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Charter school conference draws hundreds

Speakers challenge school officials to "step up" and improve education

Thu., December 13, 2001

Hundreds of individuals from Michigan's charter school community of 186 schools and 66,000 students gathered Nov. 7-8 to participate in the 4th Annual Charter School Conference in Ypsilanti.

Lawrence Reed, president of the Midland-based Mackinac Center for Public Policy, and state Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Watkins offered a joint presentation at the November Michigan Association of Public School Academies 4th Annual Charter School Conference in Ypsilanti.

The Michigan Association of Public School Academies (MAPSA), a nonprofit, nonpartisan coalition of charter school leaders and supporters, hosts the conference each year as a way for teachers, administrators, parents, policy-makers, and others to network and share the latest news on developments relating to charter school education.

The two-day affair featured joint presentations and a discussion by Lawrence Reed, president of the Midland-based Mackinac Center for Public Policy, and Tom Watkins, Michigan Superintendent of Public Instruction.

Reed's speech, entitled "Four Principles and a Challenge," outlined several concepts he said are essential if the quality of Michigan public education is to improve. The concepts included an understanding that the needs of children come before the needs of the school system, parents are an indispensable component of the educational process, competition is a necessary precondition to improved quality, and encouraging diverse methods of delivering education to students is important.

Reed publicly challenged Watkins to embrace the reform concepts and offered six things Watkins could personally do to facilitate dramatic and positive school reform.

"Tom, I want you to be the best and most successful education superintendent in the nation," Reed said. "If you'll step up and implement the agenda I'm presenting here, you'll become just that."

The six things Reed said Watkins should do included being supportive of all modes of education, whether public, charter, private, or home school; emphasizing that more money is not the solution to every problem; encouraging schools to better manage their budgets through privatization of support services; championing greater parental choice in education; calling for repeal of a union-supported prevailing wage law that forces schools to waste millions of dollars every year; and demanding an end to the forced unionization of public school teachers.

"Do you want me to be run out of town on a rail?" Watkins joked, before offering praise for charter schools and admitting that reforms are needed to improve public education.

Watkins's suggestions included paying teachers for performance and allowing teachers to form private partnerships and associations. He also argued that changes in the state's teacher education programs would boost teacher quality.

"When 80 percent of our teachers are certified, 20 percent have master's degrees, but 20 percent or less of our children are learning-something's not right," he said.

"Colleges of education are the weakest link in education reform today," he added.

Other speakers at the conference agreed.

"Stop talking about teacher certification, start talking about teacher qualification," said Samuel Casey Carter, author of the book, "No Excuses: Lessons from 21 High-Performing, High-Poverty Schools." "Principals must be free to decide who to hire, who to fire, what to teach. . . . We must be able to accept freedom in exchange for performance," he told attendees.

Carter profiled a number of schools featured in his book and described how the success of schools that serve low-income students, yet post impressive gains on standardized tests, leaves "no excuse" for other schools to have poor performance.

"If they can do it with so little, we can do it," he said.

Carter concluded by encouraging charter school officials to elicit feedback from parents and students as the best guide for how to improve their schools.

"If you want to know how you're doing, ask your customers."

Several state legislators updated conference participants on the latest education bills, including HB 4800 (see www.michiganvotes.org/bill.asp?ID=6003), which would increase the legislative cap on university-sponsored charter schools. The cap currently stands at 150.

State Rep. Wayne Kuipers, R-Holland, sponsor of the bill, said the legislation may pass if legislators can garner enough support in the House.

More information on MAPSA and Michigan charter schools is available at www.charterschools.org.

More information on "No Excuses" is available at www.noexcuses.org. The text of Lawrence Reed's speech is available at www.mackinac.org/3852.

Michigan Education Daily
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User Comments
education is an all around development for a child
he should be mentally and physically strong


<a href="http://rescueyoursavings.com" rel="dofollow">Savings</a> >>
education is an all around development for a child
he should be mentally and physically strong >>
Informative post. In order to deal with today's troubled youth, it is helpful to take a professional guidance for better teen recovery programs. Choosing a specialized organization for troubled youth is one of the most important steps for better teen recovery. Boysville is one of the non profit organization dedicated to help troubled youth with years of successful results by helping <a href=http://www.troubledteensguide.com/>troubled youth</a> to responsible individuals. Hope this organization continue their priceless support to most of the needy troubled youth with various helpful services. >>
Public servants like Presidents, Vice-Presidents, Senators, Congressmen, Judges, Secretaries of Various Departments and the like should be first to be compensated for performance.
The idea that the playing field for students is level everywhere is as Quixotic as thinking all politicians are honest and competent.
There are neighborhoods where only Portugese or gang sign language is spoken, where the parents both work two jobs to pay rent, where getting to school and back is more dangerous than Iraq and Afghanastan.
This Secretary of Education has to remove the silver spoon, roll up his sleeves and take his superior intellect attitude into the trenches and show the poor slobs that are taking their teachers jobs for granted how he would do it. Just because his mommy used to help out in Chicago doesn't give him the Congression Medal of Honor. Actually he's a stuffed shirt pretending to know it all.
How much do you want to bet that he wouldn't attempt entering these neighborhoods let alone these schools without security. >>
This article is tucked away yet is profoundly correct. Parents are pseudo parenting little objects of consumption. Teens, professionals, working moms like the "idea" of a child but are not in for the long haul and everyone loses.

Schools are enabling parents to do precious little. The time parents spend with their children is the only thing that matters. Bussing needs to be cut, school breakfast, lunch, and afterschool care needs to be stopped. Parents will grow that bond by sacrificing the nails, hair, parties, drugs, quads, vacations, etc. and making a lunch for their child and arrangements to be home when the child is out of school. No one is that poor that they can't provide a boloney sandwich, a baggie of pretzels, an apple, 50 cents for a milk, and two cookies each day.

Please respond!

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Is it true that young ones today are losing interest on these subjects? Obviously, the White House is promoting programs that will help students on coping up with math and science subjects. But, The federal government thinks that the quality of math and science education can repair credit with the scientific community and improve US education with a few <a rev="vote for" title="U.S. Government Spends $250 Million on Science and Math" href="http://personalmoneystore.com/Payday-Loans/ ">payday loans</a> of sorts. In reality, it will take far longer to accomplish than they might think – US educators can't even get students to accept that "irregardless" isn't a word, and the difference between their, they're, and there – our students can't even learn their own language! It's a noble aim, to be sure, but throwing money at it may not work in the long run. >>
I am a teacher in the same county who is presently trying to quit the union. Like Caldwell, I strongly disagree with the MEA.

This article was timely.

Rob Olson
Pittsford Area Schools

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I agree this is a change worth making. I describe some of the uneven effects of the idea on my blog at http://rickolson.blogspot.com/2009/08/statewide-health-insurance-plan-for.html which you may also wish to read.

The devil will be in the details, so this is one we will need to monitor closely.

Rick Olson from Saline, former school Business Manager >>

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I AGREE >>