The American Spectator

home
ADVERTISEMENT
Print Email
Text Size

The Obama Watch

Mutually Contradictory

How the Obama stimulus bill sabotaged Obama school reform.

Barack Obama managed a spectacular feat last year when he convinced fellow congressional Democrats to set aside $5 billion from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act for what became his Race to the Top school reform initiative. Obama won some well-deserved praise for using those dollars, along with his bully pulpit (and that of his Secretary of Education, Arne Duncan), to coax even states such as California to remove restrictions on the expansion of charter schools and subject teachers to private sector-style performance management. This has weakened the National Education Association and the American Federation of Teachers, which have long counted on the Democratic Party (and their influence in statehouses) to dominate education policy.

Yet Obama hasn't succeeded in forcing states and school districts to abandon their worst practices. This is because the very stimulus plan that helped fund Race to the Top also financed those very habits without any strings attached to force states to alter behavior or adapt more-systemic reforms. It may take a full restructuring of school funding and state laws (along with a reckoning with the long-term costs of unfunded defined-benefit pensions) to finally achieve lasting reform.

In California, the Los Angeles Unified School District is expanding school choice by handing off 196 of its schools to private operators and parent-teacher groups, as well as authorizing the establishment of 80 new charter schools over the next two years. Yet in the past two years, and in spite of $395 million in short-term federal funds aimed at helping it fill its budget, L.A. Unified laid off 2,700 young teachers -- including 400 of its best young elementary and middle-school teachers, while protecting laggard veterans on the payroll.

Meanwhile in Texas, the Houston Independent School District and its superintendent, Terry Grier, have been praised by Duncan (and attacked by the AFT local there) for such moves as requiring the use of student test score data in teacher evaluations. But the district also has 200 more special education aides on the payroll this year -- even though the district has 6,000 fewer students than there were five years ago. Why? Because it had to spend the $18 million in short-term funds it received from the Obama administration last year. (The teachers, by the way, will be on the unemployment line by the end of this school year.)

And in Connecticut, the state government used $542 million in federal funds to fund grants at existing levels -- while taking the equivalent amount in state dollars and directing it toward other uses. This action, called supplanting, wasn't an isolated occurrence; nearly all states made similar moves.

Causing all of this misbehavior is the very stimulus plan that helped Obama launch Race to the Top and his other reform initiatives. On top of the $62 billion spent annually by the federal government on education, it added another $95 billion to helping states states avoid budget-cutting and stave off layoffs of the nation's 6.2 million teachers and other school employees. While the Obama administration attempted to direct states and school districts to use the money in a more reform-minded manner, it managed to make a mess of this by issuing conflicting regulatory guidance (when it managed to get the information out to bureaucracies in a timely manner).

Not that states and districts would have paid it any mind. Declares school reform consultancy Bellwether Education Partners in a report it released last week: "the one-time nature of [stimulus dollars] may have made districts less willing to use these dollars to support ongoing reform." Naturally. Meanwhile the rest of the federal dollars went into existing programs whose formulas have long ago been set by congressional edict. This includes $23 billion for Title I -- the federal program used to help provide extra teachers and programs for poor students -- and special education grants. As a result, most states and school districts spent the money with little consideration for thrift or reform.

School reformers have since attempted -- with little success -- to force Obama and Congress to take different approaches in doling out bailout funds. Earlier this year, they unsuccessfully demanded that House and Senate Democrats require states to stop last hired-first fired layoffs as a condition for receiving the $10 billion in federal funding that came courtesy of the so-called Edujobs bill. They will likely attempt to get congressional Republicans to place similar strings on Title I funding.

The bigger challenge is actually restructuring how American public education spends the $593 billion in tax dollars it receives every year. Given that school funding has increased constantly over the past five decades (including by 16 percent between 2000 and 2007), public schools don't suffer from a lack of money, but from ineffective spending.

Thanks to decades of deals between teachers unions, state governments, and school districts, pensions and retiree teacher health benefits consume ever more school dollars. The average state now spends 34 cents on benefits for every dollar of teacher salary in 2007-2008, versus 28 cents in 2003-2004, according to the U.S. Department of Education. States now pay $68 billion for pensions, $18 billion more than they did five years ago. More money will end up being diverted from classrooms thanks to at least $600 billion in pension deficits and unfunded retired teacher healthcare costs that are now coming due thanks to the retirements of baby boomers from the teaching ranks.

Just as costly -- and harder to see -- are other aspects of traditional teacher compensation such as degree- and seniority-based pay scales. Some $8 billion alone is spent on pay raises for teachers who obtained master's degrees; this practice continues despite evidence that there is no correlation between graduate degree attainment and student achievement. Another $7 billion annually is devoted to university schools of education to train collegians to become teachers. But that money is also wasted. Just 13 percent of 77 education schools surveyed by the National Council on Teacher Quality had high quality math instruction programs.

The nation spent $53 billion in 2008 on school construction and another $16 billion on capital outlays; that's 11.6 percent of all public school spending. While some of that money is going to replacing aging structures, the funds are also used to build lavish athletic fields and sprawling campuses. One such complex is the Robert F. Kennedy Community Schools in L.A., which was built on the grounds of the hotel where Sen. Kennedy was slain. The cost so far: $600 million.

School districts remain as inefficient as ever. As Michael Casserly of the Council for the Great City Schools points out, just 69 percent of school buses are kept in operation throughout the school year. Most districts still keep antiquated academic, financial, and management information systems in place -- even as the private sector and the federal government have begun embracing 21st century technology and techniques. The nation's big-city school districts are particularly inefficient, often serving as jobs programs. The ratio of administrators and staff to teachers in the average urban district is two-to-one, according to University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Professor Emeritus Martin Haberman; the ratio in suburban and rural districts is two-to-eight.

Obama is learning that short-term bailouts and long-term reform efforts do not go hand-in-hand. One can only hope it's an object lesson he takes seriously.

About the Author

RiShawn Biddle the editor of Dropout Nation , is co-author of A Byte at the Apple: Rethinking Education Data for the Post-NCLB EraHe can be followed at Twitter.com/dropoutnation.

Letter to the Editor View all comments (16) | Leave a comment

Ken (Old Texican)| 12.7.10 @ 9:30AM

RiShawn,

You have got to be out of your mind! (grin)

Obama cannot learn, but that is OK. He doesn't want to learn, and he doesn't give a fig about "long term consequences".

John Bailo| 12.7.10 @ 4:41PM

Yes, but I feel there was another equally "contradictory" message recently. The original tax cut extension bill had cuts for the middle class. "Republicans" blocked that bill until there were cuts "for everyone...meaning, the well to do".

This doesn't seem right and certainly not in alignment of everything that both sides have been saying about The Middle Class.

If these parties were really concerned about The Middle Class -- they would have pushed through the cuts, alone, for the middle class (under $250,000) and then left unemployment and cuts for +$250,000 as "special interest" issues.

So, again, The Middle Class was used as pawn for the two sides, and ended up as leverage -- however, in my view were not adequately compensated for that role.

See my argument here:

http://yrihf.com/viewtopic.php.....0ae2ab9d9b

Helen| 12.7.10 @ 4:51PM

Ken, as a fellow Texan, what are your thoughts on "Robin Hood" school funding in Texas. I live in a "property rich" district. 74 cents of every school tax dollar collect in my county goes to Austin.
We are a large county with a small population. If we could retain these taxes for use on our schools here, we could rebuild our dying town.

Ken (Old Texican)| 12.7.10 @ 6:30PM

Helen,
whew...that is a thorny one!

Honestly, I don't know enough to make the call, OK?
Conversely, I DO know how to resurrect a "dying town".
contact me through sales@texassaidno.com
and we can talk.
Every great town has unique circumstances. The main thing a town has to do is RETAIN their talented youth.
I will call the town "fathers" and make it happen.
I've only done so perhaps 40 times.
God bless

Alan Brooks| 12.7.10 @ 9:58PM

How ca cacacan III exxplwant the government to spend manyreformed substantially; make sure they go toown children.as more expensive schools than other ldren- and get as much granAmerica t, and otheronlyyou don't much thousands per capita subsidizing other childrens'peoples' chi college education, but children?: that's diffenot to forggrandkidsrent. possibleet your care about their funding, for your grandkids people Schools your own in wil... and , l never be For instance, want the government to spend manyreformed substantially; make sure they go toown want the government to spend manyreformed substantially; make sure they go toown children.as more expensive schools than other ldren- and get as much granAmerica t, and otheronlyyou don't much thousands per capita subsidizing other childrens'peoples' chi college education, but children?: that's diffenot to forggrandkidsrent. possibleet your care about their funding, for your grandkids people Schools your own in wil... and , l never be For instance, children.as more expensive schools than other ldren- and get as much granAmerica t, and otheronlyyou don't much thousands per capita subsidizing other childrens'peoples' chi college education, but children?: that's diffenot to forggrandkidsrent. possibleet your care about their funding, for your grandkids people Schools your own in wil... and , l never be For instance,

Jeremiah| 12.7.10 @ 10:03PM

This is the first time the trash you're used to belch, makes a little sense... at least some of it looks like english...
Drank the Kool Aid again, sucker?

Lozel®

Alan Brooks| 12.8.10 @ 4:30AM

Lozel®?
"takes one to know one."

BTW, does the ® mean you own the copyright, Jeremiah? if so, you must be very proud.

Alan Brooks| 12.7.10 @ 10:06PM

Dumb right wing bozo! I hate your guts!
Please leave me alone! Please! Please!

Alan Brooks| 12.7.10 @ 11:01PM

Tim*,
Keep it up, and someone will use your identity to write PRO-ISRAEL comments.
The last thing in the world you want!

Alan Brooks| 12.7.10 @ 11:11PM

I didn't write the above comment! Someone stole my cyber ID! Barack help me!

Alan Brooks| 12.8.10 @ 4:31AM

Tim*, you are regressing to a fetal state. Someone might abort you.

Alan Brooks| 12.7.10 @ 11:13PM

Tim* is that you? Oh my Barack, I hear voices in my butt!

Alan Brooks| 12.8.10 @ 4:34AM

You have evolved backwards to the zygote state, Tim*.
Soon you may disappear altogether, however that would be too good to be true.

Alan Brooks| 12.8.10 @ 5:31AM

YOU brought THAT up; it is YOUR fetish, Jeremiah.
I want to know why Tim* has to COMMENT like a pre-teen, not balYOU brought THAT up; it is YOUR fetish, Jeremiah.
why Tim* hasike to la pre-teen, no like one-I want to know - again: thagain: that's your notit loball like onennat's your .
on, Jer, not-- , Je miner, not mine.COMMENT

Jeremiah| 12.8.10 @ 5:33AM

You must be very sick. At first I thought you belonged to Leavenworth, now I realize you need a traight jacket.

Jeremiah| 12.8.10 @ 5:37AM

A STRAIGHT jacket, lozel®, because you can't tell a typing error from a flaw in judgment like all liberals.

Leave a Comment

N.B. We encourage readers to share and discuss their thoughtful and relevant comments about this Spectator article. Comments are routinely monitored and will be deleted if profane, bigoted, or grossly impolite. Please be respectful. (And don't feed the trolls!) Thank you.

More Articles by RiShawn Biddle

More Articles From The Obama Watch

http://spectator.org/archives/2010/12/07/mutually-contradictory

ADVERTISEMENT

SPONSORED LINKS

Special Feature

Better that we become a nation of choosers rather than beggars. Our symposium on choice from the May, 2012 issue:

A Time for Choosing

James Piereson

The Road from Serfdom

Stephen Moore and Peter Ferrara

FLASHBACK TO: 1984

Clip of the Day

Most Popular Articles

The Wisconsin Turning Point

Peter Ferrara | 5.23.12

The Great Debate

R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. | 5.24.12

Meet the Flukes!

F. H. Buckley | 5.25.12

Greg Sowards Battles Queen RINO

Jeffrey Lord | 5.24.12

We Have To Do Something

Ben Stein | 5.24.12

The Problem With High-Mileage Cars

Eric Peters | 5.24.12

In Search of Muhammad

Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi | 5.25.12

Age and Kyl

Quin Hillyer | 5.25.12

ADVERTISEMENT