Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Getting Real About Turnarounds - Bridging Differences - Education Week

Getting Real About Turnarounds - Bridging Differences - Education Week:

Getting Real About Turnarounds

Dear Deborah,

One of the signature issues of the Obama administration's education reform strategy is "turning around" low-performing schools. We have been led to believe that schools with low test scores can be dramatically changed by firing the principal, replacing half or all the staff, closing the school or turning the school over to private management.

Part of the corporate reformers' message is that turning around a school may be painful but that it can produce transformational results, such as a graduation rate of 100 percent or a startling rise in test scores. The turnaround approach assumes that it is bad principals and bad teachers who stand in the way of school improvement. Any mention of poverty or other social and economic conditions that might affect students' motivation and academic performance is dismissed as excuse-making by the proponents of "No Excuses."

Today there is a burgeoning industry of private-sector consultants devoted to "turnarounds." One of the leading