Unrequited promise: tracing the evolution of New American Schools, from feisty upstart to bulwark of the education establishment. (Research).
Mirel, Jeffrey
IN THE SUMMER OF 1991, in response to President George H.W.
Bush's major education initiative, CEOs from a number of major
corporations established the New American Schools Development
Corporation (NASDC, later shortened to New American Schools, or NAS), a
privately funded, nonprofit organization devoted to supporting the
design and dissemination of "whole school reform" models.
NASDC's founders envisioned a complete overhaul of American
education stimulated by the spread of these innovative designs. As one
put it, school reformers who hoped to receive NASDC grants had to"
cast aside their old notions about schooling--to start with a clean
sheet of paper, and be bold and creative in their thinking, and to give
us ideas that address comprehensive, systemic change for all students
for whole schools." To President Bush; NASDC represented a major
step toward an "educational revolution" that would "seek
nothing less than a new generation of schools."
The idea was to apply a research -and -development model to a
sector that too often fell for romantic--and untested--notions of how
schools and learning should be structured. NASDC's early leaders
were determined to apply a no-nonsense business approach to their
efforts, to create an organization that was as lean and agile as the
corporations they led. New American Schools would be less bureaucratic and more aggressive in responding to new ideas than the typical
government agency or major foundation. Moreover, NASDC would be a sort
of venture capitalist for education, constantly evaluating its
investments and continuing to fund only those designs that proved their
effectiveness.
Initially, the plan for NASDC was to complement the creation of 535
federally funded "break the mold" schools by 1996. Each of the
435 congressional districts in the country would be home to one of these
schools; two more schools per state would be funded as well, Each school
would receive a one-time federal grant of $1 million in start-up funds.
The privately funded NASDC would support R&D teams tasked with
designing innovative reform models to be implemented in these schools.
NASDC's original plan didn't include supporting the
implementation of these designs. But as -- the political environment
soured early on, it became increasingly clear that NASDC wouldn't
have 535 federally funded laboratories in which to test its designs. In
light of this, NASDC had to become more than just an R&D center; it
would have to support not only the R&D efforts of the design teams,
but also the dissemination and implementation of their ideas, Moreover,
if it was to keep its promise of acting as a kind of venture capitalist
for education reform, at some point these design teams would need to
become self-sustaining, taking fees from school districts in return for
their expertise.
Over a decade, this mandate would transform New American Schools
from a privately funded R&D center that would support only effective
whole-school reform models into a savvy service provider for research
teams that needed to market and fund their designs. Their ability to
sell those designs, in turn, was heavily dependent on the ability of New
American Schools to lobby Congress for more federal funding of
whole-school reform. In some ways, these changes strengthened
NASDC's claim of being a bold new venture in education reform,
since few privately funded initiatives had ever committed to so
ambitious a program. But along the way New American Schools lost sight
of its mission and became more of a typical Washington insider than an
education revolutionary.
Progressivism Rides Again
NASD C'S initial funding competition sought innovative ideas
for creating schools in which all students would reach "world class
standards in English, mathematics, science, history, and geography"
and be "prepared for responsible citizenship, further learning, and
productive employment:" The "request for proposals," or
RFP, process also required that the designs be replicable in other
communities: "This is not a request to establish 'model'
schools. The designs must be adaptable so that they can be used by many
communities to create their own schools. The important thing is that
long after NASDC has disappeared from the scene, its legacy for new
designs will remain:" NASDC funds would support the start-up of
these break-the-mold schools, but once they were running it was expected
that they would operate on the same budgets as conventional schools.
Once NADSC chose the 11 winning proposals (see sidebar below), it
established a three-phase process for refining, implementing, and
marketing these designs. Phase one provided one year of funding, during
which the teams fine-tuned their original proposals "into workable
designs for school transformation." At the end of phase one, NASDC
dropped two of the designs, the Bensenville New American Schools and the
Odyssey Project. Phase two provided an additional two years of NASDC
funding for the design teams to implement (and further refine) their
ideas and approaches. At the end of phase two, NASDC determined that two
more designs, Community Learning Centers and Los Angeles Learning
Centers, would nor receive further support (although the Los Angeles
group eventually rejoined New American Schools with a new name, Urban
Learning Centers, and a more focused mission). Finally, phase three
envisioned a two-year scaling-up process in which the remaining designs
would be put into practice in a "large number of schools across the
country," NASDC stuck to its timetable for phases one and two, but
the scale-up phase, which began in mid-1995, has taken longer and, in
essence, continues today.
The popular and media response to the NASDC initiative was
generally upbeat and positive, but a small, vocal group of critics
repeatedly questioned NASDC and the designs. Initially the negative
assessments came primarily from liberal critics of the Bush
administration, Typical was a 1992 article in the Nation, in which the
authors declared: "Most of the educational R&D teams endorsed
by the corporation comprise an incestuous circle of right-wing
ideologues and privatization advocates, teacher-hating technocrats and
recession-rocked military contractors, their funding made palatable to
the press by token support for established and respected liberal
school-reform advocates."
Others argued that NASDC had misplaced priorities and ignored such
pressing issues as equalizing funding for poor districts and addressing
the needs of minorities. Former U.S. commissioner of education Harold
Howe II, for example, derided NASDC's business-oriented approach,
declaring, "You can bet that, when these parties get together, they
will spend little time in making a diverse society work."
Historians David Tyack and Larry Cuban wondered whether the New
American Schools initiative was just the latest example of
"ambitious reformers" promising" to create sleek,
efficient school machines' light years' ahead of the fusty
schools of their times," yet ultimately being overcome by the
education system's unreceptive environment. They argued that such
efforts to reinvent schools have in practice "often resembled
shooting stars that spurted across the pedagogical heavens, leaving a
meteoric trail in the media but burning up and disappearing in the
everyday atmosphere of the schools."
These criticisms were provocative, but ultimately proved less than
prophetic. Contrary to Howe's prediction, the New American Schools
designs have focused overwhelmingly on improving education for urban and
minority students, And NASDC and its design teams, rather than
"disappearing in the everyday atmosphere of the schools," have
survived for a decade, mainly due to their ability to adapt to the
changing political and pedagogical environment.
Ironically enough, the attacks from conservatives have proven more
prescient. They maintained that the RFP process was skewed to ensure the
choice of safe rather than break-the-mold designs. The competition was
more like those run by government agencies or major foundations than an
agile start-up venture. This gave an advantage to experienced grant
writers, and most of the winning proposals came from established
education reformers and their organizations.
The competition rounded up not only many of the usual educational
suspects but the usual educational ideas, too. Lynn Olson of Education
Week pointed out that one "striking feature of the award-winning
designs is how many ideas they have in common." A more striking
feature was how many of those ideas were deeply influenced by the
questionable theories of the progressive education movement of the early
20th century, the original break-the-mold movement in American
education. Indeed, most of the winning proposals read like echoes of
progressive manifesros of the 1920s. Six of the eleven designs, for
example, expressly declared that they were "learner-centered."
Eight sought to change the relationship between teachers and students by
transforming the teacher into a "coach,"
"facilitator," or "guide." All promised to meet
"world class" curriculum standards, but only two
(Expeditionary Learning and Modern Red Schoolhouse) focused their
programs on students' explicitly mastering academic disciplines.
Nearly all the designs promoted interdisciplinary curricula to avoid
what they saw as a key problem of traditional schools: teaching
knowledge and skills in isolation.
Related to this interdisciplinary focus was the widely shared
commitment to use the progressive-inspired "project method" to
engage the interest of students. Eight NASDC designs proclaimed that
project-based education would make learning exciting and relevant to
students in ways that traditional textbook-centered education never
could. Eight proposals envisioned using the community as a classroom to
break down barriers between school and society, an idea championed by
John Dewey, the great patriarch of progressive education. Like Dewey and
other progressives, most of the proposals also argued that their design
would not lead to the "piling up of facts," but would produce
critical thinkers.
The problem, as critics such as Robert Maynard Hutchins, E. D.
Hirsch Jr., and Diane Ravitch have repeatedly shown, is that apart from
a small number of schools serving highly motivated, well-to-do students,
progressive education has rarely fulfilled its pedagogical promise.
These critics have argued that progressive ideas often contribute to the
evisceration of academic curricula and narrow the scope of student
learning to entertaining but largely vapid topics. Especially relevant
to the NASDC designs was the late Jeanne Chall's finding, after
surveying a host of research studies, that, on average, schools guided
by progressive ideas have been less successful in raising academic
achievement, especially among disadvantaged children.
It was, in fact, controversies over progressive ideas that were at
least partly responsible for the Bensenville and Odyssey Project
designs' collapse in the face of angry community challenges. Both
designs were grassroots efforts developed by local communities; neither
was guided by or associated with the work of a national education
leader. Still, among the most contentious elements of both designs was
their progressive reorganization of the schools. A sociological study of
the North Carolina--based Odyssey Project found that parents were
bothered by the lack of course grades and college prep courses in the
Odyssey curriculum. They saw Odyssey as an attempt to shift the
curriculum to a more vocation-oriented track that would ensure a
compliant, trained workforce" for local industry.
These developments should have sent a warning to NASDC leaders
about the politically charged and therefore tenuous nature of such broad
efforts at education reform. These debacles showed that the success of
NASDC-style reform--no matter how good the design nor how much money
available--would depend ultimately on keeping all the community's
stakeholders committed to change over the long haul.
Regardless, phase one had gone generally well for the other nine
design teams, and NASDC leaders plowed ahead undauntect As businessmen,
they recognized that any new venture has some failures and losses. More
troubling for them at the rime were two emerging problems--NASDC's
precarious financial situation and concerns about the
organization's survival following the defeat of George Bush by Bill
Clinton in 1992.
Scale-Up
In its first two years of operation, NASDC raised only about $50
million of a planned $200 million. Concerns about fund-raising deepened
with fears that NASDC was too closely tied to the Bush administration to
win the new president's support.
In May 1993, however, both President Clinton and Secretary of
Education Richard Riley stated that the NASDC's reform efforts
dovetailed nicely with the new administration's education agenda.
In fact, this was no real stretch for Clinton. He had represented the
nation's governors at the 1989 meeting at which Bush and the
governors had agreed on this agenda, and his administration embraced
many of the same goals.
Yet Clinton's support had little immediate effect on
fund-raising, and NASDC watchers began asking whether the organization
could remain in business much longer. In response, the NASDC board
elected David Kearns CEO. Kearns, who had previously served as deputy
secretary of education in the Bush administration and as CEO of Xerox,
was widely respected in political, education, and business circles. The
board hoped he would find ways to shore up the organization's
precarious financial situation. In January 1994, these hopes were borne
out when philanthropist Walter Annenberg donated $50 million to NASDC--a
life-saving development for the organization. Without these funds it was
unlikely that NASDC could have made the crucial transition from serving
a modest number of schools to its broader scale-up to the state and
district level.
Further enhancing NASDC's national profile was the fact that
its key scale-up idea-- moving from reforming individual schools to
transforming entire systems--was quite similar to the idea of systemic
reform that was one of the cornerstones of the Clinton
administration's education policy. NASDC was now freed from the
allegation that it was little more than a partisan GOP initiative. In
the process, however, NASDC also appeared to be distancing itself from
its "revolutionary" free-market approach to education reform
and was increasingly looking like a respectable if rather corporate
member of the education establishment.
With its status bolstered, NASDC turned to its biggest challenge:
scale-up. Between 1992 and 1995, nine NASDC supported design teams had
implemented their plans in 148 schools. Phase three called for a
dramatic increase, with projections reaching into the thousands, At the
time, however, none of the designs had demonstrated that it would lead
to dramatic improvements in student achievement (although Robert
Slavin's Success for All program, the cornerstone of the Roots and
Wings initiative, had shown promising results).
Nevertheless, NASDC moved forward with its scale-up plan.
Agreements were ultimately reached with the states of Kentucky and
Maryland and nine large urban districts: Cincinnati, Broward County
(Fort Lauderdale), Dade County (Miami), Memphis, Philadelphia,
Pittsburgh, San Antonio, San Diego, and Seattle (and a group of
contiguous school systems). By mid-1997, two years into phase three, the
number of participating schools had climbed to 553.
Memphis would become NASDC's signature district. In 1997 its
student population was more than 80 percent African-American, and more
than 60 percent of all students qualified for free or reduced-price
lunch. Only 40 percent of its 9th graders were passing the state's
minimum-competency test. However, Superintendent Naomi "Gerry"
House was determined to use whole-school reform to try to solve
Memphis's education ills. By 1997, Memphis had almost reached the
NASDC goal for jurisdictions participating in the scale-up of having 30
percent of its schools adopting some form of whole-school design.
Encouraging news about student achievement soon followed, A study
comparing 25 NASDC school sites in 1995-96 with a control group of
non-NASDC schools found "significantly greater gains" in the
redesigned schools.
Meanwhile, less encouraging news was emanating from the RAND
Corporation's studies of NASDC's phases one and two. RAND,
with which NASDC had been working from the beginning, found that one of
the main problems in the early stages was the grating between these
innovative designs and the superstructure of state and district
policies. This spelled trouble for the scale-up phase, when entire
systems would be expected to convert to these new designs while keeping
such major influences as union-negotiated contracts and state policies
largely intact. For instance, in a RAND survey of principals in
NASDC-supported schools, a large majority reported that
"standardized, multiple-choice tests are misaligned with the
classroom practices of reforming schools." This is a common
criticism among all educators, but here the NASDC principals were
voicing a more pointed concern, namely that there was a mismatch between
the student-centered approaches of the design teams and the more
traditional evaluation practices used by sta tes and districts.
Moreover, a 1995 survey of parents in several NASDC jurisdictions
found that they were deeply divided about reform, with over a third of
the respondents wanting "the best of new and innovative
methods"; just under a third wanting "tried and true"
basics; and the remaining third wanting "a combination of old and
new methods" Getting such communities to commit to long-range plans
for whole-school transformations would be a formidable challenge. This
indicated a process of change that was more incremental and political
than the NASDC teams had expected, as they would soon learn in Memphis.
The early phase indicated that NASDC's original perspective was
somewhat simplistic, even naive. NASDC could not simply apply the
business metaphor--"develop and test a new product and then go sell
it"--to educational change.
As a result, by 1995, NASDC leaders rarely spoke about creating
break-the-mold schools; the words "education revolution" had
disappeared entirely. The realities of education politics were forcing
NASDC to adapt and adjust its approach and expectations.
Congress to the Rescue
By mid-1997, NASDC, now named New American Schools, or NAS, was
well into becoming more of a clearinghouse than an initiator of reform
and was changing the design teams into market-oriented purveyors of
education improvement. NAS increasingly focused on helping the teams
become self-sufficient organizations capable of marketing and supporting
their products. For some teams, this change was relatively painless.
Success for All, the parent organization of Roots and Wings, was already
a fee-for-service institution with substantial experience in this area.
But others, such as the Modern Red Schoolhouse, had virtually no
business or marketing experience. Thus, during phase three, NAS began
sending financial and marketing experts to the design teams to help them
develop business plans and marketing strategies. At the same time, NAS
began addressing the problem of creating markets for the designs.
The most immediate problem for NAS and the teams was finding funds
that districts could use to pay for their services, since design-team
fees for the first year of implementation alone could range from $50,000
to more than $500,000 per school. This effort was especially crucial
given that so many of the clients targeted by NAS were low-performing,
financially strapped urban systems.
Help came in the form of the Comprehensive School Reform
Demonstration Program, better known as the Obey-Porter Amendment. Passed
by Congress in 1997, it provided about $150 million for competitive
grants to aid schools in adopting "proven" whole-school reform
models. Supporters of the amendment routinely cited the NAS designs as
representative of the kinds of programs they hoped school districts
would adopt. In fact, NAS marketing efforts and Obey-Porter funds have
brought a five-fold increase since 1997 in the number of schools using
NAS designs, to some 3,000 schools in 2001. Not surprisingly, NAS had
lobbied Congress on behalf of the amendment.
One could view Obey-Porter as helping NAS fulfill its original
role, namely acting as a private R&D agency whose designs would be
implemented in schools that received federal start-up funds. Yet if
Obey-Porter aided NAS in fulfilling an important goal, it also indicated
that NAS was changing from an agency committed to operating outside the
constraints of Washington into one that depended on Washington for the
success of its venture.
However, the most troubling aspect of Obey-Porter and, by
implication, of the new role played by NAS design teams in education
reform, was not the dependency on federal funding but the claims of
"proven effectiveness" that the law explicitly made on behalf
of the designs. With the possible exception of Roots and Wings, at the
time that Obey-Porter was enacted the NAS designs still couldn't
provide substantial evidence of effectiveness.
Disappointing Results
Indeed, NAS officials' reaction to the 1999 American
Institutes of Research (AIR) study An Educator's Guide to
Schoolwide Reform would reveal an organization that had not come to
terms with the importance of evaluating student achievement in the
reform process. Of 24 whole-school reform designs, AIR found that only
three had "strong" positive effects on student achievement:
Direct Instruction, High Schools That Work, and Success for All, none of
which were NAS designs. Of the eight NAS programs, AIR rated
Expeditionary Learning "promising" and Roots and Wings (the
NAS version of Success for All) "marginal" in boosting
achievement. All the others received no rating because there
weren't enough data.
New American Schools president John Anderson's reaction, in a
1999 column for Education Week, was to maintain that the AIR review was
flawed in its approach and conclusions. "Not surprisingly," he
argued, "AIR took a traditional approach, gathering the relatively
small body of published research on the programs as its evidence of
effectiveness. But this sort of reliance on limited and often
time-consuming research as a way of assessing comprehensive designs may
be outmoded." Anderson held that "traditional" evaluation
took too long and ignored data on progress that schools were gathering
on an almost daily basis. In addition, he wrote, "Even the most
careful research on a handful of campuses and a handful of matched
schools could not give us a picture of what happens when models are used
in hundreds of schools." Anderson seemed troubled by the attention
AIR gave to student achievement in making its assessments." Beyond
academic results," he asserted, "design teams should be judged
on other practices involvin g their relationship with schools and school
districts. Practices involving implementation, communication, and data
collection are all vital to viable campus change."
Was Anderson implying that the NAS designs were so novel that
standard approaches to research could not capture what they were doing?
Was he questioning all traditional external reviews of the NAS programs?
If so, these concerns didn't stop him from citing data from a
traditionally designed study on student achievement in Memphis as
evidence that the designs in that city were working.
Meanwhile, the data finally produced by RAND on the performance of
NAS schools in scale-up jurisdictions relative to other schools in the
same district showed mixed results. About half of the NAS schools in
Cincinnati, Memphis, Miami, and Kentucky (the cities where RAND studied
math performance) outperformed the district average in mathematics,
while 50 percent or more of the schools in Cincinnati, Philadelphia, San
Antonio, and Washington (the cities where RAND studied reading
performance) improved in reading. In other words, about half of the NAS
schools in the cities studied by RAND only met the district average or
underperformed relative to other district schools. RAND identified Roots
and Wings as the most consistent design, with 10 of 21 schools making
progress in both reading and mathematics relative to the district.
Modern Red Schoolhouse did even better, with 7 of 11 of its schools
improving in math and 8 in reading. Other designs showed considerable
variation. Of the Audrey Cohen schools, for examp le, 5 of 8 schools
improved in math, but only 2 in reading. Similarly, 9 of 24 ATLAS
schools and only 4 of 16 Expeditionary Learning schools improved in
math.
The inescapable finding from RAND was that, despite millions of
dollars and enormous effort, over the course of a decade what NAS had
brought about was at best incremental change and modest achievement
gains. RAND'S mixed assessment was: "Dramatic achievement
gains were not made, although some designs fared better than
others."
Another blow to NAS's performance record was dealt in June
2001, when the Memphis school district announced that it was abandoning
the district's six-year experiment in whole-school reform. In the
spring of 2000, when Johnnie Watson took over as superintendent from
Gerry House, the great promoter of whole-school reform, he found a
deeply troubled district. In the late 1990s, House had mandated that all
of Memphis's more than 160 schools adopt a reform model, a policy
that angered and alienated many teachers, Worse, an internal district
study found that after six years of reform and the expenditure of some
$12 million, Memphis students had exhibited virtually no gains on state
tests. Moreover, the study
revealed that only 3 of 18 reform models implemented in the city
had boosted student achievement; none of the three was a NAS design.
Indeed, one NAS design, ATLAS, had "the most negative impact"
on student achievement of any of the reform models. The report found
that even Success for All, which was being used in almost 25 percent of
the Memphis schools, performed poorly. There have been questions about
the quality of the study, but this merely underscores one of NAS's
fundamental problems: the lack of independent, reliable research on the
effectiveness of its designs, a deficiency that allows decisions like
Memphis's to be made more on the basis of politics than sound
evidence about what works.
These events should signal to NAS that the future of whole-school
reform rests as much on the fluid and unpredictable nature of
educational politics, changes in leadership, and the sufferance of
patents and teachers as it does on successful marketing, buy-in from key
administrators, and substantial federal funds. Moreover, the Memphis
experience highlights the importance of the bottom line--student
achievement--for all such reform efforts.
How will Memphis's rejection of whole-school reform affect
NAS? 'While it is certainly too soon to offer a definitive answer,
it seems likely that NAS will weather this storm, although its momentum
may be somewhat slowed. The flow of Obey-Porter and, increasingly, Title
I funds to support whole-school reform will sustain NAS and its design
teams for many years to come.
Lost Chances
At its inception New American Schools held the promise of being an
extremely exciting research-and-development initiative in education. It
would sponsor the creation of innovative designs, pilot test them in a
select group of schools, and decide whether they were effective enough
to warrant wide dissemination. Its evolution into a financier, lobbyist,
and marketing shop for a variety of as-yet-unproven whole-school designs
must be considered at best a modest contribution to the cause of
education improvement. In its current incarnation, NAS is almost
indistinguishable from the foundations and government agencies that have
dominated school reform efforts for decades, It has become part of the
very education establishment its leaders once sought to circumvent.
More important than the changed status of NAS is the increasing
prominence of NAS-style whole-school reform as one of the most popular
strategies for education change. NAS has played a key role in that
development. Yet its own experience in Memphis raises questions about
whether the commitment to whole-school reform is the best strategy for
improving educational outcomes in troubled urban schools. With so many
unmanageable and unpredictable variables, whole-school reform will
always be tenuous, because it attempts to simply glide by many of the
institutional constraints--the variety of programs operating within a
school, all with different goals; the requirements of the
administrators' and teacher unions' contracts--that make
large-scale change so tortuous. University of Michigan historian Mans
Vinovskis and other scholars have suggested that less ambitious and less
costly efforts such as mote learning time during the summer might yield
gains as great as or greater than comprehensive school reform,
One of Johnnie Watson's first moves after ending
Memphis's experiment with whole-school reform was to order a new
district-wide curriculum. A primary reason was the problem the district
had experienced in adopting so many different designs. One teacher
noted: "Since Memphis has such a mobile student population students
fell even further behind because nothing was the same from school to
school," High rates of student mobility are an ever-present feature
of all urban school districts. Yet the NAS design teams did not appear
to have taken that vital fact of urban life and education into
consideration when they developed their programs. The seeds for
significant gains may lie in such small insights about student mobility
rates and district-wide curricula.
Unproven Designs
Only 3 of 24 popular models of whole-school reform have strong evidence
that they improve student achievement. None of the 3 is a New American
Schools design.
Models of Whole-Schools Reform Evidence of Year
Positive Effect Introduced
on Student
Achievement
Accelerated Schools (K-8) Marginal 1986
America's Choice (K-12) No Research 1998
ATLAS Communities (PreK-12) No Research 1992
Audrey Cohen College (K-12) No Research 1970
Basic Schools Network (K-12) No Research 1992
Coalition of Essential Schools (K-12) Mixed, Weak 1984
Community for Learning (K-12) Promising 1990
Co-NECT (K-12) No Research 1992
Core Knowledge (K-8) Promising 1990
Different Ways of Knowing (K-7) Promising 1989
Direct Instruction (K-6) Strong Late 1960s
Expeditionary Learning Outward Bound (K-12) Promising 1992
The Foxfire Fund (K-12) No Research 1966
High Schools That Work (9-12) Strong 1987
High/Scope (K-3) Marginal 1967
League of Professional Schools (K-12) Marginal 1989
Modern Red Schoolhouse (K-12) No Research 1993
Onward to Excellence (K-12) Marginal 1981
Paideia (K-12) Mixed, Weak 1982
Roots and Wings (Pre-K) Marginal 1993
School Development Program (K-12) Promising 1968
Success for All (PreK-6) Strong 1987
Talent Development High School (9-12) Marginal 1994
Urban Learning Centers (PreK-12) No Research 1993
Models of Whole-Schools Reform Number of
Schools
Adopting
the Model *
Accelerated Schools (K-8) 1,000
America's Choice (K-12) 300
ATLAS Communities (PreK-12) 63
Audrey Cohen College (K-12) 16
Basic Schools Network (K-12) 150
Coalition of Essential Schools (K-12) 1,000
Community for Learning (K-12) 92
Co-NECT (K-12) 75
Core Knowledge (K-8) 750
Different Ways of Knowing (K-7) 412
Direct Instruction (K-6) 150
Expeditionary Learning Outward Bound (K-12) 65
The Foxfire Fund (K-12) N/A
High Schools That Work (9-12) 860
High/Scope (K-3) 27
League of Professional Schools (K-12) 158
Modern Red Schoolhouse (K-12) 50
Onward to Excellence (K-12) 1,000
Paideia (K-12) 80
Roots and Wings (Pre-K) 200
School Development Program (K-12) 700
Success for All (PreK-6) 1,130
Talent Development High School (9-12) 10
Urban Learning Centers (PreK-12) 13
* As of October 30, 1998
SOURCE: "An Educator's Guide to Schoolwide Reform," American Institutes
for Research, 1999, under contract to AASA, AFT, NAESP, NASSP, NEA
RELATED ARTICLE: The Original New American Schools Designs
The competition for New American Schools funding yielded 11 winning
designs that were notable mainly for their use of progressive rhetoric
in describing their approaches.
* Audrey Cohen. Organized as a series of "complex and
meaningful ... purposes" in which students apply content knowledge
to solving "real world" problems. The curriculum is
interdisciplinary and project-driven, with the goal of having schoolwork
contribute to "improving the world outside of school."
* Authentic Teaching, Learning, and Assessment for All Students
(ATLAS). Drawing on the work of several prominent educators, such as
Theodore Sizer, James Corner, and Howard Gardner, ATLAS engages students
in "active inquiry" as part of an integrated curriculum built
around "essential questions." The goal is to create
"communities of learners."
* Bensenville New American School. Bensenville planned to use
"the entire community as a school campus," with pupils
actively involved in real problems in diverse settings (for example,
students could be assigned to a local business to see how "learning
has a tangible and immediate purpose"). Students were grouped
according to their progress in moving through an interdisciplinary
curriculum rather than by age or traditional grades.
* Community Learning Centers of Minnesota. Under the aegis of
Minnesota's new charter-school law, this design sought to empower
teachers, parents, and community members to create schools that are
"learner centered" and "meaningful." The key to
finding meaning was involving students in "real life tasks"
such as "using statistics to conduct and analyze a community survey
of attitudes about taxes."
* Co-NECT Design for School Change. Constructed around an
interdisciplinary curriculum that combined ongoing student-initiated
projects with teacher-initiated seminars. Supported by a number of
prominent high-tech companies (Apple, Lotus, NYNEX), this design has a
strong emphasis on students' using technology for projects and for
online interchanges among members of the school community.
* Expeditionary Learning. Based on the principles of the Outward
Bound program, this design blends intellectual, emotional, and character
education into a single curriculum. The course of study is based on the
international baccalaureate, but its strong emphasis on content was
"intertwined" with engaging learning expeditions, on such
topics as "Understanding the Bubonic Plague."
* Los Angeles Learning Centers. Structured as a "moving
diamond" that linked each child in the program with three different
mentors-- an older student, a parent or community member, and a teacher.
This foursome stayed together for several years to provide academic and
emotional support for the child.
* Modern Red Schoolhouse. Seeks to fuse the best of old-fashioned
one-room schools (for example, multi-age homerooms that keep students
and their teacher together for several years) with the use of
information technology. It focuses on student mastery of a strong,
academic curriculum (influenced by the ideas of such educators as E. D.
Hirsch Jr. and William J. Bennett).
* National Alliance for Restructuring Education. Concentrates on
both systemic and school-level reforms. The design coordinates
district-wide education, health, and human services in ways that aim to
improve student learning. Schools are run according to the principles of
Total Quality Management.
* The Odyssey Project. This community-based design developed in
Gaston County, North Carolina, dispensed with traditional grades and
replaced them with broad groupings ("Alpha" for ages zero to
three, "Beta" for ages three to six, and so on). Students
progressed at their own pace through the interdisciplinary curriculum by
meeting specific "performance outcomes." Older students
participated in weekly seminars that focused on "national and world
citizenship" and multicultural issues.
* Roots and Wings. Building on Robert Slavin's Success for All
program, this design focuses on having students develop strong basic
skills such as reading and writing (the roots) as well as content
knowledge and higher-order thinking skills (the wings). A central
feature is the WorldLab, which involves students in real-world
activities, projects, and simulations, such as representing the 13
colonies in debating and drafting the U.S. Constitution.
Jeffrey Mirel is a professor of educational studies and history at
the University of Michigan and the author of The Rise and Fall of an
Urban School System: Detroit, 1907-81 (University of Michigan Press,
1993). The unabridged version of this article is available at
www.educationnext.org.