Nevada wants to create an Achievement School District, where low-scoring public schools can be turned into charter schools and managed by private operators. Nevada wants to copy the failed experiment in Tennessee, whose ASD has not met any of its goals other than to privatize public schools.

 

The person picked to run the Nevada ASD is Jana Wilcox Lavin. A newspaper in Nevada, the Desert Beacon, wrote about her appointment and asked about her credentials to run a school district made up of struggling schools. It checked her background and found that she has a master’s degree in marketing. But she did work for a time at a charter school in Memphis. The Desert Beacon realized that what is really happening is that the state is investing in a “privatization scam.”

 

The Department of Education would like to find private sector “operators” to take over the management of “struggling” schools. Applicants are asked to contact Jana Wilcox Lavin, whose background is in marketing. Leaving a person to ask what qualifications she might have as the “superintendent” of a school district with a BA from Tulane and an MA in Integrated Marketing Communication from Emerson College. Not that those aren’t fine institutions, but exactly how this prepares a graduate and board member of a college prep boarding school in Connecticut (Hotchkiss) to run a charter system isn’t all that clear. As a prep school product I’m not knocking the prep part, but there’s no Public in Hotchkiss, Tulane, or Emerson. As close as Wilcox-Lavin has come to the Public part of the equation may be a stint as the executive director for a charter school operator in Memphis, TN.

 

For some reason, the shocking number of charter schools that are struggling will not be added to the Achievement School District. Some, like the Andre Agassi Charter school, may be turned over to another charter operator. But as of now, Nevada has no plans to address the fact that the charter sector is lower-performing than the state’s public schools.

 

Nevada calls its successful schools “Shining Stars.” Its lowest performing schools are called “Rising Stars.”

 

Despite the failure of charter schools in the state, officials still believe that the answer to low-scoring schools is to turn them over to charter operators. Isn’t the definition of insanity doing the same thing over and over again and expecting to get different results?