Jeannie Kaplan is an elected member of the Denver Board of Education. She has been critical of corporate-style reform and of the heavily-funded effort to persuade the public that it is successful. When she heard that Jonah Edelman of Stand for Children told an audience in Tulsa recently that Denver was a national model of success, she decided to review the score card for the district. (Stand for Children boasts of its civil rights credentials but supported a slate of Republican candidates for the state legislature in 2012, as part of its campaign for corporate reform).
Kaplan wrote for this blog:
So Much Reform. So Little Success
Denver, Colorado is a poster child for much of what reformers like to see: standardized testing, teacher accountability, charter schools, choice, co-location, and oh, did I mention testing? Denver Public Schools is trying or has tried almost all of them. Why, even Jonah Edelman, founder of one of the most well-funded, prominent reform organizations, Stand for Children, just today, January 10, 2013, pointed to Denver as a leader in reform because of its “portfolio” of school choice led by its charter schools. So, how is reform really working in Denver?
Let’s start by focusing on achievement, meaning test scores, since that is the focus of all things reform. (This post will have a lot of data since reform and data go hand in hand these days, especially data that can be spun). Denver Public Schools have been rated by the Colorado Department of Education as “Accredited with Priority Improvement Plan,” for the last three years. Out of five grades this is the second to the bottom. To be fair, DPS is inching toward the next category, “Accredited with Improvement plan.” The cut point is 52% of eligible points; Denver is at 51.7%. I am not sure how meaningful this data point is, since the GROWTH points count for 35 points out of 100 and ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT, meaning proficiency, counts for only 15.
Colorado now places enormous emphasis on “the growth model.” While no one would contest you need to have growth to get to proficiency, I believe this model masks what is really happening, and so the data I am citing is all about proficiency. To further emphasize how growth can mask proficiency, allow me to quote from one of Denver’s most ardent reformers, Alexander Ooms, who said on in a commentary on EdNewsColorado:
“Denver can celebrate academic growth for years to come without making much progress in the exit-level proficiency of students. And that is simply not the right direction. Growth is means, not end.” http://www.ednewscolorado.org/2012/05/23/38581-commentary-our-unhealthy-obsession-with-growth to read his entire commentary.
I could not have said it better. The data I cite are proficiency numbers, not growth numbers.
In 2005, when reform was in its infancy, Denver Public Schools hired its first non-educator superintendent: Michael Bennet, former businessman/lawyer, former mayoral chief of staff . Mr. Bennet’s childhood friend and fellow businessman, Tom Boasberg, was hired to replace him when Bennett became a Senator. Denver has been experimenting with reform since then. Oh, and BTW, Jonah Edelman grew up as Tom Boasberg’s neighbor in Washingon, D.C.
After 8 years, what academic changes has reform produced?
The following data is from 2005 through 2012, according to Colorado standardized tests. Here is the website for a deeper delve into the data
http://www.schoolview.org/performance.asp
ACHIEVEMENT:
8 yr increase–% incrse per year–% chnge from ’11-’12–% proficient
Reading – — 12———-1.5 ———– 3 –————— 52
Math — — 10———–1.75————–2———————-46
Writing —- 11——— 1.375————2———————41
Science —– 11 —— 1.375 ——— 4 ——————31
Lectura -10 /—–// -1.25 /// -3 /// 46
Spanish Reading
Escruita 4 ////—/ .5 ///// -3 ////// 47
Spanish Writing
We can’t leave achievement without looking at the State of the Union shout-out school, Bruce Randolph. Bruce Randolph Middle School in 3 years of state tracked data shows a gain of 2% in reading to 28%, stayed at 19% in math, increased by 3% in writing to 17%, and increased 7% in science to 17%. It is tied for last in proficiency – 52nd – for all of Denver’s middle schools.
Bruce Randolph High School has declined 10% to 33% in reading, declined 3% in math to 10%, declined 2% in writing to 14% increased 1% to 12% in science. Bruce Randolph is 24th out of 27 high schools in academic achievement.
ACHIEVEMENT GAP increases based on 7 years of CSAPs/TCAPs
Elementary School
Reading 4.17
Writing 5.78
Math 6.46
Middle School
Reading 3.23
Writing 4.71
Math 6.72
High School
Reading 3.01
Writing 5.82
Math 6.30
According to DPS data, the gap between FRL and paid-lunch students has widened by 9% since 2005. In 2005, percent proficient for FRL was 29%, paid was 58%. In 2012 the numbers were 41% for FRL, 79% for paid. The gap has grown to 38%.
ACT RESULTS: (A composite score of 21 is generally accepted as a college readiness benchmark)
From a DPS presentation of September 2012
2005 17
2012. 17.6
GRADUATION for 2011 – we are still waiting state numbers for 2012 but the number of students graduating increased from 2,642 in 2005 to 3,414 in 2012, for a total of 772 more graduates in 8 years…or an average of 96.5 more graduates each year.
Here is how Denver Public Schools compares with the state:
State 73.9%
Denver 56.1%
REMEDIATION (from Fall of 2010)
From the Fall of 2007, when this data was first available to the Fall of 2010 (the latest data available, remediation numbers have increased from 57.1% to 59.7%. The state of Colorado is at 31.8%.
This is the achievement for 8 years of reform.
Need I say more?

The reform movement started because public ed wasn’t working. Testing and charter schools have not worked either. If anything, the reform has made public ed worse in schools once considered excellent.. In an affluent area with highly rated public schools where many parents have to hire tutors for basics. Off to Kumon we go because our 2nd-5th graders haven’t learned basic math facts. So not only do we pay high property taxes because of our bigger home, we budget for tutors for several subjects. Give me my tax dollars in a voucher and let me homeschool.
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The public education system is working but American society is not. We have allowed a vast divide between haves and have nots and the schools can’t fix that.
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There’s no faster way to get your kids to lose interest in school/education than enrolling them in Kumon. I’d suggest you try to plow through worksheet after worksheet and see how long you can keep your eyes open, let alone your mind on the task. Once kids understand math concepts and how those concepts apply in the real world, the facts will follow. If you really must, a few minutes a night at most with flash cards might help.
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Madam or Sir,
“Your” tax money is not for your child. It is for the good of the entire community.
If tax money was for individual children, then families with 4 children would pay more than families with one child and families with no children of school age (or no children period) would not pay at all.
Perhaps you think we should not pay taxes for schools and just let parents do their own thing with what is truly their own money?
Or shall the old and childless continue to subsidize you and yours?
Just a thought.
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To add a thought to your thought: yes, we shouldn’t be surprised if we hear some of the charterites take “choice” to another level. You are spot on with one absurdity: if you don’t have children in public schools, why should you pay taxes at all when they will go for those good-for-nothing children of others? And to extend their possible line of “reasoning” a little more: why not let people who have children of school age choose to pay “taxes” directly to the charter school of their “choice”? Otherwise [so their sloganeering would go] you are forcing people against their will—Forcing!—to pay for lousy schools, lousy teachers, and lousy outcomes.
The best part? They will then claim that what is even better about all this is that if your local charter [or the one, say, two or twenty miles away] doesn’t get the results you want in five or ten years, why you can just yank your children out and put them in another charter and make up for all that lost time. Isn’t consumer choice powerful and effective?!?!
If you think this isn’t possible, please take a look at the recent comments from Michael J. Petrilli and Mike Doherty. Their takes on public education might not be pearls of wisdom but they are priceless in showing how far down the slippery slope of foolishness people will go who serve the charterites/privatizers.
🙂
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You should also take a look at the massive proficiency drop at DPS two premier charters. West Denver Prep(now known as STRIVE, Alex Ooms sits on the board) and the Denver School of Science and Technology(DSST). DPS acts as if things are improving so much but we had a huge cheating scandal with a principal who met Obama for his great sucess, massive school closures, and high levels of teacher disatifaction. Reform in DPS is not working. We have had years of it and have little to show even by their measures.
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I am going to be looking at charter performance in DPS soon. DSST and Strive will definitely be part of my analysis.
Jeannie
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I hope this posts to EdNews Colorado. We will miss you when you get term-limited.
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Reblogged this on Transparent Christina.
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Grat title – So much reform – so little success!! Love it.
mb mbutz24@aol.com
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