School Information System
Newsletter Sign Up |

Subscribe to this site via RSS: | Newsletter signup | Send us your ideas

February 3, 2013

Dreaming of ways to bring school options together

Alan Borsuk:

I've had a hallucination hanging around in my head the last few weeks. I'm hoping it will be therapeutic if I vent it here. Keep in mind that this is just a hallucination.

But what if . . .

. . . what if Mayor Tom Barrett called all the key education players together. In my hallucination, it's Barrett because, dammit, he's the mayor. One huge problem we have is that there is no one person who is responsible for the whole enterprise of education in Milwaukee. Instead, we've had a generation of schisms and division over MPS, voucher schools and charter schools when unity could help bring quality. So who could be the convener for a summit meeting, the agent to push unity? Scott Walker? No one thinks "convener" when they think of him. Barrett has never had much of an education role or platform, so at least he's kind of neutral. And, dammit, he's the mayor. Oh, I said that already.

. . . what if Barrett told everyone: Make yourself comfortable. He has an unlimited budget to order in pizza. (One person I mentioned this to asked for a low-carb option. Granted.) He'll even bring in pillows and blankets, if needed. But no one is leaving the room until everyone agrees on an outline for a new way to run the school scene in Milwaukee.

. . . what if everyone agreed (maybe with help from the bold, visionary, and even intimidating work of the mayor) on a few basic points: (1) Schools need to be fairly and adequately funded. All schools. (2) The fighting between the streams of schools has to stop because, dammit, it's been so counterproductive and this is reality - the voucher and charter schools are here to stay, whatever you think of them philosophically. (3) Most important, quality is what it's all going to focus on as we go forward. We're going to create systems in which schools that get good results flourish and increase and schools that don't get good results have to improve their ways or leave the scene.

Posted by Jim Zellmer at February 3, 2013 3:32 AM
Subscribe to this site via RSS/Atom: Newsletter signup | Send us your ideas
Comments
Post a comment









Remember personal info?