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Welcome to my playground.
How
the Teachers Killed a Dream
or
how Detroit lost out on $200 million for new schools
By
JOE KLEIN
Monday, Oct. 27, 2003
In
1999, an unassuming Michigan road builder named
Bob Thompson sold his construction company for $442
million, an amount he and his wife Ellen believed
was far more than they needed for retirement.
His
first act, which received national attention, was
to distribute $128 million to his employees; about
80 became instant millionaires. Then Thompson decided
to donate most of the rest of his money to public
education, preferably in Detroit.
After
doing some research, he offered $200 million to
build 15 small, independent public high schools
in the inner city. A few weeks ago, Thompson withdrew
his offer after the Detroit Federation of Teachers
(DFT) led a furious, and scurrilous, campaign against
his generosity.
The
philanthropist is in seclusion now — friends say
he is stunned and distressed — but his is a story
that deserves telling.
Thompson's
research led him to Doug Ross, founder of University
Preparatory Academy in Detroit. Ross is a prominent
New Democrat policy wonk who served in Bill Clinton's
Labor Department, then went home to Michigan and
ran unsuccessfully for Governor in 1998.
"I
learned during the campaign there was one overpowering
issue for inner-city parents: to get their kids
a college education," Ross told me. "I was tired
of theoretical policy junk; I wanted to do something
that really mattered.
It was
clear that urban kids were not responding to the
industrial-age assembly-line education model — and
there were people around the country who had figured
out how to educate kids in a more humane, customized
way."
Indeed,
recent studies indicate that small schools with
specialized curriculums have much lower dropout
rates and higher college-admission rates than traditional
education factories. "The cost per pupil is a bit
higher," says Patty Stonesifer of the Gates Foundation,
which has become a major supporter of the small-school
movement. "But the cost per graduate is much lower
— and that really should be our goal."
Ross
decided to tackle the toughest education problem:
middle school.
(How
Teachers Killed A Dream continued...)
He started
in 2000 with 112 sixth-graders and has added a new
grade each year. He had been in business two years
when Thompson came to visit.
"I had
him sit in on some classes," Ross says. "He liked
what he saw and asked how he could help. I asked
him to build me a high school. He said he'd build
one to my specifications and lease it to me for
$1 per year — but there had to be accountability.
How would he know if I was succeeding or not?
I told
him my goals — a 90% graduation rate and 90% of
graduates going on to college. If I didn't meet
those benchmarks after three graduating classes,
he could take the school away and let someone else
give it a try. He accepted, and I got my high school."
This
was, essentially, the same deal that Thompson offered
Detroit.
He didn't
specify curriculum or who should run the 15 independent
charter schools.
Theoretically,
any organization — including the teachers' union
— was eligible to propose its own system if it presented
a plausible plan for a 500-student campus and agreed
to Thompson's 90-90 yardstick.
New
state legislation would be needed to establish the
schools. But both Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick
and Governor Jennifer Granholm were thrilled by
Thompson's offer — at least until the Detroit Federation
of Teachers made plain its opposition.
On Sept.
25 the DFT held a work stoppage, which closed the
public schools, and staged a rally at the state
capitol in Lansing. The mayor withdrew his support,
and Thompson withdrew his offer soon after.
"The
Thompson schools would devastate the critical mass
of students who remained in our traditional schools,"
Janna Garrison, president of the DFT, told me last
week.
She
was referring to the $7,100 per pupil that would
travel with each student who chose to go to a charter
school (although the state offered the Detroit schools
$15 million to compensate for the lost funds).
This
is a familiar union song — similar to the argument
against school vouchers — that grows less powerful
as urban schools grow worse.
The
fact that charter-school teachers in Detroit are
not union members probably had something to do with
the union's stand too (Ross said he would accept
a union if his teachers wanted one).
But
Garrison took the argument a step further: "If someone
from the outside came to Bob Thompson's suburban
town and said, 'I'm gonna give you a lot of money
for education, but we spend it my way,' they just
wouldn't tolerate it."
This
was thinly veiled racial politics. "You've got a
lot of poison in the air," Mayor Kilpatrick told
me. "People here are sensitive about white people
bossing them around."
Kilpatrick
insisted he wasn't opposed to more charter schools;
his own children go to one. And he was not pleased
by the union's role, even though he's a former teacher.
"The
teachers' union once was a progressive force, but
that day has passed," he says. "And it's not coming
back until the union realizes that we're going to
have to make dramatic changes to improve education
here."
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