Credit Where It’s Due

South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford (R) has put a sensible teacher quality proposal on the table. He wants to better target funding for National Board Certified teachers (NBCTs) to struggling schools. This PPI paper (pdf) gives an overview of the issue.

Currently NBCTs get $7500 annually. Sanford wants to continue that incentive for NBCT’s in schools that are low-performing or those with critical needs. Other NBCTs would get $3,000. There is also a very fair hold harmless. Teachers already receiving $7,500 would continue to regardless of where they teach as would teachers who complete National Board certification in 2005. More details in his proposed budget (pdf).

Behind the scenes the National Board treats proposals like this as an attack on the program. That’s unfortunate because the data is abundantly clear that NBCT’s disproportionately teach in affluent schools.

NBPTS claims that about 37 percent of NBCTs are teaching in high-poverty schools, which they define as schools receiving Title I money. Yet Title I funding is an imprecise proxy for poverty. Fifty-eight percent of all U.S. public schools receive some Title I dollars. Thus, even this estimate of only about one in three is overly optimistic.

Better data is more sobering. A 2003 study (pdf) led by Dan Goldhaber found that NBCTs in North Carolina were disproportionately teaching in more affluent school districts, as well as districts with fewer minority students. A 2004 study (pdf) by SRI examined distribution in the six states with the most NBCTs — California, Florida, Mississippi, North Carolina, Ohio, and South Carolina — or about 65 percent of all NBCTs nationwide. The SRI researchers found that only 12 percent of NBCTs teach in schools with more than 75 percent of students receiving free or reduced price lunch; only 16 percent teach in schools with more than 75 percent minority student populations; and only 19 percent teach in a school in the bottom third of performance for its state.

Put plainly, you’re unlikely to find an NBCT in a school that is high poverty, high minority, or seriously struggling. That’s a pretty straightforward equity issue considering how important teacher quality is to student learning and the inequitable distribution of top teachers overall.

Of course, in an ideal world states would be able to offer larger differentials than just $3,000 or $7,500, but policy must be made based on the circumstances at hand, not the ones we might like. Sanford has the right idea (as do a few others, NY, CA, IL and in CT the AFT state affiliate there has its own targeting program) and more states should follow this lead.

From Colorado…

Democrat reformer and rising star Terrance Carroll passes a bill to improve that state’s charter school law by allowing for multiple authorizers of public charter schools. This year some teachers’ union water carriers charter opponents are trying to undo it. Gee, why do Democrats have problems presenting themselves as a party of reform on education? Must be that dang Fox News!

The Exceptionalism of Margaret Spellings?

Ed Week’s Robelen turns in the requisite story about whether it matters that incoming Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings doesn’t have K-12 teaching or administration experience. It’s replete with lots of quotes expressing wonderment at this extraordinary state of affairs.

Hard to believe that just four years ago the buzz was running solidly in the opposite direction with hearty enthusiasm about how terrific and noteworthy it was that Bush had appointed a practicing school superintendent, one who was named Superintendent of the Year shortly thereafter.

In fact, of the eight secretaries (including Spellings) Paige’s background is anomalous. More common are lawyers (Hufstedler, Cavazos, Alexander, and Riley)*, and academic types (Bennett and Bell) or former governors (Alexander and Riley), and probably even gamblers (Bennett, and odds are there’s probably another in a group of eight) are as common. Though Bell brought an education background to the table, Paige is the real exception on that score. A better headline might be: Back to business as usual at Dept. of Ed.

Besides, it really doesn’t matter much. Background is not deterministic in jobs like this, experience, intellect, and commitment to the issue, education in this case, are. Teaching no more qualifies you to run a large federal agency than running a large federal agency qualifies you to teach. If Margaret Spellings fails in this job (or fails to live up to the big expectations that are being set for her…) it won’t be because she wasn’t a teacher.

Consider that few on either side of the aisle argue that Dick Riley was not an outstanding Secretary of Education. And it’s hard to believe that establishment education groups wouldn’t have jumped at a Paige for Riley swap at almost any point in the past four years. Yet Riley was a naval officer, attorney, and politician in his career not an educator.

However, another South Carolinian a few years older than Riley had experience as a public school superintendent. Should Clinton have nominated Strom Thurmond instead?

*Correction: Cavazos was a doctor, not a lawyer.

The Dog That Didn’t Bark

The ever-predictable Boardbuzz is whining about NCLB and touting lawsuits with big potential. But isn’t the real story here that all the much ballyhooed lawsuits have, at least until this point, amounted to nothing? Who can forget the great NEA-led legal crusade that would turn this law on its head? Or the lawsuit in PA, that was the one!

The school finance lawsuits will likely have some impact, but ironically in a direction that most NCLB critics should favor.

More Dissonance…

Yesterday, at a forum on charter schools in Massachusetts, Edu Commentary heard people simultaneously arguing that there was absolutely no grassroots support for charter schools while decrying all the money that is being “drained” from local school districts by parents choosing to send their kids to public charter schools. How can both these things be true?

Ed Trust and Higher Ed — It’s Such A Shame Our Friendship Had To End…And More From NYT and AL

Gigi Douban of the Birmingham News takes an interesting look at one struggling school there. Someone call these guys….

But, wait, those guys are pretty busy busting colleges and universities for their graduation rates. Handy website and data tool here, USA Today story here.

NYT’s Freedman writes on writing and NYT’s Saulny on interstate differences in proficiency. And, NYT ed board urges Spellings to clean house at Ed.