Books
Book Review
A Decade of Urban School Reform: Persistence and Progress in the Boston Public Schools
Edited by Paul Reville with Celine Coggins
(Harvard Education Press, 2007, 269 pages)
Urban School Reform: Lessons from San Diego Edited by Frederick Hess, Ed.M.’90
(Harvard Education Press, 2005, 300 pages)
When future historians examine the current era in American
education, one thing they will note is the emergence of some
urban school districts, after decades of being maligned, as centers
of innovation and reform. For scholars interested in studying
efforts to bring about large-scale improvements in teaching
and learning, the action is now in the big cities, hence these
two volumes analyzing the implementation of comprehensive
and ambitious reform programs in San Diego and Boston.
Despite the very different political environments in which
these reform programs played out, there is substantial overlap
in these two volumes. In each case a respected independent
analyst was asked to assemble a panel of scholars to examine
key facets of the reform strategies. The Boston volume draws
heavily on HGSE-related faculty and doctoral students;
Assistant Professor Nonie Lesaux is the one HGSE contributor
to the San Diego collection. Each volume has key chapters on
the infrastructure to support instructional improvement, high
school reform, special education, human resource development,
governance, and the political context. Both end with
thoughtful reflections from the district’s superintendent.
Alan Bersin, hired as superintendent in San Diego in 1998,
was brought in as an outside change agent. His first act was
to hire as chancellor for instruction Tony Alvarado, longtime
superintendent of Community District 2 in New York City.
Bersin and Alvarado moved quickly to develop a program for
San Diego, the “Blueprint for Student Success,” which called
for a massive reallocation of resources to support teaching and
learning in the classroom, with heavy investments in literacy
and mathematics coaches, intensive professional development,
and the development of principals as instructional leaders.
These reforms were met with resistance from the teachers
union. By the end of Bersin’s second year, the battle lines were
so sharply drawn that it became clear that if one of his three
supporters on the board were to be replaced by a critic, implementation
of the blueprint would likely be reversed. The papers
in the Hess volume, commissioned in early 2004, provide a
balanced assessment of the strengths and weaknesses of an
implementation strategy summarized by one author as:
“(1) Do it fast. (2) Do it deep. (3) Take no prisoners.”
The political context and reform implementation strategy in
Boston could not have been more different. First, after a long
and contentious history of divided authority over the schools,
the Massachusetts legislature in 1991 approved a measure to
replace the elected school committee in Boston with a mayorappointed
committee. In 1995, Mayor Thomas Menino worked
closely with his committee to select as superintendent Tom
Payzant, M.A.T.’63, C.A.S.’66, Ed.D.’68, former superintendent
in four other communities (most notably San Diego). For the
next 11 years, Payzant enjoyed the support of the mayor and
school committee as he methodically implemented two successive
versions of “Focus on Children.” Payzant articulated a
common framework to guide “whole school reform” in each of
Boston’s 145 schools, with six essentials, including substantial
investments in coaching and other professional development
to drive instructional improvement down into each classroom.
Although the specifics of each city’s reform program were
customized, the underlying philosophy and core content were
not all that different. The biggest difference was in the intensity
and pace of implementation. The criticism that emerges in
San Diego is that implementation was too top-down, with too
little attempt to generate real teacher buy-in. In Boston critics
express the opposite concern: Was the pace of reform fast
enough, given the persistence of troubling racial achievement
gaps amidst the overall progress of the system?
For students of urban education reform, both books provide
a detailed and nuanced portrait of two districts engaged in ambitious,
thoughtful, systemic efforts to transform teaching and
learning across their schools. Both districts have experienced
substantial gains in student performance during the tenure of
these two extraordinary leaders, but much work remains. Can
these reforms be sustained and deepened? Here’s hoping Hess
and Reville revisit these districts in 2010.
— Bob Schwartz is a professor and academic dean at HGSE.
About the Article
A version of this article originally appeared in the Fall 2007 issue
of Ed., the magazine of the Harvard Graduate School of Education.
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