John Thompson, historian and teacher, submitted this article:
The Oklahoma City Public Schools is being clobbered by state budget cuts that could approach $50 million over two years. Anyone who doubts that money matters should take note of the collapse in morale as exhausted educators flee even faster from the school system and, often, the profession.
I remain a loyal supporter of President Obama, but we can’t forget that when his administration gave the OKCPS around $50 million, most of it had punitive strings attached. The regulations that accompanied Obama’s School Improvement Grants (SIG) made it virtually inevitable that its $5 million per school grants, and the energies of educators, would mostly be wasted. The predictable result was an increase in teacher turnover, educators who are even more inexperienced and beaten down, and legislators who are even less likely to fund urban schools.
I understand why President Obama felt obligated to promote teacher-bashing policies as a part of a “carrot and stick” approach to school improvement. It hurts to ask but, gosh, what if we could have spent the additional $50 million in ways that made sense?
Oklahoma City’s SIG efforts failed, but they did so across the nation. Even the corporate reform true believer Matt Barnum acknowledges, “Past research on federal turnaround programs have shown positive effects in California and Massachusetts, mixed or no effects in North Carolina, Tennessee and Michigan, and negative results in Texas.” But, he grasps at straws citing the 3rd year of California SIG, which seems to be an exception because its “gains in student learning likely stemmed from improvements in the professional opportunities for teachers.” Barnum then claims, illogically, that a study of the Ohio SIG gives evidence that the federal program “produced notable gains.”
https://www.brookings.edu/research/continued-support-for-improving-the-lowest-performing-schools/
Actually, the authors, Deven Carlson, Stéphane Lavertu, Jill Lindsey, and Sunny L. Munn conclude:
Overall, the study provides convincing evidence that interventions such as the SIG turnaround
models have the potential to improve school quality very quickly, which is consistent with the
theory underlying school turnaround reforms as well as research in other contexts. We also find,
however, that initial positive impacts dissipated after the first 2-3 years of implementation.
Click to access EvaluatingtheOhioImprovementProcess_Final_4.11.17.pdf
Curiously, student achievement gains occurred during the chaotic years of the school turnarounds and transformations, but not afterwards. How could that be possible?
When announcing the SIG experiment, President Obama’s Secretary of Education Arne Duncan claimed that The Turnaround Challenge was his “bible.” But, that study and a large body of social science and cognitive science explained that “aligning curricula to higher standards, improving instruction, using data effectively, [and] providing targeted extra help to students … is not enough to meet the challenges that educators – and students – face in high-poverty schools.” But, that shortcut was encourageded by SIG regulations.
Click to access TheTurnaroundChallenge_SupplementalReport.pdf
http://www.livingindialogue.com/real-crisis-in-education-reformers-refuse-to-learn/
Carlson et. al also conducted qualitative research which yielded three “Three key takeaways” from the state’s SIG effort, Ohio Improvement Process (OIP):
Additional funding for improvement personnel was the largest contributor to successes. OIP was hindered by culture challenges, most notably being a perception of compliance being more important than student improvement and stakeholder fatigue from too much change. Lastly, schools that experienced high levels of principal turnover or low principal effectiveness saw more challenges implementing OIP. Even in a school with strong principal leadership and relatively high fidelity of OIP implementation, student academic performance has not improved on state tests.
A generation of well-funded, output-driven school reforms has shown that old-fashioned, input-driven efforts like hiring counselors and mentors can increase graduation rates, and teacher supports are more likely to raise math scores, especially for younger students. But as was reported in the qualitative portion of the new SIG study, the key issue is whether low-skilled students can be taught to read for comprehension, and accountability-driven reform has failed at that task. We have long known that students must “learn to read,” in order to then “read to learn.” Test-driven reform has often demonstrated a capacity to raise test scores by teaching kids to decode, but it has been an utter failure in improving the reading skills necessary for meaningful learning.
Sure enough, an Ohio SIG leader explained:
We are working extremely hard trying a number of different things. We have … (a) phenomenal curriculum and instruction department; we have a scope and sequence, teachers receive a pacing guide; we offer extensive PD, we buy new resources – students are really resource rich. But (we’re) not really able to answer the question of why no growth, except that that we just haven’t hit the mark in how to help students who are not reading on grade level.”
In other words, the driving force of the SIG was a rebranding of the simplistic, and doomed, instruction-driven, curriculum-driven shortcut for improving the highest-challenge schools. As one leader explained, “The Ohio Improvement Process is teaching and learning. That’s the bottom line.”
But what were they teaching? First, they focused on math and reading test scores. More fundamentally, as one district leader explained the goal, “We decided on using that as a formative assessment to guide our work throughout the district, throughout the school year to better prepare our students to take the summative assessment, for them to be successful in the summative assessment.”
What teacher wouldn’t be thrilled to learn that they are no longer required to teach-to-the-test? To teach in high-pressure SIG schools, they must only teach to high-stakes summative assessments!
Not surprisingly, Carlson et. al learned that, “There is lots of push back from staff on testing because kids are tested a lot here.” Given the long history of the latest, half-baked “silver bullets” being repeatedly imposed on schools, it wouldn’t be surprising to hear, “During the first two years of OIP implementation, teachers felt the focus was on compliance.” The rushed turnarounds and transformations, especially in the first 2/3rds of the program, resulted in teachers “in the compliance mode going through the motions.”
But here’s the kicker. The seeds of so-called student performance gains were nurtured during this time of the “perception of compliance being more important that student improvement.” And there are only two explanations for that counter-intuitive pattern. Perhaps, more money works. Or perhaps the culture of compliance “works.” Under-the-gun educators will find a way to jack up test metrics even when they are meaningless.
To really improve high-challenge schools, we must first lay a foundation of student supports. Teacher supports using aligned and paced instruction can’t work until aligned and coordinated socio-emotional supports are in place. School improvement requires administrators to break out of their cultures of compliance and invest in the team effort to create trusting and loving school cultures.
As in Ohio, the SIG was driven by “a lack of understanding on the state’s part regarding what actually happens during the course of a day in some schools. … It’s like triage all day. Teachers are spent at the end of the day or they can’t really take the time to focus on this OIP because you know ‘Johnny’s mom got shot yesterday, they witnessed the murder,’ or …”
It’s not enough to do what one district did and purchase “fidget boxes” and “wiggle seats” to settle down students who are acting out their distress. As Johns Hopkins’ research shows, a system must establish Early Warning Systems to address chronic absenteeism before it spins out of control, and train and organize a “second team” of caring adults to make home visits and provide remediation.
Click to access NYC-Chronic-Absenteeism-Impact-Report.pdf
In theory, schools could have used SIG to invest in wraparound services so that its teacher supports could then produce better instruction, but I expect that Ohio’s (and Oklahoma City’s) experiences were typical. There are only so many hours in a day, and so many days in a three-year grant. When SIG demanded “transformative” gains in bubble-in scores in such a short time, systems did what they do best. They complied, hoping that “this too will pass.”
In my experience, teachers have been more successful in finding new careers than finding ways to teach for mastery in SIG-driven, test-driven schools. Fortunately, SIG is dead. Unfortunately, mandates for its failed approach to instruction are not. But, this post-reform hangover shouldn’t persist much longer than the so-called student performance gains that were produced by its turnarounds and transformations.
I just hope that the demand that educators give up a pound of flesh before legislators will adequately fund our schools might also fade away.

“I remain a loyal supporter of President Obama”
Why?
“I understand why President Obama felt obligated to promote teacher-bashing policies as a part of a “carrot and stick” approach to school improvement.”
Glad you do. Mind enlightening the rest of us?
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“Doomed”
We were doomed
And this is why:
We assumed
That “He’s our guy”
We believed
That “Yes we can”
Twice deceived
By “He’s our man”
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Better make that “We are doomed”
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Damn, Dienne, you beat me to the punch again! The exact two lines I was going to use with my commentary being:
And that my friends is the problem with those who choose to be ardent dimocrap (or rethuglican, doesn’t matter) supporters. Blind allegiance does no one any good.
And I won’t bore you all with all the other reasons the Obomber was less than an “ideal” president.
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Obama “protected” public school students, with thorned “sticks” and poisoned “carrots,” just like he did homeowners from questionable or fraudulent bank foreclosures.
Now, earning $400,000 a pop giving speeches on Wall St., he’s being paid for services rendered.
Meanwhile, the Democrats are All Putin, All The Time, seemingly intent on having a Pence administration pass the Republican-Fascist agenda even faster than a stumbling, tantrum-throwing Trump, and making themselves even more irrelevant.
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Michael,
Do you want the investigation to stop?
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Schools and the humans that populate and support them cannot be treated as if corporations headed by a CEO who needs to “turn around” the company in order to make a profit and please investors.
The whole concept is wrong, but the people in charge of policy and flows of money to education this and future generations do not care a wit about education. They care about giving tax breaks to business and deregulating business activity. They seek monetary profit from anything that can be marketed as if education.
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I confess I’m unable to understand why people remain “loyal to…Obama” when, as this gentleman outlines quite clearly, he was an active participant in the degradation of public schools. Is it just that the pain of having to accept that he screwed over everyone who bought his “hope and change” rhetoric is so great? Have we become a nation of masochists who are willing to take any amount of abuse so long as it’s done with “style and grace”?
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As long as “our guy” does it, it’s all good.
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I recommend reading: LISTEN LIBERAL by Frank Thomas.
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Obama should be judged on whether he left public education stronger or weaker than when he got there.
It’s weaker.
There are a few states that did some things for public schools on their own since 2008, but the federal government didn’t add any value at all as far as I can tell.
I think the worst thing the Obama Administration was really promote the “failing government schools” mantra ed reformers use. That prepared the ground for a lot of attacks on public schools- it gave people like Scott Walker political cover.
Sometimes you can join with Republicans on public schools. We did a levy campaign where the Republicans complained that Kasich treated public school students poorly and Democrats complained that Obama treated public school students poorly.
We were united in our dislike of privatization advocates 🙂
Try it. You may be surprised. There are a lot of GOP public school parents.
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The truth is probably that public education has been on a steady decline since day one of NCLB.
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YEP!
And it wasn’t teachers who thought up and mandated those supposed “reforms”.
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Correct.
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Obama’s policies were harmful to both students and teachers. He appointed those that inflicted test and punish along various other extortionist tactics. Obama opened the door that allowed Bill Gates to insert himself into our schools. From that, VAM, endless testing and, of course, “innovative” use of technology were introduced despite none of these having evidence to support their adoption. For all the chaos Gates inflicted on our young people that served as Gates’ lab rats, Obama awarded him and his wife the Medal of Freedom.
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“The Medal of Fiefdom”
Medal of Fiefdom
Gates was given
For his thiefdom
Data driven
Exploitation
Of our schools
Adulation
For the tools
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“. . . student academic performance has not improved on state tests.”
Why anyone gives a rat’s arse about “student academic performance. . . on state tests” is beyond me. That the intellectually bankrupt concept of “student academic performance. . . on state tests” holds such sway over so many in the education world can only be attributed to blindly accepting long held social constructs, even when those constructs have been proven to be onto-epistemologically false, completely invalid mechanisms (as per N. Wilson).
It appears that the vast majority of teachers and administrators have thoroughly swallowed that baited hook of “measuring student learning”. It’s oh so scientific. . . NOT! Our schools of education have certainly not produced teachers and administrators who can critically think and analyze policies and practices and who have been taught to be compliant blobs of human protoplasm-nothing more. As one of America’s premier writers told us:
“The mass of men [and women] serves the state [education powers that be] thus, not as men mainly, but as machines, with their bodies. They are the standing army, and the militia, jailors, constables, posse comitatus, [administrators and teachers], etc. In most cases there is no free exercise whatever of the judgment or of the moral sense; but they put themselves on a level with wood and earth and stones; and wooden men can perhaps be manufactured that will serve the purpose as well. Such command no more respect than men of straw or a lump of dirt.”- Henry David Thoreau [1817-1862], American author and philosopher
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“Lastly, schools that experienced high levels of principal turnover or low principal effectiveness saw more challenges implementing OIP. Even in a school with strong principal leadership and relatively high fidelity of OIP implementation. . . ”
Ahhh, the old “strong adminimal” argument that started to rear it’s ugly head in the late 90s as a response to the growing phenomena of teacher involvement with school management. Can’t be having any of that Commie nonsense now can we? There must be “strong leaders” Ask any of those who aren’t dead how those strong leaders of various countries in the last century and this one fared-not much different than the teachers and children under the current “strong leader” phase of public education. Petty dictators those current adminimals in their little school or district fiefdoms. And ultimately it’s the children who suffer the most.
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Diane, I know you’re trying to help us stay focused on educational issues but the country is slipping away due to a lying, treasonous immoral president. Please switch gears and start calling for immediate start of impeachment of this “president”. PLEASe! Bill Murphy
Sent from my iPhone
>
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Diane has called for Trump’s impeachment. Repeatedly. Where have you been?
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Bmur,
I am appalled by Trump. He is crude, a liar, a malignant narcissist, an insecure bully, a fraud, a man lacking morals and character. If he gave state secrets to the Russian Foreign Minister, i think that is treason. if he fired Comey to stop the FBI investigation of Russian ties to his campaign, that’s obstruction of justice. You can’t impeach a president for being a liar, a bully, and a braggart, but obstruction of justice is criminal. Frankly, I think the whole lot of them are grifters.
I try to keep Trump-related thoughts on Twitter unless they touch education. Every day brings a new outrage. The man is a menace to the republic.
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Yes, save us, President Pence! A desperate nation turns its deluded eyes to you!
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Public schools aren’t facing up to two of their major problems.
First, discipline is inadequate in many of them. Kids bully and run amok. Even if physical danger is not high, psychological danger is –for kids and even adults –and disorderliness harms learning on a regular basis. This will not change until the stigma against punishment and tracking abates. Public school teachers and administrators need to push back against bureaucrats who decree that high suspension and expulsion rates must stay low. Unfortunately our teachers’ unions seem to buy the hokum than discipline creates a “pipeline” to prison. No, if anything, LACK of discipline creates a pipeline to prison.
Second: the curriculum (especially Common Core and its knock-offs) often stinks. Actual learning has been replaced with “doing work”. The process is everything. Kids toil daily at mental tasks that bear no tangible fruit. They don’t know anything, but the charlatans in charge tell us they’re gaining alleged “critical thinking skills” and “reading skills” and “deep understanding of math and science”. How do we know? Well, the SBAC and similar tests allegedly measure these amorphous qualities. It’s hokum. Schools are just manufacturing ignorance and calling it “enhanced mental skills”.
Even though I’m a public school teacher, if I had kids and could send them to an orderly, knowledge-based charter school, I would. I understand the legions of parents who are fleeing our public schools. I wish our public schools would face these problems honestly and reform themselves.
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I couldn’t get past that the author is a loyal supporter of Obama. As an educator it was devastating to see the result of his education initiatives!
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The OIP is a joke. For years I’ve been asking admins and regional support team trainers to show my colleagues and I examples of where this is working to improve real student learning. Show us a model where a district is finding success. They can’t. They can’t even show us where the OIP has steadily improved standardized test scores(which is their only metric). Their comeback always is “if you follow the five step process with fidelity, you will get results.” Yet, no one can cite any district on the OIP getting meaningful results. Per my observation and participation, the OIP has done nothing more than to line the pockets of support team trainers and consultants who jock scripted intervention programs, Marzano, and Hattie. That’s all they have. It’s getting old in Ohio.
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This is true of most reforms in education –e.g. Common Core. They’re unproven, but most people jump on board uncritically nonetheless. They have faith in the “authorities”. But above all, they seize on the reform as a chance to prove they’re doing SOMETHING. Appearances uber alles. That’s really all that matters to most of us. Teachers need to start revolting against these faux educational authorities –that’s the Reformation we really need.
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“We have long known that students must ‘learn to read,’ in order to then ‘read to learn.'”
This should be rewritten to say, “Kids need to KNOW STUFF in order to then ‘read to learn'”. Teaching content IS teaching reading.
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Discipline problems and curriculum problems galore. You are correct Ponderosa. But people who haven’t been in a school for awhile would be shocked at much more. Here is a brief list of observations that I see at my high school:
Device addiction – most are checking their phones more than 1000 times per day
Social media drama – creating narcissistic personalities constantly tallying “likes” and “followers”
Addiction to video gaming – this used to be just a few kids but now is the majority of students across all genders
Device addicted parents – they text or Instagram their children all day constantly as if even ten minutes without being in contact with their child would be impossible
Ear bud addiction – many cannot go for mor than a minute or two without some sort of sound smashing into their ears
Binge watching Netflix etc. . . So while they are monitoring social media or gaming, they watch 6 consecutive episodes of Breaking Bad (even though they already watched every episode countless times). This leads to coming to school each day and collapsing their head upon the nearest desk each and every class.
More than half of my students work (even those that play high school sports). They tell me it is to save for college but if you probe a bit, they also have to pitch in for their nice car and expensive car insurance. They arrive home very late and get very little sleep.
I realize that many of these descriptions fit middle class suburban/rural type students but many are true of even our poorest.
Now take students addled with many of the above distractions and try to teach them about events leading to World War, or Imaginary numbers, or the problems with mitochondrial mutations, or the musings of F. Scott Fitzgerald.
I don’t think many out there understand what we have done to these children.
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Good list. Binge watching is the new soma (though I will say that one redeeming feature of TV is that it sometimes actually teaches kids stuff about the world, unlike schools that scorn such a lowly task). I’d add high-potency strains of pot and ubiquitous pills (e.g. Aderal) to the panoply of latter-day opiates that impede the proper cultivation of young minds. But I still think the #1 problem facing education in this country is the false belief (almost universally believed) that schools can increase intelligence through mental exercises rather than imparting knowledge. Years of brain workouts are leaving many kids mostly ignorant while the promised increase in g, general intelligence (a.k.a. all purpose thinking, reading and writing skill), never materializes. Schools are neglecting to do what they CAN do to make kids smarter and fruitlessly attempting to do what is impossible to do. It’s a giant con job perpetrated unwittingly by miseducated teachers.
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