Yesterday, I expressed skepticism that some of the  top-down, one-size-fits-all strategies propounded by the Obama and Bush  administrations for educational reform were appropriate for Districts  like our own.  Of course, everyone has their own definition of what  reform means.   But for me, reform means addressing the educational  needs today's generation of young people by  implementing proven new  ideas that work.  It means overcoming resistance to change for the sake  of keeping to the status quo.  It means addressing the emerging  crisis in preparation for "first generation" students, so that we  realize the full potential of all of our young people.  It means  responding to the challenge that we do a better job of educating the  bottom quartile of students who aren't graduating proficient in math,  science, reading and writing.
I said yesterday, that I don't  think that pundits, politicians and even school board members are able  to dictate how needed change should be implemented. I said that those of  us who aren't professional educators must approach the issue of reform  with a sense of humility, recognizing that we are remote from what's  going on in the classroom.   The evidence of the past decades  demonstrates that in our district, positive change has always come from  hard work and  innovation led by the best of our teachers and  professional educational leaders.  To make continuous progress, we must  continue to find ways to unlock the potential of our most creative,  innovative and inspirational educational leaders.    
Our first  son entered District 742 in about 1984.  Since that time, there have  many significant positive changes in our school district, and most of  those changes have been successful because they were sponsored,  supported, and implemented by outstanding teachers and innovative  educational leaders who said, "I want to try something better."  In that  period, gifted teachers developed the area's first advanced placement  classes, and then over the years, introduced more and more of these  rigorous, challenging courses.  A lot of work went into that innovation,  and one by one, high school teachers learned new and demanding courses,  recruited students to participate, and demonstrated their ability to  teach courses to our students that are as demanding as found in most  introductory college classes.   For those of you who have never taught,  it may seem a simple matter to make a change in curriculum or teaching  practices.  Even introducing a new textbook requires a tremendous amount  of preparation, but implementing significant meaningful change, such as  adding an advanced placement course, is a major undertaking that  involves research, extensive preparation, and then years of work trying  to make the new course work.
In our district, significant  improvements in the teaching of elementary science were developed and  advocated for by gifted teachers who were lovers of science, and they  put a lot of hard work into making those improvements.    In more recent  years, improvements in the rigor of our junior high classes have been  implemented, again with the active support and hard work of teachers who  cared enough to adapt their teaching practices to make things better  for kids.  Parents, board members, and the curriculum folks supported  those changes, but they couldn't have occurred without active support,  planning, and innovation by the teachers and professional leadership in  the schools.  These improvements are way easier to think up, than they  are to implement.  Improving a social studies course, or introducing new  computer or calculator technology, or modern interactive white-board  technology, requires hundreds of hours of time from dedicated teachers  who are inspired to make their classrooms work better for kids.
In  the last several years, several teachers have been working very hard to  integrate pre-engineering programs in our district using the Project  Lead the Way model.  Project Lead the Way is an exciting program that  appeals to so-called average students, because it connects  pre-engineering to projects that kids can do with their hands.  Just as  auto mechanics inspired that group of kids back when I was in school,  now pre-engineering experiences like Project Lead the Way, provides an  exceptional opportunity to attract and retain a group of kids who might  otherwise lose interest in school. Project Lead the Way didn't happen  because a school board member did something, although the board gave it  our full support.  The hard work, the inspiration, and the success of  that program resulted from innovative hard work from exceptional  teachers.
In the last couple of years, teachers and  administrators have begun to integrate web-based technology called  Skyward to provide better communication to parents.  That change too has  required, and will continue to require efforts to innovate and change.   The District has implemented a new progress reporting system using the  best testing and reporting system, the NWEA, that for the first time  provides parents regular accurate information on where their student  stands on math and reading based on national norms.  Again, a lot of  work went into implementing that system, and while it represents an  innovation to implement board policy, all of the hard work happened at  schools.
What I found over several decades is that significant  positive reforms can happen. and will happen, by liberating the creative  energy of education professionals.  Parents can provide encouragement.  School boards can provide support and encouragement, and we can manage  change in an environment of accountability, but at the core of positive  change you are going to find the teachers in our organization who have  the drive to make things better.   Sure, there are people in any  organization who would just as soon keep doing things exactly as they  have been done before.   But needed reforms do not happen without the  hard work of teachers and educational leaders.   This is my issue with  the top-down, Washington and St. Paul based attempt to inflict  one-size-fits-all reform on school districts.   
Now  yesterday, I warned that some of the quick fixes propounded by Bush and  now Obama-Duncan are not proving successful, at least as measured by  emerging data.  I wasn't attacking all of those reform ideas, but I was  challenging the idea that districts should have to implement changes  whether they are going to work here or not. I pointed out that charter  schools have not yet demonstrated the payoff that had been promised by  proponents.  I wasn't suggesting that there aren't good charter schools.   Charter schools provide an opportunity to create a new school with a  different approach or philosophy, and like regular public schools, some  are great and some are not.  But increasingly, there is evidence that  charter schools, and some of the other centralized top down quick fixes  are not what they have been marketed to be by Bush-Obama and Duncan,  solutions to the so-called achievement gap.  In my next post, I'll talk a  bit about the use and misuse of education research to promote  questionable panaceas in education.  Then, I'll try to talk about some  of the reforms that show promise.
Time for a Public Discussion on Delivering a Constitutionally Adequate education to Minnesota
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