The Stimulus, What Was Not Funded: School Constuction

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Excerpts from the Wisconsin State Journal, “Rebuilding Wisconsin, Part 1: A long and costly to-do list.”

PUBLIC SCHOOLS

West Bend Public School Superintendent Patricia Herdrich said she can hardly bear to walk through the district’s Badger Middle School. Built in the 1920s, the old school is the worst of the substandard buildings in this district about 75 miles northeast of Madison.

There are, Herdrich said, 13 different levels in the school because of the hodge-podge tangle of additions over the years. There are no elevators.

“You can’t make it accessible,” Herdrich said. “I’ve had kids on crutches crawling up and down stairs.”

In hundreds of school districts across Wisconsin, students are stuck in inadequate and even dangerous buildings, jammed into too-small classrooms or housed in trailers in school parking lots, according to Miles Turner, director of the Wisconsin Association of School District Administrators…

The problem is that, since school expenditures were capped by the state Legislature in 1993, the corner that has been most frequently cut by money-starved districts has been building maintenance and repair.

In its most recent survey of school district spending, the Wisconsin Education Association Council found that 82 percent of the 303 districts that responded have cut money for improvements to buildings and grounds.

And 77 percent reported delaying building maintenance or improvement projects. According to the 2007 infrastructure report from the Wisconsin chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers, the median reported need of the state’s 431 school districts to catch up on repair and maintenance projects is $695,000 while the average need is $1,768,563.

But some districts are in such dire shape that the cost of delayed projects far surpasses those numbers. Herdrich in West Bend said the district’s total deferred maintenance is $80 million.

Bringing Badger Middle School up to standards alone would cost $29 million, she added…

[A]s the stimulus bill was being put together, the state School Administrators Alliance conducted a needs survey of the state’s school districts.

Only 228 responses were received from all 431 districts, but for just those districts, when it comes to repair, maintenance, and building needs topped $2.5 billion.

Referendums have offered relief only in some districts.

In West Bend, for example, voters defeated a $119.3 million building referendum in 2007 by a 62.6 percent to 37.4 percent margin.

The district had hoped to have another referendum in November but decided against that when the economy went south.

Now, a $68 million building referendum is scheduled for April…

The version of the bill that passed the House of Representatives included what seemed a healthy amount for Wisconsin schools — a total of $729.6 million, including $317.2 million for construction.

But the political debate and resulting compromise in the Senate resulted in much of the money for school construction, including maintenance and repair, being slashed from the bill.

“That line item was zeroed out,” said John Forrester, a spokesman for the School Administrators Alliance. So superintendents such as Herdrich in West Bend, initially buoyed by reports that the stimulus bill could offer some help to repair dilapidated buildings, now find themselves wondering again how to house students safely in the face of failing referendums and dwindling state funds.

It should go without saying that the current broken school finance system requires successful referenda for almost all construction, maintenance and remodeling projects.

Thomas J. Mertz

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And they all shined on . . .

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A couple of days ago, NPR had a feature on All Things Considered that was quite intriguing.

One county in Virginia has found a new way to reach taxpayers: an automated phone system calls thousands of residents and asks them to participate in school board meetings.

It has proven successful.

It can be tough to attract an audience for local government meetings. School boards and city councils cannot compete with prime-time TV, cable and the Internet. So, some cities are trying to bring the meetings to the people by phone.

The piece highlights the difficulties people have in making evening school board meetings and how one of the most basic technologies is offering citizens the chance to  “vote” on proposal’s and to register their opinions. Could this be a solution for Madison, especially during crucial budgeting meetings?

And while were on the subject of communication, I wonder why the last two meeting agendas have not been emailed to MMSD agenda subscribers and why several “special board meetings” from November still do not have minutes posted?

Robert Godfrey

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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

A Little Education Policy Humor

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The Coasters, “Charlie Brown” (click to listen or download)

With the stimulus, elections, budget and school finance proposals, a few smiles seems like a good idea.  It has been a little while since the last Education Tweak so I thought I’d pass along a couple of items from the Britsh site NewsBiscut (hat tip to Judy Schmidt).

Balls announces Hindsight to be taught in schools
The Minister of Education, Ed Balls, has announced today that from September 2009, the teaching of hindsight will become a compulsory addition to the national curriculum at Key Stage 3 and above.

‘Clearly, the benefits of hindsight have long been recognised, but schools have provided little or no formal teaching of the subject to date. It is to remedy this deficit that we are moving straight to an expectation that a minimum of an hour per week’s hindsight will be taught to all children aged 11 plus’ from the beginning of the next academic year.’

Further details of the curriculum are to be released shortly, but the Minister did confirm that both GCSE and A level Hindsight would be offered to students, although pupils wishing to pursue the subject would not be able to sit their final exams until several years after the completion of their formal education.

The Government are also considering the teaching of ‘Retrospective Foresight’ ‘Tip of the Tongue’ phenomena and ‘Unknown Unknowns’ although there have been delays drawing up the syllabus for the latter.

While the Opposition supported the new plans, the Conservatives said that the teaching of Hindsight should have been introduced much earlier. ‘Knowing what we know now, it’s obvious that hindsight should have been introduced ages ago,’ said Tory education spokesman Michael Gove. ‘I can’t believe that they have waited until now.’

National Curriculum to include ‘Bleedin’ Obvious’

The Department of Education has announced that it is widening the National Curriculum to include lessons in the Bleedin’ Obvious.
Research has shown that much of Britain’s workforce is under-educated in this area, and continues to fall for email scams, Readers Digest appeals and offers of extended warranties.

‘In the modern global economy Britain’s workforce needs to be highly skilled and educated,’ said Junior Education Minister Sarah Beaumont. ‘Frankly if we still got people thinking that they really are the millionth visitor to a certain website, then there really isn’t much hope for any of us.’

Lessons in the Bleedin’ Obvious will also explain that being rude to a policeman who has pulled you over for a driving offence will not result in a quick resolution of the matter or smaller fine nor is it generally making worth making jokes about bombs and terrorism to airport security staff.

Pupils will also be taught that if they get seriously into debt with the bank, then paying it off by borrowing lots of money from that dodgy bloke on the estate may not be the end of all their problems. Another lesson includes learning what happens if you try and clear the compacted grass cuttings off the lawn mower blade while it is still connected to the mains.

‘It’s great to get proper training in the Bleedin’ Obvious before we head out to the workplace’ said 16 year old Simon Jonson. ‘I’ve seen a really well paid job I want to apply for that will let me work from home. It was advertised on a bit of paper tied onto a lamp post so it must be from a really reputable source.’

Thomas J. Mertz

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Oneida County Resolution on School Finance

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There was at least one positive vote for the future of education in Wisconsin on February 17th.  The Oneida County Board of Supervisors went on record supporting “legislative change to the state-aid formula to more fairly distribute state-aids throughout the state of Wisconsin” (full resolution here).

According to the Lakeland Times, Supervisors explained the situation and their votes as follows.

“… I just thought it would be nice that the people of Oneida County know that the supervisors … will support this resolution and bring it down to Madison,” Dean said. “This resolution, 13-2009, is to support our schools – Rhinelander and other districts. With the decreasing state aids to schools, Oneida County school districts are receiving less state aids based on school aid formulas. Oneida County property taxes is not the answer. The state is obligated – I’ll say it again, the state is obligated – to support the district schools. The Legislature has to make some kind of adjustments … If we send support like this, and other people as well, maybe they’ll see that we do have a problem. In closing – if you think education is expensive, try ignorance.”

Supervisor Gary Baier agreed, noting “property value rich and tax poor” northern Wisconsin districts are facing an economic crisis under the current school funding formula.

“The [school funding] formula is broken, it hasn’t worked for years …,” he said. “If they (the state) say they are going to fund it (education) two-thirds, then they ought to fund it two-thirds.”

I’m going to be asking the Dane County Board to do something similar.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Cuts Coming to Salem

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“We All Love Our School”,  written by 4th grade Salem students in 2007, performed by 2nd and 3d grade students in 2008-9. Click to listen or download.

We All Love Our School

written by 4th grade Salem students in 2007

Salem is Great. It’s the biggest in the state. We all love our school!
White and blue our colors true. We all love our school!
At Salem we’re having fun.
Salem we’ve just begun
Salem students are the best.
We’re a cut above the rest.
A-round every turn, there is some-thing to learn. We all love our school!
A peaceful place puts a smile on your face. We all love our school!
At Salem we learn and grow.
Salem out to recess we go.
Falcon is our name and learning is our game!

Referenda in six districts failed on Tuesday.  That means each of these districts must to scale back their plans in ways that do the least harm to their students.  This is all part of business as usual under Wisconsin’s broken school funding system.

Here is a preview of what is in store for Salem.  The headline in the Kenosha News promises “Deep Cuts,” 17 layoffs and reductions in music and art.  The story offers further details

Cuts approved Thursday include eliminating band for children in fifth and sixth grade, cutting down on the number of gym classes children take each week, cutting back on art, and reducing reading specialty programs. All after-school sports and clubs would be eliminated, and class sizes would climb in grades three through eight. There were cuts in support staff and the administrative staff as well.

The source of the problem is also explained:

Salem has been facing budget shortfalls as it grapples with state school funding regulations that cap the amount of revenue schools can receive. The district has been covering its operating deficit using savings, but faces a deficit of more than $1 million next school year.

Two board members voiced the lament familiar to many around the state:

“This is killing me,” board member Shane Gerber said during the vote, the names of teachers who are targeted for layoff were read off. In the audience, teachers began to cry as names were read off and some walked out of the meeting.

“We as a board are now faced with cutting programs we know are good for kids,” said President Patty Merrill. “We have attempted three referendums, all three failed. The cuts must be made.”

If you haven’t already, listen to the song at the top and then try to convince yourself that  slowing the bleeding via band aids and reshuffles is the best we can do for the children of Salem and Wisconsin.  When you are done, contact the Governor and your legislators and tell them they need to listen to voices of children also; tell them that these children deserve music and art and reading help and all the other components of a full education.  Sign on with the Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools and the School Finance Network while you are at it.

Thomas J. Mertz

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The Man With a “Plan”

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After greeting the School Finance Network (SFN) plan with little better than contempt and offering a budget proposal that at best slows the bleeding in school finance (after 15 years of steady blood loss), Wisconsin Governor Jim Doyle has previewed his own “plan” for fixing school funding.  It may be a good starting point for talking (not as good a starting point as SFN’s work), but I don’t think contains the answers to the financial and other struggles of our schools and I don’t like the way it only provides the  resources needed to “improve student performance” (which unfortunately will likely be defined by the flawed and limited WKCE) to those districts that meet criteria that have nothing to do with education.

Like many policy proposals these days, it uses rewards and punishments, carrots and sticks.  The reward is an opportunity to escape from the revenue caps, to no longer have to cut 1%-2% of educational programing annually.  The punishment is to continue under the system that has eaten away at our schools, limited our students’ opportunities and put our state’s future in danger for the past 15 years.

The rewards are tied to the following ill-defined (at this point) policies:

• Join together for the purposes of negotiating union contracts

• Make employees use the state health plan unless the school district already has a plan that is cheaper

• Require schools to agree to a list of practices that would improve student performance

• Provide compensation for teachers that better reflects the needs of individual schools such as those in rural districts that struggle to attract teachers for some subjects

I’m going to leave the contracts, compensation and health insurance aside for now in order to say a few words about #3, the “best practices.”

Doyle cited the work of Alan Odden as the basis for the kind of practices he has in mind.  The Wisconsin School Finance Adequacy Initiative Final Report for 2007 has some good ideas about “best practices” based on research  and good estimates of the costs of these practices, also based on research.   Some of the things in the Odden report are stronger than others and some would be difficult for many districts, but small classes, formative assessments used wisely, teacher coaches, staff development are all good ideas.

What Odden and SFN both propose is funding these practices for all schools.  Doyle seems think that access to best practices should be a reward available only to those who get all their ducks in order. I guess the New “New Wisconsin Promise” will be “A Quality Education for Every Child Who Lives in District that Joined with Other Districts to Negotiate Contracts and Limit Health Care Costs.”

I want to make it clear that neither Odden nor SFN wants to simply give the schools more money to do whatever they want (although both do show proper respect for the  professional knowledge of our state’s educators).  Both include means of targeting money to research based programs and both also propose “accountability” evaluations.

There are ways to target money toward best practices but still make the resources available to all schools  (the Student Achievement Gaurentee in Education — SAGE — program is a partial example).  You can do categorical aids which can only be spent in certain ways,  you can do grants, you can do reimbursements.  Instead, Doyle ties the resources for best educational practices to his ideas of the best financial and policy (and probably political) practices.  As education policy, this makes no sense.

We’ve had 15 years in Wisconsin under a system of school finance that is based on the politics of tax policies, not education.  As a nation, with No Child Left Behind we’ve been punishing schools instead of helping them.

If Doyle’s plan moves forward, I sincerely hope that education is put first and that the stick punishment is put away;  that the very good ideas about funding promising educational practices are enacted in a manner that will reach all districts, all schools, and all students in Wisconsin.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Primary Election Roundup

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Some quick results and very few thoughts this morning.

Turnout was pathetic.  During the Presidential campaign season we heard a lot about a new political engagement, especially among the young.   February primaries lack the glamor (and resources) of Presidential votes, but going from about 2.9 million statewide voters in November 2008 to about 250,000 statewide voters in February of 2009 does not bode well for our political culture.  Locally, in Madison District 8 — one of the campus districts — the vote total in November 2008 was about 7,500; yesterday it was 528.   One data point does not make a trend, but this can’t be good for our democracy.

Tony Evers and Rose Fernandez survived the Sate Superintendent primary.  Here are the totals:

Schools Superintendent REPORTING 97%
Tony Evers

88,734

35%
Rose Fernandez

78,830

31%
Van Mobley 34,534 14%
Todd Price 28,641 11%
Lowell Holtz 22,163 9%

I want to thank Todd Price for his effort and his successes in raising awareness of the continuing crises in school funding, testing and other school matters. Tony Evers now has my full support (and I hope to see more evidence of the aggressive advocacy he has claimed).

All nine referenda failed!

The Appleton referenda lost by a 5 to 4 margin.  According to the Post Crescent this will mean “as many as 30 fewer teachers and larger class sizes next fall, plus delaying safety measures for several school buildings.”

The Clinton referendum asking to fund investments in a geothermal HVAC system failed again, this time by a large margin of 968-576.  This is exactly the sort of infrastructure investments we should be making, but under our current state school finance system they are difficult (more here, here and here).

The Highland request for recurring authority to limit program cuts lost 298 to 158.

Class sizes will be going up in Salem.  There is confusion about the margin.  DPI reports that it was 964 to 654.  The Kenosha News says 664 to 654.  More form that source on what this will mean to the quality of education in Salem:

The increase, officials said, was needed to cover expenses for the upcoming school year. School Board President Patricia Merrill said the result means 19 employees would be laid off for the 2009-10 school year, with layoff notices likely to be announced at Thursday’s School Board meeting.

Also on the chopping block are extra-curricular and after-school programs, starting this fall. Other programs scheduled for elimination include the gifted-and-talented program and technical education. Cuts are expected for music, arts, gym and Spanish. Merrill also said technology upgrades could be halted and staff workshops and travel will be reduced.

Superintendent Dave Milz said class sizes will likely increase.

“I’m not sure how any of these things can be beneficial for the kids,” Milz said. “This will certainly prove to be a challenging experience for the board and community to overcome.”

Referenda were narrowly defeated in Salem last June and September.

The vote in Siren was very close, 156 to 167 (turnout is important!).  There is talk of going back to the voters, but programing cuts are likely.

The votes on the three asks in Waupun were also relatively close.  Out of about 2,700 votes cast, they ranged from 698 in the “ongoing operational expenses vote,” to 26 votes in the “textbooks” and “materials” measure.  There will likely be school closures, and many cuts.

Closing the two outlying schools is a ticket item that would address about half of the budget deficit. No other suggestions presented could put a dent into it as closing Alto and Fox Lake elementary schools.

School board president Cathy Loomans said, “The business we’re in is about putting teachers in front of students. So the majority of our budget is staffing, and unfortunately, when you make these kinds of cuts, they have to come from staffing and that’s going to directly affect class size. There’s no way anymore to insulate the students from making these kinds of cuts.”

“Looking at what cuts we’re going to do, we have to look at what’s best for all the students to give the students across the district an equitable education,” Anne Kraintz, school board member, said.

For more information on the situation in Waupun (from one perspective), check out this site.

All around, not a great day for the future of education in Wisconsin.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Vote Today! – Today’s School Votes

Today’s election is very important.  Wisconsin will decide which two candidates for State Superintendent of Public Instruction will be on the April ballot; districts around the state have significant referendum questions and there are a couple of local Aldermanic races in Madison where there are candidates who I think deserve support (there are also some other primaries for judges and Board of Education and other Aldermanic races around the state).  The projected turnout is only 6%-10%, so your vote may make the difference.

First and foremost, Todd Price is the clear choice for State Superintendent.   Price has a thorough understanding of the difference quality public education can make in the lives of individuals, the health of our communities and the future of our state.  He also has correctly diagnosed and offered solutions to the problems of our state school finance system, our testing regimen, NCLB and more.  Most importantly, Todd Price has brought an urgency to this race that others lack.   We don’t need another state superintendent who accepts the continued erosion of our schools under a broken state finance system, underfunded programs for our highest need students and the misplaced priorities of NCLB and WKCE.  We need a State Superintendent who will challenge our governor, our legislators and our local school officials to do better.  Todd Price will be that State Superintendent.  Vote for Todd Price.

There are nine referenda in six districts on the ballot today.  The districts are Appleton, Clinton,  Highland,  Salem, Siren and Waupun.  I don’t have time this morning to fully explore these measures (if possible, I will add some links later), but essential things like preserving smaller class size (Appleton and Siren), investing in sustainable energy (Clinton), keeping neighborhood schools open (Waupun), paying for books, technology and other learning materials and avoiding further programing cuts will be decided.  I hope they all pass.

I am going to offer some quotes from a Todd Price press release and interview on these measures and the system that has led 151 referenda votes since January 1, 2008, most simply to preserve  or limit cuts to current programs, maintain or upgrade facilities, or build needed schools.

Price characterizes the need for these votes as “a regrettable symptom of a school finance system that has been harming our students, our communities, and our state for far too long.”…

“Referenda are band aids, temporary fixes. Our districts keep asking for more band aids just to stop the bleeding. It is time to address the real problem; it is time to fix Wisconsin’s broken school finance system.”…

“These campaigns to provide an adequate education for all children divide communities and distract from the essential task of working together for the education of all children,” Price explains. “One neighborhood is pitted against another, people on fixed incomes who can’t afford tax increases but know education is important are frustrated, educators and boards of education spend too much time trying to pass referenda instead of working to improve education; parents and concerned community members end up volunteering on campaigns instead of in the classrooms.”…

Racine Unified is a good example. The district struggles on an annual basis to balance its budget without making significant cuts to programs or going to referendum for extra money. It’s led to a contentious relationship between the district and the public, left schools in disrepair and resulted in relatively poor student performance.

Last, voters in Madison District 2 need to keep one of our city’s most Progressive and hardest working Alders in office — vote for Brenda Konkel.  In District 8, newcomer Katrina Flores is the best choice and as a grad student in the School of Education a sure friend to the schools.

Thomas J. Mertz

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What does Van Mobley mean by a “Basic Education for the Real Economy” (and who gets a “basic education” and who gets something richer)?

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John Nichols in the Capital Times seems enamored with State Superintendent of Public Instruction candidate Van Mobley’s sound byte  “”Basic Education for the Real Economy.” Me, I’m confused, skeptical and suspicious.  Mostly, I think it sounds like an abandonment of public education as a means of expanding equality of opportunity and an embrace of the idea of social and economic stratification via  “appropriate education.”  In other words, a “basic education”  and some vocational skills for the masses, something better for the ruling classes.  I will say I am impressed with the sound byte itself — it sounds very good and is open to many interpretations.  It appeals to John Nichols and the “reading, riting and rithmatic” crowd.  Nice political rhetoric.

Before continuing I want to say two things.  First, if you believe like I do in public education as our best tool for moving towards equality, I think Todd Price is the best choice to keep that vision alive.  Second, despite what I think is an inexcusable lapse in not further examining Van Mobley and his rhetoric, John Nichols deserves some credit for being one of the few journalists in the state who has given the Superintendent’s race regular coverage.

Next, I think the full statement is in order:

Basic Education for the Real Economy

For the last twenty years we have geared our education system to prepare our children to thrive in the “New Economy.” Guess what? The “New Economy” is collapsing. It was a chimera. It is time to get back to the basics of reading, writing and arithmetic. What do children learn from the internet if all they can do is look at the pictures? As Superintendent I will refocus class time on the basics.

Since Mobley is a historian, I’m going to play historian too.   This Struggle for the American Curriculum (click the link for Herb Kliebard’s masterful book by that name) is as old as public education itself.   There are lots of versions:  Education for Democratic Citizenship vs. Education for a Trained Workforce; Manual Training for all as part of a varied education vs. Industrial Education for some and liberal arts and the classics for others; Booker T. Washington’s Vocational Education vs. WEB DuBois quest for excellence in liberal arts and sciences…  One consistent thing has been that calls for “basic education” have rarely been mouthed by those looking for equity and equality.  The “back to basics” crowd generally know that the elite have the resources to supplement the “basics” and that by limiting the education of the non-elite, they all but guarantee a recreation of inequality.

Mobley also writes of the failure of the “New Economy” as a reason for his emphasis on the basics.  This is a false dichotomy.  Our only chices aren’t “the basics” vs. “Education for  New Economy.”  However, there is some truth here, but only some.  The whole “World is Flat,” “Education for the 21st Century,” line of thinking  rests on some shakey oversimplifications.  As the Center for the Study of Jobs & Education in Wisconsin and United States has ably demonstrated, the “New Economy” jobs have always been few and far between.  This doesn’t change the need to work towards the promises of democracy and equality of opportunity and may reinforce the need for our schools to provide full and varied educations in order that people in all occupations may  achieve full and varied successes.

Mobley’s statement also made me think of something I was teaching today.  The topic was how railroads transformed America in the 19th Century.  I always use the computer revolution as a comparison to communicate that railroads touched every aspect of life, from work, to entertainment, to agriculture, to politics…to education.  To further this point, I also quoted Henry Adams (from The Education of Henry Adams):

This relatively small part of its task was still so big as to need the energies of a generation, for it required all the new machinery to be created — capital, banks, mines, furnaces, shops, power-houses, technical knowledge, mechanical population, together with a steady remodelling of social and political habits, ideas, and institutions to fit the new scale and suit the new conditions. The generation between 1865 and 1895 was already mortgaged to the railways, and no one knew it better than the generation itself.

Mobley asserts that because the “New Economy” bubble burst, our students need only a  “basic” education.  Adams reminds us that innovations like railroads and computers, and the commitment societies make when they “mortgage” their futures by embracing them, remake and remodel everything.   The depression of 1893 did not mean that America no longer needed a “mechanical population;” the recently burst bubble does not mean that our children will thrive with just the “basics.”   Just because only some  of today’s students will work at “knowledge based” “New Economy” jobs doesn’t mean that they won’t benefit in myriad ways from a well rounded education that includes knowledge about computers and the world that computers are such a big part of.

I’ll admit that all this is riffing on a very short and not very clear statement by Mobley.  Unfortunately, that’s all I have to work with.  Even in his WisconsinEye interview and the candidate forum, Mobley did not say much more about this.  Slick.  Mobley needs to be pressed; consider this the first prod.

Vote for Todd Price, Tuesday February 17, 2009!

Thomas J. Mertz

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