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An Interview with Andy Smarick: Rebuilding Urban School Systems
- 15-7-09
An Interview with Andy Smarick: Rebuilding Urban School Systems
Michael F. Shaughnessy -Â July 15, 2009
Senior Columnist EducationNews.org
Eastern New Mexico University
Portales, New Mexico
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1) Â Â Â Â Andy, first of all, tell us about your experiences and education.
I’ve had a pretty varied set of professional experiences in K-12 education.  At the state level, I worked for members of a state legislature and served on a governor’s education commission.  At the national level, I was a congressional aide, worked in the White House at the Domestic Policy Council, and was a Deputy Assistant Secretary at the US Department of Education.  In terms of more “on-the-ground†work, I helped start the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, and I was a co-founder of a college-prep charter school for disadvantaged kids in Annapolis, MD.
I’m a total product of public education.  After public school kindergarten in western Pennsylvania, I attended Anne Arundel County Public Schools in Maryland.  I went to undergraduate and graduate school at the University of Maryland.
2) Â Â Â Â Now, what is this book you are writing all about?
It’s about rebuilding America’s urban school systems.  I think we need to create healthy industry systems if we’re to ever have consistently successful urban school districts.  I think we can do this by applying the concepts of chartering—like new starts, school closures, and replications—across all school sectors.
3)     What do YOU mean by turnaround and how do you define “failing schools�
This term has been poorly defined for too long. Â Ideally, a successful turnaround would mean taking a school that was persistently very low performing and getting it to consistent very high performance in a reasonable amount of time. Â Incidentally, if we use this definition, the number of successful turnarounds is extraordinarily small.
As for “failing schools,†you could approach this in a number of ways.  Any school that can’t keep its students safe must certainly fall into that category.  So too any school that, year after year, has large portions of its student body failing to meet state standards.  The federal “restructuring†designation captures this set of schools relatively well.  Ideally, though, we would have clear, reliable growth measures so we could evaluate all schools based on improvements in student performance.  We’re not there yet, but we’re getting there.
4) Â Â Â Â What is Arne Duncan doing right and what is he doing wrong?
He deserves credit for talking about failing schools, advocating for charters, pushing for better use of data, and nudging the left to be more open to performance pay for teachers.  Also, though the education components of the stimulus legislation weren’t put together very well if reform is the ultimate goal, Secretary Duncan has been using his bully pulpit to push states and districts to do the right thing.  There’s no doubt whatsoever that he cares greatly about reform.
On the downside, I believe he is entirely too sanguine about our ability to “turn around†America’s lowest performing schools.  Turnarounds have a terribly low success rate in education and other industries.  Instead, we need to be willing to close failing schools and open new schools (that have the characteristics that produce success) in their place.  If we ignore the evidence on turnarounds, we could very well waste several billion dollars in the near future.  Along those lines, Secretary Duncan recently encouraged several superb charter start-up organizations to get into the turnaround business, which I think would be a terrible mistake.  Don’t push the few bright spots on the urban schools landscape into a historically unsuccessful activity that could ultimately compromise their terrific work.
I was also very disappointed that Secretary Duncan didn’t fight to protect the DC Opportunity Scholarship Program.  Worse, his department released the positive evaluation findings late on a Friday so few people would notice that the program was working.  I’ve also been disappointed that Secretary Duncan hasn’t said anything about the continuing decline of faith-based, especially Catholic, schools in our inner-cities.  These schools often do outstanding work with the most disadvantaged students, and yet the schools are disappearing.  With the paucity of great schools in these communities, we don’t have the luxury of allowing any of them to close.
Finally, unlike the secretary, I’m not convinced that national standards and assessments are the answer.  We are rushing headlong into this, and we could spend enormous sums of time and money bringing this about without significant gains in student learning.  You can have national standards and still have failing schools, low-performing teachers, misguided collective bargaining agreements, and much more.  I’m concerned that with all of the momentum building behind national standards that it’s not getting the critical eye that it deserves.  At this point, it is looking like the classic “bad idea whose time has come.â€
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5) Â Â Â Â Andy, I used to teach in the South Bronx. I thought the school itself, was neat, clean, well kept, and we had good supplies. However, the neighborhood was in shambles. What can the government do?
I’m all in favor of helping these neighborhoods in as many ways as possible, such as improving housing strategies and creating jobs.  But I also believe that we’ll never fully turn around our inner-city neighborhoods until we get education right.  So I’m not part of the camp that argues the inverse—that we can only have successful urban schools if we solve poverty and the other ills of US cities.
There is no doubt that kids in these communities come into school with a wide array of challenges.  Teaching in these areas is extraordinarily difficult, and those who do it well deserve enormous thanks and praise.  But just because it is hard doesn’t mean that we should be excused for not doing it well.  The purpose of public education, in my opinion, is to take all kids, no matter their circumstances, and lift them up to high levels of achievement so they can succeed throughout life.  So, I readily concede that urban schooling is just about as tough as it gets, but I’m emphatic that we have to get it right.
I worry when the first reaction to a struggling school is, “the students come from a difficult neighborhood.† That statement, though true, doesn’t do anything to help those children learn more.  In fact, taken too far, that statement can contribute to the kind of low expectations that depress achievement.
6)     And, I used to teach in rural Nebraska, where they “consolidated“ schools.  What should be done about “failing schools“ in rural areas?
Entirely too little attention has been paid to this issue.  There are struggling schools throughout rural America, and those underserved kids deserve better, just like urban kids deserve better.  Getting the human capital—great teachers and principals—to choose rural Nebraska or West Virginia over Chicago or New York City is a challenge.  But that’s where I would start. Â
7) Â Â Â Â Are charter schools the answer? Or do we need more merit pay or vouchers?
All of the above. Â And more. Â
But we have to be careful to support not just good concepts (which these are) but good policies as well. Â For example, not all new charters will be great. Â So you need great authorizers, and you need to be thoughtful about new starts, closures, and replications. Â Merit pay must be done in concert with improved teacher preparation programs and better teacher evaluations. Â Voucher programs need to ensure that participating private schools are high-quality.
8) Â Â Â Â I believe it is difficult for most schools to keep up with the technology. What do schools have to do to keep up with all of these changing platforms and various technologies?
I’m conservative on this front; that is, I’m not in favor of chasing new technologies just for the sake of being on the cutting edge.  Some technologies will be great for our schools, and some will not.  Even if you find promising innovations, it’s a major challenge to implement them properly, train adults to use them well, and so on.  This is much more difficult than merely buying laptops for all students, declaring victory, and then calling it a day.
9) Â Â Â Â What is the basic premise of your book?
We’ll never have successful urban school systems until we 1) focus on school quality instead of school sector—i.e. it shouldn’t matter who runs the school as long as it is excellent; and 2) continuously use the systemic innovations of chartering—new starts, replications, and closures—to build a dynamic, nimble, self-improving education industry
10) What have I neglected to ask?
My favorite blues guitar solos: Texas Flood (Stevie Ray Vaughan), Crossroads (Cream), Since I’ve Been Loving You (Led Zeppelin), and One Way Out (Allman Brothers Band).
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Michael and Andy--
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           I'm all for systems working well. Do that.
           As you do so, however, note that you turn your eyes away from the micro-system of students' experience. If you design a garden, you can see it as the planter does or like the mole experiences it. You can design a steamship to travel securely through the roughest seas and still make passengers miserable so they flee the boat as soon as they can.
           The language of school change contains a clue. Richard Bandler and John Grinder, in developing the breakthrough in psychotherapy they named Neuro-Linguistic Programming, identified a major barrier to change in nominalizations. These are words so vague that they don't tell the other person what to do. People using them habitually can think they're making changes when they really only juggle verbal formulas. A way to tell is to ask, 'Who specifically is doing what specifically?" If you can read something (e.g. the interview between you two) and find nobody actually doing anything, then the piece is comprised totally of nominalizations. In effect you punt the ball. Someone reading your words may later figure out what actually to do.          Â
           Understanding that we have to give up nominalizing go get change, we ask the concrete question instead: "Who exactly does what exactly when good education occurs?" Countless actions by teachers and students achieve this, but they have in common that they occur in a certain band of mental activity.
           A story. Back when I was running a small school for eighth to tenth graders disaffected from the public system, a dyslexic eighth grade boy came to me who was tested as reading at the third grade level. He was your classic good kid but his parents were concerned that he'd been growing more and more discouraged and frustrated as he fell further behind.
           I set him to extremely simple reading tasks, watched him carefully, questioned him about what he was reading, and probed into what he was focusing on. After two weeks of looking over his shoulder and tracking his perceptions and thinking, it dawned on me that in eight grades of school, no one had ever connected individual letters to their varied sounds for him. This we accomplished in a few days, and at the end of the year, he tested as reading at grade level, having caught up five grades in one year once he knew exactly what to do.  Mind meets data. What happens next?
           To convert from a nominalizing to a concrete system, use this criterion: What do I (teacher) do exactly to insure that all my students learn the key knowledge from today's lesson permanently? Exactly what do I do differently than when I just teach for familiarized knowledge I don't expect them to retain?
           Among systems, this is the concrete one where "rubber meets the road," occurring millions of times a day across the country. Student mind meets knowledge, and what exactly does the former do to retain the latter? When teachers know specifically what to do to get students doing exactly what they need to do, all other issues become quickly resolvable.Â
Message
Message
John Jensen states, " "Who exactly does what exactly when good education occurs?"
We should also ask, "Where does a good education occur?" We should also ask, "Who exactly is responsible when good education happens?"
When I have met an academically successful child, without exception, that child and his parents are doing **everything** that I did with my academically highly successful homeschoolers. There is no difference in their home study habits, and little difference in outside activities.
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I doubt that educators really want to know where, how, or with whom education **really** happens. If they did turn over this rock, they would find that academically successful children are nearly 100% "afterschooled". The children themselves and the parents are doing the educating. The institutional school is merely sending home a curriculum for the parents and child to follow.
So?....Where does nearly all education happen? Answer: Probably in the home.
Who does nearly all the teaching and learning: Answer: It is most likely the children and parents in the home.
How does nearly all education happen: Answer: Through "afterschooling". The institutional school is merely sending home a curriculum. Little learning happens in an institutional classroom.
It is important that we truly know the "where", "how", "who" to the educational question.
1) If parents and children are doing nearly all the learning and teaching in the home through "afterschooling", then perhaps these children would do better with **LESS** institutionalization in brick and mortar schools! The typical government K-12 school may actually be retarding the educational and social development of these children. The time spent in the institutional school may be contributing little or nothing to the child's real learning, and may actually be wasting a large part of the child's day.
2) It is insanity to think that the child from a dysfunctional family will do well in a typical government school, if the only thing that government school is doing is sending home a curriculum! These children would likely do better in an institutional school that attempts to duplicate in the institution what happens in "afterschooling" in a functional family. George Will calls these schools "paternalistic" schools. KIPP schools are and example.
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By the way, my three homeschoolers were admitted to college at the ages of 13, 12, and 13. All three finished all college general courses and Calculus III by the age of 15. The two younger earned B.S. degrees in mathematics by the age of 18. The older of these two finished a masters in mathematics at the age of 20.
The oldest will earn an MBA ( accounting) this year at the age of 25. He has chosen to attend college part-time while competing on a national and international level in a sport. He also worked in his late teens for a few years for our church in Eastern Europe. As a result he is completely fluent in Russian.
My children are normally bright. There are children throughout this nation by the thousands upon thousands who could be doing as well academically. As I drive by our brick and mortar government high school, I can't help but wonder how many children are artifically retarded in their own "afterschooling" efforts because they are legallly imprisoned in these institutions.
A round of applause for Wintertime's message. He has in common with great classroom teachers, I believe, that it matters keenly to them what students actually understand, think, and retain. A parent is saying "I'me homeschooling you because I REALLY want you to get this." Wintertime uses the term "afterschooling" evidently to mean instruction occurring outside the classroom, but a more subtle aspect of it permeates all good teaching. Afterschooling is also "after-school thinking." Good teachers install something so it stays long enough to be thought about and built upon. A state teacher of the year I inteviewed once said that he was "adamant" that his high school students knew their material. Once teachers understand how to apply such a standard along the full range of ability in their class, there's no excuse for mediocre learning. My suspicion is that our manner of organizing classes so that they structurally END is a powerful message both to teachers and students not to teach or study for learning in depth, while parents have a natural investment in their child's learning not being discarded.Â
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A round of applause for Wintertime's message. He has in common with great classroom teachers, I believe, that it matters keenly to them what students actually understand, think, and retain. A parent is saying "I'me homeschooling you because I REALLY want you to get this." Wintertime uses the term "afterschooling" evidently to mean instruction occurring outside the classroom, but a more subtle aspect of it permeates all good teaching. Afterschooling is also "after-school thinking." Good teachers install something so it stays long enough to be thought about and built upon. A state teacher of the year I inteviewed once said that he was "adamant" that his high school students knew their material. Once teachers understand how to apply such a standard along the full range of ability in their class, there's no excuse for mediocre learning. My suspicion is that our manner of organizing classes so that they structurally END is a powerful message both to teachers and students not to teach or study for learning in depth, while parents have a natural investment in their child's learning not being discarded.Â
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