City November 14, 2010 11:26 AM

A MODEST PROPOSAL

A MODEST PROPOSAL
BRO submission by Ben Perrone:

Our current school system is broken and attempts to make it work have never been successful. We have a continual battle between the school board, parents and unions that produce small increments of change and improvement, and we accept the terrible results for graduation and test scores. It's like trying to keep the old car running when it has long past its usefulness. It's time for a 'sea' change that will bring many protests from all sides. I would like to propose a new system of public education that would bring more harmony and better results for students, parents and teachers, and therefore society as a whole.

My proposal is this.  All certified teachers are put into pools divided by first and secondary teaching. Anyone who wants to be a principle administrator must run for the position. This may include trained administrators and/or any one who may see themselves as qualified through life experience. They would have to present themselves to the teaching pool and after due process the teachers would vote on them. The highest vote receivers would get the available positions but they would be placed in schools not by their choosing but by lottery. The principals would then pick their administrative staffs and by agreement the teachers that they need. All teachers would receive a base salary considering past experience. The school board would assign and pay maintenance and building upkeep. They would be responsible for school supplies and their distribution.

Students would be assigned a monetary value based on the amount allotted for education from the city, town and state. As each student graduates by passing a State University designed test some of that monetary value would go to the school and to the teachers whose classes the student had attended. Both administrators and teachers would have a financial benefit to educate the students and also to help each other in accomplishing that goal. That will mean that the faculty as a whole will also want to and have to police its own staff, hire new replacements out of the pool of available teachers, in order to enjoy the benefits of higher graduation rates and financial incentives. The principal (and staff) would also be replaceable by election every four years. Each school would be an independent unit, small enough and stable enough to determine its goals and success.

The part that the State University plays in designing the tests needed for graduation is obvious. It has insight into what degree of lower education is needed for success at the University level and for those going directly into the work force. The State University can also advise schools on their direction and curriculum needed to best prepare for final testing.

Parents will also be slightly rewarded out of the 'student value'. They will be compensated for their responsibility to get their child to school and on time for a certain percentage of the school year.

Another part of this plan is to eliminate bussing as much as possible. That means returning to neighborhood schools, with parents responsible to walk or drive their children to school. Cooperation within neighborhoods and policing can help with this problem. The huge savings on bussing to schools, plus the evenhandedness and improvement of schools will outweigh the benefits of bussing.

To accomplish these changes would require a Herculean effort. Almost everyone now employed in the present system; teachers, union leaders and administrators would resist change. Even if the will is there it could require a closing down of the present system, the firing of all teachers preceding the rehire and much planning ahead. To continue on the present path however will never return the country to lead in education.
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Does no one remember anymore that Jonathan Swift's original "A Modest Proposal" was a satire about eliminating poverty by selling poor children as food for the rich?

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Yes

replied to JSmith
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I agree with parts of your idea.

The problem is that the bureaucracy that has become of education won't allow any change. It's the system itself that has created a stranglehold. The disorganized manner in some cases reminds me of the Dark Ages where people tore apart grand buildings to build badly constructed dwellings. People take good ideas and turn it to crap now.

I personally thought of making schools like sports franchises where teachers keep their retirement where ever they go in the county, but can sign contracts for a certain amount of years. Schools like professional sports all have their own budgets. Schools could resign teachers when their contract is up in a certain window or release them where they would be a free agent. They can sign a teacher to a three year deal or a ten year deal. It makes teachers have to perform still and districts can monitor a teachers stats on the web perhaps.

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Unfortunately bureaucracies are endemic in pretty much every aspect of western culture's public sectors. Also, as has been pointed out ad nauseam, there is no single thing one can point to in the deficiencies in education, however I do think blackrocklifer narrows it down best. Few suburban schools are "broken" it's the urban & rural districts that are dragging the country down in an educational sense.

replied to Greg
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This sounds like a voucher system meets a union protection. Why would teachers vote for an administrator? Wouldn’t it be in their best interest to vote for the person who would protect the staff not the students? I guess I don’t see the point of the lottery at all. Would this just drive people away from teaching further lowering the bar?

The idea of money based on results also becomes flawed in that the better school should then keep getting better and the worse would keep getting worse. So attaching funding that way seem hard. If we talking a per-bonus program that may work, but do we really need to pay a bonus for people to do there job? Especially teachers who work half the year, full pay and uber benefits in NYS? And paying parents to take there kid to school, has it really come to that?

I’m all for centralized building control, decentralized execution. I think the small school in allot of ways is the ‘cure all’ for many of the problems. Getting the student bodies down to 100-200 a class year would give all students the ability to be on sports teams, be in band, etc while still being large. The movement of faculties to a centralized body outside the school should as well allow teachers to focus on teaching and nothing else. The rebuilding of a community should also eliminate the need to pay someone to send there kid to school, rather the social stigma can accomplish it.

Really this seems to boil down to max-school size and a voucher system to accomplish what you want without all the funky stuff.

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I kind of like the sports franchise idea. And I am in total agreement with the college designed graduation exam, as long as the curriculum used matches the test that is being designed. As a teacher in NYS, I am continually amazed at the misconceptions and vilification that is constantly voiced in newspapers, blogs, and television. Most of the teachers I know didn't get into teaching to make big bucks or pull the wool over the eyes of the taxpayers. We ARE taxpayers, homeowners, parents, coaches, and yes- union members. We realize as public employees that we are responsible to educate all of our children and the majority of us do just that. That being said, I believe that getting rid of poor teachers should be easier and administrators need to get in the classrooms and observe the teachers! They need to be well versed in best practices and get struggling teachers the help they may need. I love my job and I work really hard to deliver excellent instruction to students every day. I take graduate classes to hone my skills and I keep my brain sharp by volunteering to change grade levels every few years to challenge myself. I know the system is broken, but for many of us, it's not for lack of trying. ok-off the soapbox.

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Yes, from Swift.
Feeding our children to the rich and greedy is a quicker and therefore less painful death than dragging them through this sad educational system with no promise of improvement. The rich send their kids to private schools and elect politicians who feed pap to the working class about capping their real estate tax and shrinking government. Face it. The rich don't want to spend money on education (while their children are in the best schools) if the choice is improving the country or their having more and more wealth. The top 1 percent eat up almost 25 percent of pre tax income and still that's not enough. They think that God is the almighty dollar and screw the rest of the country and patriotism.

As far as the proposal goes, we should all think out of the box and devise an idea of our own. Picking apart this idea is counter productive. You should design a better one.

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WTF? Public schooling has received double the money (inflation adjusted) since 1970 and had flat results.

They don't NEED ANY MORE MONEY.

They should get less, not more, and compete like every other industry.

replied to 2perroneben
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how about feeding the rich to the children... they say you are what you eat... or something.

replied to 2perroneben
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It is not possible to "fix" the public schools until we "fix" the grossly unequal distribution of wealth that undermines our schools and our country. School performance is directly related to the wealth of the district, demographics drive the success or failure of individual schools. All the best laid plans are just a waste of time and energy until we address this issue.

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There are Charter schools in Harlem that have just as good test grades as those in Scarsdale, NY.

Scarsdale per capita income - 183K
Harlem avg household income - 45K

The problem is between good management and good teaching. There should be a few districts identified within the country as top performers. A template should be made from their union contacts and replicated all over the country.

replied to Blackrocklifer
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Those Charter Schools have the advantage of engaged parents and most likely they are drawing kids from the middle class families in Harlem. I took part in some community workshops in Harlem a few years ago and contrary to the public perception there was a fairly good size community of middle class residents. There are some exceptions but poverty is the driving force behind poor school performance.

replied to Chris
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Seriously? Replicating union contracts from successful districts will solve the problems? and don't get into the charter school debate please, they are just as flawed, good, bad, & in between just like their public counterparts.

replied to Chris
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Who knew that a solution to the problems of public education would be delivered in seven short paragraphs on Buffalo Rising.

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Who knew a perennially glib dbag would offer up a glib dbag comment? Oh, we all did.

replied to 4matic
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What an eloquent rebuttal. Were you on the debate team in high school?

replied to omonahan
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yes. pretty impressive, huh?

were you in high school musicals?

replied to 4matic
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Right, we're waiting for your fourteen paragraph piece as a solution.

replied to 4matic
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Right, we're waiting for your fourteen paragraph piece as a solution.

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It's certainly an outside the box proposal. At the very least it moves the discussion into areas that before might not have been contemplated and opens the door for other new ideas.
*thumbs up*

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Here is a video related to education reform. It discusses one of the core deficiencies of our public education system, where it evolved from and where it is going.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zDZFcDGpL4U

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