Sunday, August 28, 2022

KS: Strategic Plans Versus The Gag

Sigh. 

Gag laws seeking to restrict what schools can say about gender roles and LGBTQ+ humans and critical race theory (aka "anything at all about race stuff") are having the desired effect in many states. 

I don't imagine for a second that any of the supporters of these measures wanted to see a bunch of lawsuits and arrests. No, the point of vague and threatening rules like these is to scare teachers and chill discourse and especially spook conflict-averse school leaders into backing away from all such content, as well as continue reinforcing the choicer talking point that public schools cannot be trusted. 

And also to empower those board members who want to put the kibbosh on all that stuff.

So it was inevitable that a gag law would impact that most useless of school district practices, the strategic plan.

In my 39 years of teaching, I stepped up to become involved in every single strategic planning cycle, and I can say with absolute confidence that not once did the results of a strategic plan have any actual effect on how the school district operated and certainly not on how teachers did their jobs. Goals ranged from aspirational documents ("All students will become fluent in 21st century skills while showing skills required to be fully functional citizens while self-actualizing their way to accomplishment of personal success...") to catalogs of administrative fears ("The district will make sure to be a space safe enough to avoid any actual lawsuits") to implementation steps that accurately reflected the concerns of whichever group of parents showed up {"The school will continue to develop a strong middle school tiddly winks program"). And then they go to some shelf to gather dust (or, in modern times, into some software file that nobody will have the software to open within a decade).

The process is far more fascinating that the eventual product, because it generally involves an assortment of stakeholders saying out loud what they actually think about education and schools. 

And what the board of the Derby School District in Derby, Kansas is worried about is diversity. Specifically, noticing that it exists. Consequently, the right-leaning majority on the board axed the recent strategic plan proposal. Reactions from the board included 

“I don’t think focusing on diversity is going to (help) ... our kids, academically,” board president Michael Blankenship said. “Rather than trying to point out our differences … we should try to find things that make us unite. We should find similarities.”

He proposed replacing "diversity" with "unity." 

This board has previous experience with this stuff. They've dabbled with book-banning. They complained that a book publisher supposedly supported anti-racism efforts. they made a principal apologize for showing staff a four-minute video that talked about racial discrimination and white privilege

Board members also objected to the part of the proposal that called for an advisory committee to report on trends in staff and student diversity. The board vice-president said she objects to any audit of district discipline patterns or hiring practices as they relate to race. And there were also complaints about the plans mentions of mental health and social/emotional well-being.

Derby is a large suburb of Wichita, with a population of about 25K with a median household income of $76,684. In 2022, the racial composition of Derby was 87.9% white, 6% two or more races, and 1.3% Black. The school district takes in 37K people, with a median income of $66K. The school district's racial breakdown is 75% white, 4% Black, 4% Asian, and 10% Hispanic. The child poverty rate in the district is 8%. The district serves around 7,000 students, of whom roughly 3,000 qualify for free and reduced lunch, and 596 are ELL. The school board itself looks uniformly white.

Board President Blankenship added, “If we keep going down the road of focusing on everything that makes us different, how are we ever going to unite?” He did not actually go on to add, "Why can't I just assume that everyone is like me and leave it at that." 

Two board members did speak up in favor of the diversity aspects of the plan.

Board member Pam Doyle, who voted in favor of the plan, said diversity efforts are common in the business world and should be part of the district’s mission.

“Diversity is something to be celebrated,” Doyle said. “The more diverse (the) administration, teachers, and staff that we have, the more we’re going to learn from each other.”

Board member Tina Prunier, who voted in favor of the plan, said she didn’t understand why concepts like diversity and equity are controversial.

“These words have been around long before political gain,” she said. “I don’t understand why it’s becoming such a divisive thing.”

The solution to all this will look familiar to veterans of school district projects--Derby has hired a consulting firm to help out. 

In the meantime, pay attention to your local school board elections.






ICYMI: Here We Go Again Edition (8/28)

We've been to orientation and now, in a couple of days, the board of directors begin kindergarten and the CMO* starts her new year. Soon I'll have extra time on my hands, Yikes. In the meantime, here's some reading form the week.


One more entry in the continuing attempt to quantify and give a name to whatever it is that's going on in US education. This time it's Derek Thompson at The Atlantic trying to take a look at actual numbers and not finding much data to crunch...


From the Wait What File, a story from Utah about a charter school that has been started up by a family from a polygamous sect, and even the state of Utah decided that some of these shenanigans need to stop. 


Speaking of charter shenanigans, Chalkbeat Indiana has the story of a charter that ran into all sorts of failure, and so just gave itself a new name and got right back to it.


PEN America looks at Oklahoma, where the state board of education has set out to punish a couple of school districts for violating the state's gag order. 


Speaking of gag rules in OK, here's the tale of the teacher who got in trouble for sharing information about the Brooklyn Library plan to share books with any students in the US. 


Thomas Ultican offers a positive review of Lily Geismer's boo Left Behind: The Democrats Failed Attempt To Solve Inequalkity, which appears to be a heavily researched look at the Dems descent into neo-liberalism. So of course it addresses school choice, too. 


Jack Schneider and Jennifer Berkshire are at The Hill laying out the long, sad history of treating teachers like the problem in public ed--including the part of that history that belongs to the Democrats. 


This article is at Education Next, and it's written by Paulk Peterson and M. Danish Shakeel, and despite all the reformster weight backinmg it, it includes this sentence:

Contrary to what you may have heard, average student achievement has been increasing for half a century.

There's a lot of argle bargle here, but when reformsters start explaining that public school students haven't been descending into awfulness for the past several decades, it's worth a look.


Zurie Pope in the Ohio Capital Journal has the info on just who has been helping to push voucherization in Ohio. You may already have known that the Center for Christian Virtue's role in pushing the bill, but Pope is looking at the emails surrounding the creation and promotion of the bill, and CCV's fingerprints are everywhere. 


Steven Singer has a bone or two to pick with the MAP test.


If you've been looking for a Christian pastor to push back against some of the christianist nationalist baloney out there, let me intriduce you to a Baptist minister from my neighborhood, who took a look at that video from Flashpoint Live that's been circulting, and offers a point-by-point Christian rebuttal (and no, you don't have to watch the original video to follow this). 






Thursday, August 25, 2022

Another Look At Evolving Ed Reform

Mike Petrilli at the reformster-minded Thomas Fordham Institute has been taking a look at the current state of ed reform  (apparently many of us are in that mood right now?)  and it's worth taking a look at what the guy in every education reporter's rolodex thinks the state of ed reform is right now. And I promise what I think is an interesting observation at the end.

In "The Evolving Education Reform Agenda," Petrilli starts with his previous argument that while the "Washington Consensus" is dead, ed reform itself is not. This hints at one of the challenges of the ed reform brand these days, which is that nobody really knows what the term actually means any more. He tries to address that in this piece.

Petrilli argues that the agenda has shifted (a more positive phrase than "we keep moving the goal posts") from a focus on data and getting students to score proficient on state tests (circa NCLB) and then moved to trying to hold individual teachers responsible, a movement that Petrilli assess pretty frankly:


By the early 2010s, much of the conversation was about holding individual teachers accountable via test-informed teacher evaluations. Ham-handed implementation and poisonous politics led us to leave that misguided reform behind.

If only they had taken the policy with it, but its hammy hands are still felt by many teachers in many states. But one of ed reforms annoying features is that it never picks up after itself; it never puts as much energy into undoing its mistakes as it does into making them in the first place. Just imagine a world in which these thinky tank guys picked up the phone to call their contacts and say, "Look, that thing we convinced you to try? You've got to make people stop doing that." Imagine if Bill Gates put the same kind of money into cleaning up his policy messes as he puts into pushing them. 

Sigh. Anyway, Petrilli lists some other new-ish policy foci, like high quality instructional materials. He aptly notes that a new support for better school funding coincides with A) recognition by reformsters that funding does improve student outcomes and B) a desire to get charter and voucher schools more money (the old "choice gets it done more cheaply" talk is toast). 

Parental choice? There's still debate about using tax dollars to fund private and religious schools, particularly those that discriminate, says Petrilli, though I've missed the folks in the reformster camp arguing the anti-discrimination side. Unbundling is still a thing.

Testing and transparency? Reformsters still believe in the value of the Big Standardized Test, a point on which they remain resolutely and absolutely wrong, though they are now, he says, also interested in alternative assessments--but that's still hung up on the obsession with test scores. Writes Petrilli, "How would assessments be different? If schools do well on “alternative measures” but not on test-score growth, then what? Should we ever consider such schools “good”?" I can help, Mike--the answer is "Yes."

Petrilli mentions in passing that reform has left high schools "largely untouched" (I have some thoughts about why, starting with "high school is hard" passing through "teens are resistant to bullshit" and leading to "nobody has figured out how to make money at it"). He throws weight behind the career and technical education bandwagon (I renew my invite to anyone interested in the "new" CTE to come to my neck of the woods, where we've been doing it for over 60 years), and tosses in "mastery based learning" for some reason.

Finally, he arrives at an interesting observation-- "The reform agenda is mostly about policy, not practice." Though he goes on to note that policy has often been aimed at trying to find levers to move practice because, as he correctly notes, "the classroom is where consensus goes to die." In other words, policy can be passed all day, but teachers will still do what they do.

Various policy tools have been tried by reformsters to address this, most notably tying teacher evaluation to student test scores. But, he notes correctly, many things like personalized learning and the culture wars and school discipline resist consensus and demand trade-offs and so "strain the bipartisan reform coalition." Such as it is these days.

But Petrilli is wrestling with the tension between policy and practice. Policy makes for good politics, he says, but...

But the endpoint of these reforms is to improve what actually happens in the classroom, and thus boost educational outcomes—and, one would hope, life outcomes for students as well. Stopping at the schoolhouse door, then, is far from satisfactory.

I suggest looking at it this way. It's not a choice, but a continuum. On one end you have groups trying to tell other groups what to do, and that's policy. On the other end, you have individuals influencing other individuals, via professional training or administrative managing or collegial mentoring and collaboration, which is how practice is affected. What Petrilli is wishing for is a way for groups to make individuals behave in a certain way, which not only rubs a lot of people the wrong way, but is hard to pull off (I am thinking of Rick Hess's great insight that you can make people do something, but you can't make them do it well). 

This is further complicated by the fact that the individual-to-individual practice end of the scale only happens if the individual has some credibility, and reformsters have always been hampered by their amateur status in education practice (I can think of exactly one who can legitimately claim classroom experience--and no, Temp For America doesn't count), and that has been further hampered by their insistence that their amateur status actually made them wiser than the teachers who has actually spent their professional career in the classroom. 

Petrilli says that reformsters have to enter the world of practice:

So we reformers face a choice: Stay in the relative comfort zone of public policy—or engage in the messy world of classroom practice, too. If we want to make a real difference for kids, and our country, I vote for the latter. But we are going to have to be thoughtful to find ways of doing so while keeping our coalition together.

His concern here is that practice is fraught with so many controversial choices that it will strain the already-splintered reformster coalition. That's a reasonable emphasis for his piece, which is after all aimed at the reform audience. But beyond that, if this crew wants to "engage in the messy world of classroom practice," they cannot do it from comfy offices in well-funded thinky tanks. They cannot do it by relying on the expertise of people whose educational "background" is strictly in policy and government, and that includes people who just breezed through a TFA classroom as a resume builder. 

Hire some actual classroom teachers to consult, and then listen to them. Spend at least one day a week as a substitute teacher in a public school. Socialize with actual working teachers, including those who don't pay much attention to all the policy and politics. And consider the possibility that some of your best loved policy ideas actually become toxic when they filter down to the classroom level (looking at you, high stakes testing). 

There is no way to engage with classroom practice without engaging with actual classrooms, and it's really hard, if not nearly impossible, to do it at scale. I'd love to see outfits like Fordham engage with the actual practice implications of policy ideas, but I suspect that they can't do it without changing their operational strategy.



St. Louis City Museum

One of our cross country stops was in St.Louis, where we visited The City Museum. If you have children and live anywhere within reach, we recommend this Very Highly.

The museum is located in a 600,000 square foot former warehouse of the International Shoe Company, and "museum" is a little bit of a misnomer. There are some displays of historical stuff, but mostly it is a multi-story interactive art installation, a huge complex of immersive art. Your kids will just think it's the best playground in the world.

There is no map or guide to what is where, and it seems that something is always under construction, so visitors have no choice but to just start exploring. The Board of Directors leapt into the first tube the saw snaking around a pillar, and quickly disappeared into the ceiling. And so much of the museum is built from recycled stuff, particularly recycled industrial stuff.






There's a complex of caves, a whole bunch of hamster-tube type climbing runs, a three-story slide, a bunch of fish, tunnels that go from one floor to another. A few floors up there are a couple of installations for younger children--well, really, they're for parents of younger children who want to be able to see whatever the child is up to.

All of that is indoors. Outdoors is a whole other installation several stories high and loaded with more crawlspaces and I will tell you that it was when the boys were about to head into the very top I called them back down because my own acrophobia was fully kicked in. Apparently they did not inherit my irrational fear of heights.

But that points at what I find interesting and inspiring about the City Museum. I've logged many hours in many children's museums, and what most have in common is that you have to monitor your child and make sure they adapt to whatever rules the place requires. 

But the City Museum is centered on children, in the sense that it is built for them to use, not for them to be taught how to use it "properly." There's no "Honey, you can't put the plastic pork chop from the pretend store over in the fake fish pond" in this place. There's certainly a place for activities that require children to bend (we've spent many hours at various versions of water tables), but it's a whole other sensation to be in a space where kids can just be. The City Museum is not organized around what adults think kids should be made to do, or should want to do, but just around how kids are. All while being truly beautiful. 

One wonders, obviously, how a school could incorporate such a philosophy, to organize around students and what they want to, love to, do. 

At any rate, this is a fabulous spot. St. Louis is about a day away for us, but I think we may revisit it next summer just to stop here. You can follow City Museum on Twitter and of course visit the website. And at the end I'll throw in a drone trip through a tiny fraction of the whole thing. 







Lumping, Hyperbole, and Education Disruption

I get the occasional note pointing out that I use what appears to be wishy washy language with "some reformsters this" and "a few right wingers that." and while I generally try to avoid fuzziness, this particular fuzziness is deliberate and, I think, necessary.

It's incorrect to lump all education disruptors together, because there's a wide array of folks who want a piece of the education disruption action. But they don't all want the same thing, and not only is it unfair to lump them all together, it's just not accurate.

There are people who believe in choice, in the idea that there should be a broad selection of options for students. I'm actually one of these people; I just happen to believe that providing those options under one roof is the best, easiest, most efficient way to provide those choices. 

There are people who believe in the power of the free(ish) market. They believe in competition and lifting all boats and all that fun stuff. Most sincere free marketeers have no real beef with public education; mostly they would just like to see it as one of many options. I think their model is flawed and would ultimately do more damage than good.

There are people who are concerned about something going on in their own local schools, from bullying to some educational choices they disagree with. More than once I have been one of these people, too (I think pretty much every single teacher has been). These people, I want to note, are different from the people who have heard something on Fox News or a Twitter thread about some terribly awful thing happening in some school somewhere else and here are 143 signs that the same thing is about to happen in your local school (though 142 of the signs are unrelated to the actual awful thing).

There's a whole other broad spectrum of people who don't know what they're talking about, but who are sure they know just what education needs, and they range in levels of effectiveness in bollixing things up from the powerful (Bill Gates and Common Core) to the merely annoying (that lady who comes to every board meeting to demand that cursive, Latin, and sentence diagramming be required in grades K-12). 

There are privatizers who, by and large, want to skim off the profitable bits 

There are grifters. They don't have any particular ideological beliefs; they just smell a chance to make some money. T. C. Weber has convincing argued on his blog for ages that Tennessee's education leaders are not interested in any particular aspect of education reform as they are in just running whatever grift looks most promising this week.

So far we're talking about people pursuing policies that have a variety of negative consequences, from wasting resources on ideas that simply won't work, to making the work of teaching and operating a school that much harder, to removing accountability and democratic processes from school, to crippling a public school's ability to function. 

It's hyperbole to say these folks are "destroying" public education; they are making it suck more and weakening it in ways that make it easier to destroy. The hyperbole comes from many quarters, from public ed teachers who are very alarmed to public ed supporters who want to raise an alarm (these days, if you aren't yelling about a Major Crisis, how do you even get anyone's attention) and reformsters who have at time used the language of destruction, assuming, as many do, that you can't really destroy public education because it's just indestructible.

And while many of these folks have not intended to destroy public education as we know it, they have provided cover for lots of folks who do. 

You can find them at places like FlashPoint 2022, swearing their fealty to God and the Constitution and their intention to take back the United States. You'll hear these folks talk about reconquering the Seven Mountains-- business, government, family, religion, media, education, and entertainment. They've been talking about this for a long time, courtesy of such shadowy groups as the Center for National Policy. Read Wolf at the Schoolhouse Door

These are the folks who envision a completely different education world. Education as a private good that you buy yourself with the aid of a government voucher (and if you can't afford more than that, well, your lack of wealth is your own fault and other people shouldn't have to pay to make up for it). Education used to sort people out into their proper level in life. Education under the control of religion. 

Disruptors come in a variety of flavors, from those who think they're in the early stages of a game of Jenga and they can yank out planks here and there without really compromising the basic structure, to those who just want to take a sledgehammer to the whole tower. The education disruption field includes the same range, and it's not useful to lump them all together.

It's a tricky balance (which should probably be the official motto of this blog). On the one hand, it's useful to know which kind of disruption you are--or are not--facing. On the other hand, many disruptions don't intend to trash education entirely, but they provide cover and plough the field for those who do. And many of these disruptors and privatizers have been trying to change the whole purpose and premise of public education in this country without any sort of public conversation about that change, and it's hard to predict how significantly altering the foundation of public education will affect the structures resting on that foundation. Easy answers are almost always wrong (maybe that should be the official motto of this blog). 


Tuesday, August 23, 2022

School Vouchers and Resource Hoarding

I was revisiting a piece from just a couple of months ago in which I subjected myself to the Daily Wire's Betsy DeVos interview, and I noticed again the exchange that starts with this extraordinary quote from Michael Knowles, the interviewer.

This sounds like when Western civilization made sense, when our civilization was growing and thriving--this is how education was done. It wasn't big institutionalized one-size-fits-all public schools. Alexander the Great (going all the way back) Alexander the Great didn't go to a public school...he was tutored by Aristotle.

This was available to people who had privilege and means, he muses. Why can't we give that to everyone?

DeVos replies that we can, with vouchers. 

I talk a lot about how a voucherized education world would leave parents (and the general taxpaying public) unprotected in an unregulated market loaded with grifters and amateurs, but we also need to be aware of the other part of this dynamic.

DeVos et al like to talk about vouchers as if they create a level playing field for all parents and students, but of course they don't. DeVos and the other Betters of the world will take their kid's backpack full of cash and toss it onto the back of a dump truck full of more cash. There is no voucher in the world big enough to keep the DeVos family from hoarding all the Aristotles for themselves. 

Well, goes the DeVos theory, the poors can just pool their voucher money and try to hire their own Aristotle, or maybe set up some kind of microschool where some kids meet in someone's living room and all log on to Aristotle.com together (except it will be something else because that website is taken by an "industry leading political data, consulting and software" corporation. 

This whole "band together and hire some teachers" idea is not bad-- the group could band together, and then, I don't know, elect representatives who sat on a board to collect the tax money and make decisions about the "school" that they own together. Except that they wouldn't have the power to levy taxes or legally do all sorts of other stuff. Yes, DeVos is proposing a neutered school board--one that doesn't have the power to make a nuisance of itself or counter-balance the power and privilege of the Betters.

And those various solutions, from microschools to software to classes from maybe-qualified teachers in makeshift facilities are all solutions that the Betters would never accept for their own children.

See, there are lots of ways to view the call of DeVos et al for "education freedom," but one way is definitely to view it as a way for the Betters to disempower the competition, so that it's easier for them to grab all the best educational resources. Especially to be able to do so without the galling requirement to finance via taxes their own competition for those resources. 

Vouchers would enable resource hoarding. Does the current public system enable it in some places. It surely does, but vouchers do not offer anything like a solution. 


Sunday, August 21, 2022

How To Harass Female High School Athletes

In the interest of Fairness, many states have pursued the idea of anti-trans athlete legislation, largely centered around the notion of athletes who were born male transitioning to female and thereby gaining an unfair advantage over those athletes born female. 

I'm not going to wade into the debate about this issue, other than to note that I've known plenty of highly driven teen athletes and their highly driven parents and I still doubt that any of them would have ever decided that a gender transition would be a great way to get an edge in sports competition.


Instead, I want to look at the real world consequences of these kinds of laws.

Here's a story from Utah about one of the results of the state's girls track and field competition:

After one competitor “outclassed” the rest of the field in a girls’ state-level competition last year, the parents of the competitors who placed second and third lodged a complaint with the Utah High School Activities Association calling into question the winner’s gender.

Congratulations unnamed female athlete! For your dominance in your sport, you win the chance for the state and your school district to dig through your records to prove that you have always been a girl. 

The girls showed excellence in her sport, so disappointed competitors can go ahead and make the accusation and she then has the burden of proof to show that she is and has always been a female. 

Might have been worse if she were in Ohio, where the House advanced the Ohio version of a Save Women's Sports Act that allowed losers to burden winners not just with the burden to prove their adequate femaleness, but to do it by way of testosterone levels, dna testing or "participant’s internal and external reproductive anatomy." Congratulations on your win, Bethany. Now, the state needs you to submit to a little physical exam.


The welfare of those young people needs to be absolutely most important to this issue, whether that young person is transgender or not.

He vetoed the bill.

Other states have shown less restraint. Oklahoma, for instance, did get a Save Women's Sports Act passed into law. That one gives any female athlete who thinks she's been boxed out or beaten and deprived of benefits to sue the school, and she's got up to two years to sue. Oklahoma's law doesn't offer any guidance about how the school is supposed to defend itself in court and what demands for "proof" they can place on their athletes. 

South Carolina has one of these laws, too., basically identical to Oklahoma's. And even the feds were trying to get in on the act at one point. 

These laws are a perfect example of how focus on ideology ends up creating a huge mess for real human beings. Every one of these laws becomes a tool by which successful female athletes can be harassed, a whole new way to take revenge on Suzi because she beat your beloved child on the field. And the more excellent and dominant the female athlete is, the more she makes herself a target for this sort of thing. Not a great way to "save" women's sports.