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Concern emerges that Obama has picked a side in education wars

Has President Obama finally picked a side in the education wars? Three prominent New Yorkers are worrying that he is at least leaning — and that it’s not in the right direction.

Deborah Meier, the respected small schools pioneer, said President Obama’s appointment of Arne Duncan as education secretary “leaves me sad.” Today, Diane Ravitch, the NYU historian and Meier’s blogging partner, described Duncan as “Margaret Spellings in drag.” “This is not change I can believe in,” she wrote in Politico. And on Saturday, Ann Cook, another small-school movement doyenne, said she is also concerned about  Obama’s choice of Duncan.

All three women sympathize with the “Broader, Bolder” manifesto, which argues that schools alone cannot be expected to close the achievement gap and whose members are more suspicious of popular innovations such as charter schools and test-driven accountability systems. Schools Chancellor Joel Klein leads another camp, which strongly supports test-based accountability, the No Child Left Behind law, and charter schools. Klein’s Education Equality Project circulated a rival petition.

Obama made a point of not selecting a side in the debate. He chose two top education advisers, one from each camp. And he touted his chosen education secretary, Duncan, who had signed both petitions, as a pragmatist. But in the last few weeks, concerns about Duncan have begun to surface.

Cook’s remarks came at a panel discussion in the East Village, where she used a question and answer session to raise two concerns about Obama’s education policies. One was Duncan’s remarks at a press conference in Brooklyn last week in favor of testing. The other was the Obama administration’s support for adding funds for education data systems into the stimulus package.

The Obama administration has made other moves to signal this preference. Duncan selected the man I identified as a poster boy for the Klein camp, Jon Schnur, as his close adviser. He praised Klein on a trip to New York City last week. The administration also pushed for adding funds for programs favored by the group to the stimulus package. And a spokeswoman of the opposing group, the Stanford professor Linda Darling-Hammond, recently announced she will not join the administration.

In an interview just now, Cook said that her concerns don’t negate her support for Obama. To the contrary, she said, she feels compelled to voice her thoughts because she supports the president:

“It’s easy when you’re dealing with somebody like Bush to sort of launch a campaign. But it’s equally important when people are so supportive of the president, which I am, to make sure that you don’t let things slide because you think he’s a good guy. It puts more of a responsibility on us to remain watchful. And that’s what we’re trying to do.”

Meier also said she’s reserving judgment. “Maybe he’s ‘purple’?” she wrote, saying she’ll reserve final judgment until Duncan announces his staff.

  • http://none Bob Rose

    Maria Montessori wrote, almost a century ago, that three- and four-year-old preschoolers will learn to read spontaneously if they get “sufficient” practice forming alphabet letters. Although boldly claimed in her “The Montessori Method” this possibility has strangely never before been subjected to a scientific test.

    In 2002-2004 I found five kindergarten teachers on the Internet who provided experimental data on 106 experimental kindergarten students as they practiced printing fluency and we monitored their reading ability (and also five other first-grade teachers who did NOT make the effort of inducing printing practice, but who only measured how much of the serial alphabet students could print in a timed, twenty-second period of time, and the correlation with reading skill. These 94 students formed a control group).

    The correlation was very obvious in all ten classrooms. We found that all but a very small percentage of students read well, and with good comprehension, shortly after the point in time when they were able to print at least the first thirteen letters within 20 seconds. Multiplied by three, this equates with a fluency rate of 39 letters per minute.

    The children enjoyed the practice sessions, and observing their gradual increase in fluency as the weeks passed. No apparent stress was noted, and it was found that the median kindergartner, after spending five minutes daily of each school day practice printing, was “printing fluent” after a mere three months. But printing fluency didn’t correlate with reading skill among older students, according to our results with a group of fifty fourth-graders.

    The kindergartners wrote and read with about the same skill as the first graders at the end of the winter of school. The fact that kindergartners were reading and writing at a level of children a full grade ahead shows that the early acquisition of literacy in the kindergarten (experimental) group was caused by the dedicated attempt to induce practiced fluency in printing, and not just a coincidental marker of some third, and unknown, causative factor.

    At the present time (May, 2008) I have collected another group of kindergarten and first-grade teachers on the Internet. Fourteen K-1 teachers have already submitted correlations of the printing fluency and reading skills of their pupils. In each case the correlation has been obvious and strong. Anyone wishing to join and monitor (or participate on) this free list need only send any email to k1writing-subscribe@yahoogroups.com. Returning the automated “confirmation message” to the computer will result in automatic list membership.

    Printing practice and fluency training in the early grades has completely gone out of style during the twentieth century, though it is still practiced (though not specifically tested) in India and China. This rediscovery of this important principle offers an inexpensive and effective means toward ensuring reading and academic success from the earliest grades for children of all races and ethnic backgrounds.

    It has also been found that second-graders able to give correct answers to simple addition facts more fluently than 40 answers per minute rarely have problems with math or science thereafter.

    Bob Rose, MD (retired), rovarose@aol.com
    Jasper, Georgia

  • Bernard

    You New Yorkers see everything in terms of NY politics. You think your little faction fights should drive national politics–and too often they do. If someone from the Dept. of Education visits NY, they must be siding with Bloomberg and Klein in school wars. Obama and Duncan can’t and shouldn’t worry about taking sides between Broader, Bolder and the Klein faction. The president has much bigger fish to fry right now–like pulling the nation and the world back from the brink of financial collapse and ending the war in Iraq. And all you N.Y. old lefties shouldn’t be hanging on every word in every speech to see if Obama or Duncan mention the word “charrters” or “test.”

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  • jay samuels

    I do not believe the results of the kindergarten study. the implication is that when children know the letters of the al[habet they can on their own learn to read. Most children will reguire instruction

  • Michael Fiorillo

    “Concern emerges that Obama has picked a side in education wars”

    One day this headline will be a historical artifact, along the lines of

    “Concern emerges that SEC not policing Wall St. enough”

    After Mr. OBait-and-Switch has lead the schools on a forced march to privatization, and attacked Social Security in the name of “fiscal discipline,” perhaps the objective journalist -as-ingenue/stenographer trope will have run its course.

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