R&L Education
Pages: 164
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-1-4758-0468-3 • Hardback • September 2013 • $77.00 • (£59.00)
978-1-4758-0469-0 • Paperback • September 2013 • $38.00 • (£30.00)
978-1-4758-0470-6 • eBook • September 2013 • $36.00 • (£30.00)
Frederick M. Hess is an educator, political scientist, and author who serves as director of education policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute. His books include Cage-Busting Leadership, Education Unbound, and Spinning Wheels, and he writes the popular Education Week blog “Rick Hess Straight Up.” A former high school teacher, Hess currently teaches at Rice University and the University of Pennsylvania and serves as executive editor for the influential education journal Education Next.
Carolyn Sattin-Bajaj is assistant professor of education policy and research and co-director of the Center for College Readiness at Seton Hall University. Her research on school choice, immigrant students, and educational equity has appeared in a variety of academic journals and popular media outlets, and a book based on her most recent study of high school choice in New York City will be published in Spring 2014.
Introduction
Frederick M. Hess, Carolyn Sattin-Bajaj, and Taryn Hochleitner
Chapter 1. New Schools and Innovative Delivery
Michael B. Horn and Meg Evans
Chapter 2. Quality Control in a Local Marketplace
Michael J. Petrilli
Chapter 3. The Recovery School District Model
Neerav Kingsland
Chapter 4. Practice Makes Perfect: Thinking Smarter About Professional Development
Doug Lemov
Chapter 5. Building a Better Pipeline: Thinking Smarter About Talent Management
Ranjit Nair
Chapter 6. The Power is in the Purse Strings: Thinking Smarter About Resource Allocation
Jonathan Travers, Genevieve Green and Karen Hawley Miles
Chapter 7. Harnessing Data and Analytics 2.0
Jon Fullerton
Chapter 8. Leading Systemic Reform
Heather Zavadsky
Conclusion: Putting the Pieces Together
Frederick M. Hess, Carolyn Sattin-Bajaj, and Taryn Hochleitner
Blueprint for School System Transformation takes on the silver bullet mentality plaguing too many education reforms today. We can’t layer a change or two on top of a foundation built for a different era. We must instead seek, in the editors’ words, to widen the landscape of possibility.
— Kevin Huffman, commissioner of education, Tennessee Department of Education
All too often, policy prescriptions for changing an education landscape are isolated and disconnected from the reality of what's actually happening on the ground. As Hess and Sattin-Bajaj point out in the introduction, we've witnessed a disappointing hodge-podge of layered ideas, creating confusion about what reform actually is and further distancing the very people who need to understand their ability to change is possible. Building a new education ecosystem requires an approach much like building a model car, with all the right pieces in the box needing to be connected properly. So it is with this model in front of us—a package full of reforms that have all worked somewhere in isolation but rarely together in one system—that should be approached with interest, craft, and resolution so we can finally begin to solve the most pressing crisis we have today.
— Jeanne Allen, president and founder, Center for Education Reform
Hess and Sattin-Bajaj slice through the fat and get right to the meat: the stuff that actually works in schools explained by the people who are actually doing it. But it gets better. They’ve brought it all together in a fresh, accessible way by inviting the contributors to apply their knowledge to a real city we all know and love. These people are wicked smart and have very dirty fingernails. Try what they’re proposing; kids will thank you for it.
— Matt Candler, CEO, 4.0 SCHOOLS
For two decades, some education reformers have pushed for a variety of reforms to improve education for those students who are most in need of significant changes in the quality of schooling they are receiving. In this volume, a collection of smart, thoughtful, and experienced thinkers offer a vision for building on the gains and rethinking those practices that have not worked. This is a volume that educators, community leaders, and reformers will find invaluable when it comes to truthfully accessing what works and what needs to be improved or done away with in order to realize the promise of education reform.
— Howard Fuller, PhD, distinguished professor of education, director of the Institute for the Transformation of Learning, Marquette University
Despite widespread recognition that school systems need to do profoundly better, those seeking improvement have been frustrated by the mediocre results of popular reforms. There is a lack of clear guidance on the steps needed to dramatically and effectively transform and educational ecosystem. Reformers need a playbook outlining clear strategies for rethinking outdated school system governance, resource allocation, quality control, talent management, and data use for the 21st century. In Blueprint for School System Transformation, a team of national experts addresses the major elements necessary for system redesign, describing in detail all the steps needed at the community, school, district and state level.
— Education Next: Journal of Opinion And Research