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FROM THE EDITORS: Misdirected Energy
By Michael J. Petrilli
Schools get an A in resisting reform.
How is it that a system
can simultaneously master the art of resisting reform and stick to the
path of least resistance? Such is the conundrum facing public
education.
That our schools are impervious to fundamental
change (fads-of-the-month notwithstanding) is well established.
Joe Williams (“Games Charter Opponents Play”) recounts the imaginative means school districts find to
strangle promising reforms, in this case charter schools.
Couldn’t defeat them in the legislature? Then bleed them with
a thousand little cuts. Can’t halt them with a state-mandated
cap? File a frivolous lawsuit. Can’t persuade parents that
they aren’t worth choosing? Ground their buses so students
can’t get to the schools. Though twisted, many of these
actions are inventive and energetic, some even entrepreneurial.
But push the education system to address its
own widespread failures and suddenly it becomes limper than a
lunchroom Tater Tot. Consider teacher quality. Virtually every
school district in the nation possesses the authority to fire
ineffective teachers within their first year or two on the job,
without much difficulty. As Thomas Kane and his colleagues argue
(“Photo Finish”), the effectiveness of a teacher
can be predicted early on. Letting the weakest ones go makes
perfect sense and requires no change in law or collective
bargaining agreements. Why, then, don’t districts routinely
dismiss those rookie teachers who don’t have the right stuff?
Secure on the path of least resistance, administrators typically
find it is just too much work to fire someone and find a
replacement. Instead, they keep them all—good, bad, and
indifferent. Later on, their hands are tied. They’re
“stuck” with poor performers.
Consider the fate of failing schools under the
No Child Left Behind Act. While the law’s rhetoric is John
Wayne tough, its reality is Tiny Tim timid. Districts are expected
to “restructure” their chronically low-performing
schools by firing the entire staff, reopening as a charter school,
or contracting with private managers. Most instead opt for soft
reforms like sending in an instructional “coach” or
tweaking the curriculum. As both Sara Mead and Nelson Smith lament
(forum), it’s a tragic
lost opportunity. How to explain districts’
actions? They’re on the path of least resistance. It’s just
too hard to close down a school and launch a “fresh
start.”
To be sure, such bumbling behavior has long
been associated with bureaucracies. Shielded from the free
market’s incentives, public sector officials learn to
“make nice” rather than make unpopular decisions. But
in K–12 education, “accountability” was supposed
to change all that. The new system of rewards for strong
performance and tough sanctions for failure was meant to motivate
officials to do the difficult work, make the hard choices, upset
the applecart.
So why isn’t it working? Why don’t
newly accountable principals, driven to raise student achievement,
dismiss their ineffective rookie
teachers? Why don’t newly accountable superintendents,
committed to “leaving no child behind,” shut down their
failing schools? Why hasn’t accountability closed off the
path of least resistance?
There are two obvious explanations. First,
accountability as we know it is still too weak-kneed. Sure,
there’s plenty of sunlight and shame, with schools labeled
“in need of improvement” and editorial writers wringing
their hands. Yet very few public school employees—from the
superintendent to the soup server—ever lose their jobs for
poor performance. We need more head rolling, and less eye rolling.
Second, accountability is not enough.
Competition via school choice is the other weapon in the
“tough love” arsenal, and until it’s wielded at
large scale, we are unlikely to see real results.
Which brings us back to charter schools.
Through the eyes of change-resistant bureaucrats, they present a
mortal threat to the very culture of the public education system.
Were they to grab significant market share, they might
“tip” K–12 education into an age of real
accountability. And that’s a path the system can be expected
to blockade with all the entrepreneurial zest it can muster. One
only wishes all that energy could be put to a better purpose.
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