Arizona spends less on schools than most states. The governor, Doug Ducey, is determined not to raise taxes. The public is willing to spend more to improve education but the governor wants to hold the line.
Robert Robb, an editorial columnist for the Arizona Republic has an idea: cut the schools loose from school boards and judge them by standardized tests. And hold everyone accountable for results.
Arizona currently spends, from all sources for all purposes, $9,500 per K-12 student. That’s low compared with other U.S. states. But it is in the range spent by countries in Western Europe.
For example, Finland spends roughly the same per pupil as does Arizona, and it has one of the highest performing school systems in the world, based on international test scores.
However, to have high performance with existing dollars would require blowing up the existing delivery system and substituting a new one built from scratch.
What would such a system look like?
It would be entirely financed and controlled at the state level. Funding for all purposes, operational and capital, would be folded into a single, lump-sum, per pupil grant. The grant would go to whatever public school the student attended.
The principal at that school would have control of the elements of educational success: money, personnel and curriculum. Local school boards and central school district business offices would be neutered or abolished.
That would put in place the infrastructure of educational success. But actual success would be ensured by a rigorous regimen of accountability through testing. Failing to achieve the educational benchmarks set by the state would have consequences for all — administrators, teachers and students.
Arizona has never had such an accountability- through-testing regimen.And the state Board of Education is fleeing in the opposite direction, bent on adopting a new school grading system even more meaningless and useless than the previous one.
This is a surprising proposal because it echoes the failed test-and-punish accountability regime of No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top. Both efforts said that test scores should be used to measure success and to hold everyone accountable. Fifteen years later, what is there to show for these multi-billion dollar initiatives? They aimed to produce higher test scores, and by their own goals and measures, they failed.
Mr. Robb must have a lot of faith in standardized testing if he thinks, like Margaret Spellings, Sandy Kress, and Arne Duncan, that they are the best way to identify success.
Since he brought up Finland, he should look into that nation more closely. Start by reading Pasi Sahlberg’s wonderful book, Finnish Lessons, or Finnish Lessons 2.0. What he would learn is that students in Finland don’t begin formal academic instruction until they are 7. They never take a standardized test until the end of high school. Their teachers are carefully selected, well prepared in a five-year program (that is hard to get accepted into), and given substantial autonomy over how and what to teach. Children have recess after every class, rain or snow or shine. The arts and physical education are very important. Creativity and play matter.
Please, Mr. Robb, learn more about Finland, and compare what you see in Arizona to what the Finns do.

Compares money spent per pupil to Finland’s great results and proposes doing the opposite of what they do. Utter idiocy, and totally disingenuous smoke and mirrors.
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maybe our new educational slogan will be: We’re No Finland
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This idiot author can’t seem to understand that money that goes to make up for the obscene amounts of poverty here, such as fee waivers, counseling services, etc., that Finland doesn’t have to deal with. IF we had the low levels of poverty that Finland has, THEN we could discuss spending less per pupil. But not now.
BTW, Utah is spending about $6500 per pupil this year. So we’re spending LESS than Western Europe, but WITH the problems the U.S. public schools have to face. How’s that going for Utah? Terrible teacher retention rates (fully half of teachers in Utah leave before their reach their fifth year), class sizes that are appalling, even in the youngest grades, and sliding scores.
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First thing we should all do is get rid of football. It’s a good place to start. Just saying.
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The campaign to kill school boards is buried under double-speak about autonomous schools and districts, new governance models, and innovation in education (viewed as an imperative). Money follows the student is central to this, whether by voucher, scholarship, or tax credit.
Autonomous schools are being pushed as virtuous because they can be “innovative.” Innovative means freedom to hire and fire, choose curriculum, set standards, choose professional development, select students, control budgets and the rest. It can also mean freedom to seek waivers from all state regulations, ALEC has updated model legislation with this title: Public Charter School Operations and Autonomy Model Legislation (approved by the ALEC Board of Directors on September 4, 2015).
Bellwether Education Partners is pushing a “US education Innovation Index” in which district or metro areas are judged ripe for “innovation” if most schools have below average scores and have failed to close achievement gaps for high poverty schools…based on these measures….
(a) the five-year student achievement trend,
(b) past year achievement compared to the state average,
(c) for students who qualify for FRL (the proxy for poverty, free or reduced price lunch) the five-year trend in closing the achievement gap and
(d) the past year comparison of the achievement gap between students who do and do not qualify for FRL.
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Laura,
One bright note in Bellwether’s “education innovation” is that they can start by shutting down the public schools in DC for having the largest achievement gaps in the nation; that would show how well the reformers did with total control for a decade.
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The Index applauds New Orleans as innovative. One measure:
“Dynamism”
“The school system in New Orleans is nothing if not dynamic. Low-performing schools are routinely closed and new schools open on an annual basis. The vast majority of this turnover happens in the charter sector. At the end of the 2014–15 school year, three of the city’s six F–rated charter schools were closed; four new charter schools opened at the beginning of the 2015–16 school year.127 The set of traditional district schools, run by the OPSB, has remained steadily high performing. None of the OPSB’s direct-run schools earned an F on the state report card, and subsequently, none was closed. Further, just a single private school in New Orleans closed at the end of the 2014–15 school year; no new private schools opened in the city at the beginning of the 2015–16 school year.
New Orleans is faulted for not attracting venture capital into education.
I guess DC schools would fail the test of dynamism (I call it churn) unless there is a continuing process of closing the lowest of low performing schools and opening new ones.
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“This is a surprising proposal because it echoes the failed test-and-punish accountability regime of No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top.”
Nah, It doesn’t “echo” those malpractices, it surpasses those malpractices in incoherent blatherings on false and invalid suggested methods.
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British Columbia just ranked 1st in reading, 2nd in science and 6th in math GLOBALLY.
https://news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2016EDUC0265-002592
And did so spending $9,129 CAD (that’s $6,755 in US dollars) per student.
Click to access 16_operatingcosts.pdf
BC’s teachers union just won a 14 year battle to hire hundreds of more teachers to decrease class sizes and increase student services with the Canadian Supreme Court, so its educational system will likely improve even more.
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Forgot link: http://vancouversun.com/news/local-news/b-c-teachers-win-landmark-supreme-court-of-canada-victory
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Unlike Finland, British Columbia has a diverse population with poverty issues as well. It is also an innovator in personalized learning and hands on learning and is being used as a model for other systems around the world by John Abbott, founder of the 21st Century Learning Initiative on his world tours as a consultant.
Click to access 21st_Century_Obsession.pdf
They have recently introduced a new graduation standard that combines core competencies the students should have within each of their universal objectives.
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Because of its harmful effect, British Columbia is also scaling back on its standardized testing in favor for more classroom assessments.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/british-columbia/fewer-provincial-exams-more-in-class-assessment-in-bc-to-come-next-year/article30178911/
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