Update: Naive To Print Teachers' Scores, Says TFA Founder
#valueadded #vam Just a day after a New York court found that value-added ratings for public school teachers should be revealed and reported publicly -- something that Joel Klein's DOE succeeded in encouraging the press corps to ask for -- TFA founder Wendy Kopp shot back at the notion that her organization should reveal the value-added ratings for its teachers -- and in particular the charge of being "hilariously hypocritical" in Steve Brill's book. Brill claimed that, because it promotes accountability so fiercely, TFA should reveal its teachers' performance ratings. Kopp claims to have been outraged at the LA Times' decision to name names last year and she writes, "Is it really naive to think that we should not be printing the names of teachers and the results they get on standardized tests in newspapers? Or is the naivete the notion that this might be a good path forward?" I wish Kopp had been so clear back a year ago when this was all first being debated -- it would have been brave and right of her -- and I love to poke TFA in the eye for, well, whatever I can think of (it's not hard to find things). But she's right that publishing the names and ratings is dumb, that the LA Times shouldn't have done it, that there's nothing necessarily hypocritical about TFA's decision to use the scores internally, and that Brill was amusing but incorrect to slam TFA in his book. Full Kopp statement below.
FROM KOPP VIA TILSON
Whitney, I thought I'd take a moment and share with you, and your readers if you're up for printing, my response to a piece of Brill's essay.
Brill writes: "There are many situations where the reformers have been naïve, arrogant, or hypocritical. For example, Teach for America is hilariously hypocritical when it comes to teacher accountability; the organization rates its teachers rigorously, but won't tell parents or prospective employers of those teachers anything about the ratings for fear of hurting their corps members' morale. Huh?"
To step back, I just finally read through Brill's book yesterday on the first day of my vacation on the Jersey shore and am still trying to figure out what to make of it and of your enthusiasm for it. First there are pages and pages that make what has been a very challenging and very serious effort to improve urban and rural schools into a soap opera -- pages that I fear will do damage by leading many to think that this effort is more about a bunch of privileged people making a name for themselves than it is about a diverse group of people working with seriousness of purpose and love for kids. I found so many inaccuracies in these pages, so many issues that were addressed in an overly flippant manner, and, speaking for myself, many quotes that were wrong and were never checked. In the concluding pages Brill finally attempts to weigh in on what he thinks it will take to succeed. As Sara Mosle captured in her brilliant book review, it is hard to understand the connection between his conclusion and the rest of the book, but Brill does in fact get near making a compelling point that we're going to have to fix the whole system through good leadership and management if we're going to make schools work in a way that's sustainable for teachers, i.e. we can't rely on a bunch of superheroes to solve this problem.
I believe this is exactly right. We need to resolve that we're going to achieve great outcomes for all of our kids and then go after this exceedingly ambitious mission with the level of energy and discipline it takes to attain exceedingly ambitious outcomes in any endeavor. To do so we'll need to reject the lurch from one silver bullet solution to another that has characterized so much of the last twenty years of education reform (as an example, this is the year of the teacher; fix the teachers and we'll solve the problem) and instead ground ourselves in the hard-learned lessons from the now hundreds of schools that are showing us that success is possible. It is possible, but only with extraordinary leaders who build strong teams and strong cultures, who manage aggressively, and who are committed to providing the extra time and supports to set students up for success. There's no quick fix, but as Brill quotes Dave Levin as saying, we'd better get started now or we're never going to get anywhere.
Given this context, is it really naive to think that we should not be printing the names of teachers and the results they get on standardized tests in newspapers? Or is the naivete the notion that this might be a good path forward?
There's no good manager I know, inside or outside of education, who would resort to printing the names of their staff members and their performance levels in newspapers as a strategy for organizational improvement. In refusing to publish the performance assessments of Teach For America's corps members, we are treating our teachers with respect and endeavoring to build the kind of relationship with them that will give us the best chance of improving their performance over time.
There's also nothing hypocritical about this stance; I was as outraged by the L.A. Times decision to print the list of Los Angeles' teachers and their performance ratings as I was appalled by the notion that Teach For America should operate similarly.
If we're going to realize educational excellence and equity, we're going to need to stay centered and resist getting caught up in blame games. We spent much of the last two decades blaming kids and families for the achievement gap; that was wrong, but it's not right to blame teachers either. As Brill argues, we need to fix the system. We've seen over the last twenty years that we can make extraordinary progress toward this end -- through determined leadership from inside and outside of the system, from within schools and districts, from within the teaching profession and our unions, through advocacy, policy and political leadership. To do so will require that we keep this about kids and communities, and that we treat all those who are engaged in the hard work with respect.
As an elementary school administrator in New York, I agree 100% that publishing teacher's performance results in newspapers is ludicrous and disrespectful. As early as January of this year year Kopp shared her agreement with this position: "The principals of very high performing schools would all say their No. 1 strategy is to build extraordinary teams," Kopp said. "I can't imagine it's a good organizational strategy to go publish the names of teachers and one data point about whether they are effective or not in the newspaper." http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2011/01/25/wendy-kopp-on-her-new-book-and-teach-for-americas-record.html
Posted by: Kevin | August 27, 2011 at 05:55 AM
"We've seen over the last twenty years that we can make extraordinary progress toward this end -- through determined leadership from inside and outside of the system,"says Kopp.
The problem with generalized claims of progress is that they can be easily switched to a new claim, as each old one is exposed and forgotten.
Could she please stand there and defend the "extraordinary progress" she claimed her protegee, Michelle Rhee, made in DC?
http://www.zimbio.com/photos/Wendy+Kopp/Michle+Rhee
The extraordinary progress in Atlanta, for another instance, was also key to building Kopp's aura of extraordinary success. In this instance, though, there has been a real investigation.
Former Atlanta Deputy Superintendent Kathy Augustine was a board member for TFA, and the investigation concluded she knew or should have known of specific instances of institutionalized cheating, and that she made false statements to investigators.
TFA's only official response is, "“A handful of our teachers did confess to cheating and there are no excuses for that. It’s completely unacceptable,” but they have no investigation underway. One of their teachers, who was not implicated, says she would like to know, herself, why her students' tests were flagged for high erasures, but TFA itself is apparently not curious.
http://www.11alive.com/rss/article/198424/40/Elite-Teach-for-America-thrust-into-APS-scandal
And Alexander, why do you subsidized columnists ignore news reports like this one?
Posted by: Mary | August 27, 2011 at 07:56 AM