Superintendent Smackdown

The Baltimore Sun compares Baltimore's and Washington DC's school reforms, and it finds DC's wanting.
To be more precise: The Sun finds DC's Chancellor Rhee to be wanting. The paper sees little difference between the two districts' reform plans:
there's little doubt the personal leadership styles of the two CEOs have largely determined how reform efforts have been received. In public, at least, Mr. Alonso eschews drama. Ms. Rhee, by contrast, once appeared on the cover of a national news magazine wielding a broom to symbolize her intention of cleaning house.
Which city has a better shot at success down the road? The Sun votes for Baltimore:
We're betting on Baltimore getting there first, if for no other reason than that Mr. Alonso's style seems to mesh better with the players in a city that also seems to have fewer structural obstacles in the way of reform than comparable urban school systems. It's freer from political meddling, enjoys a more harmonious relationship with its unions and is outside the national spotlight that magnifies - and possibly distorts - everything a Washington school superintendent does.
As a rule, it's unwise to place bets of that kind. History is strewn with the corpses of would-be prophets.
Still, the Sun makes a good point about the national media. Journalists are drawn to conflict like flies to honey, and they often further inflame the passions of the combatants. Baltimore should be thankful for its relative obscurity.
But the national media do even more damage when they imply that Rhee is the last great hope for urban schools. (See, for example, the Washington Post editorial page, which referred to Chancellor Rhee as the "best, perhaps last, hope" for DC students.) This common bit of newspaperly drama is downright irresponsible. It breeds cynicism and despair. If Michelle Rhee can't do it, why then things must be hopeless!
It's a bad idea to pin all our hopes on one reformer or a handful of reform strategies. It's even worse to turn one lightning-rod superintendent into the sole standard-bearer for school reform.
Let's not forget that there are other people out there, like Baltimore's Andres Alonzo, Aldine's Wanda Bamberg or Atlanta's Beverly Hall, who can help light the way forward for urban schools.
Sign up
Sign up for our e-newsletter on public school success.
Become a Facebook fan.
H1N1 FLU RESOURCES
Click here for resources to help the public education community prepare for the unlikely case of a flu pandemic.
Emerging Vision
On this website, educators, parents and policymakers from coast to coast are sharing what's already working in public schools--and sparking a national conversation about how to make it work for children in every school. Join the conversation! Learn more.
Visionaries
Click here to browse dozens of Public School Insights interviews with extraordinary education advocates, including:
New Stories
Featured Story
Opening the Door for a New Generation of Students
Built in 1898, John Spry School has served kindergarten through eighth-grade children from southwest Chicago’s Little Village community, where the majority of the population is bilingual, for many years. But historically many of Spry’s students would graduate in the 8th grade, get a job to help support their families, and never complete high school.
In 2003, former principal of Spry, Dr. Carlos Azcoitia, approached the District CEO about adding a high school to Spry, creating a comprehensive community school from preschool through secondary school. After getting the go-ahead, Azcoitia met with community members, parents, the local school council, teachers, and students to discuss the design of a shared community building with an innovative, “no failure” high school. Today, Spry’s Community Links High School, which serves a student population that is 100% Hispanic and over 93% free or reduced price lunch, is opening new doors for the area’s children. Read more
School/District Characteristics
Hot Topics
Blog Roll
- Boardbuzz
- Edwize
- NSDC Reflections
- Advancing the Teaching Profession
- Principals' Office
- Principal's Policy Blog
- ASCA Scene
- The Leading Source
- PDK Blog
- ASBO Intl.'s Economic Recovery Blog
- Always Something
- U.S. Department of Education Blog
- The Core Knowledge Blog
- This Week in Education
- PTA Blog
- Such a Smart Mom
- Eduwonkette
- Teacher Leadership Today
- On the Shoulders of Giants
- Relentless Pursuit of Acronyms
- Teacher in a Strange Land
- Teach Moore
- The Tempered Radical
- TLN Teacher Voices
- The Educated Reporter
- Center for Public Education
- Connect for Kids
- Once Upon a School

Post new comment