New Playbook Profiles D.C.'s Messy Journey to Education Reform
        
        
        
			- By Dian Schaffhauser
- 06/21/18
While the public schools in the District of Columbia have  generated ample headlines for outright malfeasance and publicly  displayed poor judgment, it has also been held up as a "national model  for education reformers," as  the Washington Post once expressed it. Now an education think tank has  issued a report about District of Columbia Public Schools to profile its work  and to draw important lessons for both educators and policymakers.
"A  Policymaker's Playbook: Transforming Public School Teaching in the Nation's  Capital," produced by FutureEd,  explores how DCPS has converted teaching "into a performance-based  profession" over the last 10 years. FutureEd is an independent  organization with a focus on education issues that works out of Georgetown University's School of Public  Policy.
The report drew on hundreds of hours of interviews with past  and present DCPS leaders, staff, principals, teachers, union officials and  researchers. The story of transformation began with the hiring of controversial  Chancellor Michelle Rhee in 2007 (and departure in 2010) and built on work  introduced during those years and subsequently improved on. The results,  according to the researchers, have "effectively transformed teaching in  [the] district into a performance-based profession that provides recognition,  responsibility, collegiality, support and significant compensation -- features  that national policy experts have long sought but only partially  achieved."
In early days, a big part of the transformation effort revolved  around the use of IMPACT, an ambitious teacher performance-measurement system  that was launched at the start of the 2009-2010 school year without any pilot  testing or sufficient training for school leaders and teachers. While the  educators approved of the new teaching standards introduced under IMPACT along  with the idea of identifying and removing "weak teachers" from D.C.  classrooms, " the inadequate training, rushed implementation, and high  stakes [of IMPACT] left many teachers anxious and angry." It didn't help  that Rhee had already fired "several hundred teachers" before the  launch of the system and expected to drop even more over the coming year.
While local voters eventually swept Rhee patron Mayor Adrian  Fenty out of office, taking the beleaguered chancellor with him, IMPACT stayed  in place, but this time with a new chancellor determined to understand the  strengths and weaknesses of the new evaluation system. By 2012-2013, major  changes had been introduced, including elimination of whole-school value  ratings and new approaches for evaluating new teachers and low-performers.
Tweaks to IMPACT's use as well as new ways of measuring  teacher and principal effectiveness have continued to be introduced into the  district, alongside new pay structures; changes to educator recruiting, hiring and  retention processes; continued attention to what's working and what isn't; and  the introduction of new systems for curriculum addressing Common Core standards.
That whole messy process along the way is what the report  has captured. "Generations of reformers have sought to transform public  school teaching into the true profession it deserves to be," said FutureEd  Director, Thomas Toch, in his introduction to the report. "The District of  Columbia has produced a compelling blueprint for achieving that goal."
Support for the project was provided by the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Joyce Foundation.
The 44-page playbook is openly available on  the FutureEd website.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.