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Education Funding

Race to Top Funds Prompt District, School-Level Efforts

By Sean Cavanagh 鈥 April 19, 2011 6 min read
At Middleton High School, in Tampa, Fla., teachers, from left, Elaine Gibbs, Laura Burger, David Folmer, Assistant Principal George Fekete, and teacher Karina Streeter have been using a model to improve instruction called lesson study, in which teachers review each other's lessons and discuss ways to refine them. Other schools throughout Florida will soon be using the model, with support from the $700 million award the state received through the Race to the Top program.
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Years ago, when he was working as an English teacher in Japan, David Folmer watched with curiosity as his colleagues spent time huddling in common areas before their classes, planning lessons. After their classes, his Japanese co-workers would often meet again to talk about what worked well, and what didn鈥檛.

Mr. Folmer didn鈥檛 understand those teachers鈥 methods at the time. But now the mathematics teacher and a group of fellow educators at Middleton High School, in Tampa, Fla., are using a variation of that model, called 鈥渓esson study,鈥 to plan and refine their daily instruction.

Over the next few years, schools across Florida will be following the example of Middleton High School and implementing lesson study. Those schools鈥 efforts will be funded through the federal program. They are part of a raft of state and local efforts financed with relatively little fanfare through the $4 billion national competition, better known for the large-scale school improvement efforts it is supporting in 11 states and the District of Columbia.

Much of the public and political attention surrounding the Race to the Top has focused on sweeping鈥攁nd often contentious鈥攕tate plans to make changes in teacher pay and evaluation, improve data systems, expand charter schools, and overhaul other aspects of education.

But other, mostly overlooked Race to the Top projects are rolling out in winning states, and state and local officials argue that those initiatives have the potential to create lasting improvements in schools.

In Georgia, a portion of the state鈥檚 is paying for a mini-competition for schools and districts to test new approaches in teacher recruitment, the cultivation of students鈥 problem-solving skills, and other areas.

In Maryland, the state is using a piece of its to support the development of a new elementary-teaching certificate in science, technology, engineering, and math鈥攖he so-called STEM subjects鈥攁s well as to build schools鈥 use of world languages, such as Arabic, Chinese, and Hindi.

In Florida, dozens of districts for years have been using some form of lesson study in either a broad or limited way, in some cases as part of efforts to help struggling schools, state officials say. One district using the model is the 195,000-student Hillsborough County school system, where Middleton High School is located. The state was sufficiently encouraged by lesson study to support its growth through Florida鈥檚 , said Diana Bourisaw, the state鈥檚 deputy chancellor for school improvement and student achievement.

鈥淚t takes the teacher out of isolation,鈥 said Mr. Folmer, who has helped implement the model at his school. 鈥淲e learn from each other. We know each other鈥檚 teaching styles, what works, what doesn鈥檛. We share ideas.鈥

Sparking Experiments

The Race to the Top program, which was created under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (better known as the federal stimulus program) was designed to encourage and reward states for making improvement in four big-picture areas: standards and tests; the collection and use of data; teacher effectiveness and the equitable distribution of teaching talent; and turnarounds of low-performing schools. The Obama administration later established criteria for judging states on a 500-point scale during the competition, which fleshed out those relatively broad priorities.

Critics of the program have said it places too great an emphasis on relatively unproven educational strategies and ignores more effective or promising approaches. But one observer, who has voiced doubts about the Race to the Top scoring priorities, said the smaller, state-specific projects included in winning states鈥 applications seemed to fit what he regarded as the program鈥檚 original goals.

鈥淚t was always my impression at the beginning that it was for experimentation鈥攔igorous experimentation,鈥 said Sean P. Corcoran, an associate professor of educational economics at New York University. 鈥淚n some ways, it鈥檚 kind of encouraging that states are putting these things out there.鈥

Lesson study originated in Japan, a nation that traditionally scores near the top on international exams鈥攁nd well above the United States. American researchers began introducing lesson study in the United States in the 1990s, and its popularity has grown. Today, variations of it are used in many states and school districts around the country, and in many subjects, though those approaches may only loosely resemble the original Japanese version, noted James Stigler, a professor of psychology at the University of California, Los Angeles, who has studied the approach.

Lesson study asks teachers to work together in planning, reviewing, and improving instruction, usually with guidance from a 鈥渒nowledgeable other,鈥 such as a university professor, who brings a depth of expertise in a content area. Teachers sit in on a colleague鈥檚 class and record data鈥攕ometimes videotaping the session鈥攁nalyze students鈥 responses, suggest improvements, and sometimes repeat the process.

At Middleton High, Mr. Folmer and teachers from different academic areas have beenobserving one another鈥檚 lessons, with the expectation that they will later introduce lesson study to their colleagues in their specific content areas.

This semester, small group helped plan, and then observe, a colleague鈥檚 literature class, in which students studied the relationship between plot, character, and other elements of a story. The group recorded data on students鈥 responses to the lesson. Which students were reading or highlighting paragraphs during the assigned times? Did students work collaboratively, or in isolation?

At another Florida school that has used lesson study, Amos P. Godby High School, in the 33,000-student Leon County district, the response from teachers was skeptical at first, recalled Robin L. Oliveri, the school鈥檚 science coach.

But over time, teachers鈥 support has grown, Ms. Oliveri said. That鈥檚 because lesson study gives teachers specific and useful information, rather than general, 鈥渉ang in there鈥 encouragement. It also provides educators with often-surprising insights on how students are responding to lessons, she said, without directing criticism at the teacher.

鈥淭eachers can鈥檛 see every student,鈥 Ms. Oliveri said, noting that lesson study is 鈥渁bout the practice, not the person.鈥

Core Priorities

In other winning Race to the Top states, officials are taking distinctive approaches to trying to carry out some of the competition鈥檚 core priorities.

For instance, in addition to supporting new efforts in elementary STEM teacher certification and foreign-language study, Maryland鈥檚 award is paying for teams from all the state鈥檚 schools鈥攁n estimated 6,000 eductors in all鈥攖o attend workshops this summer to help them implement new, common academic standards, said James V. Foran, the assistant superintendent for the state鈥檚 division of academic reform and innovation.

Other winning states are trying to encourage experimentation at the local level.

Georgia is devoting $19.4 million to a mini-competition, called an Innovation Fund, in which districts and charter schools will be invited to develop new strategies to recruit and support teachers, build students鈥 problem-solving skills, and develop STEM-focused charter schools. They would compete for awards of $50,000, $100,000, or $350,000.

Projects like Georgia鈥檚 Innovation Fund, which have the potential to touch a lot of schools, bring an additional benefit to federal and state officials, Mr. Corcocan suggested: They can foster a lot of buy-in for Race to the Top in school districts and communities.

Another Georgia Race to the Top project will support the replication of a program in the 161,000-student Gwinnett County schools to prepare future principals and assistant principals in four other districts around the state.

Glenn Pethel, the executive director of leadership development in the Gwinnett district, who is helping guide the project, said the goal is to create a successful pipeline for developing school leaders in each of the four school systems鈥攚hile also tailoring the approach to individual districts鈥 needs.

Districts will be able to 鈥渟ize up, size down, or right-size what they鈥檙e doing,鈥 Mr. Pethel said, 鈥渁nd make this work for them.鈥

Coverage of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act is supported in part by grants from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, at , and the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, at .
A version of this article appeared in the April 20, 2011 edition of 澳门跑狗论坛 as Race to Top Funds Nurturing Grassroots Efforts

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