A strong consensus, and powerful technologies, could herald the arrival of lasting education reform
Primary Topic Channel: Tech Leadership
|
|
Default Lines from eSchool News, first published in print on Oct. 1, 2009-- Once every generation or so, something big takes place that alters education, and it's usually bad -- or so it must seem to most Americans.
Knowing what I know about reform and disappointment, I nonetheless believe big, good things at last are beginning to happen for this field--and it's been a long time coming.
In 1957, the Soviets launched Sputnik, and that scared everybody around here into a furious push to reform education. We got to the moon, but lasting school reform never quite got lift-off.
Then came 1983, and we learned yet once again we were A Nation at Risk. We found out that our children--and, in fact, we all--were in peril of being engulfed by "a rising tide of mediocrity" in our schools. This news set off another round of frantic reforms--most notably a fervor for accountability that ultimately boiled down to too much testing. (Pity the poor farmer who must constantly yank his carrots up to see how well they're growing.)
The heat originating from A Nation at Risk--altered, reconstituted--still can cause discomfort through the likes of No Child Left Behind. Now, however, the cycle of alarm/reaction/disappointment has accelerated to the point that it's generated a whole new phenomenon, clinically known as the "Jell-O Syndrome." Gripped by this condition, reform is hot, sweet, and colorful when it's first stirred up, but it turns cold and shaky as it inevitably lingers unconsumed.
You've seen this syndrome all too often. But now I think something new is under way. What's different this time is that reform isn't being driven exclusively by leaders.
Don't get me wrong. Leadership generally is important to reform. If you doubt it, read about the inspiring work of turnaround Principal James Dierke here. But even great leadership is transitory. This fact is exacerbated by the very way we organize our schools.
As a wise old superintendent used to say, "A school board isn't a governing body, at all; it's a parade." And you know as well as I do that school board members aren't the only ones marching off into the sunset.
I worry, for example, about what will become of the bold initiatives now under way in San Diego (see our Special Report, "Reinventing Education"), now that Superintendent Terry Grier is heading off to Houston.
Leaders wander, but what never seems to stray is the entrenched special interests, those legions who perceive their security and fortunes comfortably cocooned in the way things have always been. Such legionnaires--in management as well as labor, and in the community as well as the academy--have for a hundred years succeeded in thwarting ubiquitous school reform.
Don't forget to check out our Online highlights:
- Discover new resources that help school leaders strengthen their school district inside our new Superintendents Center.
Go to http://www.eschoolnews.com/news/superintendents-center/
- View this week's Student Video News Cast at www.eschoolnews.tv where you can also upload video too!
- Follow eSchool News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/eschoolnews
- Add our RSS feeds or our new widgets to any school web site. Go to http://www.eschoolnews.com/content-exchange-rss/
- Find the latest news in the current issue of eSchool News. Go to http://www.eschoolnews.com/current/
|
You need to be registered at eSchoolnews.com to add your comments. If you do not have a username / password please register here ! Registration is very simple and will not take much time! |





Comment now.