money in actual education-related businesses. It's a subtle shift, it's true, but it takes Broad one step further away from actually caring about schools. The bottom line has not changed-- the Broad Foundation is still tops in its desire to dismantle public education, privatize the best part, and sell off the pieces.

But Dobard has inspiring things to say. He calls the academy "one of the most fulfilling experiences" of his entire professional career. "What makes it different is that it is full of a lot of 'we's.' This work can't be about just 'I' or 'me.' It's about working with others, reaching out to others and how, together, we can transform communities and the lives of underprivileged youth."

I suppose it's too much to hope that the "we" would include teachers, parents and community members. I know it's too much to hope that any of this ties directly back to actual teaching and learning and school stuff.

In the meantime, just remember, if everyone in the audience will clap really loud, Tinker Bell will come back to life as a qualified school superintendent or charter school operator or edubiz CEO. Wishing will make it so.


The nation’s most prominent preparation program for urban school superintendents has been revamped, expanding its scope, nearly doubling in length and placing greater emphasis on leadership development and helping leaders grow high-performing organizations. - See more at: http://www.broadcenter.org//newsroom/full/new-programming-new-name-among-changes-for-the-broad-academy#sthash.PvwwRts0.dpuf
The nation’s most prominent preparation program for urban school superintendents has been revamped, expanding its scope, nearly doubling in length and placing greater emphasis on leadership development and helping leaders grow high-performing organizations. - See more at: http://www.broadcenter.org//newsroom/full/new-programming-new-name-among-changes-for-the-broad-academy#sthash.PvwwRts0.dpuf
The nation’s most prominent preparation program for urban school superintendents has been revamped, expanding its scope, nearly doubling in length and placing greater emphasis on leadership development and helping leaders grow high-performing organizations. - See more at: http://www.broadcenter.org//newsroom/full/new-programming-new-name-among-changes-for-the-broad-academy#sthash.PvwwRts0.dpuf

What Is The Broad Academy?

If you're going to truly appreciate the news from the Broad Academy of Made Up Superintendent Qualifications, you need to know a bit about the Academy. For those who need a refresher, here you go.

Whence Came This Academy, Pray Tell

You see one of the things that any ordinary teachers can learn from the Broad (rhymes with "toad") Academy is that you can do anything if you have enough money if you put your mind to it. Actually, that might be the only thing that an ordinary teacher can learn from the Academy, because ordinary teachers won't be attending the Academy any time soon.

Give Eli Broad credit-- his personal story is not about being born into privilege. Working class parents. Public school. Working his way through college. Been married to the same woman for sixty years. Borrowed money from his in-laws for his first venture-- building little boxes made of ticky tacky. Read this story about how he used business success and big brass balls to make himself a major player in LA.He's a scrapper; Broad calls himself a "sore winner."

The Broad Foundation is one the Big Three (Walton and Gates) in what we call Venture Philanthropy, which is far different from the traditional kind. Carnegie Rockfeller bestowed money on people who they believed were doing Good Work. Venture philanthropists decide how they want to change the country, and they hire people to make it happen. The Broad reach is wide; this article gives a taste of the cornucopia of reformster talent that has occupied the board.

And so in 2002, Broad launched the "Superintendent's Academy" through which he hoped to further the foundation's goal of transforming America's urban school systems.

But Broad does not believe that schools have an education problem; he believes they have a management problem. School leadership does not need an infusion of educational leadership-- they need business guys, leadership guys. And so Broad launched the Superintendent's Academy by ignoring completely the usual requirements for Superintendent certification or program accreditation. The Board Superintendent Academy exists by its own force of will. It's kind of awesome-- there is no external governing or certifying board of any sort declaring that the Broad Superintendent's Academy is a legitimate thing, and yet, it exists and thrives.

I myself plan to soon open the Curmudgucation Academy of Brain Surgery, or maybe a School Of  Fine Art Production. I have everything I need to make these highly successful, with the possible exception of enough power and money to get people to listen to me whether I know what the hell I'm talking about or not.

But Does It Work?

Well, the Academy boasts many top tier graduates.The indispensable blog The Broad Report offers a full listing of the superintendents who have emerged from this pipeline. It includes such educational heavyweights as  Randolph Ward (brought in by Broad Buddy Jerry Brown and trashed Oakland Schools), Jean-Claude Brizard (received near-unanimous no confidence vote from teachers in Rochester schools), John Q. Porter (suspended after seven months Oklahoma City schools for financial misbehavior),  Deborah A. Gist (RI ed commissioner who headed mass firings and hiring of more Broad superintendents), Christopher Cerf (in charge of blowing up NJ schools), and the always-newsworthy John Deasy (resigned in disgrace from Prince Georges but landed in LA schools boss spot with his way paved by Broad Buddy Mayor Villaraigosa). And that's just to name a few.

Like TFA products, Broad Academy grads like to bring in fellow alumni. Their success rate is not super, but then that depends on how you score success.

Broad Wrote the Book on Blowing Up Schools

Not even kidding. The Broad Foundation actually created a manual for how to get schools closed in order to trim budgets while also managing public upheaval. Short version is
        1) Starve school by shutting off resources
        2) Declare that schools is failing (Try to look shocked/surprised)
        3) Close school, shunt students to charterland

In Their Defense

The notion that good managers don't need to know jack about the businesses they're managing isn't unique. It's all over the business world, and probably qualifies as one of the Reasons American Business Is Messed Up.

Actually, that's all I've got. The Broad Foundation's activity is kind of amazing in its brazenness, and other than it being a literal embodiment of the idea of running schools like a business, there's nothing much to say about it. The products of the Academy are routinely disruptive and make all the sorts of mistakes one would expect from amateurs trying to run school systems.