Sunday, December 18, 2016

Gerrymandering Charter Success

Once again I'm reading a spate of charter fan fiction in which charters are lauded for out-performing the rest of the schools in their city.

That one right there near the center is where I've been smacking my head















"Out-perform the rest of the schools in East Egg" is a meaningless metric, and I keep trying to explain why to some folks. Let me try it again, because looking at the mess in North Carolina has given me a thought.

Let's start with one of the best graphics out there for explaining gerrymandering. It comes from an article by Christopher Ingraham at Washington Post's wonkblog, with the graphic itself adapted from Stephan Wass.


















This shows how you can divide up a city to create different combinations of the voters to create particular outcomes. It explains, for instance, how Pennsylvania and North Carolina can have legislatures completely dominated by one political party even though that party doesn't have a vastly greater number of actual voters.

But now, look at the graphic again, and this time, think of the red blocks as high-achieving students.

Let's say East Egg, back when it had only public schools, looked like #2. Five schools, all containing some high-scoring students (aka "high-achieving," but as always I will remind you that "high-achieving" just means "got a high score on the Big Standardized Test") and some low-scoring students, with the proportion being such that all five schools come out "blue," which for our purposes will mean "sad and Not Good" schools (because when we talk about low-achieving schools, we just mean schools that have lots of low scores on the BS Tests).

"We must turn around East Egg," declare some Very Concerned Politicians, and soon three new charter schools open up. That takes us to #3, where the three "red" schools are the high-scoring charters, while the two remaining public schools are now very blue.

But here's the thing-- the overall total distribution of high- and low-scoring students in East Egg has not changed a bit. This whole game will still work even if all students get exactly the same score they got back in the all-public system.

Every one of the charters can brag about "out-performing" the public schools, but it means nothing. The overall total performance for East Egg has stayed exactly the same, static, flat, unmoved (exactly, in fact, as overall test results have proven to be on tests like PISA and NAEP).

"How can we gerrymander the students when we get students in random assortments?" some charter fans will say. From marketing to applying to push-outs to recruiting from outside the community, charters have shown themselves highly adept at managing their student population. No less a reformster all-star than Chris Barbic left the Tennessee ASD noting that, gee, it's really hard to lift up a school when you have to work with all of the same students that are there in the community.

So if a charter operator wants to impress me, I would need to see some data showing that the results improved for the total student population of the city where they operate. Being able to gerrymander your way to success is not the same thing as actually changing the makeup of the entire city system.

ICYMI: Frantic Shopping Edition (12/18)

You're not here today, are you? You're out trying to finish shopping before you get back to school and don't have time to shop at all. Here to help you take a break is this week's selection of reading stuff, culled from about the interwebs. If you like it, pass it on.

Teachers Are Delusional

Things are a little grim these days. Blue Cereal Education looks at how teachers everywhere cope, for better or worse.

Hanna Skandera as Assistant Secretary of Education

Yet another odd Trumpian choice appears to be coming down the pike. Here is the indispensable Mercedes Schneider with all the background you need to understand why Skandera is a less-than-encouraging choice

Don't Be Fooled; Betsy DeVos Still Loves Common Core

If you think DeVos is an exciting choice because she'll make good on Trump's promise to dump Common Core, Steven Singer has done the homework to show why Trump has gotten the wrong woman for the job.

The Broken Promise of Indiana's Online Schools

Chalkbeat's series on virtual schools continues with a look at how Indiana's cyber schools are still in operation, even though every single one of them is failing.

Is It Time to Rethink Standards

Josh Starr is guest blogging at Rick Hess's EdWeek spot, and he has some thoughts about school standards and white supremacy. Really.

Terminal Charterism: The View from Michigan

Really, you should just be reading Nancy Flanagan all the time. But right now, as a Michiganian, she has special insight on what a DeVosian eduworld would look like, which makes Flanagan's insights more must-read than ever.

How Ontario's Vision of Equity Contrasts with Pennsylvania's

Kevin McCorry is a name that anyone interested in PA eudcation should know. He's working on a series that takes a broader look at some ed issues, including this intriguing look at how PA and Ontario stack up by comparison.

Teaching Isn't Really a Profession

You've been in this argument. This piece will give you a little more ammo for the next time.

Coleman, the College Board and the SAT

I wrote about this Reuters piece this week, but let me encourage you once again to read the whole thing. It is hard to wrap your brain around just what an amateur-hour cluster-finagle Coleman's College Board is, but we all need to try.

How Much Do Charter School Executives Make?

School Data Nerd tries to answer this question for Los Angeles. Short answer: a whole hell of a lot.

Rebecca Solnit on Hope in Dark Times, Resisting the Defeatism of Easy Despair, and What Victory Really Means for Movements of Social Change

Maria Popova's Brain Pickings is one of the great websites for literature, thought, and a kind of unmushy low-grade optimism. Let's end with this for the week. 

Saturday, December 17, 2016

The New Charter Packaging

The election of Donald Trump presented nominally-Democratic reformsters with a problem.

How could they put some distance between themselves and Trump and his Ed Secretary-designate Betsy DeVos. Neither one would pass for a progressive in even the darkest alley, and yet their preferred policies are the preferred policies of Trump-DeVos. Charters? Check. Smoosh the teachers unions? Check. Even Common Core, which Trump promised to eradicate, is much beloved by DeVos.


What, exactly, is the policy difference between the so-called progressive reform education agenda and the Trump-DeVos inclination to dismantle public education and sell off the pieces?

The dance of the faux progressives has been interesting to watch.

Some have just said, "Screw it. We love the folks who have the power." Jeanne Allen of the Center for Education Reform took just six months to go from being alarmed that Trump was playing her song to thinking that, well, maybe he was swell after all.

Others, like Whitney Tilson and DFER, hedged their bets by suggesting that nobody should take a job with Trump, but maybe DeVos deserved a chance to prove herself.

But the preferred distinction is slowly being crafted and fine-tuned. Shavar Jeffries and Peter Cunningham tried it out at the end of November, and it is turning up in places like this tweet from the left-leaning thinky tank (and previous holding tank for former future Clinton administration functionaries)--




And then today's Washington Post features an op-ed by Rahm Emanuel, who wants us to know that "It's Time To Stop With the False Choices on School Choice." See, Betsy DeVos is the Wanton Floozy of choice, allowing any sleazy sloppy operator to run a school without accountability and therefor put the education of young folks at risk. Meanwhile, Rahm and Jeffries and Cunningham and other allegedly progressive folks want responsible, carefully monitored charter schools. Not only that, but Cunningham injected this into a twitter conversation today:

Sigh. Yes, for the gazillionth time, some refornmsters have discovered that they need some help from the defenders of public education.

Mind you, I have met Cunningham, and he did not appear to have horns or a forked tail. But this whole new stance requires, once again, a collective rewrite of history. In fact, plenty of right-tilted reformsters like Robert Pondiscio and Rick Hess and even Mike Petrilli who have periodically observed that somebody ought to reel in the charter operators who are really stinking up the joint, even as left-tilted reformsters have blamed all criticism of charters on those evil unions who put adult interests ahead of student needs or thrown around charges of racism every time a public ed advocate pointed out that charter schooling has a real problem.

Look, I get that politics shifts the landscape and folks who make their living playing political ping pong have to adjust to new realities and make new alliances and try new PR to achieve their goals. But just once I would like to go through one of these shifts that starts with folks acknowledging what they've said and done in the past.

If you're a teacher, you know how tiring it is-- something gets thrown across the room and you saws the kid who did it and he knows you saw him and yet he still looks at you and smile and shrugs "What? Who? Me??" The thrown object is not nearly as annoying as the kid insisting on treating you like a dope and refusing to own his actions.

But this, I guess, is how we're going to play it now. We're supposed to act like the demands for accountability represent some huge gulf between progressive charter reformsterism and the Trump-DeVosy variety as if supposed progressives haven't been pursuing conservative policies all along, and, as John King tried to suggest, all of us over here on the not-Trump side just want the same thing and are really pretty much on the same side, even though Trump and DeVos are intent on implementing the same policies that reformsters of both tiltage have been pushing toward for fifteen years. The Trumpies just don't want to pretend that they are doing non-wealthy non-white families a favor by pushing it.

This is why politics makes me tired. If we could just talk about policy and education and how best to serve America's students and communities, but no-- that conversation apparently has to be held within the restrictions and boundaries of keeping track of which side you're on and who you want to be allied with and who you want to oppose for the good of Our Team and the need to have the conversation within those restrictions results in people just saying stupid, ridiculous, if-you-hadn't-spent-so-much-time-in-politics-you'd-understand-how-silly-you-sound things. I don't care what you call yourself; the difference between "neo-liberal" and "conservative" is that one is one letter longer. I don't want to spend time sorting out people. I want to talk about preserving, protecting and uplifting public education, one of the last great foundational democratic institutions in this country, not why you think your way of attacking it is so much better and different than someone else's way of attacking it. Grrr. Yes, you can imagine me breathing heavily at my keyboard.

So, okay. These are the new rules. Righties want charters with no accountability. Progressives want tons of accountability. Gee. I guess dividing the conversation along those lines means we don't get to talk about whether or not we should have charters at all, huh?


NC: New Depths of Shame

Once upon a time, North Carolina was a forward-thinking state that took good care of its citizens. But they have spent the last few years hell-bent on turning it into a backward bottom-feeder. Now, in an attempt to win the prize for Worst Legislature in America (sorry Florida and Ohio), the North Carolina has decided to go full-on racist banana republic.

We'll get to this latest round of idiocy in a moment, but first, a refresher on Our Story So Far.

The set-up for all of this is one of the most gerrymandered states in the country (only fitting as North Carolina actually invented the practice and name). So badly gerrymandered that federal court said they had to redraw the boundaries-- but not in time for this last election.

@NCHouseSpeaker Tim Moore really needs to hear from you

The gerrymandering was just part of North Carolina's attempt to squelch the voting rights of black citizens. A federal judge also struck down several other Jim Crow voting restrictions, based on the fact that officials had literally studied various voting methods to determine which ones were most often used by black voters and then targeted the removal of those. The federal justice used the term "insane." The nicest thing you could say about the whole maneuver is that maybe-- maybe-- the NC GOP was trying to suppress black voters because they tend to vote Democrat, and not just because they're black. So maybe the NC GOP is just a bunch of partisan anti-democracy asshats and not actual racist anti-democracy asshats. Maybe.

The NC GOP had its eyes on other targets as well. Those damn college students with their fancy book-learning and liberal thinking. GOP Governor Pat McCrory took an axe to the UNC budget and brought in the decidedly-not-liberal Margaret Spellings to run the place. She's been just swell.

Meanwhile, the legislature and governor continued a multi-prong attack on public education. NC has tried to catch up to Ohio and Florida in its willingness to let any shyster with a checkbook and a dream set up a charter school and make a bundle while not being held accountable for results.  They have implemented the dim-witted policy of flunking all third graders who don't pass the Big Standardized Test for reading. They jumped at the chance to set up an Achievement School District, a mechanism by which states take over school districts so that they can be turned into more money-making charters, a mechanism abandoned by one if its biggest fans because it doesn't work.

North Carolina's legislature and governor have also done their best to end teaching as a profession in the state. They've withheld raises and tried to use them as bargaining chips to get teachers to give up tenure (because the court told them they can't just unilaterally take tenure away). And they messed with pay in a manner so bad and insulting that even their own Teacher of the Year called them out. Through it all, Pat McCrory kept trying to sell himself as an education governor, as if teachers are utter morons.

And, yes, North Carolina's GOP is the group that decided that banning transgender citizens from certain bathrooms was a hill they wanted to fight and die on. That story's important because it's the prelude to the current new depths of shameful shamelessness for the NC GOP.

The NC Attorney General who called the bathroom bill a national embarrassment was Roy Cooper. Cooper went up against McCrory for the governor's seat, and he won. McCrory (the first NC incumbent governor to ever lose) at first made plenty of noise about questioning ballots and challenging the results before conceding.

"I personally believe that the majority of our citizens have spoken and we should now do everything we can to support the 75th governor of North Carolina, Roy Cooper," McCrory said in a statement. But Pat McCrory has told a lot of lies, and this was just another one.

Not only did McCrory lose, but the state Supreme Court was flipped from conservative to liberal majority. And the NC GOP wasn't having any of it. So on Wednesday night, they called a special session specifically to change the rules and strip power from the court and the office of governor.

The full list of law rewrites include

* change the rules so that Democrats can't have control of any county boards of election
* effectively downsizing the state board of elections, and requiring it to have a GOP chair in election years
* make Supreme Court elections partisan (currently, candidates aren't identified by party)
* change the appeals policy for the court
* reduce governor-appointed positions from 1,500 to 300
* require cabinet appointees to have Senate approval
* generally moving power for various functions, like running the state university system, to offices that will be held by Republicans

Some of these moves are attempts to undo power grabs that the GOP made when they took power. For instance, when McCrory took office, the legislature upped governor-appointed positions from 500 to 1,500. So part of what we're seeing here is a lesson that political morons apparently have to repeatedly re-learn-- when you give an office a shiny new hammer, you have to consider the possibility that the next guy to hold the hammer will not be your friend.

But mostly this is an attempt to negate many of the effects of the election by simply rewriting the law. It is banana republic behavior, and one more chapter in the continuing saga written by the NC GOP's belief that we are not actually a nation of laws, but a nation of white guys who should be able to do whatever they can think of to hold onto power.

Plenty of North Carolinians have stopped by the capital to speak their mind, and the legislature is responding by shutting themselves up in private and arresting citizens who dare to question this power grab, as well as journalists who dare to cover it. It's a measure of just how transparently undemocratic this is that the legislature has not managed to articulate even a half-decent bullshit cover story about why they're doing this.

Here's a pretty piece of baloney from Senator Phil Berger (@SenatorBerger) that tries to present some rationale that he says has been "covered up by the press" but every thin piece of his crappy argument is shown to be a lie by the simple fact that the legislature somehow didn't feel the need to correct any of these issues until a Democrat was elected governor. House Speaker Tim Moore (@NCHouseSpeaker) has made some noises about "balance of power," and yet is untroubled by gerrymandered districting in the state. Meanwhile, Pat "We should do everything can to support the 75th governor" McCrory has started signing these bills as they ooze out of the legislature.

Cooper has promised to take his own legislature to court, but at this point North Carolina really has locked up the title of Worst Legislature in the US, and like a team looking past district contests to a state or national title, the NC GOP seems intent on winning an international prize. Willingness to essentially overturn an election, end democracy, and institute one party rule is hardly a regular American trick, but belongs in nations that don't even pretend to believe in a democratic process. The NC GOP have brought shame not just on themselves, not just on their state, but on the whole nation, and I hope you'll take a few moments every day to tell them so. 

Friday, December 16, 2016

Do Poor Students Get the Worst Teachers?

This has been open to debate forever, but the debate has gotten more spirited ever since the Obama administration made it a matter of policy that poverty just doesn't matter if you have an awesome teacher in the room. There are three real answers to this question. Let's consider each one.

No, They Don't

A recently-released report from the Institute of Education Sciences (part of the USED) has been touted as proof that all socio-economic levels of students have similar supplies of swell teachers. And there is also an argument to be made that since teachers in high-poverty schools are doing more heavy lifting against a greater weight of outside issues, they are actually tougher for it. I have no doubt that some of the greatest, mightiest, teacheriest teachers in the country are working in poverty-wracked schools.


This is not a new idea. The teacher program that I graduated from was run by a small-town upper-mid-class college, but it required student teachers to work in Cleveland (i.e. poor urban) schools. Their reasoning was that if you could handle that environment, you could handle any teaching environment.





Yes, They Do

There are plenty of reasons to suspect this might be so. Many policy choices have made recruitment a challenge.

In some states, test results (which are reliably lower in poorer schools) are tied to teacher evaluation, which means that taking a job at a poor school can damage a teacher's career, even end it in states that have removed tenure and made "low performance" grounds for dismissal. Who wants to sign up for that if they have a choice?

Poor districts, particularly in states like Pennsylvania, offer less pay, which means they are low-balling in the bidding war to hire the top teaching talent. This doesn't seem like the best way to gather the best.

In some states, it's even worse. Take Arkansas, where anybody with a pulse and a college degree can be put into a classroom. Again, this seems unlikely to bring in top talent, and you can be certain that the very wealthiest districts in Arkansas are saying, "Yeah, hire us some of those special teachers with no education training at all. That's what we want for our kids."

There's research to back up this answer too, like this study from the National Center for Analysis of Longitudinal Data in Educational Research (CALDER) by way of the American Institutes for Research with a whole list of universities and also connected to IES at USED. This particular study tracked teacher gaps in North Carolina and Washington. (Matt Barnum offers explanation of why the two studies get different results.)

We Have No Actual Idea

There are a couple of problems with trying to determine who has the best and the worst teachers.

One is that we have to compare apples to hubcaps. Different schools with different populations in different communities require different skill sets. I am a pretty good high school English teacher in my ruralish high school. However, I'm pretty certain that if you threw me in an poor urban first grade classroom, I would suck. Nor do I have any idea how you would compare me to the person who has that first grade job. Is the family care GP in a small town a better or worse doctor than a brain surgeon in Korea? Who knows. Just because they are both "doctors" doesn't mean they are comparable.

Second is that teacher quality is not a solid state. Over time, we all have better days and not so better days. And how "good" we are is also a matter of which students you put us together with. One student's terrible teacher is another students life-altering agent of positive change. Just because I'm a bad spouse for Ethel, that doesn't mean I might not be a great spouse for Judy or Phoebe or Bob, and vice versa.

Third, and really important for articles like the Barnum piece, we do not have a useful way to measure teacher effectiveness. These discussions inevitably drag in some version of measuring teacher effectiveness by her ability to get good test scores out of students-- and THAT assumes that the Big Standardized Tests measure anything more useful than the student's ability to take Big Standardized Tests. There's no evidence that they do.

Attempts to spruce this issue up with Value Added Measures (VAM) have been debunked by just about anyone qualified to have an opinion.

In short, we don't know where the good and bad teachers are because, except on the far edges of the spectrum, we don't know how to identify them. We don't even know what "good" and "bad" even mean when it comes to teachers.

My own sense is that the deck is probably stacked against poor schools, not just because of all the reasons listed above, but because if you take a good teacher and overload her with too many students and too few resources in a crumbling building with lousy administrative support (and force her to use canned curriculum and scripting), you can probably make a far less effective teacher out of her.

But that's just my gut sense. I have no proof, and neither does anybody else. And as long as we're asking questions like "Is there a correlation between a Master's degree and higher student test scores," we won't get an answer any time soon. And we don't need one.

Because the question we should be asking is, "Are we doing everything in our power to make sure that students in all schools, particular schools where poverty has created more obstacles to success-- are we making sure that all schools are getting all the support and resources that they need to succeed?" This is a much easier question to answer. The only problem is that if the answer is no, then policy makers and politicians and bureaucrats and administrators have to do something other than just wring their hands and point fingers at teaching staff.


Thursday, December 15, 2016

School Choice Won't Save Education

This piece popped up on my twitter feed this week. It's a hard-core pro-choice argument from David S. D'amato, an attorney as well as a policy advisor at the Heartland Institute who also does some work at Cato now and then-- so seriously Libertarian.

Is it extra-ironic that few useful Libertarian images, including the Heartland logo,  are public domain? Here's a puppy instead


His piece is pretty dry and direct, and as i read it, it struck me as a good piece for exercising a look at where exactly I disagree with the pro-choice crowd. Are my issues matter of fact, interpretation, policy, or principle? Let's see.

The United States is in the midst of an education crisis; this is not news... Almost all Americans seem to acknowledge the failures of the government school system... 

Disagreement on the facts. The education crisis is a manufactured one, including the dogged repetition that we are in an education crisis, a PR push that result in "most Americans" believing that those schools out there somewhere are in trouble, even as survey after survey shows that they think their own schools are actually dandy.

But D'amato wants to first talk about the history leading up to this alleged crisis. So let's go there with him.

In particular, Americans have forgotten the destructive philosophy upon which the government education apparatus was built. The centerpiece of that philosophy is the fallacy that centralization and monopolization equate to quality and results. 

Much more than any high-minded goal of “leveling the playing field,” early advocates of compulsory schooling sought social cohesion through forced conformity.

I'm picking quotes to get at the heart of his argument; in fairness to him, you should probably go read the whole thing. But his central point is that central planning is at the heart of public education in this country.

Disagreement on the facts, sort of. I agree that US education has often been extremely interested in homogenizing the citizenry with some, if not forced, certainly arm twisty conformity. This has not always been an ill-intended goal. Pushing, for example to get "social conformity" around the norm of literacy is not, to my mind, a bad thing. And while characterizing public education as a centrally controlled monolith suits the Libertarian view of their opponents, it doesn't really fit with a loosely connected network of locally-controlled school districts, each responsible primarily to the local voters who elect their controlling board.

Compulsory government schooling—euphemistically called “public education”—was calculated to achieve the goals of cultural and ideological uniformity. Immigrant cultures, languages and religions, perceived as inherently dangerous, were to be suppressed and eventually obliterated.

Disagreement of interpretation and philosophy. There's zero question that US culture has been hostile to immigrant culture, languages and religions. In my own small town, there were briefly schools set up for the Italian immigrants, in part because Italian immigrants who had landed jobs asked the leading employer to help set up an education program that would help their children fit in. D'amato's history of US education ignores the element of opportunity that came from education. When slaveholders wanted to obliterate the culture of Africans, one of their most common methods was to refuse to provide any sort of education that might have made it easier for Africans to find a place in this country or culture. Not sure how that's a better thing.

Classical liberalism, grounded in the ideas of the Enlightenment, had highlighted the common humanity of all people across national divides. Through the 19th century, though, liberalism’s cosmopolitan orientation was increasingly eclipsed by ascendant nationalism, characterized by a focus on, in Dewey’s words, “the realization of the ideal of the national state.” 

Yeah, the 1800's were a rise-of-nationalism kind of time, and clearly that tide is not ebbing any time soon. But I think we disagree about what that has to do with anything.

For D'amato, it connects, via John Dewey, to a progressive dismissal of the free market and limited government.

As historian Michael B. Katz argues, progressive reform efforts are best understood as attempting “to foster modes of social control” in a changing America...

And from there we jump to John King, and his inability understand the awesomeness of homeschooling because homeschooling puts a student outside the reach of government-enforced sameness. Official school remains distrustful of any schooling not certified by "qualified experts."

Difference of philosophy. D'amato says "qualified experts" like it's a bad thing, and yet I'm betting that his families health care and car repair are handled by qualified experts. D'amato became a lawyer by studying at qualified universities and notes that he was "admitted to practice" in Massachusetts and Illinois, presumably by proving that he was a qualified expert, just as he was "certified" to practice some legal specialties. His LinkdIN profile lists his many accomplishments, a method of establishing that he is a qualified expert. My question for him is a frequent question my profession has for many, many reformers-- why exactly is it that teaching is, among all the professions, one that requires no special training or expertise? What is it about teaching, as opposed to doctoring, nursing, lawyering or plumbing, that makes some folks so sure that anyone on the planet is qualified to do it right now, today?

We are in agreement, I think, that schools can too often be too focused on conformity. Some husbands are too focused on controlling their wives' behavior, but I see neither point as an argument for ending either public education or marriage.

But D'amato is ready now to move on to solutions. Here's the thesis:

The dynamism and innovation America’s schools so desperately need cannot come from a failed socialism that promotes more centralization, technocracy and bureaucracy. Rather, genuine solutions will come from the encouragement of competition and the removal of existing barriers to experimentation—that is, from school choice.

School choice can refer to any one of a range of policies designed to promote competition, expanding student options through vouchers, tax-credit scholarships, open enrollment in neighboring public schools, and other similar mechanisms.  

All right. So now we know what he wants to prove. Let's see the argument.

Under these programs, students and resources gravitate toward the schools that get results, measured using uncontroversial criteria on which Americans across partisan and ideological lines agree.

Disagreement of fact, or maybe principle. First, there are no uncontroversial criteria on which everyone can agree, and there never will be, because Americans, for the very reasons D'amato has already suggested, will never agree on what a school is supposed to accomplish. On top of that, many, if not most, of those purposes are impossible to measure. So the idea that there could be cool, clear measurement of results is one I simply don't accept.

But even if I did-- name one sector in any part of the free-ish market that operates that way. Name one product that is sold by simply laying out the clear data on the "results" it gets. There is no such sector. Every single product on the market, from breakfast cereal to automobiles to elected officials, succeeds or fails based on marketing. This is where I trot out Greene's Law-- the free market does not foster superior quality; the free market fosters superior marketing. Students and resources will gravitate toward the schools with the most attractive marketing. Or are located closest to home.

...perhaps most important of all is the basic fact that school choice “gives parents a meaningful way to hold schools accountable for performance.” 

Disagreement of fact and principle and interpretation and philosophy and I think we see entirely different realities here. School choice does not do this. School choice often provides parents with schools whose management team is nowhere nearby and does not respond to them at all. Choice provides parents with just one tool-- withdrawing the child. And that tool cannot be easily or lightly exercised. It's a simple thing to stop eating at a restaurant you no longer like; it is not a simple thing to yank your child out in the middle of third grade. And because many charter schools operate with next to no transparency, parents often have little information on which to make decisions.

D'amato attaches the "monopoly" label to public schools, but there is no monopoly in the world that has ever operated with a locally-elected board. No local citizen could call up a board member of Standard Oil or Ma Bell and say, "Straighten this out or I will work to get rid of you from the board next election." Local citizens have that coversation with school board members all the time.

But most importantly, choice gives even less power to poor parents. The free market hates poor people because you cannot make money serving poor people because they can't pay you very much. Your only options are A) serve so many poor people that economies of scale are in your favor (see: Wal-Mart) in which case you do best by offering a mediocre product or B) get the government to subsidize the market costs for the poor people so that vendors can make enough money from them, which is how most charter markets currently work and which is, of course, not a free market approach at all.

The goal of public education is to serve every single customer. The free market can't do that. There is not one single product in this country that is sold to every single citizen because that's not how a free market works. But in education, serving every customer is the gig.

Competition and choice motivate teachers and school administrators to serve student interests; ostensibly, for good teachers and administrators, those align perfectly with their own.

Disagreement of fact. The implication here is that teachers and administrators are underperforming because without competitive incentives, they just aren't motivated enough. That borders on insulting, but everything in my experience says it's counterfactual. And the research on merit pay is not promising at all. (Long time readers can enjoy my 1,562,233rd link to Daniel Pink)

School choice is dangerous to the political class precisely because it shifts power and decision-making authority back to the family unit, empowering parents and students over governments, local, state and federal. 

Disagreement of fact. Choice does not shift power to the family unit. It shifts power to the government agencies that oversee the subsidies needed by poorer families, and it most of all shifts power to the charter school operators, who get to choose which customers they serve, how much money they make, when to exit the business, who to hire, what rules to follow (or not) and most of all, which information to withhold from the public so that it doesn't interfere with their branding and marketing.

D'amato wraps up by invoking the holy trinity-- choice, competition, and accountability-- as the antidote to socialism, ignoring the gigantic ocean between those two distant shores. We probably agree that in the last decade or two, socialism has crept much further into that ocean. We disagree that the holy trinity will fix it, not because I hate the trinity because they threaten my political classiness (do I get a membership card? cookies?) but because I don't think they will do any of the things that D'amato claims they will (including reducing government meddling), and I do think they will do other, damaging things. Choice and competition are huge losers, and accountability is necessary, but only helpful if we get it right (which we haven't so far).

I appreciate D'amato laying out this pro-choice argument in clear straightforward terms, providing me with the chance to lay out in similar terms why I think he's mostly wrong. If I were willing to try my readers' patience, we could get into the parts of his argument that even pro-choicers disagree with, but I think this is enough thumb damage for smartphone based readers in one day.

David Coleman Messes Up Again

I have spent entirely much time over the past few years reading about David Coleman, the magical and super-powered wizard who manufactured the Common Core and convinced Bill Gates to become the Core's greatest patron. Coleman needed to set the Core up with a foster parent because as soon as the little tyke's wings had begun to spread, Coleman was out the door to his next gig-- a well-paying gig running the College Board and remaking the infamous SAT test.

And now Renee Dudley at Reuters brings us a detailed account of how badly Coleman screwed up that job.



None of what Dudley reports will come as a surprise to long-time Coleman watchers. The Core architect has several key characteristics that shine through.

First and foremost, Coleman is soaked in hubris. It's not just that he somehow came to believe that he should personally redefine what it means to be an educated person in this country. When you read him in interview after interview, you notice that he never gives credit to anyone. No "I depended heavily on the work of Scholar McWisdom" or "I certainly didn't do this alone. The help of Worky McColleague was invaluable." Interviewers address him as if he wrote the whole damn thing single-handedly, and he doesn't correct them. Coleman believes that he can fix the American education system, K-16, all by himself and eradicate social injustice in the process. He believes he is a Great Man, called to do Great Things.When he says that grown-ups understand that "nobody gives a shit what you think and feel," he means other people-- he's pretty sure his own thoughts and feelings are Pretty Important.

And mind you-- he started down this path when he was a twenty-something consultant who couldn't get a teaching job in New York. Coleman is proud of his lack of qualifications as a sort of humble brag about how, even without formal qualifications, he still knows better than everyone else. After all, Common Core arrived with absolutely no procedure or mechanism for review or revision-- almost as if its creator was certain that not a hair on its head would ever need to be changed.

And so the second thing to remember is that Coleman is not nearly as smart as he thinks he is. There are a mess of features that are just bad education, in particular in the lower grades, where Coleman literally had no idea what the hell he was talking about. The Core demands a particular balance of informational and fiction texts, and that ratio is based on absolutely nothing but Coleman's own preferences. And Coleman's thoughts about teaching literature? As I've said before, if Coleman had been my student teacher, we would have had to have a long talk.

The third thing? At the end of the day, Coleman is also a huckster who wants to sell some product. It'll sell, he's sure, because he's the smartest, rightest guy in the room. But he needs to move some units and make some money.

So it's not surprising that Reuters, which has been working away at the SAT's problems for a while now, would find that Coleman made a hash out of business there.

No surprise that he was so focused on rushing the new SAT so that he could capture that market share Right Now that he ignored the advice of many, many people who told him that his deadline was unrealistic and that he was breaking things trying to meet it.

No surprise that he ignored any kind of bidding process for a critical contract but instead went with a personal contact who shortly had to be fired because they couldn't do the job (again, a warning that he had received from experts within the company).

No surprise that Coleman never seemed conscious of what he didn't know-- how to run a large sprawling commercial organization, the intricacies of standardized test design, test security issues-- but instead just ignored the experts who tried to school him.

One kind of fun surprise buried in the article-- one of the colleges that has made SAT's optional for admissions is tiny Bennington College in Vermont. BC's president is Elizabeth Coleman, David Coleman's mother.

This article is a must-read, a reminder that just because somebody has a high-visibility profile and a high-paying salary in a high-ranking job does not mean that person knows what the hell he is doing. Too bad that his one success has been to con some states into using the SAT as an exit exam. Here's hoping more revelations will help colleges, universities, and state legislatures change their minds about the usefulness of the SAT.