I don’t believe. I wish I could believe.
I am supposed to believe. But, I don’t. I don’t believe in education “reform” in our country.
I don’t believe charter schools are a panacea, I don’t believe that linking student achievement to teacher evaluation will significantly impact education, and for that matter, I don’t believe student achievement” should be the ultimate goal of education in our country.
I am supposed to believe in all this, especially if you look at my resume and follow the major media discussion of education “reform.” Let me explain.
When I graduated from college in 1994 I joined Teach For America. I taught two years in Paterson, NJ (made famous by Joe “Batman” Clark from Eastside High School – which was just across the street from the 1,000-student K-8 school where I taught. After my two years of TFA service I became one of the first teachers and administrators at KIPP in the South Bronx. After three years at KIPP, I spent the next nine years co-founding and co-directing a new school in Harlem which started as a school-within-a school, was part of a take-over of a failing school that was closed, became an official New York City public school, and then converted to become one of only five conversion charter schools in NYC.
Next, I came to Denver, where I worked for Denver Public Schools in the New Schools Office where I became its Executive Director and reshaped the office to become the Office of School Reform and Innovation. And, now I am working on opening another charter school and a charter management organization (CMO) that will support a network of charter schools in the metro Denver area.
I have wanted to communicate about my beliefs, or “unbeliefs” for a long time. Diane Ravitch’s book “The Death and Life of the Great American School System: How Testing and Choice Are Undermining Education” emboldened me to write this blog. It’s not that I agree with everything Ravitch says. It’s just that I felt like it was a courageous act on her part to write it. Frankly, it was inspiring and motivating. And, so much of the book connected to my own experiences. Above I explained my background with Teach For America, KIPP schools, and charter schools. But, I also have other experiences directly relating to the book.
more . . .
http://normsnotes2.blogspot.com/2010/09/why-i-dont-believe-in-reform-from.html