June 1, 2009
The Selling Of School Reform
(From The Nation, May 27, 2009)By DANA GOLDSTEIN
It sounds like the beginning of a bad joke: Al Sharpton, Newt Gingrich and Mike Bloomberg--all failed presidential hopefuls--arrive at the White House for a joint meeting with President Barack Obama. Upon leaving the Oval Office, they convene a press conference on the White House lawn.
But far from tearing one another to bits or sniping at the man whose job they coveted, these unlikely comrades--a self-appointed civil rights spokesman, a former Republican Speaker of the House and a billionaire New York City mayor--were in total agreement. The topic of the meeting? Schools.
"You have to hold people accountable, and those that perform should be the ones that teach our kids, and those that don't, unfortunately our children are just too important," Bloomberg said, referring to his support for teacher merit pay.
Sharpton intoned, "The nation's future is at stake, our children [are] at stake."
Education Secretary Arne Duncan was there to lend the administration's support. "There's a real sense of economic imperative," he said. "We have to educate our way [to] a better economy."
Though the media portrayed the meeting as one among "strange bedfellows," in fact Sharpton, Gingrich and Bloomberg are all on the same side of the education policy debate roiling the Democratic Party. The three are spokesmen for the Education Equality Project (EEP), an advocacy group that has attracted widespread media attention since its June 2008 launch, in large part because of its bipartisan call for policies like merit pay and the expansion of the charter school sector. With the support of rising star Democrats like Newark, New Jersey, Mayor Cory Booker and Washington, DC, Mayor Adrian Fenty, the EEP and such allied groups as the political action committee Democrats for Education Reform--have openly pushed back against the influence of teachers unions, community groups and teachers colleges over national education policy. Proclaiming themselves "reformers," they often borrow their strategies from the private sector, and they believe urban public schools must be subjected to more free-market competition.
On the other side of the divide is a group of progressive policy experts and educators who published a manifesto during campaign season called A Broader, Bolder Approach to Education. They believe teachers and schools will not be able to eradicate the achievement gap between middle-class white children and everyone else until a wide array of social services are available to poor families. They envision schools as community centers, offering families healthcare, meals and counseling.
Theoretically, there is no reason all these people can't work together. Some charter schools, after all, have had extraordinary success in raising the achievement of low-income students--even, in some cases, with the cooperation of teachers unions. Many younger teachers appear enthusiastic about performance-based pay, although there is no evidence from the cities that have tried it, like Denver, that it improves student achievement. Yet the single-mindedness--some would say obsessiveness--of the reformers' focus on these specific policy levers puts off more traditional Democratic education experts and unionists. As they see it, with the vast majority of poor children educated in traditional public schools, education reform must focus on improving the management of the public system and the quality of its services--not just on supporting charter schools. What's more, social science has long been clear on the fact that poverty and segregation influence students' academic outcomes at least as much as do teachers and schools.
Obama's decision to invite representatives of only one side of this divide to the Oval Office confirmed what many suspected: the new administration--despite internal sympathy for the "broader, bolder approach"--is eager to affiliate itself with the bipartisan flash and pizazz around the new education reformers. The risk is that in doing so the administration will alienate supporters with a more nuanced view of education policy. What's more, critics contend that free-market education reform is a top-down movement that is struggling to build relationships with parents and community activists, the folks who typically support local schools and mobilize neighbors on their behalf.
So keenly aware of this deficit are education reformers that a number of influential players were involved in the payment of $500,000 to Sharpton's nearly broke nonprofit, the National Action Network, in order to procure Sharpton as a national spokesman for the EEP. And Sharpton's presence has unquestionably benefited the EEP coalition, ensuring media attention and grassroots African-American crowds at events like the one held during Obama's inauguration festivities, at Cardozo High School in Washington.
"Sharpton was a pretty big draw," says Washington schools chancellor
Michelle Rhee, recalling the boisterous crowd at Cardozo. Rhee is known
for shutting down schools and aggressively pursuing a private
sector-financed merit pay program. Some of the locals who came out to
hear Sharpton booed Rhee's speech at the same event, despite the fact
that her policies embody the movement for which Sharpton speaks.
The
$500,000 donation to Sharpton's organization was revealed by New York
Daily News columnist Juan Gonzalez on April 1, as the EEP and National
Action Network were co-hosting a two-day summit in Harlem, attended by
luminaries including Chicago schools CEO Arne Duncan. The money originated
in the coffers of Plainfield Asset Management, a Connecticut-based hedge
fund whose managing director is former New York City schools chancellor
Harold Levy, an ally of the current chancellor, Joel Klein. Plainfield has
invested in Playboy, horse racetracks and biofuels. But the company
did not donate the money directly to Sharpton. Rather, in what appears to
have been an attempt to cover tracks, the $500,000 was given to a nonprofit
entity called Education Reform
Now, which has no employees. (According to IRS filings, Education Reform
Now had never before accepted a donation of more than $92,500.) That group,
in turn, funneled the $500,000 to Sharpton's nonprofit.
If one
person is at the center of this close-knit nexus of Wall Street and
education reform interests, it is Joe Williams, who serves as president and
treasurer of the EEP's board and is also the executive director of Education
Reform Now. But it is through his day job that Williams, a former education
reporter for the Daily News, exerts the most influence. He is
executive director of Democrats for
Education Reform (DFER), a four-year-old PAC that has gained
considerable influence, raising $2 million in 2008 and demonstrating
remarkable public relations savvy.
The group's six-person team works
out of an East Forty-fifth Street office donated--rent-free--by the hedge
fund Khronos LLC. In recent months, DFER has had a number of high-profile
successes, chief among them a highly coordinated media campaign to call into
question the work of Obama education adviser Linda Darling-Hammond, once
considered a top contender for the job of education secretary. During the
same week in early December, the New York Times, Washington Post,
Wall Street Journal and Boston Globe published editorials or
op-eds based on DFER's anti-Darling-Hammond talking points, which focused on
the Stanford professor's criticisms of Teach for America and other
alternative-certification programs for teachers. Less than two weeks later,
Obama appointed DFER's choice to the Education Department post, Chicago
schools CEO Duncan.
During campaign season, DFER donated to House
majority whip James Clyburn, Senator Mark Warner and Virginia swing district
winner Representative Tom Periello, among others. The organization regularly
hosts events introducing education reformers like Rhee and Fenty to New
York City "edupreneurs," finance industry players for whom education
reform is a sideline. DFER is focused on opening a second office, in
Colorado, a state viewed as being in the forefront of standards- and
testing-based education reform. The group successfully promoted Denver
schools superintendent Michael Bennett to fill the Senate seat vacated
when Obama named Ken Salazar as interior secretary. Bennett led the
school system with the highest-profile merit pay system in the nation.
During the Democratic Party's national convention in Denver this past
August, DFER hosted a well-attended event at the Denver Museum of Art,
during which Fenty, Booker, Klein, Sharpton and other well-known
Democrats openly denigrated teachers unions, whose members accounted for
10 percent of DNCC delegates. With Clyburn and other veteran members of
Congress in attendance, many longtime observers of Democratic politics
believed the event represented a sea change in the party's education
platform, the arrival of a new generation. While progressive groups such
as Education
Sector, Education
Trust and the Citizens' Commission on
Civil Rights have long attempted to push free-market education reforms
to the Democratic Party, it is only with the arrival of DFER that the
movement has had a lobbying arm with an explicit focus on influencing
the political process through fundraising and media outreach.
"For a
lot of groups that are dependent upon both private money and government
money, there's a tendency not to want to get involved in the nitty-gritty of
politics," Williams said in a March 31 phone interview from Denver, where he
was meeting with Colorado politicians, setting the stage for DFER's
expansion there. "Our group--what we do is politics. We make it clear: we're
not an education reform group. We're a political reform group that focuses
on education reform. That distinction matters because all of our partners
are the actual education reform groups. We're trying to give them a climate
where it's easier for them to do their work."
The education
reformers who came to prominence in the 1990s, including the founders of
Teach for America and the Knowledge Is Power Program, the national charter
school network that fought unionization in one of its Brooklyn schools,
often went to great lengths to portray themselves as explicitly apolitical.
Nevertheless, "a lot of those people are, politically, Democrats," says Sara Mead, a DFER
board member and director of early childhood programs at the
Washington-based New America Foundation. "One of those things that DFER does
that's really important is to help give those people a way to assert their
identity as Democrats. It's important for those groups' long-term success,
but also for Democrats, to the extent that some of these organizations are
doing really good things for the kids whose parents are Democratic
constituents. It's important that those organizations are identified
with us rather than being co-opted by Republicans, as they were in the
past."
The question remains, though, whether DFER and its allies
actually do speak for poor and minority parents and their kids. Who on the
left would disagree that the staggering achievement gap between middle-class
white kids and poor children of color is a civil rights issue of
national importance? Who wouldn't view the high dropout rates among
black and Latino boys as a disgrace? And yet there is no clear national
representation for the interests of the urban, mostly black and Hispanic
parents whose children's schools confront these statistics day in and
day out.
"On the local level is a certain distrust and despair about
schools that makes poor families accessible" to free-market education
reformers, says Deborah Meier, an education professor at New York University
and the founder of several successful experimental public schools for poor
children. "But I think the intersection between poverty and racism can't
just be tackled in this one area, in schools."
Teachers unions, with
their focus on wraparound social services for poor kids and better working
conditions for teachers, believe they are the natural spokespeople for poor
families. But so do union critics such as Joel Klein, Michelle Rhee and Joe
Williams, who are sympathetic to No Child Left Behind and standardized
testing, and whose allies support private school voucher programs.
"The DFERs, when they look at vouchers and charters, they don't look at
the underlying conditions," says Randi Weingarten, president of the
American Federation of Teachers. "Parents want to send their kids to
charters and parochial schools because they like the smaller class
sizes, they like the attention to safety, they like the attention to
conditions that public school teachers talk about all the time. They
make us the villains instead of the people who have the most power--the
superintendents and mayors."
Weingarten says she likes Williams, who is
in fact a reasonable and calm interlocutor; he even walks the walk by
sending his children to New York City public schools. Some of DFER's board
members, though, such as investment manager and a Teach for America founder
Whitney Tilson, have been known to grow overheated in their attacks on
unions, calling them corrupt and claiming that their leaders don't care
about children. Traditional education liberals can be just as harsh on the
subject of DFER. Criticizing the group's lack of commitment to the racial
integration of schools, veteran education writer Jonathan Kozol said,
"DFER is working in historical oblivion. If they're going to betray
everything that Dr. King and Thurgood Marshall fought for, at least they
ought to have the honesty to say so."
DFER is focused on reaching
out to state legislators across the country, pressing them to support
policies such as lifting the cap on the number of charter schools allowed to
open in a year. DFER is also carefully watching how Congress and the Obama
administration dole out the $100 billion for schools included in the
February economic stimulus package.
Much of that money will fill local
budget gaps, simply allowing school districts to continue their work without
resorting to massive layoffs. But a $5 billion "race to the top" fund is
intended specifically to foster innovation and reform in a small number of
states--perhaps
between eight and twelve--that win a competitive grant
process. As White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel said in March, "The
resources come with a bow tied around them that says 'reform.' Our basic
premise is that the status quo and political constituencies can no longer
determine how we proceed on public education reform in this country."
That sounds a lot like a DFER talking point. Indeed, it has become clear
that DFER's idea of education reform is the one driving the Obama
administration as it distributes these funds. In a major March 10
address on education delivered to the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce,
Obama spoke glowingly of charter schools and merit pay plans. "Too many
supporters of my party have resisted the idea of rewarding excellence in
teaching with extra pay, even though we know it can make a difference in
the classroom," he said--though education research has yet to offer
proof that merit pay is a panacea. Later in the speech, the president
called charter schools the national leaders on education "innovation"
and called on states to allow their proliferation.
Two weeks later,
during a conference call with reporters, Duncan said thirty-six school
districts across the country are doing "interesting things around [teacher]
compensation" and added he hoped federal stimulus dollars will increase that
number to 150. The education
secretary called "rewarding teacher excellence"
a major priority but would not be more specific about how such "excellence"
should be determined.
Darling-Hammond--back at Stanford but still
advising the Obama administration--is focusing her latest research on
international teacher quality. Nations like South Korea and Singapore have
managed to reduce education inequality by building stable, high-quality
teacher forces,
she says. The key is paying teachers more, across the board,
and providing them with better professional training and support.
Test-score-based merit pay, according to Darling-Hammond, is a "marginal
issue."
On the ground, however, merit pay has become a major point
of contention: in districts like Washington, some teachers have resisted
calls for student test scores to heavily influence their salaries, and
parents have protested the firings of popular teachers, professionals
they believe were making a difference in their children's lives.
Unexplained teacher firings "are not a way to run a school," says Ruth
Castel-Branco, an organizer with DC Jobs With Justice. "That shakes up
the very foundation of stability that schools have to have. There has to
be due process and a meaningful way for parents to engage."
So far,
at least, free-market education reformers have struggled with this piece of
the puzzle. Lacking a membership base, their movement's lobbying arm is
essentially top-down, financed by New York hedge-funders, supported by
research conducted at Beltway think tanks and represented on the ground by a
handful of state and local politicians scattered across the country. And
while it's true that charter schools and Teach for America instructors
interact with children and parents every day, the excitement around
individual schools and classrooms does not easily translate into a national
agenda. After all, the vast majority of urban students remain in traditional
public schools, taught by teachers who came through traditional teachers
college certification routes.
Even the involvement of Al Sharpton
can't change those facts. Joe Williams, who describes himself as chastened
by his involvement in the $500,000 payment to Sharpton's group, will admit
that. "I wouldn't even consider Sharpton grassroots, actually," Williams
says. "But he holds a lot of power. He brings attention to an issue like
this."
Dana Goldstein is an associate editor at American
Prospect.