Tom Friedman Plugs Obama's Race to the Top Initiative
Tom Friedman with a fantastic (and well deserved) plug for Race to the Top:
ONE thing that has struck me about the debates so far is how little
President Obama has conveyed about what I think are his two most
innovative domestic programs. While I don’t know how Obamacare will turn
out, I’m certain that my two favorite Obama initiatives will be
transformative.
His Race to the Top program in education has already set off a nationwide wave of school reform...
In the Race to the Top in schools, Education Secretary
Arne Duncan has built on the good works of his predecessor, Margaret Spellings, and President George W. Bush, who put in place
No Child Left Behind. Though never perfect, No Child Left Behind was
still a game-changer for education reform because it gave us the data
to see not only how individual schools were doing but how the most
at-risk students were doing within those schools.
Without that, educational reform based on accountability of teachers
and principals could never start.
…IT is too early to draw any firm
conclusions, but Duncan points to some early positives. Some 4,500 state
and local teachers’ union affiliates have signed onto their state’s
reform proposals, showing they want to be partners. Roughly
25 percent of the turnaround schools, Duncan said, “have already showed
double-digit increases in reading or math in their first year and about
two-thirds showed gains.” There have also been “huge reductions of
discipline incidents.”
Although, over the two years of the program,
46 states submitted reform blueprints — and only the 12 best won grants
from $70 million to $700 million, depending on the size of their
student populations — even states that did not
win have been implementing their proposals anyway. And because 45
states and the District of Columbia adopted similar higher academic
standards (known as the “common core”) for reading and math, “for the
first time in our history a kid in Massachusetts and
a kid in Mississippi are now being measured by the same yardstick,”
said Duncan.
In many cases, we have seen as much reform from those “who did not get a nickel as those who got $100 million,” Duncan added.
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