Recent News
EDUCATION REFORMERS SEE BIG ROLE FOR BUSINESS
by Peter Brownfeld
November 1, 2003—Washington—Education
Management Organizations like Edison and White Hat Ventures say they can
solve the problems hampering America's education system. But teachers
say for-profit schools are more concerned about the bottom line than top
test scores.
Edison and White Hat are the largest EMOs in
the nation, which all together manage 417 schools in 24 states. Company
officials say their entrepreneurship is providing unique opportunities
to tens of thousands of students, many of whom came from failing
schools. Supporters of alternative education options agree.
"It's a very good thing for education to see
more players on the field," said former secretary of education Bill
Bennett, who spoke Thursday at the 10th anniversary of the Center for
Education Reform.
"It's a very good thing to have people who
think like entrepreneurs creating new ideas," said Bennett, who chairs
the board of directors of his EMO, K12, which has innovated by offering
its lessons over the Internet.
Private companies have been involved in
education for a while, particularly as school districts contract out
services like transportation and food.
About a decade ago, some of those districts
began turning to private companies to manage the curricula and
operations of schools, and the privatization of schools really took off
with the growth of charter schools.
The results have varied, depending on who is
asked.
The Brookings Institution's 2003 report on
education, released in October, found that EMO typically target
low-achieving students and often take over failing schools or appeal to
students who have not performed well in other public schools.
As a result, students in EMOs are still not
as successful as many public school students. Brookings found that in
2000, students in its sample group of EMO schools scored in the 16th
percentile on standardized tests. However, by 2002, these same schools
had moved up to the 28th percentile.
"EMO-operated charters score significantly
lower than regular public schools and non-EMO charters but registered
greater test score gains from 2000 to 2002," the study reported.
"The vast majority of students have met or
exceeded the expected level of growth," said Mark Thimming, CEO of White
Hat Ventures, which operates 32 schools, serving 13,000 students.
Thimming said many students are so disadvantaged when they enter EMO
schools that it takes a while to catch up.
Studies conducted by the teachers unions
have drawn different conclusions about the quality of EMO educations.
A report by the American Federation of
Teachers found that Edison Schools, the largest EMO, "cuts corners" on
its programs.
AFT acknowledged that its conclusions are
tentative, but stated in its report that "Edison relies heavily on
inexperienced teachers. Typically, half of the teaching force has less
than five years experience, compared with a national average of 16
years."
AFT spokeswoman Celia Lose said her
organization is bothered by the fact that EMOs, which have other goals,
have performed no better than public schools.
"Unlike public school systems, private
companies have a number of interests: answer shareholders, make a
profit, and raise student achievement. EMOs have found that it is
difficult to achieve all of those goals," Lose said.
EMOs dispute the claim that they place a
focus on profits to the detriment of the students.
The schools' "growth in test scores has been
significantly faster than those in any other school in D.C.," said
Donald Hense, CEO of Friendship House Association, which operates four
campuses in Washington D.C. in partnership with Edison.
Hense acknowledged that money is a concern,
but only because it is needed to keep the schools running.
"I don't exactly expect to make a profit,
but I do expect to end the year in the black so we have monies to
reinvest," he said.
The premise that these companies have gotten
involved in education just to make money is inaccurate, Thimming said.
"Our interest is not to make money first.
Our interest is to educate children, but not to have to stand on the
corner with a tin cup. Every education management organization that I
know has that philosophy," Thimming said.
Thimming challenged teachers to do a better
job and cited the Ohio school system as an example of public schools
gone wrong. Only about one-fourth of Cleveland students and one-half of
Columbus students graduate from high school, he said, and Ohio parents
and students need more options.
"If we were losing this many children in a
war, we would evict our president and people would be protesting in the
streets," he said.
Originally
story.
© 2003 FOX News Network
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