By Walt Gardner
in EdWeek | http://bit.ly/1PoDFlU
January 18, 2016 7:35 AM :: The
beginning of the new calendar year is a propitious time to question whether the
nation's largest school districts can ever deliver a quality education ("Principals'
Union Says Mayor de Blasio Has Lost Focus on Students," The New
York Times, Jan. 11, and "What
new L.A. schools chief Michelle King needs to do now," Los Angeles
Times, Jan. 15).
The New York City and Los Angeles school systems, the
largest and second largest, respectively, are cases in point. Both have
consistently shortchanged students they are supposed to educate. I maintain
that they are ungovernable and will remain ungovernable because of their size.
I'll take each district separately.
The union representing the 6,000 members of the Council of
School Supervisors and Administrators has gone on record that it has lost
confidence in the Bill de Blasio administration. (In New York City, the
mayor is the head of public schools.) Principals in 94 of the district's
lowest-performing schools complain that they are swamped with paperwork,
meetings and micromanagement, to the point that they cannot do what they
believe is best for their students.
The district's chancellor, Carmen Farina, counters that
autonomy has to be earned. When it isn't, principals are replaced. To
date, roughly one third of principals in these underperforming schools have
fallen into that category. Adding to the problem is that the number of
complaints received by the special commissioner of investigation has reached an
all-time high of 5,566. Although graduation rates are at record levels at 70
percent, taxpayers have not forgotten the New York Post's articles
titled the "EZ-Pass" scandal that documented grade tampering and
questionable summer-school programs ("The
phoniest statistic in education," Thomas Fordham Institute, Jan.
13).
The situation in Los Angeles is not much better. When
Superintendent John Deasy resigned in Oct. 2014, he was replaced by Ramon
Cortines as interim superintendent. Deasy's tumultuous
three-and-a-half-year tenure was characterized by a botched $1.3 billion plan
to give iPads to 640,000 students in 900 schools and by his testimony in the
controversial Vergara v. State of California case. Although test scores
and graduation rates improved slightly, the LAUSD is reeling from declining
enrollment and a precarious financial status. On Jan. 11, Michelle King was
named the new superintendent after a five-month nationwide search.
The district has long been known for heated politics and an
assertive teachers' union. The school board's members have only exacerbated
matters by failing to understand their job as elected overseers, which is why
there have been eight superintendents over the last 20 years. Some have
been outsiders and some insiders. But neither has mattered. This time the board
selected King, the consummate insider, because of her experience as a student,
teacher, high-school principal, and senior administrator in the district.
I don't think anything significant will ever change in New
York or Los Angeles unless both school systems are broken up into smaller, more
manageable districts. Behemoths cannot fulfill their obligations to all
stakeholders, no matter who is at the helm. I'm not saying that
dismantlement will result in miracles. But I believe that smaller school
districts will be in a far better position to serve students and parents
because they are more nimble and more attuned to their constituents.
My proposal is not original. Over the years, there have been
several such proposals, but to no avail. For example, on Oct. 7, 2014, a
petition was circulated by the California Trust for Public Schools to break up
the LAUSD, but it met with fierce resistance from vested interests ("Break up the
Los Angeles Unified School District," GoPetition). On Mar. 30,
2015, Education Next called for an overhaul of the New York City school
district ("New
York City's Small-Schools Revolution"). If the goal is to create
a governing structure that works for students, shuffling leaders will not do
the job. Something more fundamental needs to be done. If not now,
when?
Walt Gardner taught for 28 years in the Los Angeles Unified School District and was a lecturer in the UCLA Graduate School of Education. Follow Walt Gardner on Twitter.
_____________
Quoting: “My proposal is not
original. Over the years, there have been several such proposals, but to no
avail.”
Really??
1. Drawing on a comment from an EdWeek reader “Been there,
done that!”
In 1969, New York State devolved the New York City Public School System
into 32 self-governing school districts - for over thirty years the
decentralized system staggered, the lowest performing districts became
patronage pools for the local electeds, scandal after scandal, the middle class
districts thrived, the "haves" prospered and the
"have-nots" were ignored. [See: The Great School Wars: A History of the New York City Public Schools by Diane Ravitch]
In 2002 Mayor Bloomberg convinced the Albany establishment
to re-centralize NYC schools and move to mayoral control. Since then not much
has changed, educationally.
2. The NYC Principal’s Union isn’t asking for the District
to be broken up, they are asking for an end to mayoral control.
3. If LAUSD were to be broken up, how do were guarantee that
the results of the 1969 NYC break-up aren’t replicated on the Left Coast?
4. Please excuse my clinging to the status quo like Charlton Heston to his beloved guns, but how will we equitably assign the $20 billion-plus in
bonded indebtedness held by LAUSD to multiple school districts?
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