In this country, we have all sorts of mistaken ideas about education. One is the notion that American public education is a disaster, the idea repeated often by Bill Gates, Arne Duncan, Michele Rhee, Jeb Bush, and others who want to privatize public education. They refuse to realize that schools reflect their community and their society. Typically, schools in affluent communities are highly regarded and well-resourced. Typically, schools in segregated and impoverished communities have low test scores. Another idea without basis is that someone will come up with a solution to the problems of the schools in impoverished communities that can be quickly scaled up everywhere and these schools will end poverty. There are many “if-thens” embedded in that last sentence. My view is that school improvement goes hand in hand with improvement of people’s lives. That is not to argue against school improvement–every school can improve–but to say that we are too quick to grab onto innovations and promote them without giving them a chance to mature and prove themselves.
The latest example is the P-Tech High in Brooklyn, New York. The school opened a few years ago; it has not yet had its first graduating class. Yet President Obama and Secretary Duncan visited the school, and the president singled it out in his State of the Union Address. It has already been replicated in sixty other schools across the nation, without waiting for the model to be fine-tuned. The school promised that all of its students would graduate with a high school diploma and an associate’s degree in six years.
Now the school is finding out how tough it is to keep its promises.
NPR reports:
P-TECH completely overhauled the school-to-career pipeline, creating a six-year program that blended the traditional four years of high school with two free years of community college, plus IBM internships and mentorships. And it offered all this to some of the students most underserved by the current system: Most are from low-income families, African-American or Hispanic, and a majority are boys.
The school accepts students by lottery, not entrance exam. That means, unlike other early college programs, there are no academic requirements to get in. The high school’s website states boldly: “With a unique 9-14 model, the goal for our diverse, unscreened student population is 100% completion of an associate degree within six years.”
Riding the waves of good press, P-TECH was quickly replicated all over the country.
But five years in, a year before the first full graduating class of the original school is expected, the model is showing signs of growing pains. Many of its students failed college courses early on, and internal emails obtained by NPR reveal disagreements across the many parties to this partnership over how best to serve those students….
Of the original 97 students who started at P-TECH in Brooklyn in the fall of 2011, 11 have already earned associate degrees. At least four took jobs at IBM; the other seven are continuing at four-year colleges.
By June 2016, IBM says, about 1 in 4 of the original P-TECH students should have an associate degree. That, after five years, already beats the national graduation rates for poor community college students of color.
But the goal, on P-TECH’s own website, isn’t 25 percent. It’s 100 percent in six years.
And the school is being replicated quickly, in the bright glare of publicity, before the kinks have been worked out and the model has been proven sustainable.
I hope that P-TECH is able to survive and prosper. It sounds like a good model. But I also wish that politicians would stop promoting miracle cures and pronouncing schools to be successful when they have barely developed their strategies. This was a favorite tactic of Arne Duncan and even President Obama. A few years ago, I wrote an article about “miracle schools,” and what I have learned over time is that there are no miracle schools. Every time a politician points to a miracle school, take another look. Good schools are the result of dedication and hard work by educators and students, and you can’t wave a wand to produce them overnight.

You are correct about positive change taking time. I worked in a school that “turned itself around.” It was no miracle! Change occurred because the administration and teachers worked together to do what we saw as best for students within the confines of state laws. Our change took place over a decade! The change was evolutionary, not revolutionary.
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IMO it is too frequently something I’ve noticed…things being pronounced successful and yet weeks, months, and years later, we are finding out ‘IT’ isn’t actually successful. I had the Essure procedure done years ago and I was fortunate that everything went well. There are many women coming out now sharing their awful experiences.
We do have to have ‘guinea pigs’ when creating new things, even school programs. There is no other way to better ourselves without doing so. I agree with you very much…don’t pronounce things successful until time is allowed to show evidence of its success.
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TECH HIGH High School (Charter) in Atlanta Public Schools was also “blessed” by Arne Duncan when he first sprinkled RTTT $M across America.
Arne zoomed into GA, ran around with the Gov, smiled and schmoozed all over GA, and visited charters, including TECH HIGH HS. This poor delapidated building, strung together with old extension cords and little to no technology, was suddenly held up as a miracle school. Those of us who knew this school were flummoxed. They had few students, no SpEd needed to apply, no technology, and no tech infrastructure.
Well, guess what!? After this whirlwind Arne hurricane, the school finished out the school year and CLOSED! With little or no notice to students and parents.
Here2Day-Gone2Morrow-Charter!
On to another miracle…
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“ReforMiracles”
Walk on water
Birth to virgin
Reformy fodder
That’s for certain
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I don’t understand the hype. Why over-sell it? If it has value just allow that to develop and then other places will follow.
I really think it’s that they don’t have any faith in the people who live in these places. They seem to feel everything has to be hyped to death or no one will ever adopt anything willingly. I think the President himself believes this- he said people had to be dragged “kicking and screaming” to ed reform. What is that? Where does this idea come from people have to manipulated and “led” and sold stuff every minute of every day?
Vocational education has been around a long time and so have programs where kids attend community college in high school. Why not just tell people this is a twist on that concept instead of pretending it’s “transformational”?
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This is a very expensive program with a false promise of hope.
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After the collective madness and slaughter of WWI, the author Ford Madox Ford wrote a novel (part of a trilogy) entitled “No More Parades,” since parades were used to maintain public support for the mass human sacrifice.
Perhaps, when the current iteration of so-called education reform has had a stake driven through its heart, and the parasites and predators who comprise it have (temporarily, because these types never completely disappear) gone back under their rocks, someone will write a book about this shameful era entitled “No More Miracles.”
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The dehumanization of people is promulgated in the language of the oligarchs.
In a civilized society, the word, “pipeline” is a descriptor, reserved for commodities, not people.
“Human capital pipelines” and, “school to career pipelines” are grave and sad reminders of callous indifference to humanity.
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“Apologetic economists present the matter in a wrong light, as is best seen if we keep our eyes fixed exclusively, without taking for the time being any notice of what follows, on the act of circulation . . . , the conversion of money into labour-power on the part of the capitalist buyer, [and] the conversion of the commodity labour-power into money on the part of the seller, the labourer. They say: Here the same money realises two capitals; the buyer — the capitalist — converts his money-capital into living labour-power, which he incorporates in his productive capital; on the other hand the seller, the labourer, converts his commodity, labour-power, into money, which he spends as revenue, and this enables him to keep on reselling his labour-power and thereby to maintain it. His labour-power, then, represents his capital in commodity-form, which yields him a continuous revenue. Labour-power is indeed his property (ever self-renewing, reproductive), not his capital. It is the only commodity which he can and must sell continually in order to live, and which acts as capital (variable) only in the hands of the buyer, the capitalist. The fact that a man is continually compelled to sell his labour-power, i.e., himself, to another man proves, according to those economists, that he is a capitalist, because he constantly has ‘commodities’ (himself) for sale. In that sense a slave is also a capitalist, although he is sold by another once and for all as a commodity; for it is in the nature of this commodity, a labouring slave, that its buyer does not only make it work anew every day, but also provides it with the means of subsistence that enable it to work ever anew.”
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They’re completely enamored with silly business buzzwords.
I don’t know why they insist on speaking like this. We already have a private sector. Is it really necessary for everyone who works in the public sector to pretend they work in the private sector, and why don’t they have any respect for what they do anyway? If they want to run a private sector business why don’t they go do that? Is someone forcing them to work in government?
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Agree completely.
No employee, like John King, should receive a public paycheck, while denigrating and working to undermine the public sector.
Private business would fire an employee for sabotaging the firm’s viability.
If Pres. Obama and his plutocratic friends want privatization, the people they hire, to accomplish the task, should not be federal employees. It constitutes worker conflict of interest.
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On a desert island, the “capital” provided by labor, reflected in their skills, will more likely save us than the skill-absent, soft-handed men in pin stripe suits, talking of derivatives.
With a negative interest rate and nothing but, money stolen from public education to fill the hedge funds’ coffers, we may see a reversal, where capital begs labor to be productive. The alternative, labor storms the oligarch’s gates and takes what is rightfully theirs.
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It sounds a bit similar to Baltimore’s Digital Harbor High School, which was billed as a lottery-based miracle school with every tech bell and whistle. Turns out, when you can’t cherry pick students, you can’t “guarantee” success.
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I have said since NCLB that it shouldn’t be No Child Left Behind, it should be No Citizen Left Behind and that AYP should apply to the lawmakers, not the teachers. I agree that to improve the schools, you have to improve the community. If the community is floundering, so will the schools. NOT the fault of the educators! Please let’s make the public and the press aware of this. I am so tired of educators being the scapegoats of their failed policies.
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For the kids who are there, I hope it straightens out. It was never a good model. It was IBM meddling in education to produce workers to answer their help line. It is almost all boys, and nearly all of those boys are black.
Voc ed had never lived up to its promises.
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“The Dinosaur Model”
IBM model
Worked out great
Now their twaddle
Seals our fate
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This just seems like a special version of an Early College High School, but worse. This school channels everyone into two options for the college degree, and both of those options are technical degrees. I’m assuming they are Associate in Applied Science (AAS) degrees. AAS degrees are fine if one wants to work in that specific field, but sometimes they pose a variety of problems when it comes to transferring to a 4-year college.
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