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<!--Generated by Squarespace Site Server v5.11.81 (http://www.squarespace.com/) on Wed, 30 May 2012 12:27:22 GMT--><feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"><title>My Blog</title><subtitle>My Blog</subtitle><id>http://www.reinventedsolutions.com/als-blog/</id><link rel="alternate" type="application/xhtml+xml" href="http://www.reinventedsolutions.com/als-blog/"/><link rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.reinventedsolutions.com/als-blog/atom.xml"/><updated>2012-05-26T21:46:11Z</updated><generator uri="http://www.squarespace.com/" version="Squarespace Site Server v5.11.81 (http://www.squarespace.com/)">Squarespace</generator><entry><title>Is Georgia's Public Education System Nearing The Breaking Point?</title><id>http://www.reinventedsolutions.com/als-blog/2012/5/26/is-georgias-public-education-system-nearing-the-breaking-poi.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.reinventedsolutions.com/als-blog/2012/5/26/is-georgias-public-education-system-nearing-the-breaking-poi.html"/><author><name>Al Meyers</name></author><published>2012-05-26T21:21:22Z</published><updated>2012-05-26T21:21:22Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p>The past few weeks have been hard for me.&nbsp;&nbsp; A number of concerning news stories have come out, and I believe they all share a common thread:</p>
<p>"<a href="http://blogs.ajc.com/get-schooled-blog/2012/05/08/aps-school-chief-opposes-addition-of-a-high-school-at-drew-charter-school/">APS School Chief Opposes Addition of a High School at Drew Charter Schoo</a>l"&nbsp;</p>
<p>"<a href="http://pba.org/post/amid-budget-deficit-clayton-county-schools-cut-teachers-and-reduce-technical-training">Amid Budget Deficit, Clayton County Schools Cut Teachers and Reduce Technical Training</a>"</p>
<p>"<a href="http://www.ajc.com/news/dekalb/dekalb-schools-facing-70-1442996.html">Dekalb Schools, Facing $70 Million Deficit, Searches For Cuts</a>"</p>
<p>"<a href="http://www.ajc.com/news/dekalb/dekalb-schools-cuts-could-1446160.html">Dekalb School Cuts Could Include Fernbank Science Center</a>"</p>
<p>"<a href="http://www.wsbtv.com/news/news/clayton-co-proposing-eliminate-8th-grade-sports-sa/nMYsP/">Clayton County Proposing To Eliminate 8th Grade Sports To Save Money</a>"</p>
<p>There have been so many articles written about the "financial distress" facing public schools, and they are now making "King Solomon-like" decisions.&nbsp;&nbsp; Have you figured out the common thread yet?&nbsp;&nbsp; It's that the system is irretrievably broken.&nbsp; why else would a school district such as Atlanta Public Schools not allow the most successful charter school in the city to try and replicate its success at the high school level?&nbsp; The graduation rate of its students is more than 20 percentage points higher than APS, yet the Superintendent has rejected its expansion plans.&nbsp;&nbsp; Making draconian cuts as stated in the above stories is NOT the answer.</p>
<p>This is not a liberal or conservative problem, this is a bi-partisan problem.&nbsp;&nbsp; When school districts such as Atlanta Public Schools spend more than $15K per pupil, yet graduate barely more than half of them, it is clear that money is not the problem.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Dekalb County, the 3rd largest school district in the state of Georgia, feels that it needs to RAISE property taxes to go along with a series of budget cuts.&nbsp;&nbsp; More money is not going to solve the problem.&nbsp;&nbsp; Our public education system has been badly managed, and reluctant to change, when the world has changed around it.&nbsp;&nbsp; And it's our precious children that have been made to suffer.</p>
<p>Georgia's public education woes are not unique to Georgia.&nbsp;&nbsp; It's time for all parties to sit down and realize that the system is not working, and doesn't just need "tweaking," but a massive overhaul.&nbsp; We need to change course, and fast.&nbsp;&nbsp; I say this from the point of view of a strategist and has looked at the problems facing public education objectively.&nbsp; I am not some "school choice" lobbyist, nor am I a mouthpiece for any special interest group.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I support innovation in education and believe that we must change our approach before we lose a generation of talent and put our economic competitiveness at risk.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
<p>So when will our politicians, educators and parents get angry and start collaborating on real solutions to our education challenges?&nbsp;&nbsp; The time is NOW.</p>]]></content></entry><entry><title>Reforming Public Education Requires Abandoning Labels and Fear of Change</title><id>http://www.reinventedsolutions.com/als-blog/2012/5/9/reforming-public-education-requires-abandoning-labels-and-fe.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.reinventedsolutions.com/als-blog/2012/5/9/reforming-public-education-requires-abandoning-labels-and-fe.html"/><author><name>Al Meyers</name></author><published>2012-05-09T17:38:45Z</published><updated>2012-05-09T17:38:45Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p>If there is anything I have learned in recent weeks, it's that reforming public education in the United States requires embracing change, not fearing it.&nbsp;&nbsp; It is amazing how people are unwilling to look at any policy papers because they label the authors as "conservative" or "anti teacher."&nbsp;&nbsp; People will go to great lengths, and even wage personal attacks on people in order to protect the status quo.</p>
<p>Let me be clear.&nbsp;&nbsp; On most social issues, I lean more towards the "left" than most people do.&nbsp;&nbsp; Education, however, is not a "liberal" or "conservative" issue.&nbsp; It's about our children, and the fact that our current system was built for a mass-standardization, Industrial Revolution era in our nation's history.&nbsp; I support innovation, and that requires change.&nbsp; Yet throughout the past few years, and more intensely the past several weeks, I have been branded a "right wing extremist," a supporter of "private vouchers," and someone who supports more corporations getting into the public education arena.&nbsp;&nbsp; Why are people so keen on making judgments about my point of view?</p>
<p>I have been personally attacked on the most anachronistic education blog in Atlanta, called <a href="http://blogs.ajc.com/get-schooled-blog/"><em>Get Schooled</em></a>&nbsp; It's author has a clear agenda to attack any trends that might change the system.&nbsp; She is anti-digital learning, anti charter school, protector of local public school monopolies and yet the newspaper she writes for refuses to allow an additional education blog that provides an alternate perspective on education policy impacting Atlanta, and Georgia for that matter.&nbsp;&nbsp; Why is this acceptable?&nbsp; Where is the public outrage?</p>
<p>Again, what I support is systemic change in our education system.&nbsp;&nbsp; Teachers need to be better trained, better evaluated, better compensated, and more flexible in how they teacher our children.&nbsp;&nbsp; Local school boards cannot have exclusive control over charter schools - what is wrong with competition?&nbsp; And how can we innovate if all innovation is stifled by the status quo?&nbsp;&nbsp; Digital learning knows no geographic boundaries, yet how can local school boards put a walled garden around such learning opportunities?&nbsp; Why are teachers, and their unions, afraid that digital learning will result in fewer jobs?&nbsp; What about the positive aspects of digital learning, such as expanding the reach of the best teachers?&nbsp; Or freeing teachers up from administrative tasks to focus more on differentiated instruction?&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; What about improving the operating efficiency of public education by allowing certain pieces of the infrastructure to be run at the state level?&nbsp;&nbsp; Why is it ok that school systems such as Atlanta Public Schools can spend $15K per pupil, yet only graduate 52 percent of its students?&nbsp;&nbsp; There are so many questions I have about public education?&nbsp;&nbsp; I do not disrespect teachers, but their unions are preventing real change, and teachers need more tools to thrive in a digital world.</p>
<p>Our education system MUST change, for the sake of our children.&nbsp;&nbsp; It is time that everyone starts to keep an open mind and start compromising to get things done.&nbsp;&nbsp; The world has changed in the past century, EXCEPT public education.&nbsp;&nbsp; Our children deserve a quality education, and there are few places that are meeting this vision.</p>
<p>If people have the courage to open their minds and start working together to reform public education, then maybe there will still be hope for our children.&nbsp;&nbsp; The United States is the greatest democracy on the planet, but lets stop the partisanship and start collaborating to maintain our international competitiveness for generations to come.</p>]]></content></entry><entry><title>Education Reform for the Digital Era</title><id>http://www.reinventedsolutions.com/als-blog/2012/5/6/education-reform-for-the-digital-era.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.reinventedsolutions.com/als-blog/2012/5/6/education-reform-for-the-digital-era.html"/><author><name>Al Meyers</name></author><published>2012-05-07T00:36:28Z</published><updated>2012-05-07T00:36:28Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p>It has become increasingly clear to me that the way to reform public education is not to work within the existing system, but to rebuild it from the ground up.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Change cannot happen under the current framework.&nbsp; My colleague Michael Horn at the <a href="http://www.innosightinstitute.org">Innosight Institute</a> has it 100% right.&nbsp;&nbsp; Disruptive innovation is the only way to get the system to change.&nbsp;&nbsp; I am more convinced than ever that more money is not going to do anything for our children.&nbsp;&nbsp; There is plenty of money; however, there is too much wasteful spending in our local monopoly-driven system.</p>
<p>I decided to title this blog post identical to a recent <a href="http://www.edexcellencemedia.net/publications/2012/20120425-education-reform-for-the-digital-era/20120425-Education-Reform-for-the-Digital-Era-FINAL.pdf">white paper </a>I read from the Fordham Institute.&nbsp;&nbsp; It is free to the world, and, contrary to what many people have labeled as a "conservative" point of view about education reform, it is nothing of the sort.&nbsp;&nbsp; The extensive paper comprises well-researched policy recommendations on how we can reposition our public schools for success in a digital world.&nbsp;&nbsp; How can our schools embrace technological innovation and digital learning?&nbsp;&nbsp; The first paragraph of the introduction: <em>Overcoming the Obstacles to Digital Learning</em>,&nbsp; provides an excellent lens into the objectives of the paper:</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em>Digital learning is more than the latest addition to education reformers&rsquo; to-do lists, filed along with teacher evaluations, charter schools, tenure reform, academic standards, and the like. It&rsquo;s fundamentally different: For digital learning to fulfill its enormous potential, a wholesale reshaping of the reform agenda itself is required, particularly in the realms of school finance and governance. But just as online education needs those reforms if it is to flourish, so does deep education reform need digital learning, which can provide valuable solutions to some of education&rsquo;s greatest challenges&mdash;beginning with the basic obsolescence of its familiar delivery system.</em></p>
<p>The paper is comprised of five detailed, research-driven sections:</p>
<p>Chapter 1: Teachers in the Age of Digital Instruction<br />Chapter 2: Quality Control in K&ndash;12 Digital Learning:<br />Chapter 3: The Costs of Online Learning <br />Chapter 4: School Finance in the Digital-Learning Era <br />Chapter 5: Overcoming the Governance Challenge in<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; K&ndash;12 Online Learning</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>There is some excellent guidance in the material about the promise of digital learning and why teachers should embrace it, not fear it.&nbsp;&nbsp; However, the paper does a fine job at framing three significant barriers to successful implementation of digital learning in public education:</p>
<ul>
<li>Self-absorbed and self-serving groups that do their utmost either to capture the potential of technology to advance their own interests or to shackle it in ways that keep it from harming those interests.</li>
<li>Issues of organizational capacity within our public education system, a system that has enormous<br />difficulty accommodating and assimilating change&mdash;and the more wrenching the change the greater the difficulty.</li>
<li>Core governance and financing structures of our K&ndash;12 system itself.</li>
</ul>
<p>Teachers fear the "unbundling" of learning that digital learning promises.&nbsp;&nbsp; Education is not bound by the walls of one classroom and one teacher.&nbsp;&nbsp; How you train teachers and measure their effectiveness when they do not have full control over a child's academic development poses material challenges in our current education system that is run by local monopolies and teachers unions.&nbsp;&nbsp; That is NOT a conservative or liberal perspective - that is REALITY.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; You cannot leave local school districts in control of online learning, as it will retard innovation.&nbsp; Let me leave you with one final excerpt from the paper, which again, I encourage all of you to take the time and read:</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em>Now consider our agricultural-era devotion to &ldquo;local control&rdquo; of public education and ask how this arrangement can possibly work well&mdash;indeed, what it even means&mdash;when the delivery system itself is unbound by district, municipal, or even state borders. Who is really &ldquo;in charge&rdquo; when students assemble their education from multiple providers based in many locations, some likely on the other side of<br />the planet? Digital learning, like digital communications, lives on the Internet&mdash;often &ldquo;in the cloud&rdquo;&mdash;and knows no natural geographic or political boundaries. Sure, it can be inhibited by totalitarian regimes that fear websites or any communications that may loosen their grip. When left to flourish in the marketplace, however, digital learning will yield innovation, competition (affecting content, quality, delivery mechanisms, and price), and eventual economies of scale. And those will&mdash;and ought to&mdash;develop without regard to municipal boundaries.</em></p>
<p>I could write pages and pages of material about this work, so I ask you all to read it for yourselves.&nbsp;&nbsp; Keep an open mind, and please share your insights with me after you've had a chance to read it.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
<p>The road map is there, my friends - we just require the courage to change.&nbsp; Lets do it for the sake of our children's generation.</p>]]></content></entry><entry><title>Putting Georgia Public Education on Notice</title><id>http://www.reinventedsolutions.com/als-blog/2012/5/1/putting-georgia-public-education-on-notice.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.reinventedsolutions.com/als-blog/2012/5/1/putting-georgia-public-education-on-notice.html"/><author><name>Al Meyers</name></author><published>2012-05-01T14:02:31Z</published><updated>2012-05-01T14:02:31Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p>I have finally had enough.</p>
<p>Every citizen of the state of Georgia - in fact, every citizen in the United States - should be OUTRAGED at the rapid deterioration of our public education system.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I will lump it into the same category as AMTRAK and the US Postal Service.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
<p>You might say I'm not telling you what you don't already know.&nbsp;&nbsp; Well, at a briefing last week of the GA Public Policy Foundation, attendees were given a very detailed spreadsheet.&nbsp;&nbsp; It contained ALL expenditures, by category and graduation rates for every school system in the state of Georgia.&nbsp; And I was totally mortified at what I saw.&nbsp; A few tidbits:</p>
<ul>
<li>Atlanta Public Schools:&nbsp;&nbsp; <strong>$15,239</strong> per pupil, with a <strong>52%</strong> graduation rate!&nbsp; And they spend nearly <strong>$3K </strong>per pupil for central admin costs!</li>
<li>Gwinnett County (received a Broad Foundation grant - 162K+ students):&nbsp; 1 in 3 students NOT graduating!</li>
<li>One small district has a 40% graduation rate!</li>
</ul>
<p>Educators, parents and policy-makers - you should be ashamed of yourselves.&nbsp;&nbsp; How and why did we allow public education to stay stagnant while the entire world has changed around it?&nbsp; And how many of these graduates are truly ready for college, when professors complain about the significant amount of remedial work they need to teach their students?</p>
<p>When will our electorate realize that public education is NOT a democrat or republican issue?&nbsp; It's about our children, and we are failing them.&nbsp; It's not about the money.&nbsp;&nbsp; Heck, for $15K a year, you could almost send your child to private school!&nbsp; As you can see, this is what happens when you allow local monopoly power in education.&nbsp;&nbsp; Redundancy, wasteful spending, and lack of innovation.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
<p>And yet, our teachers unions and other factions are afraid of any kind of change.&nbsp;&nbsp; Charter schools are not the magic bullet, but they offer a chance at innovative approaches to education.&nbsp;&nbsp; Digital learning needs to be given a chance to flourish.&nbsp; Recently, the Fordham Institute released a free white paper entitled, "<a href="http://www.educationnews.org/online-schools/fordham-releases-education-reform-for-the-digital-era/">Education Reform for the Digital Era</a>."&nbsp;&nbsp; While I am still reading the content, it is very interesting and an invaluable resource for anyone who wishes to reform our education system.&nbsp;&nbsp; Having looked at the data, I am now more convinced than ever that money is not the problem.&nbsp; We need to rebuild our education system from the ground up, for the sake of our children!</p>
<p>The status quo is unacceptable, so those of you who are complacent and passing the buck to others, it's time you spoke up!&nbsp;&nbsp; Let's reinvent education in America, before it's too late!</p>]]></content></entry><entry><title>We Need To Teach Ethics In K-12 Education Before It Is Too Late</title><id>http://www.reinventedsolutions.com/als-blog/2012/4/17/we-need-to-teach-ethics-in-k-12-education-before-it-is-too-l.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.reinventedsolutions.com/als-blog/2012/4/17/we-need-to-teach-ethics-in-k-12-education-before-it-is-too-l.html"/><author><name>Al Meyers</name></author><published>2012-04-17T15:26:42Z</published><updated>2012-04-17T15:26:42Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p>Something has been really bothering me recently.&nbsp;&nbsp; I had this epiphany after observing the salacious material being cirulated through social media regarding the scandal surrounding former Arkansas Head Football Coach Bobby Petrino.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; It seems to me we have a growing ethics problem in the United States, and here's why:</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul>
<li>The Petrino scandal demonstrated that winning football games is more important than setting the right example for our students.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The University of Arkansas knew full well that they were getting a coach who cared more about himself, and winning, than teaching his students how to conduct themselves responsibly.&nbsp; Even before this scandal broke, why would you have sent your son to play for a coach whose past behavior was reprehensible, especially how he walked out of a contractual commitment with the Atlanta Falcons.</li>
<li>Technological innovation has always been a double-edged sword.&nbsp; In the case of Petrino, reporters were leaking tons of text messages and other material, that, quite frankly, should not have been made available to the public.&nbsp;&nbsp; How do we explain this situation to our children, and in this case, were we really using social media for the right reasons?&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Unfortunately, there is something called "free will," and inventions will be used for both good and evil purposes, sad to say.</li>
<li>What are we teaching our children when we see college coaches pick themselves up and leave to go to other schools, even when they're under contract?&nbsp; We saw shameful behavior from USC Coach Lane Kiffin and former Pitt CoachTodd Graham who let their student-athletes down, one who sent them a note via Twitter!&nbsp;&nbsp; Why does the NCAAA allow college coaches to be poached from schools when they're under employment agreements?&nbsp; What does this tell our students about the importance of commitment?</li>
<li>I have this running debate with a friend of mine about this "One and Done" situation with college basketball players.&nbsp;&nbsp; Why should we allow college Freshmen to leave school three years early?&nbsp;&nbsp; This sullies the definitation of a student-athlete - in this case, maybe the terms should be flip-flopped?&nbsp; Should the NBA create a developmental league for basketball players, rather than creating a situation where a student is really not attending college to get a degree, only to get drafted in one year.&nbsp;&nbsp; These students have no intention of staying to complete a degree, and it is far less likely these athletes will go back to complete 3 years of college versus one year.&nbsp;&nbsp; Maybe MLB has it right when they say you either get drafted out of high school, or you stay at college three years?</li>
</ul>
<p>I feel like our country, to some degree, is losing its "moral compass."&nbsp;&nbsp; Contrary to what former NBA Star Charles Barkley thinks about role models - public figures ARE fole models.&nbsp;&nbsp; Thus, I truly believe that a partnership between parents and teachers must be forged to ensure that we are teaching ethics as early in a child's development as possible.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I'm really afraid that we are letting this ominous legendary quote from Vince Lombardi rule the day:</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">"<em>Winning isn't everything.&nbsp;&nbsp; It's the ONLY thing</em>."</p>
<p>Lets reinvent education by ensuring we teach ethics to our students as part of their academic requirements.&nbsp;&nbsp; This may be the most important life skill they receive.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I, for one, try and live by the ideals of the following quote from famous author C.S. Lewis:</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><em>"</em><em>Integrity is doing the right thing, even when no one is watching</em>"</p>]]></content></entry><entry><title>What an Atlanta Newspaper Has Taught Us About Data Reliability</title><id>http://www.reinventedsolutions.com/als-blog/2012/4/11/what-an-atlanta-newspaper-has-taught-us-about-data-reliabili.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.reinventedsolutions.com/als-blog/2012/4/11/what-an-atlanta-newspaper-has-taught-us-about-data-reliabili.html"/><author><name>Al Meyers</name></author><published>2012-04-11T15:12:10Z</published><updated>2012-04-11T15:12:10Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p>I am done with my public bashing of the Atlanta newspaper that spread misleading research about standardized test scores around the nation.&nbsp; However, what we have seen as a result of this debacle is that as part of "Reinventing Public Education," we need to do some serious reinventing of data analysis generated by our public school system.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
<p>The Georgia Department of Education released a <a href="http://www.doe.k12.ga.us/External-Affairs-and-Policy/communications/Pages/PressReleaseDetails.aspx?pid=33">statement</a> yesterday that disclosed a new formula for calculating the state's graduation rate.&nbsp; Amazingly, but not surprisingly, the restatement brought last year's graduation rate down nearly 14 points, from nearly 81 percent to just over 67 percent.&nbsp; No one really thought the 81 percent figure was a reliable figure.&nbsp;&nbsp; So what does this all mean?</p>
<p>This indicates the great challenge in researchers trying to compare data across states and localities.&nbsp;&nbsp; It is common knowledge that the public school system is the last bastion of society mired in the analog age, and for public education to be able to be reinvented to succeed in a digital world, the entire infrastructure needs to be rebuilt from the ground up.&nbsp; This is EXACTLY why you can't "cram" technology into schools, as my friend Michael Horn (co-author of <a href="http://disruptingclass.mhprofessional.com/apps/ab/about-the-book/"><em>Disrupting Class</em></a>) has pointed out so eloquently.&nbsp; The challenge of obtaining data that is comparable across states is laborious and tedious at best, if not impossible to complete.&nbsp;&nbsp; As you saw in Georgia, what appears simple as asking for a "graduate rate" is clearly not so simple.</p>
<p>This is symptomatic of the inherent conflict between Hamiltonian Federalism and Jeffersonian Republicanism.&nbsp; We need the federal resources to compel states to report data using the same formula, but even in this case, Georgia obtain a waiver to calculate the graduation rate using a 5-year, not 4-year cohort.&nbsp;&nbsp; I am not lobbying for one methodology over another, but think about all of the disclaimers a researcher will have to annotate because states are not calculating a graduation rate the same way.</p>
<p>What this example has shown this blogger is that we need to be VERY skeptical of education data in the public domain.&nbsp;&nbsp; How un-nerving for citizens to know that reported data may not be what it seems.&nbsp;&nbsp; This is one of the many challenges faced in education reform efforts.&nbsp;</p>
<p>We should all be worried about this one.</p>]]></content></entry><entry><title>Did An Atlanta Newspaper Un-Nerve Public Education And Sway Public Opinion With Flawed Research?</title><id>http://www.reinventedsolutions.com/als-blog/2012/3/30/did-an-atlanta-newspaper-un-nerve-public-education-and-sway.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.reinventedsolutions.com/als-blog/2012/3/30/did-an-atlanta-newspaper-un-nerve-public-education-and-sway.html"/><author><name>Al Meyers</name></author><published>2012-03-30T18:07:07Z</published><updated>2012-03-30T18:07:07Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p><em>While we are free to choose our actions, we are not free to choose the consequences of our actions."</em></p>
<p>&nbsp;- Stephen R. Covey&nbsp;</p>
<p>Let me start out by saying that my blog is about reinventing public education in the United States and the world.&nbsp; I typically apply the framework of disruptive innovation theory, because that is the lens that one should look through in order to understand what conditions are required in order to successfully innovate our learning methods for the digitally-driven 21st century work environment. &nbsp; But I also possess more than 20 years of media industry experience, and some of those lessons are quite relevant to the following post which I felt compelled to write after the chain of events that have transpired since March 25, 2012.</p>
<p>Last weekend, I picked up the Sunday Atlanta Journal-Constitution ("AJC") and was completely mortified by the cover story, which was titled, "<a href="http://www.ajc.com/news/cheating-our-children-suspicious-1397022.html">Cheating Our Children:&nbsp;Suspicious School Test Scores across Nation</a>."&nbsp; It seems that my local newspaper has made an aggressive, pre-emptive strike against standardized test scores around the nation.&nbsp; A few years ago, the newspaper analyzed test scores in Atlanta Public Schools, and the anomalies identified in the results&nbsp;triggered the investigation leading to the largest cheating scandal in the history of American K-12 public education.&nbsp;&nbsp; Their objective was to extend this work, analyze test scores in hundreds of districts around the United States, and ascertain whether similar cheating activities occurred on a national scale.&nbsp;&nbsp; They claim that there are "suspicious" test scores in roughly 200 districts, including many of our nation's largest urban centers, and these "irregularities" resemble those that entangled Atlanta Public Schools.&nbsp;&nbsp; The story was picked up by all of the major news outlets.&nbsp; In addition, several public figures added their verbal "fuel" to the findings, even before verifying its credibility. &nbsp; These included&nbsp;Education Secretary Duncan, U.S. Senator Johnny Isakson, NEA Head Randi Weingarten, and Diane Ravitch, the latter who is perhaps the most visible protector of the status quo.&nbsp; It has sought to un-nerve the system of administering standardized tests in public education.</p>
<p>Let me be clear.&nbsp; These are SERIOUS allegations leveled by a local newspaper. &nbsp; Instead of having direct evidence of cheating, they are saying, "Here's some data we compiled - it's not conclusive, but we think you should look into it."&nbsp; And instead of reviewing this privately, they took this directly to the public to sway public opinion before the facts could truly be corroborated. &nbsp;&nbsp; The report&nbsp;has sent shock waves through the education system and caused politicians and other education figures to comment prematurely.&nbsp; No one wants to look like they are 'soft" on security around testing, and Georgia's politicians were not going to throw the AJC "under the bus."&nbsp;&nbsp; It has raised the rhetoric around testing, distracted the nation from the real systemic problems with our public education system, and will undoubtedly force educators to take excessive time to review this study.&nbsp;&nbsp; There is a domino effect here, and the question is:&nbsp;&nbsp; has there been a rush to judgment, and was this research thorough, conclusive, and valid?</p>
<p>Let me again reiterate that my opinion is that testing is given FAR too much weight in this country, or any country for that matter.&nbsp; Tests are supposed to be an indicator, only an indicator, of student achievement.&nbsp; This author would NOT have been admitted to an Ivy League university if the overriding emphasis was on one day's test performance over the body of work spanning a student's entire academic career.&nbsp; Fortunately, the school chose to look at other factors, such as GPA, class rank, leadership activities, and other intangibles that provide a far more comprehensive picture of a student's ability than the performance on one test, whose integrity gets challenged and ridiculed on a regular basis.&nbsp;&nbsp; Many students just don't test well.</p>
<p>Before I comment further, let me provide an important analogy.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Back in the late 1990s when I was working at Turner Broadcasting, the research department embarked on an explosive, breakthrough project titled "Media at the Millennium."&nbsp; This was the period in the history of cable television where cable network distribution reached "critical mass" in terms of household penetration and was nearing parity with broadcast television.&nbsp; However, advertisers were still purchasing cable as a low-cost, high frequency medium and were not getting their fair share of advertising dollars even though some networks were starting to achieve parity in terms of not only reach, but also certain daypart ratings. Turner's research department developed a comprehensive data model that proved unequivocally that an advertiser could purchase cable WITHOUT sacrificing reach.&nbsp;&nbsp; Turner's researchers looked at every single angle of the analysis, anticipated all questions it would receive from ad agencies, media buyers and competitors.&nbsp; It checked its methodology several times and ensured it was "bulletproof."&nbsp;&nbsp; Once they completed the extensive, robust quality control process, they released the presentation and underlying methodology to the general public.&nbsp; It was a MAJOR success, and resulted in an estimated $1 Billion of ad dollars shifting from broadcast television to cable television.&nbsp; This analysis helped transform the media value chain and turned cable and broadcast into a "one television world."&nbsp; If they had erred in their quality control, Turner would have not only ostracized itself from the advertising industry, but it would have materially damaged its brand because it could not be trusted to deliver accurate data analysis to its stakeholders.&nbsp; These were some of the brightest minds I have ever worked with in my professional career, and they were wise to take the time to do all necessary quality checks before putting their reputations on the line and releasing such an explosive research study.</p>
<p>So what does this have to do with the AJC study?&nbsp; The AJC came out with its findings, paraded out several independent researchers who reviewed and endorsed the validity of its methodology, and created "sensationalist" headlines while burying disclaimers such as "this does not prove that cheating occurred."&nbsp;&nbsp; It then hired a marketing firm to tout its investigative story on testing data from several large school systems despite being informed of numerous flaws in its methodology and analysis.&nbsp; Let us summarize what has taken place since the newspaper unveiled its story:</p>
<ul>
<li>The best synopsis I have seen can be found <a href="http://clatl.com/freshloaf/archives/2012/03/29/im-not-saying-the-ajcs-nationwide-7-month-investigation-into-school-cheating-is-complete-bullshit-im-just-saying-there-are-some-irregula&amp;cb=5e6606fba2b56967ba2734bf77e245d5&amp;sort=desc#readerComments">here</a>.&nbsp;      It gives the complete inside story of the back and forth between Dr. Miron      (see below) and the AJC.&nbsp; It is QUITE revealing, to say the least.</li>
<li>To no one's surprise, several of these districts came out with      statements that appeared somewhat "caught off guard" and      "defensive," including Houston's school district.&nbsp;&nbsp;      Typically one would surmise that when you act "defensively", you are      likely guilty of some transgression.&nbsp;&nbsp; It is likely that certain      states may quietly start to conduct more detailed investigations and look      further into the data to see if any of it is indicative of unethical behavior      (i.e., cheating).</li>
<li><a href="http://www.mlive.com/news/kalamazoo/index.ssf/2012/03/western_michigan_university_sa_1.html">Gary Miron</a>,      a respected professor at Western Michigan University who is well regarded      for his work on education policy and reforms, had reviewed the study prior      to its release and was commented in the <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/post/what-the-latest-revelations-on-test-cheating-really-mean/2012/03/25/gIQADi1HaS_blog.html">Washington Post</a> about his serious concerns about its methodology, including the fact that      the AJC did not use student level data and erasure data as had been done in      a study conducted by USA Today a year earlier.&nbsp; Miron was heavily      involved in that study, and the newspaper went back and got the extra data      needed to conduct a more thorough analysis.&nbsp;&nbsp; This data would      have allowed student mobility to be factored into the equation, because      you wouldn't know if you were looking at the same students or not.         
<ul>
<li>Dr. Miron aired his concerns, and the AJC was quick to       respond to them.&nbsp;&nbsp; Their response barely touched the surface,       and was a superficial attempt to not only discredit Dr. Miron, but also       respond only to the mobility issue, and not the other issues raised by       Dr. Miron. </li>
<li>As quoted by AJC Editor Kevin Riley:&nbsp; "Had       we waited for absolute proof before publishing news about alarming scores       in Atlanta, the investigation would have likely never       happened."&nbsp;&nbsp;</li>
<li>The AJC was forced to remove all references to       Nashville's Two Rivers Middle School from the original story.&nbsp;&nbsp;       Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools did not only defend their data, but       levied a detailed, persuasive rebuttal that took all of the air out of       the AJC methodology, and showed that the AJC released data with no       understanding of the Nashville district and its demographics.&nbsp; You       can read the full analysis <a href="http://oldcenteres.mnps.org/Page76595.aspx?Panel=Listing&amp;ListingType=tag&amp;tag=atlanta">here</a>.&nbsp;       Their assessment is validated by notable researcher<strong>s:&nbsp; Dr. Dale       Ballou</strong>, associate professor of Public Policy and Education with       Vanderbilt University&rsquo;s Peabody College of Education; and Dr. Brian       Jacob,&nbsp; Walter H. Annenberg Professor of Education Policy, Gerald R.       Ford School of Public Policy, and University of Michigan.&nbsp; A few key       highlights:         
<ul>
<li>The AJC study does not take        into account student mobility, and in Nashville, these rates are 35-40%</li>
<li>Obvious errors in data provided        where children who were absent from testing were assigned a &ldquo;zero&rdquo;        rather than being excluded from the analysis - resulting in average        scores that were below the minimum score possible</li>
<li>The AJC methodology will        automatically identify 5% of the cases/classes analyzed statewide, but        schools with changing populations (see previous bullet) or higher than        usual numbers of highly effective or highly ineffective teachers        (research supports that teacher effectiveness make the greatest        difference in test score gains) are likely to have higher percentages</li>
<li>Analysis of test gains of        MNPS middle school math teachers over three years (2006-07 through        2008-09) by Dr. Brian Jacob of the University of Chicago, on behalf of        Vanderbilt University, did not show any unusual or suspicious patterns.</li>
<li>And many other factors you        can read at the link above.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>From a blogger who clearly has a background in       statistical research:&nbsp; "I&rsquo;m at least equally curious about why       the AJC analysts used simple linear regression at a statewide level. This       implies that the issues traditionally considered barriers to learning, such       as free/ reduced participation, limited English proficiency, mobility,       special education, ethnicity and race are homogenous at a statewide       level. Extremely unlikely. And it&rsquo;s fairly easy to show that such       differences between school districts, schools, and even classes within a       school have a statistically significant, even substantial influence on       predicting the mean scaled score on a benchmark exam."&nbsp; He goes       further to say,         
<ul>
<li>"Some states also use        criterion referenced tests for measuring growth. This means that the 3rd        grade test focuses on 3rd grade curriculum standards. 5th grade tests        focus on 5th grade standards. While not an excuse for settings in        learning, it does counter the journalist&rsquo;s statement that learning        rarely disappears. That may be true, but learning multiplication tables        by rote doesn&rsquo;t always adequately prepare a student who has limited        English skills to solve word problems or do algebra. We hope &mdash; and even        expect &mdash; that a strong early performance in literacy or math translates        into sustained strong learning. But I&rsquo;ve seen too much student data to        believe that&rsquo;s true across the board, especially when the standards        (necessarily) shift to expecting higher level thinking skills in 6th or        7th grade."</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>From the Texas Education Agency: "The story       raises questions, but we do have a concern about their methodology. The       newspaper tracked test scores by school, not by student, which we found       can "have up to a 20 percent variance."&nbsp; They take testing       security seriously, but they have determined that the analysis was not       sufficient enough to warrant any further investigation.&nbsp; Based on their own review of the analysis, one Texas Superintendent called the report "reckless and irresponsible at best" because they correctly noted that the Atlanta paper's examination flagged classes for large  gains and large losses, which wouldn't be associated with cheating. And  the report examines scores for groups of students rather than individual  students.&nbsp; With many urban districts in Texas and elsewhere having a very high mobility rate, you simply cannot ascertain from their methodology whether you're looking at the same students or not.
<div style="width: 1px; height: 1px; color: #000000; font: 10pt sans-serif; text-align: left; text-transform: none; overflow: hidden;"><br />Read  more here:  http://blogs.star-telegram.com/extra_credit/2012/03/weatherford-school-officials-respond-to-cheating-report.html#storylink=cpy</div>
</li>
<li>A spokesman for the Indiana Department of Education       told the Washington Post that "a study of erasures on Indiana&rsquo;s       ISTEP-Plus exam, performed last year by the testing contractor at the       state&rsquo;s request, turned up &ldquo;very few areas of concern statewide.&rdquo;</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
<p>These references are merely a few that have risen to the surface over the past week.&nbsp; I have no doubt that there will be more.&nbsp;&nbsp; A few of my own questions are below:</p>
<ul>
<li>Shouldn't the AJC have been prepared for these      questions about its methodology?&nbsp; </li>
<li>Why didn't they consult with the US Dept. of Education      first, rather than try and besmirch the reputations of several      out-of-state school districts?&nbsp; Why does the AJC get the right to      claim that other states may have potentially similar issues as Atlanta      Public Schools without conclusive, irrefutable evidence?&nbsp; </li>
<li>&nbsp;How should Secretary Duncan have responded?&nbsp;      Did he have any other choice but to say, &ldquo;These findings are      concerning.&nbsp; States, districts, schools and testing companies should      have sensible safeguards in place to ensure tests accurately reflect      student learning.&rdquo;</li>
<li>Can a reasonable person surmise that the AJC was not      only doing this to sell newspapers, but also doing it, in part, to      exonerate the Atlanta Public Schools by claiming that rampant cheating is      happening in other cities across the nation?</li>
<li>If you read the <a href="http://www.ajc.com/opinion/testing-schools-test-integrity-1397346.html">op-ed</a> published by AJC Editor Kevin Riley, where he defends and celebrates the      "journalism" of his reporters, shouldn't we be concerned about      their true intentions?</li>
<li>Note that the Atlanta Public Schools have been      conspicuously silent here.&nbsp; I'm sure they would rather not have this      report made public because they are trying to rebuild the public trust,      only to have this story create lingering sentiment and focus on the APS      Cheating Scandal, which was the most pervasive cheating incident in the      history of K-12 public education.&nbsp; APS had nothing to gain (or lose)      here, and if they were asked to speak on the record, they would have      probably said that "this doesn't pertain to APS and you should speak      to the various districts identified in the AJC analysis."</li>
<li>Why does Riley feel so strongly that if they waited,      there would likely have never been an investigation?&nbsp; Why the rush,      and why now?&nbsp; Is it because the CRCT exams are taking place this month?</li>
</ul>
<p>Let us look at what the consequences were of releasing a study that was far from bulletproof.&nbsp; The reference links above talk about the fact that more than <strong>300</strong> news outlets around the country picked up the story, including the <em>Huffington Post,</em> <em>ABC News</em>, <em>CNN, </em>the <em>Washington Post,</em> <em>NBC Nightly News </em>and <em>MSNBC&nbsp;</em> This is one instance where media outlets exacerbated the problem by airing the story without making CLEAR disclaimers about the credibility of the underlying content.&nbsp;&nbsp; This was an explosive report, with serious consequences if proven true, and the media felt comfortable with promoting a story that had serious methodology concerns.&nbsp; This <a href="http://www.ajr.org/Article.asp?id=5280">article</a> from the <em>American Journalism Review</em>&nbsp; is certainly well-timed, given the circumstances we are dealing with here.&nbsp; I may not agree with all of its contents, but it certainly makes me VERY skeptical about how the media is covering public education in the United States.&nbsp; Like just about every other issue our country is dealing with, I come at it from the perspective that it is never as good, or as bad, as one is led to believe.</p>
<p>As an American citizen who cares about education, as well as a resident of Atlanta, I felt that&nbsp;it was my duty to provide a "fuller account" of the activities of the past week related to this news story.&nbsp;&nbsp; When you release research, even a hint of a methodology flaw could materially damage its credibility and should make one consider delaying its release.&nbsp; In my opinion, from what I have reviewed to date, it is clear that my local newspaper has wrecked havoc and instilled great fear in our nation's public schools, without conclusive evidence.&nbsp; They have used the media to sway public opinion and shift the focus back to the overemphasis on high stakes testing.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Cheating on tests is a serious issue, and this author believes that our schools are taking appropriate measures to ensure the accuracy of its test results.&nbsp;&nbsp; To paraphrase another reporter&rsquo;s assessment:&nbsp; &ldquo;The analysis may not be entirely invalid, but the irregularities uncovered require the newspaper to do some SERIOUS explaining.&rdquo;&nbsp; If the newspaper is able to successfully address every material concern about the methodology, I will be the first person to update my post and acknowledge my error in judgment.&nbsp;&nbsp; HOWEVER, that scenario seems far from likely.</p>
<p>&nbsp;<strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">NOTE</span></strong>: Special thanks go out to education blogger <a href="http://audreywatters.com/">Audrey Watters</a> who contributed reference material to support this story.</p>
<p><em>The views expressed in this post are those solely of Al Meyers, and do not represent the views of any organizations affiliated with Mr. Meyers.</em></p>]]></content></entry><entry><title>Maybe Georgia and the Nation Need To "Get Schooled" about Education Reform?</title><id>http://www.reinventedsolutions.com/als-blog/2012/3/16/maybe-georgia-and-the-nation-need-to-get-schooled-about-educ.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.reinventedsolutions.com/als-blog/2012/3/16/maybe-georgia-and-the-nation-need-to-get-schooled-about-educ.html"/><author><name>Al Meyers</name></author><published>2012-03-16T17:20:49Z</published><updated>2012-03-16T17:20:49Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p>It's no coincidence about the title of this blog post.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Over the past several weeks, I have been reading, and participating, in the discussion around an <em>Atlanta Journal-Constitution</em> Blog titled, "<a href="http://blogs.ajc.com/get-schooled-blog/">Get Schooled</a>."&nbsp; And after letting my blood pressure drop a bit, I decided to reflect and author this post.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
<p>I had to let my blood pressure drop because I have never been so aggressively attacked personally, as I quickly found that there is almost no moderation conducted on the blog.&nbsp;&nbsp; The tone is hostile, and most of the readers are teachers or former teachers who are regrettably "prisoners of the system."&nbsp; If you have a contrarian point of view, you are ridiculed, labeled as a Republican (why the labels?), or someone who immediately wants to let for-profit organizations into the public schools!&nbsp;&nbsp; By the way, is that really the coming of the apocalypse?&nbsp; I'd say the textbook publishers already see it as "for-profit" - more like "for LOTS OF PROFIT."</p>
<p>The blog's author, Maureen Downey, may be a nice person.&nbsp; I do not know her and would not make any personal attacks on her character.&nbsp;&nbsp; But what I can comment on is the fact that her views are 100% reflective of the "digital immigrant" mentality that tries to protect the status quo.&nbsp; She has an obvious agenda against charter schools (not that all charter schools are good, but new models need to be given support nonetheless), and one of recent posts was titled, "<a href="http://blogs.ajc.com/get-schooled-blog/2012/03/14/should-every-georgia-high-school-student-take-an-online-course-why/?cxntfid=blogs_get_schooled_blog"><em>Should Every Georgia Student Take An Online Course?&nbsp; Why?</em></a>"&nbsp; Ms Downey is a "laggard," meaning, she wants to see data on outcomes before she thinks our students should use it.&nbsp; She is obviously unwilling or unmoved by the digital revolution upon us.&nbsp;&nbsp; She unfortunately continues to spread distortions and misinformation to her readers, and always looks for ways to poke holes in the logic behind anything that even remotely looks like it threatens our local public schools. I am sure that there are "Maureen Downeys" in every state in our country.</p>
<p>We need new ideas to reform our education system, and if public policy can be used to help advance this effort, then it must be used.&nbsp;&nbsp; Politics will regrettably always be involved with public education, because it depends to a large degree on taxpayer dollars.&nbsp;&nbsp; However, we can, and must run our education system differently.</p>
<p>I'd like to again point my readers to a free manifesto written by my highly respected colleague, Seth Godin.&nbsp;&nbsp; It's called <a href="http://www.squidoo.com/stop-stealing-dreams"><em>Stop Stealing Dream</em></a>s, and it is a must-read.&nbsp;&nbsp; Seth has such a candid, direct writing style, and is not afraid to acknowledge the "white elephant" in the room.&nbsp; It doesn't matter if he hasn't supported his assertions with pages of footnotes citing research studies.&nbsp; He is much more "right" than "wrong," and what he says rings true.&nbsp; Here are couple of my favorite excerpts:</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em>Democracy cannot flourish where the chief influences in selecting subject matter of instruction are utilitarian ends narrowly conceived for the masses, and for the higher education of the few, the traditions of a specialized cultivated class.&nbsp; The notion that the "essentials" of elementary education are the R's mechanically treated, is based upon ignorance of the essentials needed for realization of democratic ideals.</em></p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em>The universal truth is beyond question - the only people who excel are those who have decided to do so. Great doctors or speakers or skiers or writers or musicians are great because somewhere along the way, they made the choice.</em></p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em>As John Stuart Mill said, "It is better to be a human being dissatisfied than a pig satisfied; better to be Socrates dissatisfied than a fool satisfied.&nbsp; And, if the fool, or the pig, are of a different opinion, it is because they only know their own side of the question."</em></p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em>It's easier to play it safe.&nbsp;&nbsp; Why risk blowing up the educational system, why not just add a bit to it?&nbsp; Why risk the education of our kids merely because the economy has changed?&nbsp; That whisper in your ear, that hesitation about taking dramatic action - that's precisely why we still have the system we do.&nbsp; That's how we get stuck with the status quo.</em></p>
<p>There are so many salient points in Seth's manifesto.&nbsp; He walks you through history - how we built the mass-standardization approach to education, and why that same model may ultimately lead to the continued "dumbing down" of our society.</p>
<p>Before we immediately reject reforms because we think they will reduce funding to local schools, for example, why not ask the question, "Are we better with what we have, or would trying a new approach yield more favorable results?&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
<p>I think it's time that my state "gets schooled" and embrace the winds of change, not reject them.&nbsp; The time to act is NOW, for the sake of our children.</p>]]></content></entry><entry><title>Having The Courage To Reform Public Education</title><id>http://www.reinventedsolutions.com/als-blog/2012/3/12/having-the-courage-to-reform-public-education.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.reinventedsolutions.com/als-blog/2012/3/12/having-the-courage-to-reform-public-education.html"/><author><name>Al Meyers</name></author><published>2012-03-12T17:58:21Z</published><updated>2012-03-12T17:58:21Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p>I am frustrated.&nbsp;&nbsp; As I watch my state, the state of Georgia, continue to be afraid of change, I cannot help but think about the words a Scottish Poet used that formed the basis of one of my college admission essays:</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>"If I could see myself as others see me."&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>What if this was flipped?&nbsp;&nbsp; What if the world could understand what I see as obvious shortcomings of our education system?&nbsp;&nbsp; I have watched people try to label me, just like they are labeling the Georgia Charter Schools Amendment as a vote on charter schools.&nbsp; It is far more than that.Charter Schools are not the magic bullet, but they allow our education system to try some new approaches which could never be conceived inside of the established system.&nbsp;&nbsp; I have said for years that in some instances, it is far more advantageous to "start over" versus trying to re-engineer an existing system.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; While a crude analogy, have you ever tried to edit someone else's writings?&nbsp;&nbsp; Kind of touch when styles are completely different, don't ya think?</p>
<p>I have watched with dismay as many states, not just Georgia, continue to put politics over principles.&nbsp; There are so many new school designs out there that are incorporated blended learning pedagogy into the learning environment.&nbsp; Others are blowing up the 30-40 minute periods and teaching in college course-length periods of at least an hour and 20 minutes.&nbsp;&nbsp; Others are focusing on digital learning, game-based learning, global citizenship, and other genres.&nbsp;&nbsp; But the thing that many of these new approaches to learning have in common is that they are building PASSION.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
<p>I don't know what it is about <a href="http://www.squidoo.com/stop-stealing-dreams">Seth Godin</a>, but I find myself nodding my head to most everything he says.&nbsp; Maybe it's the fact that he's not afraid to acknowledge the "white elephant" in the room, or his politically incorrect style of communication.&nbsp; I find his courage and candor to be something that parents, educators and politicians need to look at and take inventory.</p>
<p>Read the brief excerpt below from Seth's recent "manifesto," <a href="http://www.sethgodin.com/sg/docs/StopStealingDreamsSCREEN.pdf"><em>Stop Stealing Dreams:</em></a></p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em>Maestro Ben Zander talks about the transformation that happens when a kid<br />actually learns to love music. For one year, two years, even three years, the kid<br />trudges along. He hits every pulse, pounds every note and sweats the whole thing<br />out.</em></p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em><br />Then he quits.</em></p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em><br />Except a few. The few with passion. The few who care.</em></p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em><br />Those kids lean forward and begin to play. They play as if they care, because they<br />do. And as they lean forward, as they connect, they lift themselves off the piano<br />seat, suddenly becoming, as Ben calls them, one-buttock players.</em></p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em><br />Playing as if it matters</em></p>
<p>How do we get kids to be passionate about learning?&nbsp; Maybe these new charter schools can help with some of this important work? &nbsp; Perhaps some courageous public school systems, such as Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools, will continue to implement progressive approaches to learning.&nbsp; Maybe policymakers should take note at what student-centric online learning innovations such as<a href="http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-18560_162-57394905/khan-academy-the-future-of-education/"> Khan Academy</a> are doing to completely reinvent education?&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
<p>And how about TED's new initiative, <a href="http://tedchris.posterous.com/behind-todays-ted-ed-launch">TED-Ed</a>?&nbsp; TED has become one of the most viral brands in the world.&nbsp; TED Talks get hundreds of thousands of hits almost immediately after they are unveiled on TED.com.&nbsp; Could the power of the TED Community actually help accelerate the education reform movement in the United States?&nbsp;&nbsp; They just announced this new initiative: TED-Ed -&nbsp; "Lessons Worth Sharing."</p>
<p><em><br /></em></p>
<p><iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/FfJ5XG5i2aw" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Of course it's way too premature to ascertain whether or not this initiative will succeed, but what all of these initiatives have done is convey to the world that disruptive innovation is the path to successfully reforming our education system.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
<p>So to all you skeptics out there, it's time to embrace change, not fear it.&nbsp;&nbsp; Otherwise you'd better get out of the way of this juggernaut!&nbsp; And that goes for my own state of Georgia!</p>]]></content></entry><entry><title>Change Is Never Easy, Especially In Public Education</title><id>http://www.reinventedsolutions.com/als-blog/2012/2/19/change-is-never-easy-especially-in-public-education.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.reinventedsolutions.com/als-blog/2012/2/19/change-is-never-easy-especially-in-public-education.html"/><author><name>Al Meyers</name></author><published>2012-02-19T18:40:27Z</published><updated>2012-02-19T18:40:27Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p>The past few weeks have been difficult ones in Georgia's efforts to reform its education system.&nbsp;&nbsp; The state is in late stages of debate to pass a resolution allowing for the state to approve certain types of charter schools, and it is incredible how much lobbying has taken place on this issue.&nbsp; And I have learned firsthand that when you decide to throw yourself into the public domain, you better be prepared for dissension, and even some disrespectful personal attacks despite people not knowing your background or the basis for your perspective.&nbsp;&nbsp; I have been called&nbsp; "one of those educational resource suppliers that I&rsquo;m sure has a big stake in the Charter movement."&nbsp; Some of the remarks this week are from people who not only have not read the language of the resolution, but whom immediately deduce that the state is looking to move to private vouchers and other radical "school choice" mechanisms.</p>
<p>I have been and will continue to be a proponent of innovation in education.&nbsp;&nbsp; I do not "pander" to charter schools, nor do I approve of many of their stated "missions."&nbsp; But I do believe in innovation in education, and the Georgia Supreme Court overreached when it said that local school boards had "exclusive control" over any public school in its geographic area.&nbsp; We are talking about certain types of charter schools that are "tuition free," so we're not talking about private schools.&nbsp; Further, you can NEVER allow monopoly power if you truly desire an "innovation ecosystem."&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
<p>The debate this week has finally culminated in sound minds prevailing, and the compromise language should address the concerns of the vast majority of dissidents.&nbsp;&nbsp; However, there will ALWAYS be politicians who will reject any type of legislation that shifts even an inch away from the "status quo."&nbsp; They will eventually need to listen to their constituents if they want to remain in office.&nbsp;&nbsp; Change is hard to swallow.</p>
<p>However, Georgia must face the reality it is current experiencing.&nbsp;&nbsp; Our education system must allow new learning models to have a shot at creating the type of learning outcomes that every parent desires.&nbsp;&nbsp; Georgia cannot continue to be a laggard when it comes to educating its citizens for success in the 21st century, digitally-driven environment.&nbsp; It means we need to innovate our learning methods, including both new forms of content creation and also new school designs.&nbsp;&nbsp; Let innovation have a chance, and then integrate the best practices into the existing schools.&nbsp;&nbsp; At the same time, though, don't expect these innovative models to be an overnight success.&nbsp; Disruptive innovation needs time to work its "magic."&nbsp;</p>
<p>Change is never easy, but sensible change and</p>
<p>I'd like to conclude this post by offering an excerpt from one of my favorite books, <a href="http://davidbornstein.wordpress.com/books/how-to-change-the-world/">"<em>How to Change the World:&nbsp; Social Entrepreneurs and the Power of New Ideas</em>"</a> by David Bornstein.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em>With the rise of the welfare state in the twentieth century the fulfillment of social needs came to be seen not only as the government's responsibility, but one of its primary operational functions.&nbsp; Government, however remained insulated from the pressures and incentives that forced businesses to continually improve their products.</em></p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em>As the romance of charity yields to a health realism that citizen organizations should rise and fall on their merits, the result is likely to accelerate innovation. In a competitive landscape - when rewards follow the best performers - it takes only ONE innovative organization to send everyone else scrambling to upgrade their products and services lest they be left behind.</em></p>
<p>Finally, Georgia is starting to take the necessary steps, albeit baby ones, to ensure it does not get left behind in the movement to reform its education system.</p>
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