Category: RTTT


My last post in this series ended with RI’s entry into the RTTT fray.  This entry meant that the RI Department of Education (RIDE) would need to put together a compelling application to be considered alongside the other 40 some-odd states that applied for the competitive funds.  Because of the way that RTTT has been framed, it seemed that states would need to spend lots of time thinking hard about what innovations and creative solutions they might propose to set them apart from the competition, right?  Wrong.  The US DOE was not the least bit interested in innovation and creativity.  And even though Duncan spends time saying that his office is not interested in creating programs (see Duncan at Harvard post), they have set forth a narrow scope of program prescriptions for states to follow, at least those who want a chance at the extra federal monies.  This is the genius of RTTT as a public policy.

First, consider RTTT in the context of the current economic times.  There are few, if any, states that can realistically afford not to apply for funds.  There are few state commissioners of education who are in a position of saying, “thanks, but no thanks,” to a federal education grant.  Thus, state education officials like Commissioner Gist, regardless of their personal beliefs about the types of reforms being promoted through RTTT, have their hands forced into submitted an application for the funds.  Duncan and Obama know this, and thus expected that the vast majority of states across the country would submit RTTT applications, and in doing so, would try their hardest to shift the policy contexts within their states to align as closely as possible with RTTT priorities.  They didn’t need a mandate, they just needed a policy that would exploit the vulnerability of states’ economic circumstances.

Naomi Klein has coined the term “disaster capitalism” in her book The Shock Doctrine to explain how US “free market” philosophies have been used repeatedly through recent history to exploit public disorientation in the aftermath of collective shocks or disasters.  While her book mostly discusses shocks such as wars, terrorist attacks, and natural disasters, I don’t think it is a stretch to consider the current economic crisis as having the effect of a collective shock on much of US society.  It is in this context of economic crisis that RTTT employs the mechanisms of free market, disaster capitalism to effectively force education policy change.  Remember, RTTT is part of the Stimulus Package.  With little choice but to apply, states have little choice but to conform.

Next, if the US DOE’s priorities weren’t clear in their RTTT RFP, The New Teacher Project (an organization founded by Teach for America alum, formerly headed by Michelle Rhee, that offers an alternative route to teacher certification in cities throughout the country) produced and circulated an RTTT application and policymaking handbook for state officials to utilize in putting together competitive RTTT applications.  If one takes a close look at the content guidelines laid out by TNTP and the content found in the actual application submitted by states like RI they are similar if not essentially mirror images, thus calling into question any semblance of innovation or creativity that one might expect in a truly competitive application process.  In this case, the feds are less interested in what good ideas that individual states might have, and more interested in how well prepared they are to implement the ideas that have been handed down.  In other words, how much have you, in your state, been able to shift the policy context such that RTTT priority areas are likely to succeed?  Thus, things in RI like a current cap on the number of charter schools and the lack of a state education aid funding formula hurt the application.  But, things like Commissioner Gist’s aggressive school turnaround actions that have begun even before the RTTT awardees have been announced will be looked upon favorably.

Finally, the last piece of public policy brilliance is found in RTTT’s multiple rounds of awards.  The current stimulus money is going to be doled out in 2 or 3 rounds of awards, and when speaking publicly Duncan alludes to more, without actually saying where the money would come from.  We are about to hear (maybe even today) who the lucky winners are for the first round of funds.  This announcement will not only move RTTT priorities forward in these states, but more importantly it will set off a flurry of activity in the states that were not chosen so that they might have a better chance in round two.  The states that win in the first round will most likely be states that have most of their ducks in a row, that is, they will already have established the policy context necessary for RTTT priorities.  The states that have a viable shot at second round funding will most likely be short in an area or two and will get to work on “fixing” them as soon as possible.  For example, if RI doesn’t receive funds you can expect that there will be aggressive legislative pushes for a lifting of the charter school cap and the establishment of a funding formula (only one of which I would support…but that’s another post).  You can also expect the further vilification of teachers and teachers unions as they by and large did not support the states RTTT application.  The message will be that RI had a strong application but for these areas and if these conditions change, then RI will be in a better position for round two funding.  Thus, the multiple rounds of funding also act as a mechanism to continue to force policy upon states without an actual mandate.

In the end though, realize that only 10-15 states will receive RTTT funding, yet the 40+ who have applied will have been working diligently to create policy contexts in their states aligned with RTTT priorities.  Thus, what we will be left with is a majority of states who have shifted their policies with hopes of being funded, but who will not be a position fiscally or mechanically to actually follow them through.  The effect?  An unfunded mandate in a new sneaky guise.

People keep asking me if there is some sort of useful resource out there laying out criticisms of the US Department of Education’s Race to the Top (RTTT) school reform plans.  I’m not sure what’s out there, but I hope to provide an analysis of RTTT through the telling of what’s been going on in RI from my point of view.  So, here goes…

The Elementary and Secondary Education Act (in its most recent form known as No Child Left Behind) might be up for re-authorization sometime within the next year, but that hasn’t stopped the start of a new education reform era: The Race to the Top.  If you’re even peripherally connected to public education, you’ve probably heard of the Race to the Top (RTTT) in the past few months as state education officials all over the country raced to get their RTTT applications submitted to the feds.  But, you might be wondering: why has everyone been in such a tizzy?

A small part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (otherwise know as the “Stimulus” package) dedicated approximately $4.3 billion to education reform.  These funds are being administered through a competitive grants program managed by the US Department of Education named Race to the Top.  As Duncan launched his “NCLB Listening and Learning Tour” in the late spring of 2009, he was really less interested in listening and learning about people’s experiences with NCLB, and more intent on pushing what amounted to an RFP outline for RTTT funds.  And then, just in case folks still hadn’t heard about what the Obama administration has in store for our public schools, Duncan launched another tour, this time with Newt Gingrich and Al Sharpton, and continued to promote a narrow reform agenda that threatens to entrench some of NCLB’s worst legacies.  Once again, the ones on tour did most of the talking and it soon became clear who was supposed to be doing the listening when Duncan & Co. made their appearances.

In the littlest state in the union, newly minted State Education Commissioner Deborah Gist listened carefully.  Gist arrived to Rhode Island fresh off of her previous job as the State Superintendent of Education in Washington, DC.  Her days in DC (from the Clinton administration forward) may have helped Gist to translate Duncan’s RTTT policy plans more quickly than others less familiar with the federal policy scene.  She soon released newly articulated statewide priorities directly aligned with RTTT priority areas.  Rhode Island had officially entered the Race to the Top.

(The next post in this series will use RI’s example to begin exploring how RTTT’s brilliance and simplicity has exploited the economic crisis to spell danger for public education throughout the country.)

Not really.  But, some individual professors did.  As noted in the Arne Duncan at Harvard post, two professors at HGSE asked challenging questions of Duncan.

Karen Mapp, who’s expertise lie in the area of family, school, and community partnerships, decried the recent de-funding of Parent Information Resource Centers, the only federally funded program in the country that concentrates on helping families get connected to their children’s education.  Of course, Duncan didn’t have a response other than that he doesn’t think the US DOE should be creating programs, just funding ones that are out there that work.  He implied that if states came to them with examples of programs that are working, then they’d fund them.  Only, in the meantime the programs that are working (like the Rhode Island Parent InformationNetwork – RIPIN) will lose funding and thus have their success derailed.

Susan Moore Johnson, an expert in the area of teachers unions, merit pay, and teacher retention, pointed out the inherent tensions found between Race to the Top reform priorities and most states’ collective bargaining laws.  RTTT is decidedly anti-union and seems to provide multiple pathways to bypass collective bargaining agreements between teachers unions and school districts.  According to Dr. Moore Johnson she hasn’t seen any state statutes in a place like RI that actually give districts the authority to ignore their collective bargaining agreements with local teachers union, and questions whether any federal policies even provide such cover.  The implication is that for a place like Central Falls, RI ,where the district has fired ALL the teachers in the high school and where there is no room for a reshuffling of these teachers into different schools (as might happen in a larger district with multiple high schools), the job actions taken against teachers are without cause and thus effectively illegal.  Without passing judgment on whether or not she thinks these decisions are good ones, Dr. Moore Johnson definitely seemed to question the thinking behind RTTT which has created the conditions for a “perfect storm” with regard to public schools, labor relations, and actual education-based decision making.

And of course credit goes to portions of the student body who do not buy into Duncan’s plans hook, line, and sinker.  There were challenging questions about RTTT’s focus on competition instead of collaboration, the potentially detrimental effects some of its priorities could have on students with disabilities, and the marginalization of art education.  (As an aside, Professor Thomas Hehir recently testified before the US House Committee on Education and Labor about charter schools discriminatory practices toward students with disabilities).  Then, that evening there was yet again a capacity crowd gathered to listen to Dr. Jeff Duncan-Andrade from San Francisco State University.  Dr. Duncan-Andrade’s message is quite different than the Education Secretary’s.  His message challenges the status quo in a way that Secretary Duncan cannot fathom, and I guarantee that the student body would follow Duncan-Andrade over Duncan into the educational battlefield if given the choice.

As for the institution of HGSE, it still isn’t clear where it stands.  Not that one would expect a place like Harvard, the bastion of some of the most elite interests in the world, to come out with anything radically mind-blowing.  So, while individual professors and students may find the courage to stand up and challenge the dangerous directions in which Arne Duncan is leading current educational reform policies, I think it is safe to say we’ll continue to hear not even a peep from the institution itself, which will instead hide behind its superficial claim to be “pushing the frontiers of education.”

Arne Duncan at Harvard: A Report Back

Earlier this week I questioned whether or not the HGSE community would welcome US Secretary of Education Arne Duncan with smiles, grins, and open arms or with skeptical glances, grimaces, and critical feedback.  I think there was a little “all of the above” on display amongst the faculty, staff, and student body when Duncan addressed a packed Askwith Lecture Hall and crowds watching via simulcast in at least two other locations on campus.

First, Duncan’s speech was delayed due to inclement weather.  This delay gave local retired teacher activists more time to distribute their open letter to HGSE (see “Will the real Harvard Graduate School of Education please stand up?”) and between the before and after of Duncan’s talk they distributed 500 copies of their letter to the HGSE community.  We’ll see if they get any more substantive of a response this time around.

When Duncan arrived he was ushered into the lecture hall and got started on a speech that sounded like a list of talking points that anyone can find if they spend some time on the US DOE website.  All in all he didn’t say much, not that I would expect him to.  Then came the Q & A time, which is when things would get at least a little more interesting.  As the questions were being asked and answered I was on my Facebook account updating my “at the Arne Duncan talk at Harvard…” status with comments that tried to capture what I felt were the main points of the Qs and As.  This real-time transcription became tiresome because I lost steam and I also kept getting distracted by my own commentary (which you’ll see found its way into the notes).  Below I’ve copied the live-blogging from the questions I had energy to record.  HGSE says they’ll be posting the talk online, so you can hopefully check these accounts for accuracy if they do, but for now I figured that I would share what I’ve got (obviously things are paraphrased):

Karen Mapp’s question: There is a lot of talk about importance of family engagement, however the new DOE budget eliminates PIRCs (Parent Information Resource Centers), the only federally funded program that supports families to be involved in their children’s education…what’s up with that?

Duncan’s answer: They want to redistribute the money into competitive grants programs. The US DOE does not want to be making up programs and want people to bring to them what works.  No more handouts.

My thoughts: Essentially the ultimate neoliberal answer…commodify everything, incentivize people to behave in certain ways, rely on and encourage market-based solutions and behavior.  Now family engagement programs are going to be put up against and compared to everything else in the world of US DOE competitive grants.  In other words, there will be no guaranteed money for programs addressing an issue that research shows clearly matters.

Paul Toner’s (VP of the Mass Teacher Association) question: Labor-management issues are key. Specifically he asked Duncan to respond to reports that he “applauded” of Fran Gallo’s firing of the teachers in Central Falls, RI.

Duncan’s answer: He never said that it was great to fire teachers, instead what he was applauding was that the district was willing to take drastic action in a failing situation. He claimed that the management and teachers unions in CF were “in talks as we speak.”

Me: Ummm…are they? CF district officials and CF teachers, are you in talks? It was my impression that it was case closed…perhaps until it’s reopened in the courts.  But please let us know if there’s a way to reconcile in some other way!

Questions from students: Couldn’t merit pay could serve to segregate students with disabilities who have low test scores? Lots of the RTTT initatives are competitive in nature, not collaborative, but competition for limited funds. Why be competitive and not collaborative?

Duncan’s answer (with me in there too): Title I funding hasn’t changed, that will continue to be based on what it has always been, it’s not competitive. Duncan goes on to give some weird argument that they didn’t see RTTT as a competition between states at all (not sure how he figures that).  He’s interested in challenging the status quo, not competition. What works for wealthy families probably works well for poor families: choice. Merit pay plans have failed because they’ve been done to teachers, not with. So, in Chicago teachers/schools could opt-in and every adult in the building benefits. If you focus on absolute test scores, then it could be bad, but the focus needs to be on growth, not absolute scores. No one goes into education make lots of money (except charter school managers I guess…check out the salaries of people like Eva Moskowitz in Harlem: over $300K).

Carol L. Colbeck, Dean of Education at UMass-Boston: Concerned about rhetoric around closing and shutting schools/districts. How do we support, not close/shut down.

Duncan: Never said anything about closing, but concerned about change. There will be different rounds of RTTT funding and as the winners get moving, others can learn from them and hopefully be winners in another round.

Me: Somehow this is about collaboration and not competition in his view.  Too much double speak going on.

Susan Moore Johnson’s follow-up question about Central Falls/RTTT & teachers unions: There’s a perfect storm brewing as we see the conflicts between RTTT, district collective bargaining agreements, and collective bargaining laws in states, how will you deal with this?

Duncan: As we speak, CF is in talks between superintendent and teachers. (Again–Really? Let us know folks…are you in talks!?) We need to move outside our comfort zones and talk more about better serving children. The question needs to be would you send your child to that school? If the answer is no we have to challenge management, unions, everyone.

Me: A classic non-answer.  I guess they’ll just let the courts decide if RTTT, or actions taken under the pretense that RTTT funds might be on the way (as has been the case in RI), and state laws regarding collective bargaining can coexist?
Question: What about k-12 national standards?

Duncan: It’s about college and career ready standards in every state, not about federally mandated standards.

Me: Jeff Duncan-Andrade, in a talk later the same evening at Harvard, noted that standards are only useful inasmuch as they address the most pressing needs of children.  If a child is not more compelled by what schools have to offer than by what the streets do or make them deal with, we will never close any “gaps.”  So if standards aren’t this kind of compelling, they’re useless.
Tina Collins’ (HGSE post-doc) question: Levels of segregation have increased dramatically in recent years. What are the administration’s policies going to be in terms of addressing the resegregation of schools and do you see it as related to the achievement gap issues that RTTT focuses on?

Duncan: Believes the issue are connected. Very worried about the issue, believes that integrated schools and life experiences are important, and that when students don’t have integrated experiences growing up they struggle in a bigger more diverse world. These things are hard to teach, they happen in the hallways, in the cafeteria, on the buses, in social settings. How do we create an environment where people recognize the importance of this issue?

Me: If this is really going to be addressed you have to acknowledge that while white folks can be better for their experience in diverse settings they can still function in society “successfully” by virtue of their white privilege. The issues Duncan raises related to integration are really about the benefits that people of color get by being able to learn how to function in a white world. Until this is fully acknowledged we won’t understand the issue, and we’ll never get to the point of questioning the dominant values and norms rather than trying to beat them into those who don’t fit.

(A friend posted this last part on my Facebook because I missed it) Last question of the night from an Arts In Education student: Where do the arts fit into this push for “courage” in our schools? There was no mention of the arts the entire afternoon, even though it is considered a “core” subject.

Duncan: One bin into which the 60+ programs are being consolidating is focused on a “well-rounded” education. This issue speaks to him on a personal level…the opportunity to play basketball is what compelled him to do well in school. It’s important to introduce children to more than reading and math early so they can discover their passion, whether it be dance, robotics, sports, etc. He believes that PE and recess needs to be reinstituted.

Me: How can Duncan consider arts an integral part of the educational experience, yet think of it simply as a carrot to get kids in the door? There was no mention of the tangible skills arts develop that are applicable in the development of a new work force. Does he even know arts education has that power? Do most educators know?

Okay folks…so that might give you a feel for how it went with Arne Duncan’s talk at Harvard.  I definitely give some of the individual professors (Karen Mapp and Susan Moore Johnson especially) and students credit and kudos for asking some tough and critical questions.  I wouldn’t give Duncan any credit for actually answering them though.

UPDATE: A few people have let me know that the letter from the CF teachers union to Dr. Gallo, which Colleen Callahan refers to in the ProJo video clip, was not as conciliatory as Callahan makes it sound. In other words, the union may have said they would agree to the “transformation” model, but then refused to agree to the conditions necessary for transformation…essentially double-speak.

***********************ORIGINAL POST BELOW************************

Video footage of Thursday’s RI Board of Regents meeting leads one to believe that Fran Gallo, Superintendent of Schools in Central Falls (CF), was not truthful when it came to her claim that the teachers in CF refused to agree to a school “transformation” plan that would lengthen the school day and make other structural changes at Central Falls High School.  She used this claim to justify her choice of a school “turnaround” model, resulting in the recent firing of over 90 instructional staff that work at the school. If the teachers did agree by the deadline that Supt. Gallo imposed, then what was her real reason for going through with the mass termination plan?  Watch the videos and judge for yourself.

On Friday, February 26th US Secretary of Education Arne Duncan will be speaking at the Harvard Graduate School of Education (HGSE).  The talk is scheduled from 2:30-4:00 and is sure to attract a capacity crowd as well as others gathered around various TV monitors that will be simulcasting his talk.  It remains to be seen if there will be any critical push back from the HGSE community regarding Duncan’s federal education policy, known popularly as “Race to the Top.”  HGSE’s self-proclaimed mission is “To prepare leaders in education and to generate knowledge to improve student opportunity, achievement, and success.”  The institution also claims that its “faculty, students, and alumni are studying and solving the most critical challenges facing education: student assessment, the achievement gap, urban education, and teacher shortages, to name just a few.”  But the HGSE community, which also says it is “pushing the frontiers of education,” has been curiously silent in the face of the most recent round of threats to public education being meted out through federal education policy.  As NCLB wreaked havoc on public education systems throughout the United States, the HGSE community didn’t push back.  As Duncan and President Obama have been pushing policies that exacerbate some of the worst forms of attack against public education (the increased privatization and commodification of educational management, services, and practice; the propping up of a multi-billion dollar testing industry; the driving toward a standardization of the educational experiences of the least advantaged students; the deskilling of the teaching profession; the increased presence of non-educators in educational leadership positions; and the promotion of profit-oriented market-driven models of school reform, to name a few) the HGSE community has remained silent.

There is a stark contrast visible to those who care to look between the words in HGSE’s mission and overview, and the HGSE community’s (in)action.  This hypocrisy was outlined nicely in an open letter written to the HGSE administration and faculty by three retired Boston area teachers, who together represent more than a century of celebrated teaching experience.  Take a look at the letter for yourself: OpenLetterHarvardGSE. They’ve yet to receive any substantive response, a tactic that the HGSE administration is known for employing when faced with harsh criticism.  Harvard’s been around longer than all of us and even the institutions we represent, and it relies on this staying power to wait out its critics, ignoring them until they go away, graduate (yes, not all HGSE students are enthralled by the graduate school to which they pay thousands of dollars in tuition fees), or give up.  The authors of the letter along with some local allies plan to leaflet outside of the Duncan talk on 2/26.  Will HGSE offer any substantive response?

The faces behind the curtain

Each person pictured below has played a major role in promoting and supporting federal Race to the Top education policies.  Who else should we add to the list?  Post a comment below!

Paul Vallas: Superintendent, Louisiana Recovery School District

Richard Daley: Mayor of Chicago

Wendy Kopp: Founder & CEO, Teach for America

Steve Barr: Founder, Green Dot Charter Schools

Barack Obama: US President

Arne Duncan: US Secretary of Education

Al Sharpton: President, National Action Network

Joel Klein: NYC Schools Chancellor

Eli Broad: Philanthropist, Broad Foundation

Newt Gingrich: former US Speaker of the House

Michelle Rhee: DC Schools Chancellor

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