Thursday, April 25, 2013

Education Group Casts Doubt on Value of Michelle Rhee's School Reforms: DCist

Education Group Casts Doubt on Value of Michelle Rhee's School Reforms: DCist:


Education Group Casts Doubt on Value of Michelle Rhee's School Reforms

2011_0421_rheebroom.jpgThe conventional wisdom is that former D.C. Schools Chancellor and current national education reformer Michelle Rhee brought much-needed positive change to the D.C. public school system during her tenure, firing ineffective teachers, closing under-performing schools and more aggressively pushing students and teachers to perform better. But a new report from an education advocacy group says much the opposite, arguing that Rhee-type reform in D.C. and in two other cities haven't really improved educational outcomes.
The report from the Brighter, Bolder Approach to Education says that the reform ushered in by Rhee from 2007 to 2010 and continued by Chancellor Kaya Henderson "deliver few benefits, often harm the students they purport to help, and divert attention from a set of other, less visible policies with more promise to weaken the link between poverty and low educational attainment."
It says that test scores rose less quickly in D.C., Chicago and New York than in cities that did not adopt the reforms pushed by Rhee and other like-minded education leaders, and that achievement gaps grew more quickly in those that did. Test-based teacher evaluations increased turnover, closing schools did not produce better outcomes and market-based approaches like school choice drew attention and resources away from other more effective initiatives.
All told, says the report, the reforms ushered in by Rhee and others failed most dramatically because they