Category Archives: Uncategorized

Legislative Advocacy Action — Save the Dates

2009-041

Wednesday April 1, 20096:00 PM at  Wright Middle School — the Madison Metropolitan School District will be hosting a “Legislative Informational Community Session” to “provide updates on school funding and state budget issues that affect the MMSD” and “discuss and share strategies on how the community can get involved in advocating for our schools.”  For more on the MMSD Legislative Agenda, click on this link.

Tuesday April 21, 2009, 1:00 PM at Room 413 North in the Capitol — the Wisconsin Assembly Education Committee will be holding a public hearing on the School Finance Network education funding reform proposal.  It is important that we get a good crowd to demonstrate the importance  school funding reform.

Also, don’t forget the Wisconsin Council on Children and Families Advocacy Day at the Capitol on March 18.

Make you voice heard!

Thomas J. Mertz

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The Charter Choice in Madison and the Nation

schoolbudgets

On Monday, March 9, 2008 The MMSD Board of Education will consider an application from the Nuestro Mundo community to begin the process of chartering a dual language immersion secondary school.

Although the application is very impressive and Nuestro Mundo appears to be a good and well run school, I urge the Board to turn away this effort to expand charters in Madison.  MMSD is initiating an elementary  non charter dual language immersion program and there is talk of a non charter dual language middle school also.  I believe that this is the the better path.

In an editorial today the Wisconsin State Journal puts forth self contradicting nonsense in favor of the charter proposal.  In a letter to that paper last week, Nuestro Mundo parent Judith Kujoth employed questionable and unsupported assertions of causality to advocate for the middle school proposal.  I’m just going to hit the low lights.

The editorial begins:

Madison needs to get past its outdated phobia of charter schools.

Charter schools are not a threat to public schools here or anywhere else in Wisconsin (emphasis added).

Later in the editorial they note the President Obama has pledged to double the Federal money for charters and note that the group hopes to get $1.1 million in Federal planning grants.  It doesn’t take a genius to figure out that Obama’s funding of charters, like that of George W. Bush, will divert money from traditional public schools.  That $1.1 million that they hope to get is $1.1 million that isn’t and won’t be available for our underfunded district schools.  Yes, charters are a threat.  An insidious threat, because regardless of the merits of a particular proposal or the drawbacks of charters as a policy choice, cash strapped state and local decision makers are easily seduced by the promise of this money.

The editorial continues:

They are an exciting addition and asset to public schools — a potential source of innovation, higher student achievement and millions in federal grants.

And when charter schools do succeed at something new, their formula for success can be replicated at traditional schools to help all students (emphases added).

This is exactly what has happened in Madison.  Nuestro Mundo pioneered dual language immersion, the district saw good things happening and they are now in the process of “replicating.”

Apparently the State Journal doesn’t really believe this because later they opine:

The School Board should reward their success by opening the door to a charter middle school. Instead, too many board members seem bent on keeping any dual-language middle school within the framework of a traditional school.

So it isn’t about what is best for the district and the students at all, it is about “rewarding” certain people.  This goes to the heart of one big problem with charters:  They divide; they Balkanize.

What is good for the district as a whole and most children can easily get lost when well organized charter groups advocate tirelessnessly for their “rewards.”  This is true at the state and national levels also.  This is another way that charters threaten public education.

Even the most optimistic charter advocates must recognize that there is no realistic scenario where most children will not be in traditional public schools.  The Board’s job is to do what is best for all children; in practice they must make the utilitarian calculations about what is best for most children and that means doing everything they can to strengthen the district schools most children will attend.  This may include limited charters for purposes of innovation and to address persistent problems, but it certainly does not include “rewarding” anyone at the expense of the district as a whole.

Kujoth covered  much of the same shakey ground as the State Journal, so I’m only going to touch on one paragraph in her letter that caught my attention.

Creating a charter school will have many benefits. The law affords charters greater flexibility to create curricula and measure progress. Students in these schools often have higher rates of achievement because educators have flexibility to design teaching methods that appeal to the needs of each student and to change modalities when they aren’t working without being constrained by traditional district practices (emphasis added).

Note the “often” before “higher rates of achievement. ”  In fact there is no consistent evidence that students in charters have any higher achievement, the best evidence is that achievement is about the same or slightly lower than in traditional schools.

I’m skeptical of standardized tests as a measure of achievement, but it worth noting that Nuestro Mundo students have performed below the levels of students in other MMSD and Wisconsin schools and that this difference is more pronounced for low income students (chart from DPI)

ns-read-w-state-and-district-cft0308_1848031bb

In the next sentence, also with no evidence what so ever, she asserts the cause for this nonexistent achievement gain to be the “flexibility to design teaching methods that appeal to the needs of each student and to change modalities when they aren’t working.”  Since some charters, KIPP for instance,  are infamous for their inflexibility (and resultant push outs of students), this is a laughable generalization about charters.

The last line, the final assertion that “traditional district practices constrain flexibility is also counter to my experience as an MMSD parent.  The teachers my children have had — good and bad — have been very flexible in their teaching.  Even if my experience is not typical and the constraints on flexibility are a real problem isn’t the answer to work to free all teachers from these constraints, not set up a charter where only some children benefit from flexibility?

If these represent the best case for the new charter proposal, the Board should have an easy time rejecting it, unless political pressure holds sway.  I urge the Board to do what is right, not what might be popular.

In the spirit of honesty, I must state that my older son attends James C. Wright Middle School, a charter, if in name only.  At an earlier point in the history of the school, charter status may have been important.  In the years that I know about, Wright functions as a district specialty school, not a charter in any meaningful way.  I would a support a change in status for Wright to reflect this reality.

Thomas J. Mertz

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“Do It Again?” Another Referendum for Salem

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The Kinks, “Do It Again” (click to listen or download)

On Thursday, the Salem Board of Education voted to try again for an operating referendumOperating referenda for the district failed in June 2008, September 2008 and February of 2009.  The September referendum lost by a fairly large margin, but the June and February votes were 269 to 235 and 654 to 694.

Those working for the referenda must feel like Sisyphus forever rolling the stone up the hill, but never getting to the top, or Tantalus, with sustenance always just out of reach.  Unlike those mythological figures, the school supporters and the children of Salem have done nothing to deserve their cruel fate.

Their decision to go to referenda again indicates that they are unwilling to accept the devastating cuts in store for their schools.  I can’t blame them.

Whether this one passes or not, an inordinate amount of time and energy will have been spent trying to secure adequate funding for the district.  This is time that should have been spent educating the students.  That’s what happens when you live in a state with a broken system for funding education.  Sign on with the Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools and the School Finance Network to work to fix this.

Back to Salem.  Advocates continue to make a strong case, reminding all that strong schools are essential for healthy communities.

Proponents of the board have said that increase is needed to save programs and staff, to provide opportunities for children, and ultimately to protect property values in the community. If the school system goes into decline, they argue, the whole community will ultimately be affected.

“I’m scared too, we took a huge pay cut in my family. My wife was out of work,” said Scottie Washington. But he believes families will leave the community and home values will decline if programs are cut. “If this referendum doesn’t pass this is going to be a ghost town,” he said.

The ask this time will be for a three-year non recurring referendum at $1.16 million a year.  The vote will be at a special election on April 28.  This looks like the same measure that was voted down in February.

I haven’t seen a new presentation of potential cuts yes, but the ones form the earlier campaign are probably still in play.

clcik on image for pdf

click on image for pdf

There is much more Salem referendum related material here, including the slideshow embedded below.

It should be noted that the major issue in Salem is and has been class size.  Smaller class sizes is one of the “best practices” that almost everyone agrees helps all children learn and almost every agrees is particularly important for children from poor or difficult backgrounds.  When we know what works, we should make sure that the resources are there to do what works.

I admire the tenacity of the Salem Board and wish them the best.  Let’s follow their example at the state level and “get’r done” on school funding reform (again, join WAES, join SFN).

Thomas J. Mertz

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Out of the Loop or I Still Want My Agendas

moebius

Since the Madison Metropolitan School District has essentially stopped sending agendas to those who have requested them*, I try to make a habit of checking the “Current Agendas” and “Board of Education Calendar” pages. I usually do this on Friday, because that is when the agendas for the following week are generally posted.

I looked today and was surprised to see that there had been Strategic Planning Curriculum Action Team meeting yesterday (pdf of page as of 11:50 AM, 3-6-09). This meeting was not listed on the Calendar page (pdf of page as of 11:50AM, 3-6-09). Nor is it listed on the Strategic Planning page (pdf of page as of 11:59 AM, 3-6-09).

In fact there is no description of, membership list or other reference to the appointment of a “Strategic Planning Curriculum Action Team” anywhere that I can find on the MMSD site. We don’t know who picked the team or who is on the team.

It sounds as if the work is important, too important to take place outside the attention of the public.

The strategic priority addressed by the Curriculum Action Team is the identification of solutions that will revolutionize the educational model to engage and support all students in a comprehensive participatory educational experience defined by rigorous, culturally-relevant and accelerated learning opportunities where authentic assessment is paired with flexible instruction.

Prior to the November referendum we were told over and over again about how important, inclusive and open the Strategic Planning Process would be, how this was a key part of the “partnership” between the public and the district. It sounded real good.

I was in the loop then. Now, along with the almost everyone else, I’m out of the loop.

* Clarification – Whenever I have made specific requests to MMSD staff for information, they have been great about responding and providing that information (if possible) in a timely fashion.  This isn’t about that, it is about the list advertised at the top of the Current Agenda page “You can get BOE Agendas delivered directly to your e-mail inbox” and more generally about communication and openness.

Thomas J. Mertz

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WAES School-Funding Reform Update, March 2

waesgraphic

Table of Contents below, click here for the full update.

Update — The hearing on the School Finance Network plan highlighted below is still very important, but it is in the process of being rescheduled.  Watch AMPS for more info.

I want to highlight the first item.  Save the Date –March 24 — this is important.  The School Finance Network plan is a very good plan and enjoys broad support.  Attend the hearing and show the legislature you care about school funding.

Update — The hearing on the School Finance Network plan is still very important, but it is in the process of being rescheduled.  Watch AMPS for more info.

School-funding reform update, week of March 2

  • SFN reform plan subject of March 24 hearing at the Capitol
  • SFN plan continues to be in the news around Wisconsin
  • Evers, Fernandez meet in West Allis at state Superintendent debate
  • 2009-11 state budget appears to be on the fast track
  • WAES doing good work, but needs your financial support
  • Tax cuts cost state billions since mid-1990s, LFB report says
  • Four groups renew memberships in WAES
  • Oneida County Board petitions state for school-funding reform
  • Round-up of funding problems from around Wisconsin
  • Early childhood care and education key to economic development
  • Help WAES correct e-mail update glitch
  • School-funding reform calendar
  • The Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools (WAES) is a statewide, independent, membership-based organization of educators, school board members, students, parents, community leaders, researchers, citizens, and community activists whose lone goal is the comprehensive reform of Wisconsin’s school-funding system. If you would like more information about the organization — or on becoming part of WAES — contact Tom Beebe at 920-650-0525 or tbeebe@excellentschools.org.

    Thomas J. Mertz

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    School Funding Action – Florida

    From MYFOX 35, Orlando.

    This weekend thousands of Florida parents, teachers, students, administrators and community members took part in militant “Make Our Schools A Priority” protests against cuts in education.

    The big event was the rally in Orlando reported in the video above (more here), but smaller actions have been held around  the state, some of which included legislators in attendance (examples here and here).

    The economic situation, tax collections, the state budget and local school budgets are all in dire circumstances.  Some of this is detailed on the Channel13, Central Florida web site.  A couple of examples:

    Brevard County:

    MONEY:

    WHAT’S BEEN DONE:

    WHAT COULD HAPPEN:

    Marion County:

    MONEY:

    WHAT’S BEEN DONE:

    I like the militancy, the mass actions and even the confrontational tone.   I sincerely believe that although things are nowhere near as bad in Wisconsin that after 15 years of annual cuts in educational opportunities we also have a crisis in school funding.   I worry that polite advocacy fails to communicate the reality of that crisis.

    A Saturday, March 21 meeting of the Wisconsin Joint Finance Committee will be held at Miller Park.  This would be a great time to turn out some numbers for education and comprehensive education finance reform.

    Back in Florida, the Legislature returns for a budget session on Tuesday facing a $700 million shortfall.  Governor Charlie Crist is scheduled to give his “State of the State” address on that day.

    Hat tip to Sherman Dorn for making me aware of the goings on in Florida.

    For more on school finance in Florida, see the National Access Network state page.

    Thomas J. Mertz

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    Community Engagement: The Basics, or “I Want My Agendas”

    Click on image for this report and other resources from the Annenberg Institute

    Click on image for this report and other community engagement resources from the Annenberg Institute

    As Robert Godfrey noted recently, The Madison Metropolitan School District has been remiss in sending Board of Education agenda updates to those of us who have requested them.  No agendas for the Monday, March 2 meetings reached my mailbox (it is on the web site and I’ve posted it here).  The last agenda I received was for December 1, 2008.  By my count that makes seven sets of meetings in a row without agendas being sent.

    I believe that the elected and appointed leadership of MMSD are sincere in their expressed desires for more and better community engagement.  Yet I am confounded by the continued lack of attention to details like this.

    Some portion of the community responded to the offer of regular Board of Education agendas and updates via email, indicating a great degree of interest and engagement.  Instead of satisfying this interest and building on this engagement, the district has only sporadically fulfilled their promise.

    In discussions of community engagement, I’ve heard some (not all) Board members give sneering comments  about seeing and hearing from  the same people week after week.   I’m one of those people and I can tell the Board that by treating those already engaged in this manner — belittling our interest, neglecting to send the requested agendas, failing to respond to emails… –, you give others little or no reason to engage.

    Here are some simple, off the top of my head suggestions to improve communication and engagement.

    • Send the agendas to those who have requested them.
    • Archive the agendas and related documents in an easily accessible manner (posting the related documents was a huge move forward, but once the next set of items is posted the old ones are almost impossible to find).
    • Approve and post meeting minutes in a timely fashion (this has been hit-or-miss, the last regular meeting minutes posted are from January 12, the last special open session are for November 10, the meetings of the new committees appear to be up-to date).
    • Respond to emails, even if only with an auto-reply.
    • Consider engaging in dialogue with those who testify on agenda items (the Board used to do this on occasion, other local bodies do it all the time, it has been a long time since I’ve seen it happen with the School Board; it would be illegal to have a dialogue on non-agenda items).

    I want to applaud the initiatives to improve communication like assigning Board members to sets of schools, holding more meetings in more locations and even the new governance structure that all-but-guarantees at least one week between  an item being introduced via a committee and that item being voted on by the Board as a whole.  These are good, but they are no substitute for taking care of the most basic things.  I want my agendas.

    Clarification – Whenever I have made specific requests to MMSD staff for information, they have been great about responding and providing that information (if possible) in a timely fashion.  This isn’t about that, it is about the list advertised at the top of the Current Agendas page:  “You can get BOE Agendas delivered directly to your e-mail inbox and more generally about communication and openness.

    Thomas J. Mertz

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    Stand, fidget, and learn

    Ben Garvin for The New York Times

    Ben Garvin for The New York Times

    An interesting piece in the Times this morning really got my wife Iris quite excited, a new way to imagine the classroom setting. A good friend of hers had written her thesis on this very idea when they were studying to be physical therapists. I hope that Madison schools will continue to remain focussed on “all” approaches to quality learning in the classroom.

    The stand-up desks come with swinging footrests, and with adjustable stools allowing children to switch between sitting and standing as their moods dictate.
    “At least you can wiggle when you want to,” said Sarah Langer, 12.

    With multiple classrooms filled with stand-up desks, Marine Elementary finds itself at the leading edge of an idea that experts say continues to gain momentum in education: that furniture should be considered as seriously as instruction, particularly given the rise in childhood obesity and the decline in physical education and recess.

    Teachers in Minnesota and Wisconsin say they know from experience that the desks help give children the flexibility they need to expend energy and, at the same time, focus better on their work rather than focusing on how to keep still.

    Researchers should soon know whether they can confirm those calorie-burning and scholastic benefits. Two studies under way at the University of Minnesota are using data collected from Ms. Brown’s classroom and others in Minnesota and Wisconsin that are using the new desks. The pupils being studied are monitored while using traditional desks as well, and the researchers are looking for differences in physical activity and academic achievement.

    Robert Godfrey

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    WAES School Funding Reform Update, Week of February 16, 2009

    waesgraphic

    Click here for a pdf of the full update.  Table of contents below.

    School-funding update

    • Governor gets involved in school-funding reform discussion
    • Governor’s budget helps schools keep their heads above water
    • Funding reform effort gaining steam around the state
    • WAES doing good work, but needs your financial support
    • Two new members join WAES; 11 renew memberships
    • HOPE plan making rounds of Legislature again this session
    • New study shows benefits to Wisconsin of combined reporting
    • Norman talks school-funding reform on Milwaukee Public Radio
    • School-funding reform news from around Wisconsin
    • Get involved in budget process at WCCF 2009 Advocacy Camp
    • Help WAES correct e-mail update glitch
    • School-funding reform calendar

    The Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools (WAES) is a statewide, independent, membership-based organization of educators, school board members, students, parents, community leaders, researchers, citizens, and community activists whose lone goal is the comprehensive reform of Wisconsin’s school-funding system. If you would like more information about the organization — or on becoming part of WAES — contact Tom Beebe at 920-650-0525 or tbeebe@excellentschools.org

    Thomas J. Mertz

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    Quote of the Day — Stunning Illogic and False Hope from the New York Times

    Click the image for more NCLB cartoons.

    Click the image for more NCLB cartoons.

    The Bush administration allowed states to phony-up statistics on everything from graduation rates to student achievement to teacher training and state education standards. As a result, the country has yet to reach not only the goals that were clearly laid out in the law but also farsighted education reforms dating to the mid-1990s. (emphasis added)

    New York Times, “A New Day for School Reform,” editorial, February 21, 2009.

    There may be some truth to the cause and effect on teacher training, but the implied idea that the failures of No Child Left Behind are due to  setting standards (curricular and Adequate Yearly Progress) too low is illogical and reinforces multiple flaws in the NCLB.

    Some asides at this point.  I want to be clear that communicating high expectations to students in all contexts while giving them the support they need to meet those expectations is good policy.  Changing state standards and cut scores at best comprises a very, very small part of this concept and at worst leads to shaming and other counterproductive punishments.  Better — not necessarily higher — curricular standards do have a place in reform.

    First, standards in practice mean standardized tests and standardized tests are very limited as assessments and even more limited as a means of improving education.  To be fair, there is some language in the stimulus package (the subject of the quoted editorial) that may induce a move away from standardized tests (see below).

    Second, and most importantly, the whole notion that lax standards are the biggest problem in education defies logic and the historical record.

    In terms of logic, just ask yourself if the way to improve archery scores is to use smaller targets.  If they can’t hit the larger target, how will they hit a smaller target?

    As to the history, here is the data for Wisconsin under the current system:

    Year # Schools Failed AYP # Districts Failed AYP
    2007-8 153 4
    2006-7 92 2
    2005-6 87 1
    2004-5 49 1

    This graphic tells us about the history and projected future (more here).

    From “The Impact of the Adequate Yearly Progress Requirement of the Federal No Child Left Behind Act on the Great Lakes Region,” a study released by the Great Lakes Center for Educational Research and the Education Policy Studies Laboratory at Arizona State University.

    The current standards have resulted in clear trend of increasing failure to meet those standards, a trend that is projected to increase with current standards.

    Some quotes from “How Feasible is Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP)? Simulations of School AYP “Uniform Averaging” and “Safe Harbor” under the No Child Left Behind Act” by Jaekyung Lee may help clarify.

    It does not appear to be feasible for many schools across the nation to meet the current AYP target within its given 12-year timeline. It is not realistic to expect schools to make unreasonably large achievement gains compared with what they did in the past. Many schools are doomed to fail unless drastic actions are taken to modify the course of the NCLB AYP policy or slow its pace. (emphasis added)

    When a majority of schools fail, there will not be enough model sites for benchmarking nor enough resources for capacity building and interventions. This situation can raise a challenging question to the policymakers: is it school or policy that is really failing? There is a potential threat to the validity of the NCLB school accountability policy ultimately if such prevailing school failure occurs as an artifact of policy mandates with unrealistically high expectations that were not based on scientific research and empirical evidence. (emphasis added)

    An identified problem with NCLB is that standards are unrealistically high, the New York Times’ solution, raise the standards.  Stunning illogic.

    This is the kind of “harder is better” mentality reflected in the Pangloss Index and expected from people like the Walton and Bradley Foundation funded  Thomas B. Fordham Institute, not “the paper of record.”

    Later in the editorial, the assessment reform potential of the stimulus bill is touted:

    States will also be required to improve academic standards as well as the notoriously weak tests now used to measure achievement — replacing, for instance, the pervasive fill-in-the-bubble tests with advanced assessments that better measure writing and thinking.

    This seems to be a gross overstatement.  Here are the relevant parts of the stimulus bill:

    (4) STANDARDS AND ASSESSMENTS.-The State-
    (A) will enhance the quality of the academic assessments
    it administers pursuant to section 1111(b)(3) of the
    ESEA (20 U.S.C. 6311(b)(3)) through activities such as
    those described in section 6112(a) of such Act (20 U.S.C.
    7301a(a));
    (B) will comply with the requirements of paragraphs
    (3)(C)(ix) and (6) of section 1111(b) of the ESEA (20 U.S.C.
    6311(b)) and section 612(a)(16) of the IDEA (20 U.S.C.
    1412(a)(16)) related to the inclusion of children with disabilities
    and limited English proficient students in State
    assessments, the development of valid and reliable assessments
    for those students, and the provision of accommodations
    that enable their participation in State assessments;
    and
    (C) will take steps to improve State academic content
    standards and student academic achievement standards
    consistent with section 6401(e)(1)(9)(A)(ii) of the America
    COMPETES Act.

    A and C  send us to the two prior acts, with vague “such as” language in A.  Here is the section cited in A:

    (1) To enable States (or consortia of States) to collaborate with institutions of higher education, other research institutions, or other organizations to improve the quality, validity, and reliability of State academic assessments beyond the requirements for such assessments described in section 1111(b)(3).

    (2) To measure student academic achievement using multiple measures of student academic achievement from multiple sources.

    (3) To chart student progress over time.

    (4) To evaluate student academic achievement through the development of comprehensive academic assessment instruments, such as performance and technology-based academic assessments.

    and the section cited in C:

    (ii) identifying and making changes that need to
    be made to a State’s secondary school graduation
    requirements, academic content standards, academic
    achievement standards, and assessments preceding
    graduation from secondary school in order to align
    the requirements, standards, and assessments with
    the knowledge and skills necessary for success in academic
    credit-bearing coursework in postsecondary education,
    in the 21st century workforce, and in the Armed
    Forces without the need for remediation;

    I certainly don’t see a requirement to end “fill-in-the-bubble tests” here.  I see some good but weak language opening the door to multiple assessments, some possibility of better assessments in general and buzz words about the “21st century workforce.”  I also have not seen anything in Wisconsin’s plans for the stimulus money that indicates that the WKCE will be gone anytime soon (since the contract requires two-year notice be given, I don’t see that long awaited day being pushed up).

    This editorial is unfortunately typical of the confusion on education policy in our media and consequently in our society.  Education policy can be confusing.  This makes the role of the press even more critical and the failures of logic and accuracy like those in the Times editorial more damaging.

    Thomas J. Mertz

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    Filed under Accountability, Best Practices, education, Gimme Some Truth, National News, nclb, No Child Left Behind, Quote of the Day, Uncategorized