A Message from NASB`s President
Transcription
A Message from NASB`s President
readers to hope that the anecdotes he has chosen to share are outliers. He then mercilessly demonstrates that they are not. Office Mailing Phone 549 Court Street PO Box 14855 775/657-8411 His assertions are: • The American Dream was alive a few decades ago, though of a somewhat different nature than our “self-made” perceptions of it, that • Right now, social mobility is entirely out of reach for a massive proportion of American children, and • There is still time to do something about it. Reno, NV 89501 Reno, NV 89507 Fax 775/453-1017 Supporting Success for All Students through Local School Board Leadership Most of the book is devoted to documenting a divide between young (generally ages 18-22) Americans with access to The American Dream, and those without that access. Putnam traces how the featured individuals ended up on their sides of the divide, documents the trends to which the individuals are party, and analyzes the nature of the divide itself. Stark childhood information gleaned from interviews of young Americans, both well-set and not, invest the reader in the quantitative data that follows each set of personal stories. What is documented by this combination of anecdotal and trend data is alarming. It has also been a great source of clarity for me in my work as a school board trustee this year. A Message from NASB’s President It is time for the top pick from among this year’s reviewed books. I have enjoyed taking recommendations and seeking out a few books myself as we have made 2015 a year focused on literacy. No better book came to my attention this year than the book recommended by NASB Executive Director Dotty Merrill shortly after it was published this spring. A brief concluding portion of the book offers a menu of possible actions that Americans can take, individually and collectively, to halt the sinking of the trend lines of opportunity for poor young Americans. As I have worked these past few months with the perspective that Our Kids brought to my view, I have noticed that the stark and well-documented reality of the challenge before us has been the most useful and influential of its information. It may be literacy that will bring The American Dream back into reach for millions of young people who need something to change for the better. As we wrap this year and look forward to our Conference November 1921, I once again recommend Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis as a must-read. I recommend a full read of Our Kids, and I would love to talk it over with you if we find a moment during our NASB conference later this month. How can we, as school board members, perhaps the closest elected officials to the realities described therein, help the author of this book to rekindle America’s “deeper sense that those kids, too, [are] our kids?” Notable quotes from Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis • Contrast the stable parental support that enfolds Andrew and Chelsea [two of the case studies] with the dreadful chaos in which Kayla and David [two more] have grown up. Children pay the cost of early childbearing and multi-partnered fertility in the form of diminished prospects for success in life. – Page 78 Of all the books I read this year, Our Kids delivers the facts and insights that most often come back to mind in my efforts to make a difference as a school board member. Here I will share again some of what Our Kids offers to us as we seek to develop policy and represent and lead our communities in ways that will lead to student success. Author Robert Putnam is a meticulous bearer of this bad news: In the “aftermath of the Great Recession,” the American Dream is not currently available to poor young people. By taking us deeply into the lives of young people who are tapping into opportunity, and likewise into the lives of young people who are not, Putnam causes his • 1 The disadvantages facing poor kids begin early and run deep…. –Page 134 • • • As the twenty-first century opened, a family’s socioeconomic status had become even more important than test scores in predicting which eight graders would graduate from college. A generation earlier, social class had played a smaller role, relative to academic ability, in predicting educational attainment….Even more shocking, highscoring poor kids are now slightly less likely (29 percent) to get a college degree than low-scoring rich kids (30 percent). That last fact is particularly hard to square with the idea at the heart of the American Dream: equality of opportunity. – Page 190 NASB 2015 Annual Conference November 20-21 Reno—Atlantis Governance Meetings November 19 Award Ceremony November 21 … We have seen that social networks, communities, and community institutions like churches can be powerful resources for child development and social mobility. But we have also seen that in today’s America these resources have become less public and collective, forcing all parents to rely more heavily on private provision…. Caring for kids was once a more widely shared, collective responsibility, but that ethic has faded in recent decades. That narrowing of the effective scope of ‘our kids’ has had dramatically different effects on privileged and impoverished children. – Page 226 Thanks to these corporate friends— To be sure, the link from income inequality to opportunity inequality is not simple and instantaneous. As our cases illustrate, it took several decades for economic malaise to undermine family structures and community support; it took several decades for gaps in parenting and schooling to develop; and it will take decades more for the full impact of those divergent childhood influences to manifest themselves in adult lives…. These time lags of indefinite duration complicate our ability to draw a simple statistical correlation between inequality of income and inequality of opportunity… causal links and future projections remain uncertain, but … if we wait for perfect clarity, it will be too late. –Page 228 This year’s top pick is Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis. I hope that you find clarity, motivation and ideas in this book that will positively impact your work as a school board member, and I hope that many Americans will read it and join us in the day-to-day life-saving work for our kids. I look forward to spending time together with you November 19-21 in Reno as we work toward better policy and better school board work for greater student success, for all children! Sincerely, Erin Cranor NASB President 702/266-6890 2 November 21— Dr. Doug Reeves NASB Conference Keynote Speakers Present National Perspectives November 20— Dr. John Draper Dr. Doug Reeves has worked with education, business, nonprofit, and government organizations throughout the world. The author of more than 30 books and more than 80 articles on leadership and organizational effectiveness, he has twice been named to the Harvard University Distinguished Authors Series and was named the Brock International Laureate for his contributions to education. Dr. Reeves received both the Distinguished Service Award from the National Association of Secondary School Principals and the Parent's Choice Award for his writing for children and parents. His career of work in professional learning led to the Contribution to the Field Award from the National Staff Development Council. For his international work, Dr. Reeves was named the William Walker Scholar by the Australian Council of Educational Leaders. Dr. John Draper has enjoyed a wide variety of experiences in his lifetime. He has been a newspaper reporter, construction worker, jailor, actor, timber buyer, musician, small business owner, choir director, soccer coach, Sunday school teacher, and door-to-door aluminum siding salesman. Dr. Draper will address Conference attendees twice on November 20, jointly sponsored by Zions Public Finance and Oasis Online. November 20— Focus on Generational Attitudes and Education in the Future For the last 30+ years he has been middle and high school teacher, assistant principal, principal, Executive Director of the Council for Leaders in Alabama Schools, CEO of the Educational Research Service in Washington, DC, and now serves as a nation-wide consultant with the National School Public Relations Association (NSPRA). NSPRA is a membership organization helping educational leaders increase public support for schools and school districts. Dr. Draper earned his undergraduate and graduate degrees at the University of Montevallo in Alabama and his Doctorate from Samford University. He is most proud of his doctorate from the school of “hard knocks” earned as a middle school assistant principal in charge of discipline for 1400 students. He has done keynotes for hundreds of school districts and education associations across the nation. CenturyLink—one of NASB’s corporate friends—is sponsoring Randy McCrillis. Randy is returning due to the popularity of his presentation at the 2014 Conference and with a new perspective on generational attitudes that influence public education. Here are some comments from those who have heard Dr. Draper speak at other conferences: • One of the best presentations I have ever had the opportunity to attend. • John is an amazing leader and storyteller. This was the second time to hear him and both times I have come away with ideas and a brighter outlook. • John’s presentation was jam-packed with useful information presented in a timely and fun manner. Randy’s work focuses on facilitating large organizational change efforts, guiding management teams in the promotion of systemic effectiveness and employee satisfaction. 3 He conducts team-building, personality-assessment, and diversity-awareness events for top level managers to front line staff teams. Commentary: Up to the Challenge As an external consultant he has used his consulting experience in the private, public and volunteer sectors. He currently serves as faculty/staff at the University of Colorado, Boulder. By Del Stover Academic rigor is one of those buzzwords that makes the rounds whenever there’s a debate on improving public education. Everyone wants to ensure that all students graduate from high school “college and career ready.” Most urban school boards already are on top of this issue. They’ve expanded access to Advanced Placement (AP) courses, phased out less-demanding classes, and punched up the curriculum to promote higher-order thinking and problem-solving skills. Randy has a Ph.D. in Leadership from the University of Nebraska; he has taught courses in cross-cultural communication, organizational behavior, leadership and diversity facilitation at the graduate and undergraduate levels. Yet, the issue of rigorous coursework is important— and school boards always should be questioning whether they’ve done all they can. Have you clarified what rigor actually means in the classroom? Are your teachers trained to provide that rigor? Have you spotted all the challenges to translating your goals into outcomes? November 21— Concluding Conference Speaker to Focus on Effective Governance You could spend weeks reading the research and reports on this issue, and then devote yet more time to talking to practitioners about their best practices. We pulled together a list of ideas to spark discussion when rigor next appears on your board agenda: Offer More Academically Rigorous Courses As painfully obvious as this advice sounds, it remains one of the best strategies a school board can pursue to add rigor to student learning. Research shows that most students rise to the challenge of higher expectations, so offering more academically rigorous courses is likely to produce results. Ken Odom, Jr., is an award-winning public speaker with a passion for education and leadership development. Having served his community as a school board trustee for more than a decade, Ken has keen insight about what makes effective school governance. As a business professional, Ken has held leadership positions both in Fortune 500 organizations and small to medium start ups. That was the thinking behind the Houston Independent School District’s decision six years ago to expand AP courses at each high school, as well as to offer its International Baccalaureate program in more schools. In these roles, he has honed his abilities to think strategically and formulate solutions for myriad forprofit and non-profit governance challenges. He is the author of 10 Questions Every School Board Member Should Ask and a frequent contributor to Texas Lone Star magazine. It also was a conscious decision to not shortchange AP offerings in the city’s lower-performing schools, where large populations of low-income students traditionally have been perceived as less likely to be successful on a college-prep track, says Erica Deakins, a manager with Houston’s Innovative Curriculum and Instruction Department. Ken has presented at the annual conferences for the Texas Association of School Boards and the National School Boards Association, has served as a keynote speaker for various organizations, and trained both non-profit and school boards. 4 The expansion of AP courses—and a requirement to take the AP exam—fueled a 64-percent increase in students who are passing AP exams. Provide Supports A commonly voiced concern to academic rigor is that some students will fall short—and frustration, disengagement, and failure may result. But that risk exists only if school boards confuse rigor with a sink-orswim philosophy to learning. Introduce Academic Rigor at an Early Age The most productive and cost-effective strategy for raising academic rigor in your schools is to push rigor early. Waiting until high school to get tough is only going to backfire with students who are behind grade level in English and math. Many urban school leaders recognize that strategically placed support systems for lower-achieving students can make all the difference in their ability to handle more rigorous coursework. And the research backs that thinking up: The Annenberg Institute for School Reform studied 13 New York City high schools to determine why they were so successful in preparing low-performing ninth-graders to graduate on time, prepared for college. One key factor in their success: “Adults in the high school kept track of every student’s progress and intervened quickly with a targeted and efficient intervention when difficulties arose.” Some of that support must take place in the classroom, but other support can be developed and implemented at the district level. As part of its effort to prepare students for college and career, for example, Houston established the EMERGE program to provide interested low-income students with a strong support system. That was the thinking in Chattanooga, Tennessee, where Hamilton County Schools has made English and math literacy a top priority in the primary grades. “This is how we can ensure students are ready for grade-level work,” says Robert Sharpe, the district’s assistant superintendent for education and leadership support. Promote Student Diversity One of the main points of Brown v. Board of Education was that “separate but equal schools” ultimately leave disadvantaged students—isolated from their more affluent, academically successful peers—with lowered educational outcomes. Years ago, Maryland’s Montgomery County school district embraced a similar strategy, and its implementation strategy is worthy of attention: School officials analyzed the content of high school AP classes and revised the district curriculum, from preschool through early high school, so that students would learn what they needed to be successful when they reached those advanced courses. Make Sure Everyone Understands Rigor “Academic rigor is determined not just by what is taught, but how it is taught and how it is assessed.” That observation, included in a report on rigor by the Hechinger Institute on Education and the Media, underscores the need of school boards to clearly define what rigor means in their school district. According to Richard Kahlenberg, a senior fellow at the Century Foundation, that dynamic is as true today as 60 years ago. For Hamilton County school officials, it wasn’t enough to simply mandate English and math literacy as a priority in the early grades—teachers needed to understand exactly what that mandate meant for their classroom work, Sharpe says. “We hear a lot about differentiated instruction, but too often, the teacher aims the classroom lesson to that average student in the classroom, and if you’re stuck in a low-income school, and you’re very bright, you probably aren’t going to be challenged academically. Your schools need to allow more low-income students to attend school with middle-class students.” That meant defining what children needed to learn and “what teachers should be doing, what students should be doing, what activities need to be going on,” he says. The district then provided the professional development that gave teachers the instructional tools to implement the district’s expectations. This argument doesn’t resonate as powerfully as it once did. The demographic, political, and legal obstacles to 5 This central tenet has been over-shadowed, if not lost altogether, after many decades of growing influence and power of the central government. Some of that was almost destined to happen, given the complex challenges of modern society. Yet, Congress, the federal courts, the presidency, and executive agencies comprise just one part of a larger system of government, one that also encompasses the states and local jurisdictions. Taken collectively, they constitute the diffusion of official authority that is the essence of federalism. promoting diversity have grown more daunting over the past two decades. And some educators argue a highquality instructional program can offset many of the educational obstacles that exist in today’s segregated schools. Signs of Success The challenges of adding rigor to urban classrooms— and turning these higher expectations into tangible academic results—can appear daunting. But urban school leaders should realize that they’re already succeeding: The nation’s high school graduation rate has climbed to 81 percent, the highest in 40 years—and much of that improvement can be attributed to improving academic results in urban districts. To be sure, the word “federal” has a much different connotation today. It has become synonymous with Washington, D.C., and the labyrinth of agencies that govern virtually every aspect of daily life. That overshadows the concept of shared governance that draws on the intelligence and good judgment of people at the local, state, and national levels. It is what federalism was meant to be. Thankfully, that may be changing. There also are signs that these graduates are better prepared for college, says Daniel D. Challener, president of the Public Education Foundation, a Chattanooga community organization. What is happening in Congress right now can be viewed as an effort to restore a balance of power that was an original underpinning of the American governmental model. Both the Senate and House of Representatives have passed bills reauthorizing the Elementary and Secondary School Act (ESEA). And, while the two pieces of legislation are markedly different and need to be reconciled before any proposal can be enacted, they share a common affirmation of the vital role of state and local levels of government in providing public education. (In fact, the provisions in the two bills protecting the authority of school boards were inserted largely at the behest of NSBA and its state school boards association members.) Local research has shown, for example, that college retention rates are increasing among graduates of the Hamilton County Schools. “That suggests they’re better prepared academically,” he says. “They’ve had more rigorous coursework.” [Del Stover is senior editor of the American School Board Journal. This article first appeared n the October 2015 edition of ASBJ.] A Message from NSBA’s Executive Director— Restoring Federalism in Education Reauthorization of ESEA would represent an incredibly important milestone, for at least two reasons. The first is the widespread consensus that this major federal law is badly in need of repair. Efforts to fix it have fallen short on previous attempts. This year, with both houses of Congress moving to pass legislation (in the Senate, by an overwhelming margin), is the best opportunity to enact a workable, effective new law. By Tom Gentzel It’s probably best that our nation’s founders are not around to hear the current debate about education policy in the United States. Those who fought and worked so hard to create this new country likely would be badly confused, and probably greatly frustrated, by the language being used today. Beyond that, this development is even more important because it represents an effort to restore balance among levels of government in the delivery of education. Although those early leaders had widely different opinions about the workings of government—the battles between Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton being a great example of the spirited debate that shaped our nation—a core principle made the formation of the United States possible. It was the notion that power not be concentrated in one place, and that decisions over public policy be made at the levels and by the leaders who are in the best position to make them. It recognizes that local, state, and national leaders should work in common purpose to strengthen and improve the public school system. That is not too much to ask. It is what we should expect. It is federalism in its truest and best sense. [Written by Tom Gentzel, NSBA Executive Director. This commentary originally appeared in the October 2015 issue of ASBJ.] In a word: federalism. 6 ESEA Reauthorization Highlights Accountability Although the Obama administration began awarding state waivers to NCLB rules in 2012, the House and Senate bills formalize a new accountability that ends the adequate yearly progress (AYP) goals and sanctions. Requirements on testing remain, but states will assume authority for determining when and how to intervene in lowperforming schools. This model may be debated in conference committee, however, as some lawmakers are concerned that, with eased federal oversight, states may not pay enough attention to disadvantaged students receiving inadequate support. Title I Portability The House bill allows Title I money to follow children who transfer to another public school within their district. An amendment to the Senate bill would have done the same—but also would have allowed the money to follow a child to a private school. That voucher-like amendment failed by a 45-51 vote. The difference between the two bills must be resolved in conference committee, and NSBA has expressed concern about the House provision. “Portability sounds so harmless, particularly when the money stays within the public school system,” says Lucy Gettman, NSBA’s deputy associate executive director of federal advocacy and public policy. “But the policy could redirect Title funds from higher-need school districts to more affluent ones and, therefore, will make it harder to direct federal funds to the most vulnerable students.” safety and security The safety of children and the security of student data and personal financial information are critical issues for schools. Lifetouch has proudly delivered its SmileSafe photo ID cards and a national safety program to over 500 million parents, investing some $27 million since 2004. Standards In a demonstration of the political backlash against the Common Core State Standards and the Obama administration’s efforts to push states to embrace them, both the House and Senate bills allow states to set their own academic standards and prohibit the U.S. Education Secretary from imposing any set of standards on states. As a direct result, missing children in 24 states were returned to their families. As the trusted name in school photography, Lifetouch requires its photographers to pass background and other state-mandated testing to support a safer environment at school. For more information, visit safety.Lifetouch.com. Title I Formula An amendment to the Senate bill revises the formula for distributing Title I funds, putting a greater emphasis on rates of poverty rather than on the number of poor children. Lifetouch is the only school photography company to demonstrate its commitment to keeping school data safe by signing a voluntary, enforceable, school-service-provider, privacy pledge. (Learn more at studentprivacypledge.org). It’s expected that the new formula, if accepted, will divert millions of dollars in future funding to less-populated and poorer states that spend less on education. To ease opposition from more than a dozen states expected to lose Title I funds under the formula, the amendment includes a temporary holdharmless clause that would preserve those states’ current funding levels. And each year, a third party auditor certifies that Lifetouch meets or exceeds the credit card industry’s strict standards for use of financial information. Lifetouch supports local employee owners as they strive to deliver safe and secure relationships. Block Grants The House rejected an amendment to distribute ESEA funds through block grants to states, a funding model that would have given state officials more discretion in how money is spent. NSBA opposed the measure, as funds traditionally directed to disadvantaged children could have been diverted to other uses, such as private school vouchers. Lifetouch is a corporate sponsor of the Nevada Association of School Boards and its photographers will be taking pictures of Conference attendees on November 21, 2015. 7