The Gates Foundation has a new idea: it is putting $92 Million into “networks.” For the Gates Foundation, this small amount is more like a tip than an investment. The writer for “Inside Philanthropy” interviewed me, and I said that the Gates Foundation has a consistent record of failure in education policy, and it should consider investing in children’s health, an area that it actually knows something about. As you can see in this article, the writer was straining to find the good in this latest foray into education. It is still not clear what the $92 Million will do, although it’s likely to add a new layer of administrators.
Leonie Haimson, the leading education activist in New York State, is no fan of Gates’ latest foray into education.
She writes here about the latest Gates’ plan to remake public education. To read her post with all her links, go to Leonie’s Blog, https://nycpublicschoolparents.blogspot.com.
This week, Bob Hughes, appointed director of the Gates Foundation K12 division in 2016, made his first big move. He announced $92 million in grants for his new Networks of School Improvement initiative to be given to 19 organizations, collaboratives and districts. New Visions, the NYC-based organization that Hughes ran before coming to the Foundation, received the second largest grant at $14 million – to work with 75 NYC schools, as yet unidentified.
This grant was more than the amount given to the entire Baltimore system of public schools – despite New Visions’ spotty record.
Though Hughes admitted that there’s not much evidence behind the theory of network improvement, he’s determined to push forward nonetheless:
“I don’t think the research base is fully developed, and that’s one reason we’re making these investments,” said Hughes.
I suppose a lack of evidence never stopped the Gates Foundation before.
Asked by EdWeek reporter Steven Sawchuk how the results of this new initiative would be evaluated,
Hughes replied that “the foundation is still formulating its research approach.” And:
“We don’t have details for you, but we remain deeply committed to a third party evaluation of all our work and transparency about the results of those evaluations so we can enable the field to understand what we do well and what we don’t do well,” he said.
Yet it appears that The Center for Public Research and Leadership (CPRL) at Columbia Law School has already been chosen by Hughes to evaluate the program.
As the CPRL website notes, “In January 2018, CPRL received a two and one-half year grant to report on the research underlying the NSI [Networks for School Improvement] initiative and to use the research to design and conduct a formative evaluation of the initiative’s initial implementation.”
Sure enough, the Gates Foundation lists a grant for $1.9 million over 31 months to be awarded “Columbia University” for “evaluation” purposes.
The first Gates-funded CPRL study was a literature review of network impacts. The findings were described by Sawchuk this way:
A Gates-commissioned review of the research on the topic from Columbia University’s Center for Public Research and Leadership noted that there are more studies on the norms and conditions needed to support healthy networks than on how they affect K-12 outcomes; most of the 34 studies were case studies or qualitative, rather than quasi-experimental designs that sought to answer cause-and-effect questions.
CPRL is headed by Columbia Law professor James Liebman, who was appointed head of the NYC Department of Education’s Accountability Office under Joel Klein, despite the fact that he had no K12 education experience either as a teacher, administrator or researcher.
Liebman made a mess of the School Progress Reports at DOE, instituting a volatile, unstable system in which school grades wildly veered from year to year. A blog post by Professor Aaron Pallas in Edweek was memorably entitled, “Could a Monkey Do a Better Job of Predicting Which Schools Show Student Progress in English Skills than the New York City Department of Education?” Under Liebman’s direction, DOE efforts were statistically inept and I would not trust his ability to undertake a credible evaluation.
Liebman also commissioned the expensive ARIS data system, which lived up to none of its promises. It was rarely used by parents or teachers and was finally ditched in 2015 after costing the city $95 million.
In any case, I hope the Gates Foundation has not decided against commissioning an evaluation from a more experienced, credible organization like RAND. RAND recently released a highly critical analysis of the results of the Gates-funded Teacher Evaluation Initiative and before that, a skeptical evaluation of the Gates-funded Next Generation Learning Challenge schools, those that feature “personalized [online] learning.”
John F. Pane, senior scientist at RAND and the chief author of the latter study frankly pointed out to Ed Week, the evidence base for personalized learning is still “very weak.”
Hughes himself doesn’t have the greatest reputation for transparency. In 2005, he tried to suppress a Gates-funded research study that contained negative findings about the New Visions Gates-funded small schools initiative in New York City, a study that was subsequently leaked to the NY Times .
In 2007, it was revealed that New Visions threatened these small schools that they would not receive their full Gates grants unless they chose New Visions as their DOE “partnership support network” and paid the organization a fee in return.
“I thought, ‘Oh, my God, what a huge conflict of interest,'” a principal said. “We have to join their PSO and pay them for support in order to get this grant that we qualified for?”
Only time will tell, but the hints of insular cronyism in these decisions by Hughes to award grants to New Visions and to Jim Liebman’s outfit do not bode well for the future.
This is an informative overview. My question is: what’s the theory of action here? What is the strategy, what are the goals? “Networks” have a nice ring, but what is Gates trying to accomplish? How will it help students and teachers? It sounds very squishy.

I love Essential Questions… the kind of question that leads to the solving of the problem.
Your EQ, “what is Gates trying to accomplish” leads to one conclusion… the eventual control of what the US citizens knows and learns how to do, . Of course, since democracy depends on share knowledge https://www.aft.org/sites/default/files/periodicals/hirsch.pdf this means that the plutocrats who pay for the ‘schools’ will control what the emerging graduate will be able to do… and thinking skills are no the priority.
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So AGREE with you, Susan. You nailed the situation.
So true: “Of course, since democracy depends on share knowledge https://www.aft.org/sites/default/files/periodicals/hirsch.pdf this means that the plutocrats who pay for the ‘schools’ will control what the emerging graduate will be able to do… and thinking skills are no the priority.”
Gates is a RAT and has no clue except how to insure his income flow.
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and here is a writer art Medium who always hits the nail on the head, and he has the answer in his easy to read essay “The Dark Age of American Thought” or Why America Doesn’t Know How to Think Anymore https://eand.co/the-dark-age-of-american-thought-e32e64589b5c
Gateswill simply move this process forward. so that the people who own the media and the internet can do this “Network Propaganda: Manipulation, Disinformation, and Radicalization in American Politics,”
https://www.newyorker.com/news/daily-comment/a-new-book-details-the-damage-done-by-the-right-wing-media-in-2016?mbid=nl_Daily%20082918&CNDID=45272181&utm_source=Silverpop&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Daily%20082918&utm_content=&spMailingID=14154561&spUserID=MTgwNzgwOTcyMzEyS0&spJobID=1462603186&spReportId=MTQ2MjYwMzE4NgS2
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Yes, Yvonne, Susan nailed it.
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saddest result of more than a decade bent to invasive test-prep, loss of music, art, gym, languages and even geography and civics: for many kids thinking broadly is no longer even possible
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Exactly… the demolition is ongoing and spectacular… and unstoppable, becasue it is so much more than the profits of hedge funds and priviteers… it is the destruction of what our people know a t time when screens are replacing real information. It also is affecting how people communicate and read. In Elizabethan England, the average person knew over fifty thousand words. Today, the average American knows barely 500 and uses less than 500.
There is no context in tweets.
Sigh! I am so sad.
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yes.
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I just don’t buy that it’s an open grant process. This is the problem with these foundations- they really are imposing their vision of public schools on us.
They only fund programs and schools who fit within their agenda for public education. That’s control. There’s no way to sugar coat it or change that basic fact.
They’ve now added a local layer between them and the school, but it’s the same dynamic- they’re choosing the local intermediary based upon whether the local intermediary fits their agenda. They’re entitled to do this! It’s their money. But it’s the same thing they’ve always done, they just put a local name to it.
Ed reformers are never going to be able to make this “democratic” or “local” as far as decision making because the decisions are made AT THE FUNDING LEVEL, right from the get-go. The big decision for Gates is WHICH entities to use as a middleman. Once they do that they get the results they want thru the middleman instead of directly.
When Walton or Gates pick and choose the entities who receive funding they are setting the agenda. They don’t have to micromanage from there- the entities who receive the money will adhere to the Gates agenda because that’s why they were chosen.
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No, Gates does not have an open process for funding. You can’t send them a great idea and ask for funding.
Gates decides what it wants to do and offers money to those willing to do its bidding. Or creates new organization to follow its orders.
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Wish Gates would just GO AWAY. Gates has cause more problems for many, many people and all because of his profits…ka-ching. Gates is a RAT.
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Top down, like all the principals in the schools..do it or else.
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If your state lawmaker said “I’m not controlling this agenda! Instead I’m just funding some ideas I agree with and not funding other ideas I disagree with” you would call that lawmaker out and say “that means you’re controlling the agenda”.
Because it does. If it isn’t funded it doesn’t happen. Changing the level where the control is exercised from “Gates” to “Gates-funded intermediary” doesn’t change that dynamic.
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Today’s Guardian is posting a number of teacher-authored articles.
September 5, 2018
Teachers are guest-editing Guardian US to highlight underfunded schools, falling pay and a new wave of activism.
“How I Survive American Teachers and Their Second Jobs.”
“Wage Crisis/Teacher Pay Drops 5% In Last Decade”
“How Weak Schools Serve Trump’s Agenda”
“What We Want/ Teachers On What We Need To Solve The Crisis In Our Classrooms”
https://www.theguardian.com/us
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Great link, thanks Kathy. Here’s a sobering cite from a West Va teacher in one of the articles: “I have a friend who left teaching two years ago and became an assistant manager at Staples. He started out making $10,000 more than he was making as a teacher. It’s a lot less stressful and he’s never regretted it. The sad thing is, he was good at teaching. He was a graduate support teacher, and the last year he taught, he helped 50 kids graduate who wouldn’t have graduated if it hadn’t been for him.”
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Teachers like him, and (me http://www.opednews.com/author/author40790.html ) are not wanted.
This is the dumbing down of America the John Gatto predicted in his book of that title decades ago!
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When it comes to so-called education reform, nothing succeeds like failure. Just ask James Liebman and New Visions, who have done nothing but fail, yet continue to receive funding.
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Go AWAY, Bill Gates. Go build your utopian city in the desert and do build a wall around it to keep all the creeps inside. Take Dump and his gangsters with you, too. You all deserve one another.
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Agree, isolate the Kochs, Arnold, Gates, Art Pope, etc and their offspring away from decent society. In a satellite bunker, house the intellectual prostitutes and their offspring.
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Real research does not start with a conclusion. It starts with a hypothesis in which data are collected free from outside influence.. All Gates does is use his wealth to give credibility to his false assumptions. It’s not research; it’s “pay to play.” He is seeking a rubber stamp of approval for his bias.
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If honest research methods were in play, there wouldn’t be so many economic papers justifying charter schools with contrived, correlation couplings masquerading as causality.
Where’s the NBER paper correlating graft with charter schools? Answer, it’s not a topic beneficial to the economists’ careers.
Arnold’s spending at universities on “evidence based policy”, what can be said? Harvard’s President and Fellows, more than $12 mil. Brown,…., University of Michigan, etc.
Gates and CUNY’s HASTAC,….
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“K12 Division” indeed. How about Gates really step up to improve the education of our kids? It would probably take $3 billion a yr just to cover every teacher’s OOP school supplies plus bkfst/ lunch for 10million pubsch kids in poverty. Gates could donate that from his $11.5billion annual income & never miss it. Then the Foundation could make a real investment: set up a fund whose goal is “safe clean functional public school bldgs for every student by 2025” & get cracking. Whatever the cost it’s bound to be a fraction of what MSFT would have been putting into the hopper if we had reasonable tax laws.
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Gates is not looking to invest in poor students. His fake research is seed money for his latest scheme. He is trying to create a system where poor students will pay HIM. This will happen if he gets his “Personalized Learning” widely adopted.
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” It is still not clear what the $92 Million will do, although it’s likely to add a new layer of administrators.” Most of the Gates grants for “Networks for School Improvement” go to nongovernmental “intermediaries” and a theory of action (sort of) intended to induce targeted schools into some version of continuous improvement sharply focussed on improved test scores in math, plus college/career readiness.
I looked at the Gates Foundation press release and fact sheet about their current “portfolio of investments” in nineteen Networks for School Improvement. Almost all focus on improving test scores in math, middle school and 9th grade. Why? These test scores are viewed as “on-track indicators” for postsecondary enrollment.
Most of these grants require participating schools to adopt a continual improvement process (or continuous improvement process) determined by outside groups and “change experts.” The “science of school improvement” is a new slogan from reformers who wish to conduct experiments on students, teachers, and schools, while masking the corporate and science lab contexts from which the processes have been adapted. The Gates grants offer incentives for different versions of improvement science, some of these seeking incremental improvements, others seeking breakthrough improvements from “rapid” experimental cycles. All of these grants assume major deficiencies in the staff working in schools that that serve low income and mostly Black and Latino students, especially teachers of math.
In the following, I have edited the press release leaving in place only some of the jargon attached to justifications for each grant. Only one grant sends money to a public school district. Allmost all grants go to an intermediary organization structured to prevent direct oversight from elected school boards and supported by private dollars from foundations and corporations.
ACHIEVE ATLANTA: $532,000, 24 Months. Achieve Atlanta will help to develop a tool to support the successful matching of high school students to good-fit colleges and support students in selecting, applying to, and enrolling in good-fit postsecondary institutions. Aims: Create a matchmaking “tool” to aid students in selecting a postsecondary institution. Develop the “match and fit tool” as a predictive indicator for student success.
BALTIMORE CITY PUBLIC SCHOOLS: $11,160,000, 48 Months. BCPS will hire onsite literacy coaches trained to use “high quality, standards-aligned materials and continuous improvement strategies” to support teachers and accelerate literacy in 12-15 middle schools selected as Literacy Intensive Sites. Aim: Improve “8th and 9th Grade On-Track outcomes.”
BANK STREET COLLEGE: $700,000, 16 Months (Yonkers, NY) Bank Street will organize, train, and support school-based math teams and team leaders in 10 Yonkers Public Schools. Teams will analyze data to track student improvement. Aims: Increase the number of Black, Latino, and low-income students who successfully complete 8th grade math. Support Bank Street’s own data collection and analysis capacity in addition to the skills of teams and team leaders.
ED PARTNERS: $12,000,000, 61 Months (CA). California Education Partners (Ed Partners) will launch a network that will manage up to 50 secondary schools across 18 small and middle-size districts. Aims: Improve outcomes for Black, Latino and low-income students. Build the capacity of Ed Partners and these schools to improve outcomes (design, deliver, measure, learn from, and evaluate interventions).
CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP AND EDUCATIONAL EQUITY (CLEE): $560,000, 20 Months (RI) The Center will create a network that serves ten high schools in Rhode Island. CLEE will train teams of school and district leaders to be receptive to “a culture of change, identify equity gaps in 9th grade course completion, study root causes, and test interventions.” Aims: Increase the number of Black, Latino, and low-income students who complete a 9th grade college-prep math course. Induce school and district leaders to accept prescriptions and methods for change from CLEE.
CITY YEAR: $520,000, 18 Months (MILWAUKEE, WI). City Year and the “Everyone Graduates Center” at Johns Hopkins University’s School of Education will organize and train teams from 10 middle schools serving predominantly Black, Latino, and low-income students to embrace “continuous improvement by utilizing Early Warning Indicators” and leveraging “innovative human capital, including AmeriCorps members.” Aims: Enable all students to complete 8th grade “on-track to high school graduation.” Induce teams to accept and practice the “continuous improvement” methods from City Year and Johns Hopkins University’s School of Education.
COMMUNITIES FOUNDATION OF TEXAS: $503,000, 15 Months (NORTH TX ) EducateTexas will lead the regional Texas Network for School Improvement (TXNSI) Collaborative. The Collaborative will also be supported by Learning Forward (expertise in continuous improvement) and The Charles A. Dana Center (subject matter expertise in math education). Aims: Increase the math proficiency of Black, Latino and low- income students 8th grade students in 10 North Texas schools. Train leaders in those schools to ”adopt continuous improvement processes,” accelerate change, and increase outcomes.
COMMUNITY CENTER FOR EDUCATION RESULTS (CCER): $515,000, 24 Months (South King County, WA). CCER and the Puget Sound College & Career Network, will expand the College & Career Leadership Institute’s work on “systems improvements” congruent with the Gates funded “Road Map Project for South Seattle and South King County high schools. Aims: Provide support for more low-income students to have a meaningful, high-quality plan for college and career. Long term, “Eliminate opportunity gaps by race and income, and for 70 percent of the region’s students to earn a college degree or career credential by 2030.”
CORE: $16,000,000, 61 Months (CA) CORE stands for the non-governmental California Office to Reform Education, since 2013 active in steering accountability measures for large, urban districts in Fresno, Garden Grove, Long Beach, Los Angeles, Oakland, Sacramento, San Francisco and Santa Ana. CORE Districts participate in a system of “data-driven continuous improvement.” Aims: Sustain the CORE-PACE (Policy Analysis for California Education) research partnership and publicize findings. Enhance the use of CORE’s data and improvement management systems to improve “9th grade on-track rates.”
HIGH TECH HIGH: $10,300,000, 60 Months (Southern California). The High Tech High Graduate School of Education will lead a College Access and Enrollment Network of 30 (high) schools. Focus is on financial access, college application process, bonding and belonging, reducing failure to enroll after admission. Aims: Increase the number of Black, Latino, and low-income students who apply, enroll, and ultimately go to a four-year college. (The High Tech High Graduate School of Education offers teacher certification and a master’s program. https://hthgse.edu/programs/teacher-residency-program/).
INSTITUTE FOR LEARNING: $7,400,000, 60 Months (Dallas, TX). Leaders from two University of Pittsburg programs will train participants from 12 secondary schools in the Dallas Independent School District in continuous improvement efforts. Aims: Increase the number of Black, Latino, English learners, and low-income students who are proficient in English Language Arts and on track at the end of 9th grade for high school graduation. Induce teams of school and district leaders to lead continuous improvement efforts. (The University of Pittsburg programs are: The Institute for Learning an outreach program of the Learning Research and Development Center and Center for Urban Education).
KIPP FOUNDATION: $499,000, 23 Months, (Multiple states). Convene and support KIPP’s college counselors in 31 charter high schools in 16 states, improving and refining how they help young people matriculate to and graduate from college. Aims: Accelerate the development of practices, tools, and approaches that predict and increase college success for their students. Keep high-achieving students from “under-matching” to colleges that are less rigorous than they are qualified to attend.
NETWORK FOR COLLEGE SUCCESS (NCS): $11,700,000, 60 Months, (Chicago, IL) NCS will train participants in 15-20 Chicago high schools to “engage in cycles of continuous improvement—testing which student, teacher, and school interventions create the school conditions that build upon the abilities, intelligence, and creativity of Chicago’s youth.” Aims: Increase the number of Black, Latino, and low-income students who are on-track to high school graduation and earning a 3.0 GPA or better at the end of 9th grade. Induce participating high schools to seek “continuous improvement” by using NCS methods.
NEW VISIONS FOR PUBLIC SCHOOLS (NVPS): $13,900,000, 60 Months (New York, NY. NVPS will work train teams in up to 67 New York City high schools (over five years) to “use data and continuous improvement strategies (design, implement, test) to help more students maintain competitive GPAs, succeed in advanced coursework, and achieve college-ready scores on state Regents exams.” Aims: Increase the number of Black, Latino, and/or low-income students who graduate from high school prepared to succeed in college. Induce participating high schools to seek “continuous improvement” by using NVPS methods.
NORTHWEST REGIONAL EDUCATIONAL SERVICE DISTRICT: $586,000, 24 Months (OR) This Service District (NWRESD) is the largest of in Oregon, serving 20 school districts. NWRESD’s Deeper Learning and Equity Network will train participants in 32 regional high schools a use a continuous improvement process focused on “deeper learning and culturally sustaining pedagogies.” Aims: Increase the number of students who are on track by the end of 9th grade to graduate. Induce participants to use the network’s method of continuous improvement.
PARTNERS IN SCHOOL INNOVATION: $499,000, 15 Months (Philadelphia, PA). Partners will convene and help middle school math teachers, instructional coaches, and principals in 10 schools to improve math performance for selected students. Aims: Help students who begin the year below grade level in math to rapidly catch up to their high-performing peers. Increase the capacity of Partners to connect schools in virtual communities and to use classroom-level data in the continuous improvement process.
SEEDING SUCCESS: $560,000, 24 Months (Memphis, TN). Seeding Success (part of the StriveTogether national network of cradle-to-career collective impact organizations) will enlist 15 Shelby County Schools (middle school feeders into high schools) for a 24-month “rapid improvement cycle process” of identifying “8th grade and 9th grade on-track outcomes, root causes of students who fall off track, and testing aligned interventions. Aims: Help more students stay on track toward college and career readiness. Induce the participating schools to engage in “rapid improvement cycles” based on Seeding Success methods.
SOUTHERN REGIONAL EDUCATION BOARD (SREB): $3,300,000, 36 Months. SREB will enlist 10 secondary schools in Birmingham, AL (Jefferson County) to increasing the proficiency rates of Black, Latino, and low-income students on 8th grade math and 9th grade Algebra 1. Aims: Improve scores indicating “math proficiency” in grade 8 and in Algebra I. Promote “improvement science and cycles” in two national networks: High Schools That Work and Making Middle Grades Work.
TEACH PLUS: $619,000, 23 Months (Chicago, IL & Los Angeles, CA). Teach Plus will use an “evidence-based Change Management Framework” from the Boston-based Rennie Center for Education Research & Policy (has deep connections to Teach Plus) to develop continuous improvement skills among the teacher leaders and principals in ten middle schools located in two cities. Aims: Increase the number of African American, Latino, and low-income students achieving proficiency in 8th grade math. Promote use of the Change Management Framework from the Rennie Center https://www.renniecenter.org/change-management
I hope this post is of use in understanding how the $92 dollars will be used to extract compliance with the Gates-favored methods of intervening in schools. It is not obvious how much of the money will actually reach schools, teachers and students. It is not yet obvious how much collatoral damage will be done by these ventures. Gates is a sucker for anything that looks like a short-term fix or formula for public schools.
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Dare I suggest that the outcomes of this muddle will disappoint? Unless Jim Liebman, the Columbia law school professor hired to “evaluate” the Gates plan, cooks the books.
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Not $92 dollars, but $92 million. The press release had more conceptual hash than my edited version. The “science of school improvement” is being promoted by Anthony Bryk and the Carneige Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.
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If there is a “science of school improvement,” I have yet to see it in action anywhere.
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“Network” seems to be the catchall term for having no idea of the organizational structure and/or tasks associated with this continuous improvement process other than that someone has to collect a mountain of data that is supposed to show minority students are making continuous progress toward college and career success. So if we try lots of “innovative” (substitute untested) things on really big groups of students, we can produce really humongous amounts of (test) data that we can then massage to say something we want it to say efficiently.
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Gates always wants mountains of data. The term “network” conjures varied mental images, e.g., spoke and wheel, spiderweb, fishing net and many more when you add directional flows. Do to a Google key word search for “network” but look only at the pull down menu for images of the varieties of networks, nodes, and connections.
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“The term “network” conjures varied mental images,…”
Exactly. And since there is little evidence that these “networks” have been defined, they apparently are part of the research design. They will have so many independent variables that it will be easy to claim that the initiative needs more time when no results are evident several years into this experiment. Gates just throws things against the wall to see if anything sticks.
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