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conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote2010-05-04 10:12 am
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And a longer article about charter schools

Wait... wrong article. This one is about placebos and prozac.

Here we go!
It has pictures

Despite Push, Success at Charter Schools Is Mixed
By TRIP GABRIEL

In the world of education, it was the equivalent of the cool kids’ table in the cafeteria.

Executives from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, McKinsey consultants and scholars from Stanford and Harvard mingled at an invitation-only meeting of the New Schools Venture Fund at a luxury hotel in Pasadena, Calif. Founded by investors who helped start Google and Amazon, this philanthropy seeks to raise the academic achievement of poor black and Hispanic students, largely through charter schools.

Many of those at the meeting last May had worried that the Obama administration would reflect the general hostility of teachers’ unions toward charters, publicly financed schools that are independently run and free to experiment in classrooms. But all doubts were dispelled when the image of Arne Duncan, the new education secretary, filled a large video screen from Washington. He pledged to combine “your ideas with our dollars” from the federal government. “What you have created,” he said, “is a real movement.”

That movement includes a crowded clique of alpha girls and boys, including New York hedge fund managers, a Hollywood agent or two and the singers John Legend and Sting, who performed at a fund-raiser for Harlem charter schools last Wednesday at Lincoln Center. Charters have also become a pet cause of what one education historian calls a billionaires’ club of philanthropists, including Mr. Gates, Eli Broad of Los Angeles and the Walton family of Wal-Mart.

But for all their support and cultural cachet, the majority of the 5,000 or so charter schools nationwide appear to be no better, and in many cases worse, than local public schools when measured by achievement on standardized tests, according to experts citing years of research. Last year one of the most comprehensive studies, by researchers from Stanford University, found that fewer than one-fifth of charter schools nationally offered a better education than comparable local schools, almost half offered an equivalent education and more than a third, 37 percent, were “significantly worse.”

Although “charter schools have become a rallying cry for education reformers,” the report, by the Center for Research on Education Outcomes, warned, “this study reveals in unmistakable terms that, in the aggregate, charter students are not faring as well” as students in traditional schools.

Researchers for this study and others pointed to a successful minority of charter schools — numbering perhaps in the hundreds — and these are the ones around which celebrities and philanthropists rally, energized by their narrowing of the achievement gap between poor minority students and white students.

But with the Obama administration offering the most favorable climate yet for charter schools, the challenge of reproducing high-flying schools is giving even some advocates pause. Academically ambitious leaders of the school choice movement have come to a hard recognition: raising student achievement for poor urban children — what the most fervent call a new civil rights campaign — is enormously difficult and often expensive.

“I think many people settle and tend to let themselves off the hook,” said Perry White, a former social worker who founded the Citizens’ Academy charter school in Cleveland in 1999 — naïvely, he now recognizes — and has overseen its climb from an F on its state report card in 2003 to an A last year. “It took us a while to understand we needed a no-excuses culture,” he said, one of “really sweating the small stuff.”

Visits to half a dozen charter schools in Cleveland and New York State show that high- and low-performing schools often seem to take pages from the same playbook. They require student uniforms, a longer day and academic year, frequent testing to measure learning, and tutoring for students who fall behind. They imitate one another in superficial ways, too, like hanging inspirational banners: “This Is Where We’re Headed. To College!” say posters in the hall of the Williamsburg Collegiate Charter School in Brooklyn, with campus scenes of a chemistry lab and big-time college sports.

But the differences in how schools are run, the way classes are taught and how school culture is nourished are striking. It is like watching two couples dance a tango, one with poise and precision, the other stumbling to execute the intricate footwork.

A High-Flying School

At Williamsburg Collegiate, whose middle school students annually outscore the district and city averages on state tests, Jason Skeeter stood before his math students the other day as tightly coiled as a drill sergeant. He issued instructions in a loud, slightly fearsome voice, without an extra word or gesture. “Five minutes on the clock,” he told the 26 fifth graders, as they began a “Do Now” review sheet on least common denominators.

On the whiteboard, an agenda told students precisely what to expect for the 60-minute period. Mr. Skeeter placed his digital Teach Timer on an overhead projector so the countdown was visible to all. When the buzzer sounded, he announced, “Hold ’em up,” and students raised their pencils.

“Clap if you’re with me,” he said, clapping twice to snap students to attention. The class responded with a ritual double-stomp of the feet and a hand clap.

Mr. Skeeter, 30, a stocky man in a dark blue shirt and tie, moved swiftly to a second timed exercise, the “Mad Minute,” 60 multiplication problems in 60 seconds.

“Pencils down,” he ordered after the minute was up. “Switch papers with your partner.”

The teacher read aloud the 60 answers. “Hands on your head when you’re done counting” correct answers, he told students. He started the timer again as he called students’ names — DeAndre, Alejandro, Nakeri, Lyric — typing their scores into a laptop. He announced the class average: 37.86.

“Brian Leventer,” he said, making what the school calls a cold call to one student rather than looking for a raised hand, “what does it round to?”

“Thirty-eight.”

“Thirty-eight is correct,” Mr. Skeeter said. The class had fallen two points shy of fifth graders in a rival class. “Close, close, close,” the teacher said.

At Williamsburg Collegiate, everything is measured, everything is compared, graphed and displayed publicly. Besides academics, students compete for merit points for good behavior and receive demerits for absent homework or disrespect. The school drills students on posture and clear speaking, known as SLANT, shorthand for “Sit up straight. Listen. Ask and answer questions. Nod for understanding. Track the speaker,” meaning follow with your eyes.

“I will give merits to the first group to stop what they’re doing and track me,” Mr. Skeeter said at one point.

A rigidly structured environment is part of the formula the school believes produces success. Another is “the use of data to inform everything we do,” said Brett Peiser, the superintendent. If tests reveal that 70 percent of students do not know how to add fractions with like denominators, teachers reteach it. The curriculum is constantly adjusted.

Although half of Mr. Skeeter’s fifth graders began the year, their first at the school, below grade level, his goal is for all to pass the state exam. It is a goal that eludes most schools statewide with populations like Williamsburg Collegiate’s, which is 99 percent African-American and Hispanic, with 83 percent eligible for free or reduced-price lunches.

Yet last year all 78 of the school’s fifth graders who took the math exam passed. “If our goal is to close the achievement gap and prepare students for college, obviously we’re trending in the right direction,” Mr. Peiser said.

A More Typical Case

In Ohio, the Cleveland Arts and Social Sciences Academy is not the kind of charter school that celebrities visit. It is, however, close to the norm for urban Ohio, where 60 percent of charter school students in the eight largest districts attend a school that earned a D or F on its last state report card, according to an analysis by Catalyst Ohio, an independent publication supporting school improvement.

Alison Ellis, who is 27 and in her second year of full-time teaching, had the advantage of a small class of 14 the other day to teach sixth-grade math, in preparation for the state tests on which the all-important school report cards are based.

“Yesterday we looked at the extended-responses part of your test,” Ms. Ellis said, referring to practice exercises the students had done. “We had a rough day.”

She passed out a work sheet reviewing similar material, starting with a word problem calling for basic arithmetic. “Jackie ate lunch at the Double D Diner,” she read. “Her check is shown below.”

The students bent to their work sheets, six girls and eight boys, the boys ranging in size from a student with a faint mustache and an untucked extra-large polo shirt to another seemingly half his size.

The Arts and Social Sciences Academy, which Ohio says is in a state of “academic emergency,” might not strike a casual observer as a school that is failing its students, who are similar demographically to Williamsburg Collegiate’s — 98 percent African-American, 91 percent economically disadvantaged.

But the contrast with the Brooklyn school was apparent in many subtle ways. In Ms. Ellis’s classroom, the whiteboard was empty except for the date — no agenda to focus students. Although Ms. Ellis timed students on solving problems similar to those they would expect on the state test, she was imprecise about when time was up.

The pace was unhurried; there was little sense of the urgency to impart and absorb knowledge that lends an electricity to classrooms at Williamsburg Collegiate. At one point, a boy put his head on a desk and had to be wakened.

As fifth graders one year ago, only 20 percent of the school’s students passed the state math exam, results that contributed to the school’s overall grade of F. The principal, Debroah A. Mays, was disappointed by the results. She introduced a yearlong improvement plan that included Saturday tutoring and teacher training.

“We are determined to become a school of excellence,” Mrs. Mays said.

Even though the school did worse on the Ohio math and English exams than the average Cleveland public school, families did not flee Arts and Social Sciences Academy. On the contrary, enrollment has doubled in each of the past two years. It is a phenomenon often seen in academically failing charter schools when parents perceive them as having better discipline than district schools.

“Families love the feeling of community; they walk in and say they feel safe,” Mrs. Mays said. “They don’t worry about bullying. My kids are just a bunch of marshmallows.”

The Ideology

Since the first one opened in Minnesota in 1992, charter schools have captivated school reformers, originally on the political right but increasingly from the center-left. Largely an urban phenomenon, charter schools in some 72 cities now enroll 10 percent or more of public school students, up from 45 cities three years ago, according to the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools.

Fifty-five percent of enrolled students nationwide are black or Hispanic, the alliance says, and more than a third qualify for free or reduced-price lunches, a common measure of poverty.

The movement sometimes makes for strange bedfellows. “When I first got into this, I thought everyone interested in educating poor black kids would be a good lefty,” said Lyman Millard, director of development at Citizens’ Academy in Cleveland and a Democrat. “We went to a state charter convention where they were debating which of two bumper stickers to have printed: ‘Go With Bush’ or ‘God Wants Bush.’ I thought, what did we get ourselves into?”

In 2007, President George W. Bush visited a Harlem charter, but President Obama has done him one better, pledging to use the Harlem Children’s Zone, a network of charter schools and social services, as a model for high-poverty urban areas. The administration’s Race to the Top competition, which waves the carrot of $4.3 billion in education aid to states that comply with administration goals, has prompted three so far — Illinois, Louisiana and Tennessee — to lift limits on the number of charter schools. Advocates say there has never been more political momentum from Washington in favor of charter schools.

The club of millionaires and billionaires who support them includes Mr. Gates; Mr. Broad, whose fortune is from home building and financial services; Michael Dell of Dell Computer; Doris Fisher, who, with her late husband, Donald, founded the Gap; and the Walton family.

Rather than starting their own schools, these philanthropists largely went looking for successful charters and provided money for expansion. Thus they can boast of mainly backing academic winners.

Celebrities who support charters have also picked carefully. In Los Angeles, a former writer for “L. A. Law,” Roger Lowenstein, founded the Los Angeles Leadership Academy, which ranks in the top 10 percent of schools statewide with similar disadvantaged populations. He has cultivated as donors the screenwriter James L. Brooks and the television agent Rick Rosen, who represents Conan O’Brien.

In New York, Mr. Legend, the Grammy-winning soul singer, has used his visibility to debate political opponents of charter schools in the news media. “What these people are proving who are running excellent schools is that poor black and brown kids can be successful,” he said in an interview. “Until recently a lot of Americans didn’t even believe that was true, because they saw such persistent gaps in the education outcomes.”

Mr. Legend is on an advisory board of Harlem Village Academies, three small schools that held a glittery fund-raiser at Lincoln Center last week. Katie Couric told the crowd that she was a mentor to students on Saturday mornings. Hugh Jackman, the host, announced a $500,000 gift from Rupert Murdoch.

Last year, 93 percent of eighth graders at the flagship Harlem Village Academy passed the state math, English, science and social studies exams, compared with 41 percent in its West Harlem school district, records show.

Some Have Doubts

Critics of charter schools, often teachers’ unions and their political allies, say the schools rely on a corps of young teachers who are willing to work 60-hour weeks, but who burn out quickly. In addition, as the United Federation of Teachers reported in January, charters in New York City enroll a smaller share of special education students and those still learning English.

An independent study recently backed the claims to high achievement made by New York City charters, which have benefited from the strong support of Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg and the schools chancellor, Joel I. Klein. Devised to address criticism that charters skim off the most motivated students, the study compared the state test scores of students in charter schools with those who had wanted to enroll but were not picked in lotteries that charters hold when they have too many applicants.

The study concluded that charter students made better progress in math and English than their counterparts who ended up in traditional schools. In math, students in charters from kindergarten through eighth grade came close to equaling the achievements of suburban students, nearly closing what the study’s lead author, Caroline M. Hoxby, a Stanford economist, called the “Scarsdale-Harlem” gap.

Ms. Hoxby’s study, released in September, followed by three months the much broader investigation by a Stanford colleague, at the Center for Research on Education Outcomes, which showed discouraging results for charters nationally. Drawing on data from the District of Columbia and 15 states (but not New York), that study’s finding that 83 percent of charter schools are doing no better than local public schools shocked many advocates, all the more so because its author, Margaret E. Raymond, is a fellow at the Hoover Institution, a bastion of libertarianism.

Ms. Hoxby, also a fellow at the Hoover Institution, where she is a member of a pro-charter task force, and Ms. Raymond engaged in a sharp online exchange over research methodologies — an echo of years of arguments over charter school data. (Ms. Raymond’s study did show that learning improved the longer students were in charters.)

What most experts can agree on is that charter school quality varies widely, and that it is often associated with the rigor of authorities that grant charters. New York, where oversight is strong, is known for higher performing schools. Ohio, Arizona and Texas, where accountability is minimal, showed up in Ms. Raymond’s study with many poorly performing schools.

Perhaps the sharpest knock on charters — one that even some proponents acknowledge — is that mediocrity is widely tolerated. Authorities are reluctant to close poor schools. Some advocates concede that the intellectual premise behind school choice — that in a free market for education, parents will remove students from bad schools in favor of good ones — has not proved true.

“If you look at the hopes and dreams from 1992, it didn’t pan out that quality would rise because of marketplace accountability,” said James Merriman, chief executive of the New York City Charter School Center. “It turns out you need government accreditation to drive quality, and the human capital to make schools go. The hard lesson is, it is so dependent on human capital.”

Can They Be Replicated?

Mr. Skeeter of Williamsburg Collegiate is what advocates mean when they talk of human capital. A former public school teacher in the Bronx, where he lives, he works from 7 a.m. to 5:30, nearly three hours longer than his public school day. The charter school says it pays teachers about 15 percent above union scale, though there is no tenure. “I have more say in what I teach and how I teach, which is important to me,” Mr. Skeeter said, adding that in a traditional public school he felt “handcuffed” to the assigned curriculum.

As his students lined up after lunch outside his classroom, he popped questions before they could enter. “Kayson, what is two-fifths as a percent?” he asked. The boy hesitated before correctly answering 40. “Next time,” Mr. Skeeter said, “quicker.”

Mr. Peiser, who oversees Williamsburg Collegiate and nine other charter schools in Brooklyn for Uncommon Schools, a nonprofit management organization, frequently says “there’s not one big thing” that his schools do differently that explains their success. “There are 100 1-percent solutions,” he said.

Ninety-eight percent of some 1,000 students in grades three through eight in Uncommon Schools, almost all poor minority children, passed their New York State math exam last year, and 89 percent passed the English exam. “Higher in both cases than the white average,” Mr. Peiser pointed out.

Such stellar results have attracted philanthropists, including those from the New Schools Venture Fund, which seeks to replicate top charter schools. Whether that is possible at a scale that could move the needle in American education may be the greatest challenge of all for the charter movement.

Nonprofit networks of charter operators with top-flight schools — outfits like Uncommon, KIPP and Aspire Public Schools — have created only about 350 in the past decade, and required $500 million in philanthropic support, according to Thomas Toch, author of a study last year on many of the groups underwritten by the New Schools Venture Fund. He questioned whether successful charters could be “scaled up” without sacrificing quality and without heavy subsidies from private donors.

“It’s easy to open schools, but it’s very hard to open and sustain and to grow networks of very good schools,” said Mr. Toch, a founder of Education Sector, a research group.

The education historian Diane Ravitch offers a parallel critique. “Charters enroll 3 percent of the kids,” she said. “The system that educates 97 percent, no one’s paying any attention to.”

In a new book, Ms. Ravitch describes her about-face from supporter of the school-choice movement as a member of the first Bush administration to a critic. In an interview, she pointed to the Obama administration’s oft-stated goal of turning around 5,000 public schools — the bottom 5 percent — which it is leveraging through $4 billion in School Improvement Grants to states that adopt one of four strategies, including giving failing schools to charter operators. “What we’re likely to get are lots of mediocre and very bad charters,” Ms. Ravitch said.

Mr. Duncan, the education secretary, replied through a spokeswoman: “We do not favor one kind of school over another. We favor educational quality and accountability for all schools.”

The teachers and principal at the Arts and Social Sciences Academy, which has 230 students in temporary buildings, do not want to remain in the category of failing charter. They hope to expunge the F on their school’s report card with this year’s state exams. “Soaring to Success!” a banner in the hallway read the other day, exhorting one and all. “There are 13 school days to the Ohio Achievement Assessment!!”

In Ms. Ellis’s math class, she patiently demonstrated how to answer the word problem of Jackie and her lunch at the Double D Diner. As she reread the problem, one boy interrupted: “I thought it was a he,” he said, meaning “Jackie.”

“One thing I’ve noticed we get stuck on is names,” Ms. Ellis said, gently correcting that Jackie is a she. “They have the wackiest names,” she told students named Devonere, Aja, Danisha and Caz’mier, who might be unfamiliar with some of the references of standardized tests.

She assigned a more challenging problem, and as she went from desk to desk offering advice, students worked without the familiar distractions of a more crowded classroom — hands raised for a bathroom pass, students wandering over to backpacks. Disengagement here was expressed passively: after most of the time allotted to complete the problem had passed, one boy had drawn only a line dividing the work space in half. At a bank of computers in the back, where other students were working, one had his head on the keyboard.

The computers ran a learning program, A-Plus, with problems geared to a student’s abilities. A boy was working his way through simple math. “A glass of lemonade costs 25 cents,” the computer screen told this sixth grader. “A hot dog costs 5 cents. How much will it cost to buy both?”

When he tapped the correct answer, the screen flashed, “Way to Go.”

Clearly, this school still has work to do.

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