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R.I. School Shake-Up Is Embraced by the President

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image Anthony J. Mullen, the national teacher of the year, said school accountability was important, but he suggested that it needed to be the right kind.

3.7.10 - Anthony J. Mullen, the national teacher of the year, said school accountability was important, but he suggested that it needed to be the right kind.

R.I. School Shake-Up Is Embraced by the President

A Rhode Island school board’s decision to fire the entire faculty of a poorly performing school, and President Obama’s endorsement of the action, has stirred a storm of reaction nationwide, with teachers condemning it as an insult and conservatives hailing it as a watershed moment of school accountability.

The decision by school authorities in Central Falls to fire the 93 teachers and staff members has assumed special significance because hundreds of other school districts across the nation could face similarly hard choices in coming weeks, as a $3.5 billion federal school turnaround program kicks into gear.

While there is fierce disagreement over whether the firings were good or bad, there is widespread agreement that the decision would have lasting ripples on the nation’s education debate — especially because Mr. Obama seized on the move to show his eagerness to take bold action to improve failing schools filled with poor students.

“This is the first example of tough love under the Obama regime, and that’s what makes it significant,” said Michael J. Petrilli, a vice president at the Thomas B. Fordham Institute in Washington, an educational research and advocacy organization.

“I think it’s going to give some cover to other school boards and school superintendents around the country that want to do something similar,” Mr. Petrilli said. “They can say the president of the United States, Barack Obama, someone the teachers voted for, supports us here to take some radical actions to shake up our schools.”

In Boston on Thursday, another city moving to carry out the administration’s school-turnaround policy, officials announced that staff members at six underperforming schools would have to reapply for their jobs. Carol R. Johnson, the schools superintendent, said staff members were not being fired, but were being asked to “recommit” themselves. This move angered the teachers’ union, which said it was exploring legal action.

Mr. Obama’s endorsement of the Rhode Island board’s tough action infuriated many of the four million members of the two national teachers’ unions, thousands of whom campaigned vigorously for him in 2008.

“I ripped the Obama sticker off of my truck,” said Zeph Capo, a midlevel official at the Houston Federation of Teachers who trains classroom teachers. “We worked hard for this man, we talked to our neighbors and our fellow teachers about why we should support him, and we’re having to dig the knife out of our back.”

Officials at the two unions, the National Education Association and the American Federation of Teachers, were so angry in the hours after Mr. Obama first endorsed the firings that an irreconcilable break with the administration seemed possible, perhaps bruising Democrats’ electoral chances in November. Recognizing how a permanent breach could hurt everyone, however, both sides sought to lower tensions, partly by encouraging a negotiated settlement in Central Falls, administration and union officials said in interviews.

But neither the president nor Education Secretary Arne Duncan backed off his support for tough action, including dismissing teachers en masse, to improve learning conditions in chronically failing schools. At the high school in Central Falls, a poor community with a large immigrant population, only 7 percent of 11th graders passed state math tests last fall. And if the administration’s posture was undermining its support among teachers, it was earning unusual praise from conservatives, as well as from supporters of an overhaul of the nation’s schools.

“The administration is putting down a real marker here,” said Alex Johnston, chief executive of the Connecticut Coalition for Achievement Now, a business-backed education advocacy group.

The decision by the Central Falls school board came under the terms of a new Obama administration policy intended to spur interventions in thousands of failing schools nationwide.

To get a share of the $3.5 billion in what are known as School Improvement Grants, school officials can choose to transform the learning environments in failing schools by extending instructional hours and making other changes, converting them to charter schools, closing them entirely or replacing the principal and at least half the staff.

The Central Falls superintendent, Frances Gallo, initially chose the first option this year, but after a dispute arose with the union over extra pay for adding 25 minutes to the school day, she broke off negotiations. Backed by the local school board, she announced the firings on Feb. 23. Last Monday, Mr. Obama supported the board’s action in a speech to a dropout prevention group.

“If a school continues to fail its students year after year after year, if it doesn’t show signs of improvement, then there’s got to be a sense of accountability,” Mr. Obama said. “And that’s what happened in Rhode Island last week.”

National union officials were shocked.

“Teachers were taken aback — and profoundly disappointed,” said Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers. “Teachers will watch carefully whether Washington, the states and local districts will be partners that help us do our job or whether they’ll be scapegoating and demonizing.”

continue...   http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/07/education/07educ.html?pagewanted=2&ref=education

 

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Subscribe to comments feed Comments (3 posted):

Patrick Groff on 08/03/2010 03:29:07
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Teachers should not be accused as being the entire reason why their students do not learn adequately. The professors of education at universities who train teachers must accept part of this blame. For example, the National Council on Teacher Education recently reported on "What Education Schools Aren't Teaching [future teachers] about Reading and What Elementary Teachers Aren't Learning" about this matter. The large majority of teachers across the nation are misinformed about this vital matter.

Patrick Groff, Professor of Education Emeritus, San Diego State University.
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marg on 08/03/2010 10:11:10
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I agree with Mr. Mullin. We do need teacher accountablility for teaching students the skills, concepts, etc that they need to succeed in this world. I DO NOT believe, however, that we get that level of accountability using one test to measure student progress. We need to use Multiple Measures and look at the academic growth of each individual child.
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marmykode on 08/03/2010 12:11:25
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It needs to be a collective accountability piece that no one has stepped forward yet to take. Superintendent Gallo took the first bold step to literally shake up the system. Now unions are crying foul! How about teachers, administrators, teacher development trainers, etc. now take a step in the right direction by coming together to address the issue. They all need to be at the table and they need to stop pointing the finger elsewhere. Bottom line if you are not performing in the real world, they will make a change. You don't get to maintain your "under performing status". Why is education any different especially when we are talking about how their responsibilities directly affect future generations?
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