Needle.
Jacobs, Joanne
Low-income parents want good schools, he says. But demand for what
schools are offering weakens in working-class families and diminishes
even more for middle-class parents. One or two steps up the economic
ladder, parents say, "I just want my kids to be happy."
Kids have their own perspective. "The 'why' behind
education is not clear to kids," he says. Everyone wants to go to
college, but not to get an education. "College is like a bar
mitzvah. It's a rite of passage."
Being a "good learner" is valued. Being "well
educated" is not. "Students think they can learn on their
own," he's found. "Teens think, 'I'll never use
geometry. If I need it, I'll learn it then.'
"Today's kids are very entrepreneurial," says
Hamilton. "One-third of high schoolers say they'll start their
own business."
In focus groups, he has met a Philadelphia girl who plans to open
her own strip club and a boy who wants to run a saltwater aquarium
store.
Kids are focused on "creating their digital brand,"
Hamilton says. "How they're seen online is what matters."
He remembers when people would talk about "discovering who I
am." Now teens say, "I'm creating my brand." He
shakes his head. What used to be exploration is now marketing.
In the past, the family sat down at the dinner table together and
ate the same meal, Hamilton recalls. It was meat loaf, mashed potatoes,
and peas for everyone. Now dinner is "hyper-personalized."
Everyone wants something different.
People expect education to fit their personal tastes and interests,
too. "They like learning what they want to learn and expect to do
it online."
But technology doesn't work if the motivation isn't
there. And it can't do everything. Children learn teamwork and
citizenship by interacting face to face.
"Young Millennials and their Generation Z siblings" think
they don't need school to learn new things. They'll do it all
themselves--if and when they feel like it. If kids don't see a
direct connection to their own goals, they don't want to do the
work.
"If they're playing a computer game, they're willing
to dig for 100 treasure chests to win the Golden Sword of
Awesomeness," Hamilton says. But they're not as willing to
work hard in school because the reward isn't clear to them.
Circumventure is pursuing ways to put learning directly into the
hands of children. Digital learning can be very effective, Hamilton
believes. "Students like learning privately in their own time and
their own space. If you need to watch the Khan [Academy] video five
times no one knows or thinks you're dumb."
He lent mini iPads to 18 early elementary school kids and gave them
incentives for completing learning pathways in curated math apps. The
children averaged eight months of growth in math in just four weeks.
Schools won't vanish, Hamilton predicts, if only because
"people want a safe place for kids in the workday and a place for
kids to be with their peers."
What if today's kids are not as smart as they think they are?
Hamilton wonders how to persuade the future strip-club owner that she
needs to master math and science.
"I don't yet have a list of solutions," says
Hamilton. Just questions.
From Plato to KIPP
Growing up in Colorado, Hamilton attended "good but not
great" public schools. His high school had 3,800 students. If you
wanted a good education, you could get it," he recalls. If you
didn't care, you could settle for mediocrity.
Interested in politics, he postponed college to work on a
senatorial campaign. The campaign manager, who had studied Latin in
college, turned him on to classics. Hamilton majored in ancient Greek at
Penn. He wrote his senior thesis on the education ideas in Plato's
Republic. "It's been education ever since," he says.
Hamilton interned for Secretary of Education Bill Bennett, and then
worked as a policy analyst for the department.
He left Washington to work for former Yale president Benno Schmidt,
who was starting the Edison Project. Edison, which tried to run public
schools at a profit, faltered. But it was there that Hamilton met Stacey
Boyd, who became his wife.
Hamilton became Massachusetts's first associate commissioner
of education for charter schools, recommending which schools would get,
keep, or lose their charters.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Boyd earned an MBA and started a charter school in Boston.
(Hamilton recused himself on all matters concerning his wife's
school.) The Academy of the Pacific Rim seeks to combine "the best
of the East--high standards, discipline and character education--with
the best of the West--a commitment to individualism, creativity and
diversity."
Now a high-performing school serving grades 5 to 12, the academy
enrolls primarily black and Latino students.
The family left Boston for San Francisco in 1999 when Hamilton went
to work for Don and Doris Fisher's Pisces Foundation. The Fishers,
who had started the Gap clothing stores, wanted to "reduce the
gap" in achievement between the haves and have-nots, says Hamilton.
"They thought education was the way to do that."
The Fishers' goal wasn't to start something new. They
told Hamilton to "find what works and make it bigger."
Boyd suggested Hamilton look into KIPP. She'd met KIPP
co-founder Mike Feinberg after she started the Academy of the Pacific
Rim in Boston. Hamilton visited KIPP's two schools in Houston and
New York City. "It was working," he concluded. He sold the
Fishers on expanding KIPP. "Don and Doris said, This looks great.
Here's $15 million. Go do it."
Hamilton decided KIPP would not run KIPP schools. "We wanted
entrepreneurs to start schools, not administrators."
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Hamilton had seen how his wife used her business school training to
build a leadership team and create a culture oflearn-ing at the Academy
of the Pacific Rim. He asked University of California-Berkeley's
business school to design an intensive leadership training program for
people who wanted to start their own KIPP school.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Hamilton became CEO of KIPP and the KIPP Foundation, while
continuing to work at Pisces.
In his search for fundable education ideas, Hamilton kept
discovering Teach For America alumni who had become innovators and
leaders. The Fishers and I agreed that TFA was addressing a human
capital problem for American education. So I went to Wendy Kopp [TFA
founder and board chair] and asked if she could grow the size of
TFA." With the Fishers' help, TFA doubled the size of its
teaching corps.
Hamilton served on the TFA board for several years and helped with
its reorganization. "Four years later, we went back to Wendy and
asked if she could double the size of the corps again, and she said yes.
But this time, before committing millions more, we got Wendy to agree to
place a good number of TFA corps members at charter schools and not just
district public schools."
Blend and Save
Hamilton left Pisces, now the Doris & Donald Fisher Fund, in
2007. Then, as a distinguished visiting fellow at the Thomas B. Fordham
Institute, he worked on a report exploring the question, "Who Will
Save America's Urban Catholic Schools?"
A friend said: "Why not you?" So he co-founded Seton
Education Partners to develop a new financial model for urban Catholic
schools, which faced rising costs and competition from tuition-free
charter schools.
"Catholic schools never really recovered from losing the
nuns," says Hamilton. "It used to be one nun teaching 50 kids.
Now there's a lay teacher who makes close to a public school salary
teaching 20 kids."
By this time, Hamilton and Boyd were parents. Boyd now runs the
Schoola web site, which creates fundraising tools for schools. The
couple's daughters, a kindergartner and a 3rd grader, attend
private schools. "Most anyone in San Francisco who can afford it
sends their kids to private school," says Hamilton.
When their older daughter was four, she had taught herself to read
using software. Hamilton was intrigued.
Seton worked with Mission Dolores Academy, an independent K-8
Catholic school in San Francisco, to introduce "blended"
learning. Students split their time between mastering lessons on
computers and working with the teacher. Class size rose, lowering costs,
but the rotation model let teachers work with small groups and build a
closer relationship with kids," says Hamilton.
Seton has expanded the blending learning model to three other
Catholic schools.
But Hamilton decided he needed to do more. "I can change a
thousand Catholic schools' economics and results, but that
won't move the needle.
"The focus on closing the achievement gap in the last 10 to 20
years has shown results," he says. "But I'm very worried
about the future of America and our inability to improve what American
kids know and can do."
Suburban and private schools aren't doing well compared to
America's competitors overseas, he explains. "Everyone likes
to think their own kids' school is fine. It's those other
schools that are a problem. We've gotten too fat and happy."
Americans think "creativity and entrepreneurship have made our
country great" and will keep our economy strong in the future,
Hamilton says. His work with Circumventure confirms this: Generation Z
is creative, enterprising, and very confident.
But do they know math?
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
"Young Millennials and their Generation Z siblings" think
they don't need school to learn new things. They'll do it all
themselves.
A conversation with Scott Hamilton
"Everyone likes to think their own kids' school is fine.
It's those other schools that are a problem.. We've gotten too
fat and happy."
Joanne Jacobs, a former San Jose Mercury News editorial writer and
columnist, writes about K-12 education and community colleges at
joannejacobs.com and ccspotlight.org.