I hope you will buy and read Andrea Gabor’s After the Education Wars: How Smart Schools Upend the Business of Reform.
It is ironic that Gabor is the Bloomberg chair of business journalism at Baruch College of the City University of New York, because her book stands in opposition to almost everything Mayor Michael Bloomberg did when he had control of the New York City public schools. Bloomberg and his chancellor Joel Klein believed in carrots and sticks. They believed in stack ranking. They believed that test scores were the be-all and end-all of education. They believed that teachers and principals would be motivated to work harder if their jobs and careers were on the line every day. They created a climate of fear, where people were terminated suddenly and replaced by inexperienced newcomers. If they had brought in W. Edwards Deming—Gabor’s guiding star— as an advisor, their strategies would have been very different.
Gabor is a proponent of the philosophy of management of Deming, the management guru who is widely credited with reviving Japanese industry after World War II, by changing its culture and making it a world leader. If Bloomberg had hired Deming as his lead adviser, his strategies would have been lastting, and he might have really transformed the nation’s largest school system and had a national impact.
I first learned about Deming’s work by reading Gabor’s book about Deming titled The Man Who Discovered Quality. I read the book in 2012. I have repeatedly gone back to re-read chapter 9, the chapter where she explains Deming’s hostility to merit pay and performance rankings and his emphasis on collaboration and teamwork.
Describing his views, she wrote:
“The merit rating nourishes short-term performance, annihilates long-term planning, builds fear, demolishes teamwork, nourishes rivalry and politics…It is unfair as it ascribes to the people in a group differences that may be totally caused by the system that they work in.”
She wrote, citing Deming, that performance pay (educators call it merit pay) undermines the corporate culture; it gets everyone thinking only about himself and not about the good of the corporation. Everyone focuses on short-term goals, not long-term goals. If the corporation is unsuccessful, Deming said, it is the fault of the system, not the workers in it. It is management’s job to recruit the best workers, to train them well, to support them, and create an environment in which they can take joy in their work.
Deming understood that the carrot-and-stick philosophy was early twentieth century behaviorism. He understood that threats and rewards do not produce genuine improvement in the workplace. He anticipated what twenty-first century psychologists like Edward Deci and Dan Ariely have demonstrated with their social experiments: People are motivated not by incentives and fear, but by idealism, by a sense of purpose, and by professional autonomy, the freedom to do one’s job well.
In After the Education Wars, Gabor takes her Demingite perspective and writes case studies of districts that have figured out how to embed his principles.
She writes about the “small schools movement” in New York City, the one led by Ann Cook and Deborah Meier, which relied on performance assessment, not standardized tests; the remarkable revival of Brockton High School in Massachusetts, a school with more than 4,000 students; the Leander school district in central Texas, which embraced Deming principles; and the charter takeover of New Orleans.
The chapter on New Orleans is the best account that I have read of what happened in that city. It is not about numbers, test scores, graduation rates, and other data, but about what happened to the students and families who live in New Orleans. She describes a hostile corporate takeover of a city’s public schools and a deliberate, calculated, smug effort to destroy democracy. Her overall view is that the free-market reforms were “done to black people, not with black people.” She spends ample time in the schools and describes the best (and the worst) of them. She follows students as they progress through charter schools to college or prison. She pays close attention to the students in need of special education who don’t get it and who suffer the consequences. She takes a close look at the outside money fueling the free-market makeover. She explains the role of the Gates Foundation, New Schools for New Orleans, and other elements of what was essentially hijacking of the entire school system by venture capitalists and foundations who were eager to make a point about their own success as “gatekeepers” of reform. She finds that New Schools for New Orleans “functions more like a cartel than an open-source project.” It prefers “no-excuses” charter schools like KIPP. Gabor is critical of the Education Research Alliance at Tulane University for ignoring the “no-excuses” discipline policies, saying “ignoring no-excuses discipline practices at New Orleans charters is like covering the New England Patriots and ignoring Deflategate…[Douglas] Harris bristles at the suggesting that his research organization is anything but neutral in its assessments of the city’s charters. Yet ERA’s job must be especially difficult given its co-location with NSNO and the Cowen Institute on the seventh floor of 1555 Poydras Street.”
She writes wistfully of a New Orleans story that never was: “a post-Katrina rebuilding–even one premised on a sizable charter sector, albeit with better oversight and coordination of vital services like those for special-needs students–that sought to engage the community in a way that would have helped preserve, even enhance, its stake in their children’s education. What if, instead of raising the performance scores so as to lasso the vast majority of New Orleans charters into the RSD, the city had taken control of the worst schools while encouraging community groups…to lead by example. What if it had made a concerted effort to enlists dedicated, respected educators and involved citizens and parents…in the school-design and chartering process?”
Gabor’s chapter on New Orleans is a masterpiece of journalism and investigative reporting.
She concludes that “Contrary to education-reform dogma, the examples in this book suggest that restoring democracy, participative decision making, and the training needed to make both more effective can be a key to school improvement and to imbuing children–especially poor and minority children–with the possibilities of citizenship and power in a democracy.”

From Mother Jones- Louisiana is where the family of alt right, Richard Spenser, owns 5200 acres of cotton and corn fields, as absentee landlords. The farm is managed from a $3 mil. home in Whitefish, Montana where Richard’s website is located. The farms received $2 mil. in farm subsidies from the government – (in other words, corporate welfare).
Steve Bannon’s friend, Rebekah Mercer (Cambridge Analytica and Breitbart) pushed for Trump’s hiring of Jeff Sessions, Michael Flynn, John Bolton, and Kellyanne Conway.
Mercer has also backed “Lucifer himself”, Ted Cruz.
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WH policy aide and speechwriter, Darren Beattie, spoke at a conference linked to Spenser, the Mencken Club, which the SPLC, described as “academic and pseudo academic racists”.
Privatization was first suggested by racist Gov. and Senator Talmadge of Georgia.
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Gabor’s book is lies! Lies, I tell you! All lies!
… or so says corporate ed. sellout and shameless charter shill Citizen Stewart::
Keep earning your paycheck, Stew!
Keep earning your corporate masters’ marching orders!
In the meantime, the rest of mankind is going to read Gabor’s book and decide for ourselves.
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“corporate masters’ marching orders”- the writer/pseudo researching prostitutes who perform for ed deformers while sending their kids to public schools, while having attended public universities, and/or while taking public paychecks are among the most hated people in America.
They pull up, behind themselves, the ladder that they and their families climbed.
They contribute nothing to GDP while aiding those who steal children’s schools, exploit taxpayers and rob the middle class of real jobs.
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It’s ironic that Cathy Davidson wrote the NYT review criticized by Citizen Stewart. In 2003, Davidson “initiated a project with Apple that gave free Ipods to each member of the incoming class”. She’s on the MacArthur Foundation Board, who are big pushers of digital media and learning. I am unable to find a cv for her that identifies grant amounts and funders.
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Davidson, who wrote the NYT review of Gabor’s book, is author of “The New Education”. At Amazon, a reviewer wrote, “(Davidson) focuses on economic ROI which begs the question…becoming a better human being.”
Same criticism about Bill Gates.
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“Reform” is based on so many false assumptions that it may be one reason why they continue to get dismal results. Test score “accountability” will never build better schools. Building better schools takes time and effort from teachers, parents and administrators. Collaboration and trust are essential to the process. Test based sanctions actually impede growth by creating a climate of paranoia and competition. Test prep often becomes the focus of instruction, not real learning. Backed by dark money, the deformers never really learn anything. They double down on their bad ideas.
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Education reform is the false assumption capitol of the universe.
The propensity to rely on a foundation of false assumptions is rooted in the reformer’s constant conflation of the adult world with the world of classrooms filled with children and adolescents and the ensuing dynamics.
False assumptions also rooted in the misunderstanding of the complexities, actual missions (read those old mission statements and try to find “improving test scores in math and ELA) , scale (50 million students, 3 million teachers) and yearly grind (72 billion individual class periods) of the public school system. False assumptions rooted in the mistaken belief that good teaching must produce good learning.
False assumptions rooted in complete and utter detachment from the appalling conditions of the underclass; inner cities rife with poverty, crime, substance abuse, and dysfunctional, mostly single parent families, and most seriously, a hopelessness and apathy and despair.
False assumptions rooted in the myth that ALL children can learn the same material at the same rate, regardless of their cognitive disabilities or psychological trauma, food insecurity, sleep deficits, or parental neglect.
False assumptions rooted in the belief that failing test scores could be improved with endless supplies of data or different (better?) teachers, or new standards, or test-and-punish threats was beyond foolish.
Never once did they ask teachers WHY students struggled in school.
Was it attendance?
Was it accrued knowledge and skill deficits?
Was it apathy?
Was it low parental expectations?
Was it psychological or social distraction?
Was is it dyslexia?
Was it cognitive limitations?
or
Was it bad standards? bad teachers? bad tests? HA!
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In all my years teaching inside inner-city low-income high schools the issue with students passing or not passing a course was almost always attendance. Not bad teaching or bad kids or bad neighborhoods or bad schools or….
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My experience too. It is not at all uncommon for students to miss 20, 30, 40 or more days of school. I taught in a large inner city high school and the absentee list we received each day had anywhere from 500 to 800 names on it. Every day. Add lates to school, early dismissals, class lates, class cuts, and being called out of class and the cumulative deficits become impossible to overcome. A day out of school is much more devastating than most non-teachers realize. Marginal students who can barely handle the demands of their teachers when present, return to school overwhelmed with work for the day on top of make up assignments from five or six different teachers. If they miss a few days in a row – giving up becomes much easier.
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That large inner city HS I taught in had a total population of 3,000+ students. So on any given day 15 -25% of the students were absent.
One of the most deceptive stats in all of education is attendance rates. They don’t begin to paint the real picture.
Absenteeism creates a downward spiral that produces knowledge and skill deficits, frustration, misbehaviors, and defeat.
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I’ve been canvassing for a Dem candidate in low-income areas. You see the parents Rage describes: overwhelmed. Defeated. Truly despairing (especially with the recent rhetorical buffetings by our racist president, which may account for the shellshocked and frightened look I see in many of them –and their relief when I tell them there’s hope of thwarting Trump). Working hard yet unable to pay bills, much less serve as academic coach to their kids (especially when they themselves had dysfunctional schooling). Teachers’ crying “poverty” sounds like shirking responsibility to Reformers’ ears, but it’s truly a mammoth impediment.
That said, switching to a knowledge-based curriculum would ameliorate the situation. All kids can learn facts –enjoy learning facts –and these facts form a crucial foundation for higher-level skills. Giving these facts at a young age would militate against kids’ disenchantment with school in higher grades. And they’d enable them to start navigating the public sphere, which many of their parents cannot do, as my conversations with them about politics show.
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I teach science – old school. Introductory lab program in chemistry and physics. It is a knowledge based curriculum: facts, vocabulary, laws, theories, principles, measurement, formulas, etc. And I teach physical lab (equipment and instrument) skills. Intellectual skills like reasoning, logic, problem solving are an inherent part of science yet impossible to teach directly and impossible to acquire without the requisite knowledge stored in long term memory.
Ponderosa’s point here is more than important. It is essential that young kids slowly fill their heads with knowledge. That the teaching of “facts” or worse yet, “memorizing” information got a bad name in education is a professional embarrassment. The notion that students did not need teachers (sages on the stages) but instead should have facilitators (guides on the sides) was an egregious error in professional judgement.
One way all of this happened was through federal education law that placed an over-emphasis on skills based subjects: math, reading, and writing. This over-emphasis was institutionalized by test-and-punish reform (NCLB/CCSS.RTTT). Under this standards-based testing regime, external (federal and state) pressures created a shift at the elementary and middle school level that left the knowledge based subjects of science, geography, history, government, specials, etc. out in the cold. Math and ELA instructional time was increased while other subjects were eliminated or reduced. AIS classes gave struggling students more math and ELA and fewer of the classes they needed the most.
And now we’re left with a generation of students with basic knowledge deficits that are almost impossible to believe until you start asking kids some simple questions and get the IDK look, a shrug of the shoulders, and the “whatever” attitude. Worse than lacking fundamental knowledge, the math and ELA skills-based approach has inadvertently killed off the biggest driver of learning: curiosity.
So, by de-emphasizing content knowledge we have produced national elementary and middle school curricula that make reading comprehension, writing, and problem solving in math more difficult than ever for students.
Accruing content knowledge has benefits that are more than important. The benefits are essential:
Knowledge makes learning new material easier.
Knowledge promotes curiosity which drives learning.
Knowledge makes school and life more interesting.
Knowledge makes you more interesting and more interested
Knowledge opens doors of opportunity that you otherwise did not know existed.
Knowledge makes you a better reader and a better writer.
Ignorance does none of these.
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I call the current Common Core ELA/math-centric curriculum the “ignorance curriculum”. That, my friends, is America’s national curriculum. Does not bode well for avoiding another Trump in the future.
Rage, I usually attribute our schools’ misguided, ineffective skills-centrism to John Dewey and the schools of education, but you do a good job here of explaining the role of one fatal policy decision –NCLB’s privileging of ELA and math –in removing nourishing factual knowledge from the curriculum.
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Ponderosa
NCLB was just the foot in the door. The last nail in the coffin of content knowledge was the Race to the Top and Arne’s NCLB waiver (Duncan’s Folly) requirement that linked test scores to teacher evaluations. Once careers and reputations were directly threatened going along with Testomania became the SOP of elementary and middle schools.
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“Corporate Culture”
“Corporate culture”
Golden Sacks
Jamie’s Diamond
Cheating hacks
Corporate vulture
Picks apart
Simple Simon
Eats his heart
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“Corporate Culture” is one of them oxfordmorons, for sure.
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Good one, SomDAM Poet.
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Thank you, Diane.
I LOVE W. Edwards Deming’s work!
Wrote an article about using Deming’s principles re: supervising teachers. Teachers and Principals found it empowering. Principals have told me that s/he have a hard time keeping up with “PLEASE VISIT my classroom” re: both teachers and students. BUT ALAS … this was BEFORE ALL the DEFORMS really took over and SLAMMED the public schools in this country, while charters got away with highway robbery. SO SAD.
Dr. Demings: 14 points for management: https://deming.org/explore/fourteen-points
Video with Dr. Deming: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tsF-8u-V4j4
Attend a Deming Institute: https://www.eventbrite.com/o/the-w-edwards-deming-institute-11156166312
There is one in October, 2018 at Manhattan Beach:: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/2018-annual-conference-why-deming-why-now-registration-44382993729
Dr. Deming helped Japan after WWII. Now “MADE IN JAPAN” = not a joke.
Today, “Made in America” IS A JOKE. But wait, the fall out from Dump’s policies is that there are more people without jobs and jobs have gone away. And … even China won’t take our plastic recycles anymore (https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2018/06/28/623972937/china-has-refused-to-recycle-the-wests-plastics-what-now).
An Aside: Our politicians are MADE in America. No wonder they are so disgusting.
Additional comments:
We truly need to do more than RECYCLE.
We need to: REPAIR and RECYCLE.
This throw away mentality in America is killing us … literally.
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Diane, I got a lightbulb about my family of origin, reading your description of Chap 9 in Gabor’s 2012 book. Both parents and 3 of 4 siblings were/ are self-employed or work in small-biz teams. I used to attribute this to our parents being outliers, so individualistic that they shied away from the constraints (& rivalry, & politics) of large orgs. Perhaps those are prerequisites, but I see them now as needing to work in a system where personal action directly affects the achievement of goals.
The 4th sibling – our only career-long pubsch teacher – is “motivated by idealism, a sense of purpose” and has managed thro personal excellence (& often sheer force of will) to obtain “the freedom to do one’s job well” even in admin roles.
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Diane “. . . imbuing children–especially poor and minority children–with the possibilities of citizenship and power in a democracy.”
For the arrogant rich in our country, them’s fightin’ words. CBCK
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Education reformers another word for rich people were determined to destroy public education and certified teachers. They have done that successfully with the get along educators who wouldn’t fight back when they should of. Of the million blogs who never addressed what these mayors were actually doing. Two generations of children of color who have been thrown out with the dish water. Everyone knows education is one means how we can move forward. So they have taken away health care, in the midst of a fight for social security and all the safety nets.
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