Friday, May 18, 2012

The Hard But Rewarding Job of Saving Schools « Diane Ravitch's blog

The Hard But Rewarding Job of Saving Schools « Diane Ravitch's blog:


The Hard But Rewarding Job of Saving Schools

Those pesky public schools! They get reformed, and they don’t stay reformed!
They get saved, and they don’t stay saved! What gives?

Take Chicago: First, Chicago was saved first by Paul Vallas in the 1990s; President Clinton congratulated Vallas for raising test scores and all sorts of innovative reforms. Then came Arne Duncan to lead the Chicago school system, and he developed a new plan to save the schools, called Renaissance 2010. Under this plan, 100 or more schools were closed and 100 or more charters and other privately run schools were created. Schools closed, schools opened. By the time 2010 rolled around, Duncan was U.S. Secretary of Education and he took the lessons of Renaissance 2010 and applied them to the nation.

Sadly, not even Chicago stayed saved, so Mayor Rahm Emanuel imported a new Superintendent, J.C. Brizard, from Rochester, to save Chicago public schools again. Brizard had a pretty awful record in Rochester, but no