Who's The Education President?
Here is how Bush's and Gore's ideas are working out in the schools where they have been tried
Andrew Goldstein
With reporting by Paul Cuadros/Pensacola and Desa Philadelphia/New York
The Party balance in Congress is on the line, there is dissent
among the White House staff...and what does the President spend
the week obsessing about? The school-board election in his
hometown.
President Bartlet's manic attention to local school politics
on a recent episode of NBC-TV's hit show The West Wing seems
especially appropriate in the final days of this real-life
American campaign. Anyone hearing George W. Bush and Al Gore
might think that the big vote we're casting next week is really
for superintendent in chief.
Listen as Bush invokes his "crusade" to improve schools and Gore
calls for an education "revolution," and it's hard to believe
that just 45 years ago the Federal Government didn't spend a dime
on K-12 education. Even now, Washington provides only about 7% of
public school spending. Yet this year Bush and Gore--while rooted
in different philosophies--have come up with thoughtful, detailed
plans to tackle our most pressing educational challenges: schools
that repeatedly fail, the opportunity for more early-childhood
learning, the shortage of qualified teachers, the high cost of
college tuition. And voters in 18 states will decide on ballot
initiatives that concern such issues as vouchers and bilingual
teaching. Gore is right when he says, "Education is on the ballot
this November."
So who's got the better program? For much of the campaign, Bush
had neutralized the traditional Democratic advantage on
education, boasting of a Texas record that enabled him to say
that he, not Gore, knows what works. Last week a Rand Corp. study
called parts of Bush's record into question, noting that many of
Texas' touted gains may have been the result of widespread test
cramming, not actual learning. But Bush stands by his record (a
Rand study earlier this year showed that by several measures
Texas leads the nation) and pledges to enact the Texas testing
and accountability program on a national scale. Bush also
proposes a $26.6 billion increase in education spending over 10
years--a dramatic departure for a Republican.
Gore would impose less testing than Bush does, and promises far
more in new spending: $115 billion. This fundamental
difference--do you stress accountability or investment?--is nowhere
clearer than in how the candidates propose to handle what is
arguably the nation's biggest problem: the more than 7,000
schools that year after year have failed to educate students.
A President Bush would tell failing schools that enough is
enough: If you can't do the job, we'll give your federal dollars
to parents to help them send their kids to a better school. A
President Gore would keep trying: bring in a team of specialists,
pump money into reform, and if all else fails, shut the place
down and start over with a new principal and new teachers.
To see the Bush plan in action, consider the story of Spencer
Bibbs Elementary in Pensacola, Fla. Meant to be a magnet school
for science and technology, Spencer Bibbs instead posted abysmal
test scores that landed it on the state's worst-performing list
two years in a row. During the 1998-99 school year, just 26% of
its students scored at the minimum-competency level of the
state's reading exam.
Last year Spencer Bibbs and neighboring A.A. Dixon Elementary
became national guinea pigs as the first schools to lose kids to
state-sponsored vouchers, thanks to Governor Jeb Bush's "A+
Schools" program, the model for his brother's national voucher
plan. (As Governor of Texas, George W. Bush tried but failed to
get the legislature to pass a similar program.) Students at both
Pensacola schools were offered as much as $4,000 in state aid to
pay for private-school tuition. Under Bush's national proposal,
failing schools that do not improve for three years would lose
their federal Title I money, which is then divided up and given,
along with state matching dollars, to parents as $1,500 vouchers.
In Florida, voucher proponents had argued that parents would jump
at the chance to get their "trapped" kids out of public schools.
Yet of the 870 students offered vouchers, only 60 took them;
eight have since moved back to the public schools. Area
superintendent Jim May explains that parents already had the
option of switching their kids into other public schools, which,
unlike the private schools, pay for transportation and lunch. The
52 kids still using the vouchers are mostly happy, say their
parents, but that's the only evidence of improvement because the
state has refused to release the voucher kids' test results.
Voucher critics warned that the loss of $2 million in state aid
could devastate the district schools. While Spencer Bibbs did
have to drop three reading specialists, the voucher threat
inspired the district to make improvements, including extending
the school year to 210 days. Today neither Spencer Bibbs nor A.A.
Dixon is on the state's failing list.
The biggest surprise to both sides in the voucher debate came
this summer when the state announced the results of last year's
exams. Seventy-six schools had been graded F by the state the
year before; if these schools did not improve, nearly 60,000 kids
would have been offered vouchers. Yet somehow every one of those
schools received a D or higher, so the 52 kids from Pensacola
remain the only ones in Florida using vouchers.
The Gore treatment is equally controversial. He wants to send
educational "SWAT teams" armed with extra cash into failing
schools. If after two years that hasn't turned the schools
around, states would have the power to shut the schools down and
reopen them with new teachers and administrators.
The easy half of the Gore plan--the teams of experienced educators
with extra money--is inspired by North Carolina, which has brought
great improvement to some low-performing schools. But once the
teams leave, some schools have fallen back onto the failing list.
And the costs of the program, if fully funded, are huge: North
Carolina's $6.6 million a year in turnaround money pays for only
14 teams to assist the state's 44 low-performing schools. Gore's
national turnaround budget is $500 million a year, and he moves
failing schools to the front of the line for funds for
after-school programs and to cut class size, but even that may
not be enough.
The second half of Gore's plan, reconstitution, has been called
the neutron bomb of school reform, and most states, including
North Carolina, have been too skittish to try it. The only real
success stories have come in New York City, which has
"redesigned" about 65 schools in the past five years. One
example: three years ago, the Bronx's P.S. 3 ranked 672nd among
New York City schools--fourth from the bottom. The city fired the
principal, replaced two-thirds of the teachers, extended the
school day and switched from a touchy-feely "real life"
curriculum to one emphasizing basic instruction in reading and
math. In one year, math scores on the state exam jumped 15% and
reading scores 8.5%.
But such radical change is difficult to pull off. Unions fight
layoffs. And it isn't easy to find good replacements. Maryland
almost lost its battle to take over three Baltimore schools last
year (out of 81 deemed to be failing) because of community uproar
and a teachers' union lawsuit. In 1997 Denver restaffed two
elementary schools, but test scores have barely changed.
These mixed results, however, are unlikely to quell the public
demand for reform. No matter who wins, our new Superintendent in
Chief will use that 7% of education dollars for as much leverage
as he can get.
--With reporting by Paul Cuadros/Pensacola and Desa
Philadelphia/New York
BUSH'S APPROACH:
VOUCHERS
--After two years of failure, students in a Florida school got
vouchers to go elsewhere. But John Rigsby and his daughter
Porsche decided to stay
GORE'S ANSWER:
"RECONSTITUTION"
--New York's P.S. 3 ranked 672 out of 675 schools when the city
fired the principal and replaced most of the staff. Now Luis
Torres can learn the alphabet
OTHER GOODIES
Some of the candidates' proposals have not received much
attention, but they are designed to please key supporters
SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION
AL GORE
--Gore pledges as much as $10 billion over 10 years in tax
credits to states for school construction and repair
GEORGE W. BUSH
--Bush would allot $3 billion to aid charter schools with
construction and other start-up costs
SECOND CHANCES
[AL GORE]
--Gore would help districts create "second-chance schools," at
which expelled students can get another shot
[GEORGE W. BUSH]
--Bush would allow students in persistently dangerous schools
the option of transferring out
APPLES FOR TEACHERS
[AL GORE]
--Gore would provide Internet training for teachers and would
deploy AmeriCorps volunteers to teach the Internet in schools
[GEORGE W. BUSH]
--Bush's Teacher Protection Act would protect teachers from
lawsuits over their "efforts to maintain discipline"
AFTER-SCHOOL PROGRAMS
[AL GORE]
--Gore would extend tax credits for after-school care to parents
of kids ages 13 to 16
[GEORGE W. BUSH]
--Bush would involve faith-based organizations in devising
afternoon recreation for kids
-QUOT-
Anyone hearing the speeches of George W. Bush and Al Gore might
think the big vote we're casting next week is really for school
superintendent in chief
-PICT-
BROOKS KRAFT--CORBIS SYGMA FOR TIME (2)
ANDRE LAMBERTSON--SABA FOR TIME
ROBERT NICKELSBERG FOR TIME
-ENCH- AS
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