More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Kenzo Shibata

GET UPDATES FROM Kenzo Shibata
 

The Board of Education's Circus Act Doesn't Help Kids

Posted: 02/15/2012 2:46 pm

I blogged about the December 14th takeover of the Chicago Board of Education meeting by parents and educators where I described the feeling of being dismissed by powerful people while presenting cold, hard facts. This was the first Board meeting after Chicago Public Schools (CPS) announced its desire to "turnaround" ten schools next school year. Turnaround is a process where an entire staff is fired and in most cases an outside vendor is contracted to take over management of the school. Most of those contracts are proposed to go to the Academy for Urban Leadership (AUSL).

Video of the December 14th Board of Education Takeover

Immediately following the meeting, there was blowback from the mainstream media. The Chicago Sun-Times wrote an editorial calling the act of civil disobedience a "circus act." The piece read like the grown-ups in the room scolding their petulant children.

The Sun-Times:

Despite the union's contention that turnarounds don't work, a report due out next month by the University of Chicago Consortium on Chicago School Research on the early years of turnarounds shows elementary turnarounds managed by the Academy for Urban School Leadership, a private non-profit, made "significantly greater" gains in reading and math than did comparable schools.

The Sun-Times printed this long before the actual study was released. It is unclear if the early leak of the study's findings happened before or after the federal government pulled its name from the study.

"Parts of the report were written in a way that could suggest the study was intended to answer more complex questions than was judged to be possible with the available data," said Rebecca Maynard, the commissioner [of U.S. Department of Education's Institute of Education Sciences].

So did this study actually point to AUSL making "significantly greater" gains?

It's hard to tell because the study itself did not target AUSL turnaround schools, instead it culled data from multiple reform efforts. In Chicago, these efforts ranged from keeping the staff and replacing the principal to a complete closure and restart as a new school -- some as select enrollment schools or charters where almost the entire student population changed.

From WBEZ:

When schools close and are replaced with charter schools, they tend to attract better-performing and more economically advantaged students from further away. Charter schools also re-enroll fewer of a school's original students. For instance, when Howland Elementary in North Lawndale became Catalyst-Howland Charter School, just 16 percent of students eligible to re-enroll did.

Even the study's authors maintained that this study did not point out to significant gains for specific programs like AUSL turnarounds:

The study did not reach any conclusions about which reform measures worked best, in part, [CCSR Researcher Elaine] Allensworth said, because "there aren't enough schools in each of these reform models to make sweeping generalizations that one model worked better than another."

Even though the study conflates several different reform initiatives, it still only shows a "small effect" according to Dan McCaffrey, a statistician at the Rand Corporation.

I assumed that after the release of the report, the Chicago Sun-Times would have changed course and maybe shown some humility for labeling AUSL critics as being part of a "circus."

However, the Sun-Times in its February 9th editorial skated around all of the limitations of the study and forged ahead with the Board of Education's party line:

Dramatic reforms at failing schools are starting to pay off, a new U. of C. report found...


The newly devised reforms include "school turnarounds," in which students remain but most staff are replaced over the summer. Turnarounds account for about half of the 22 schools studied. This is the highly controversial strategy embraced by Mayor Rahm Emanuel and, since 2006, by CPS. Turnarounds are mostly done by the Academy for Urban School Leadership, a private nonprofit. CPS also does a smaller number of turnarounds itself.

You see what they did there?

This makes me think about cognitive scientist George Lakoff's concept of framing outlined in the 2004 book Don't Think of an Elephant! where he made the point, "[I]f a strongly held frame doesn't fit the facts, the facts will be ignored and the frame will be kept."

The Sun-Times framed the debate by implying AUSL is synonymous with reform. The CCSR releases a study that states "reforms" show improvement. CPS asserts, "The alternative is the status quo." Therefore, the only choice is to go with AUSL, right?

This looks like all three rings of a circus and just in time for the February 22nd Board of Education meeting where the Board will vote on turnarounds and other "school action" proposals like phase-outs and school closings.

Perhaps the Board will continue with their circus theme and rent more protesters to pretend that the public supports AUSL turnarounds.

I fail to see how this process helps kids.


CTU's Jackson Potter and Chicago Board of Education's Noemi Donoso debate turnarounds and the CCSR study.

 

Follow Kenzo Shibata on Twitter: www.twitter.com/kenzoshibata

 
 
  • Comments
  • 10
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
12:04 PM on 02/17/2012
This is from someone who spent grade school in the 1990s in the CPS system, in a non under served community in fact.

I was SO far behind other students (predominantly private grade school students) upon entering high school, it literally took until my 3rd year of college to catch up in mathematics.

While I did have some great teachers in the CPS (and City College system for a short stay), unfortunately a number of the teachers were apathetic at best.

There is little to no consequences for under performing teachers, and sadly the union resists any amendment or revision to the system. While the blame doesn't solely fall upon the union's shoulders, the teachers and the union seem to refuse any culpability in the decrepit nature of the CPS education system.

The losers in this equation are the students, particularly those in under served and poverty stricken communities, who need every opportunity (paid for by tax payers) to transcend the situation.

Yes parents need to step up, but so does the UNION, to STOP protecting bad teachers. Ultimately the city will break the union if they continue to unreasonable protect the degenerate contingent of lazy apathetic monsters that make up part of the union's constituency.

Also if my grammar is weak, you can blame my fundamentals.
09:00 AM on 02/21/2012
Well, you HAVE to blame some one other than yourself.
Not MY fault. It's the new "American way."
12:38 AM on 02/16/2012
Silly facts getting in the way of corporate style education reform. Did the Sun Times quote the U of C Consortium Report which found little to no positive effect of the last 30 years of reforms such as mayoral control, an unelected school board, turnarounds and turning public schools over to charters? In 30 years there was a small positive blip on 4th grade test scores and some increase in HS grad rates, but other than that the main effect was a significant increase in the achievement gaps between rich and poor, black and white and Latino and white. Why are these same reforms sweeping the nation? Why are these harmful reforms becoming the new status quo?
11:39 AM on 02/16/2012
They really aren't sweeping the nation. Most states are on to Arnie's con job.
But Illinois ain't "most states" (see today's Tribune article declaring Chicago and Illinois the most corrupt in the nation).

Just follow the money if you want the answer.
12:02 PM on 02/16/2012
They aren't sweeping the nation. Most states are onto Arnie's con job.

Just follow the money and understand Chicago and Illinois corruption and you will see that these "Charter Schools" and turn-a-rounds go to a small number of heavily connected Rahm (and Daley) supporters like Juan Rangel.
05:08 PM on 02/15/2012
We've been hearing how charters were "starting to show promise" since charters were created. For twenty years, we've been told that the success will be just around the corner. A little longer, and charters will deliver.

Meanwhile, public schools do a better job, but they're not as profitable for corporations, and they're often unionized, so expect to keep hearing that charters will start to really deliver on their promises any year now for the next couple decades.
12:06 PM on 02/16/2012
The appeal of charter school is not the quality of the education. They are intended to allow parts of heavily minority communities to opt out of neighborhood schools because the people want to avoid having their children go to school with problem kids from their own neighborhood.

It's called "divide and conquer" with the profit going to Juan Rangel, at the taxpayer expense.
09:05 PM on 02/16/2012
Depends. Certainly they're marketed as if they're better educationally, in contrast to reality. There are probably some cases in which the charters are relatively well-run, and some informed parents put their kids there for the reasons you cite. Odds are, the kids would still be better off back in the publics, where they might have to pass the bad kids in the hallway but the quality of education is actually better.
09:09 AM on 02/21/2012
That is spot on accurate, vfurman.
The main objective of these parents is to get their kids away frrom the local gangsters.