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Galston is a professor and director of the Institute for Philosophy and Public
Policy at the University of Maryland School of Public Affairs. He served as the
Deputy Assistant to the President for Domestic Policy in the Clinton
Adminstration and is serving as a senior advisor to Vice President Al Gore
during his 2000 campaign for the Presidency.
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I am a professor at the School of Public Affairs, University of Maryland at
College Park. I am also a director of the Institute for Philosophy and Public
Policy, which is a research center here at the University, which is a mostly
owned subsidiary of the School of Public Affairs, but an old institution. We're
heading toward our 25th anniversary. It's filled with people who are
interested in philosophy and public life. Which is a rare combination. So
that's our business. And, in addition to those two academic titles, I am a
senior advisor on domestic policy issues to the Gore campaign.
With that background and that preparation, let me start you with the
broadest of all possible questions for our program, which is that, back in the
Reagan era, in the early 80s, there was a report called The Nation at
Risk about public education in America. And since then, in all these years,
there has been a lot of talk about a crisis in public education, especially
from conservatives--that public education is a disaster in this country, that
we're way behind other countries, that we're in serious trouble. What's your
own view of the state of public education in this country?
The report, Nation at Risk, perhaps the most important document on
education reform issued in the 20th century, came out in the early
1980s, at the end of a roughly 15-year period of uninterrupted decline in
American public education. And that report, Nation at Risk had a
significant positive impact on public education in this country. The committee,
the commission that put together Nation at Risk for example, identified
what it called a new basic curriculum. In the early 1980s only about 14% of
graduating US high school seniors had gone through the basic elements of that
curriculum. About ten years later, that percentage had tripled to 42%. So we
have made progress and we've continued to make slow progress through the 1990s.
Where are we today: Is the US system of public education as a whole in crisis?
The answer to that question, I believe, is no. Today it would be more accurate
to say that we have two systems of public education, not one. The first of them
is based principally, though not entirely, in the suburbs of this country and
[in] some of the wealthier urban jurisdictions and districts. That is, a public
school system that could be better and should be better. In many respects it is
mediocre, particularly when compared to our international peers in the advanced
industrial nations. But it is not failing its students.
The second system of public education, which is based principally in poorer
urban and rural areas, is indeed in crisis. Too many of the students in those
schools are dropping out well before high school graduation. Too many are
receiving high school diplomas that do not certify academic confidence in basic
subjects. Too many are being left unprepared for the world of work. Too many
are being left unprepared to go on to higher education and advanced technical
training. Those schools are indeed in crisis and they require emergency
treatment....]
There are important gaps in resources between many of the wealthier
jurisdictions and many of the poorer jurisdictions. And money matters in
education--there's no getting around that. However, many of the gaps in per
pupil expenditures between urban districts and their surrounding suburban
districts have been closed in the past ten years, not eliminated in all cases,
but closed substantially in many cases. [This is] in part because a higher
percentage of the expenditures in the poorer districts are now being picked up
by the states or even by the federal government through its compensatory
education programs.
So, while money matters, it's not the only thing that matters. School safety
and discipline matter a lot. Teacher quality matters a lot. Support from
parents and the surrounding community matters a lot. And a culture of learning
matters a lot. And all of those things have to be attended to at the same time
that we continue to focus on the existing and remaining gaps in resources.
What works, from your experience in public schools, especially in urban
areas that are in the crisis you described?
Some very basic common sense measures work in dealing with the crisis of urban
education. You need good leadership in the schools, a strong principal focused
on the basics can make an enormous difference. Restoring safety and discipline
and backing up teachers who are determined to maintain discipline in their
classrooms and in the school corridors can be very important. High
expectations work. A solid academic curriculum for all students works. And
determined efforts by school districts to recruit and retain high quality
teachers can make a big difference....
One of the hot button political issues in this presidential campaign that
separates Vice President Gore and Governor Bush is the issue of
vouchers....There's a Cleveland voucher program, a Milwaukee program. A
program that Jeb Bush, governor of Florida, is trying to get started [was] just
declared unconstitutional by a judge last week. In general, what do you think
of vouchers as a solution to the problems in public education in our
cities?
I don't know of very many people who think of vouchers as the solution to the
problem of education in our cities. We have to keep our eye on the ball. More
than 90% of all of our school age kids go to public schools. And that ratio of
9 to 1 is likely to prevail for the indefinite future. So if we don't fix the
public schools, then all of our other efforts are going to be futile or, at
best, marginal. In addition there is a very, very substantial academic debate.
And I do not pretend to be an academic expert on this subject, but there is a
very substantial academic debate as to the efficacy of the early voucher
programs that have been implemented. It is possible to look at the figures in a
way that suggests significant progress. It is also possible to look at the
figures in a way that suggests minimal progress or that attributes the progress
that has been made to factors other than choice. For example, smaller class
size....
In addition to being an academic, you are an advisor to Vice President Gore.
Let me ask you a political question about vouchers. There was an op ed piece
in the New York Times recently by a Reverend Floyd Flake who argued that
Vice President Gore was vulnerable to the criticism that his own children were
in private schools, had been educated in private schools, but that he was going
to deny choice to poor black parents because he was opposed to vouchers. Do
you think that that's something that the Republicans might use to try to go
after the Vice President in the campaign, and that [Gore] might be vulnerable
on that issue?
...I don't know of a lot of people who think of vouchers as the solution to
the problems of American public education. There are a number of public
opinion surveys that indicate that fewer than one fifth of Americans believe
that vouchers are, or could be, the solution to the problems of American public
education. The argument about sending one's own children to private school is
a familiar debating point. I suspect very much that the American people are
going to make up their minds about education policy in the year 2000 on the
basis of the programs and the commitment and the overall credibility of
individuals putting forward their plans. I am confident that when Vice
President Gore and Governor Bush go head to head on that issue that the
American people will be able to draw the right conclusion about which
candidate, which program and, I might add, which political party is likely to
be more committed to the cause of improving American public education.
But what do you say to a single black mother in Cleveland, for instance,
whose school where her child is attending is dangerous, where the education is
substandard and suddenly someone comes to her and says, "Here's a voucher--you
can go to the Catholic school across town that may not have the best education
in the world but it's safe, it's orderly, it's disciplined. It's better than
what you have now."?
Let me say first of all that there is a significant gap in public opinion
between white suburban parents on the one hand and African American parents,
particularly in urban areas, on the question of choice and school vouchers. I
think that the African American urban community is sending the country a huge
signal that it wants revolutionary change in schools and it's fed up with
promises. It will not wait much longer. And it is entirely understandable that
parents whose kids are, from their standpoint, trapped in schools that are not
doing the basic job properly will be willing to embrace almost any alternative
that seems to hold out hope. I would be the last person in in the world to
second guess a parent in those circumstances. So what we're talking about is
public education policy, for cities as a whole and for the country as a whole
and in that context we have to place our hopes on a comprehensive program of
public education reform that is likely to get the job done for most or all
students.
What is the program? Could you give me the highlights of the Vice
President's program? I know it's 115 billion dollars--that's been the headline
figure. What do we get for the $115 billion? what's he proposing?
The Vice President is proposing a comprehensive program that begins, in
effect, at age 3 or 4 and goes all the way through post-secondary education and
training. First, he's put a plan on the table, with the federal government in
partnership with the states. [It] would guarantee quality pre-school for every
child. Why is this so important? The very first national education goal stated
by the governors, and then agreed to by the governors, and then President Bush
more than a decade ago, was that every child would reach first grade ready to
learn. Well, some children come from more fortunate circumstances than others.
For some without quality pre-K, the goal of reaching first grade ready to learn
is very unlikely to be realized. And, if we are interested in equal
educational opportunity for every child, then we had better be prepared to
invest in the sorts of programs that especially poor and disadvantaged kids are
going to need in order to be comfortable with learning the content and the
process from first grade on.
Another thing you're going to get for the large investment that the Vice
President has proposed is school buildings that are fit to learn in, that are
in good repair, that contain the technology that kids need to learn for the
21st century. And that sends a signal of concern and respect for
every student and every learning opportunity whether it's in a wealthy suburban
area or a poor urban area. You are also going to get an accountability
program. You're going to get accountability for students in the form of higher
standards and federal support for beefed up testing. You're going to get
accountability for teachers. The Vice President has called for a test to be
administered to every new teacher before he or she begins teaching that will
demonstrate and guarantee competence. Not only in pedagogical technique, but
also the content of the courses that that teacher is proposing....
What do teachers' unions have to say about this? The political charge
against the Vice President is that he's in the pocket of teachers' unions and
that teachers' unions are resistant to reform, especially to anything that
would merit pay proposals, for instance, or in some cases to even testing.
You'll have to ask the teachers' unions what they think of the Vice President's
proposals because, not only has he called for testing at the threshold, but
he's also called for the development of fair but expedited means of getting rid
of incumbent teachers who aren't measuring up. So take those two proposals...to
the heads of the major teachers. The Vice President, of course, hopes that, on
sober reflections, the teachers' unions will understand that they have an
enormous stake in the credibility of the system of public education....
In that Floyd Flake op ed piece that I referred to earlier, he had a phrase
saying that a President Gore could do for education reform what President
Clinton had done for welfare reform. And his argument was [that he could reform
education] by pushing school choice. What do you think about that?
I entirely agree with Reverend Flake that Vice President Gore could do for
public education what President Clinton did for welfare reform. That is to say,
bring what the Vice President has called "revolutionary change to our system of
public education." The revolution that Vice President Gore is proposing is an
accountability revolution....
You have these studies showing that the most
important way to improve students learning is by having a good teacher. We also
need an enormous number of teachers because we have this baby boom echo of the
largest number of kids ever in kindergarten through 12th grade. So
what do we do?
We are faced with the task of recruiting more than 2 million high quality
teachers for public education in the next decade. Now that figure sounds
dauntingly large. It represents a modest increase over the yearly recruitment
that has been required in the previous decades. So it is not the towering
crisis that some have maintained that it is but it's still a major challenge.
It is for that reason that the Vice President's education proposal includes a
proposal for a 21st century teachers' corps which would defray a
substantial portion of the four-year college and teacher training expenses of
young people who are willing to commit to teach for at least four years in
high-needs areas, after they get their high school [degrees], their college
diplomas, and their teaching certificates....
There has been a very remarkable [increase] in the past 2 or 3 years in the
percentage of entering high school freshmen who say they are interested in
becoming teachers. They see this as a career that can really make a difference.
It's a way of expressing their idealism. It's a way of expressing their
commitment to their country. It's the task of the country now to meet this
youthful idealism half-way, or more than half-way with programs and
opportunities that will convince our most talented young people that teaching
is how they want to spend their lives.
Because I know what has happened with some individuals is that you get a
very idealistic college student [that] says "Look, I'll go into an area, I'll
go into a tough urban area where I'm really needed." They go in and they burn
out in a couple of years because the school system is so bad, the support's not
there and they can't take it. They're gone. So that school is back to square
one.
The problem of retaining talented young people, particularly in tough schools
in tough neighborhoods, is a tough problem. And it won't do much good to
increase the number of young people entering the pipeline if the pipe continues
to leak as much as it now does. What can we do?
First of all, we should build in opportunities of new teachers to meet with one
another, to learn from one another's experiences and to learn from experienced
teachers. Many young teachers describe an experience of near total isolation
during those first few years. Being sort of flown into an educational ocean
with raging waves and left literally to sink or swim on their own. That's
wrong. And no other advanced industrial country throws its entering teachers
back on their own resources in the way that we do. Second, we obviously have to
provide more opportunities during the summer for young teachers to continue to
learn from master teachers. And to be exposed to the latest materials, the
latest developments both in content and in pedagogy in their chosen
subjects.
And one other thing--a lot of young people who enter teaching get discouraged
because they want to teach, not to spend all of their time enforcing discipline
in the classroom. You hear this over and over and over again. If principals and
other school administrators are really interested in retaining the services of
talented young people, they will back those young teachers up when those young
teachers do what they think is necessary in order to maintain discipline in the
classroom. And it is just not only unwise but also unfair and incredibly
short-sighted for school administrators to be so worried about lawsuits or
parental complaints that they are unwilling to create a safe and secure
environment conducive to learning in their schools. So school leaders have a
huge responsibility in this regard and in too many jurisdictions, in my
judgment, they are defaulting on that responsibility and they ought to
change.
There was a piece in the New York Times Magazine several months ago
which raised the issue: Can public schools solve the problems of poverty? Can
they alone lift kids up and get them out of the situations that they've been
in? or [is that] an impossible task to ask individual schools to do? What do
you think?
Demography makes a difference--everybody knows that. It makes a difference
whether you're rich or poor. It makes a difference whether you come from a
culturally enriched background or not. But while demography makes a difference,
demography is not destiny. A generation ago, leading school researchers really
believed that demography was destiny, but the best modern evidence refutes that
proposition. Schools in poor areas have a tougher job to do than schools in
wealthier areas. But schools even in the poorest neighborhoods can get the job
done....They can get there. And that is not only a profession of democratic
faith. It is also the conclusion that recent evidence produced not only by
excellent schools in the poorest areas, but also by much more broad-based
studies about the effects of quality teaching on poor kids. That is the
conclusion to which one is driven. And my fear is that failing schools in poor
areas are using poverty as the excuse for their failure and they should not do
that.
In his State of the Union address this year President Clinton said that if a
school--even in a very poor neighborhood that's struggling--if they don't
measure up, they should be closed. Do you agree with that?
I agree with that and the Vice President agrees with that as well and has put
forward a program that would help identify those failing schools, help them
improve and, in effect, change them over to new management if they don't. That
is the least we can do for kids in those schools. It is intolerable that we
tolerate failure in schools, because in tolerating school failure we tolerate
unequal opportunity for some students in this society....
Let me ask you another political question. We've been in Texas. In
Texas, Governor Bush backed standards, accountability. He opposed vouchers. A
lot of proponents of vouchers in Texas are upset with him. And there's a
privately funded voucher program because one could not be passed by the state
legislature in Texas. What's the difference on a national level between Bush
and Gore when it comes to education?...
We shouldn't end with Texas but we should at least start there. And Governor
Bush on educational reform in Texas reminds me of the rooster taking credit for
the sunrise. In fact, Governor Bush has done little more than continue the
programs of his predecessors. Interestingly, a survey of Texas Republicans,
taken just a few weeks ago, indicated that more than 40% of Texas Republicans
questioned Governor Bush's credentials as an education reformer. So the idea
that Governor Bush is some sort of path-breaking leader in educational reform
is not one that will survive inspection. Having said that, as one moves to the
national level, the principle questions that ordinary voters ought to be asking
themselves, in my judgment are these: 1) Who has a program to insure that
every student reaches first grade ready to learn? Vice President Gore has
proposed such a program and, to the best of my knowledge, Governor Bush has
done nothing of the sort. 2) Who has a plan to ensure that every student is in
a school building fit and safe for learning? Vice President Gore
has proposed such a program and, to the best of my knowledge, Governor Bush has
not. 3) Who has proposed a program to insure that there are quality teachers
in every classroom in this country and who has given not just rhetorical
support to that, but programmatic and fiscal support as well? Vice President
Gore has proposed a 21st century teachers' corps to get hundreds of
thousands of teachers into those schools and school districts that need them
the most. What's Governor Bush's plan?
At the other end, Vice President Gore has proposed a series of innovative
measures to insure that every young person can go off to college, that every
family can save for a college education, because increasingly in the
21st century economy, post-secondary education and training are the
key to opportunity and to success. That will be a major point of debate and
contention in the fall. So if voters are asking themselves those basic
questions about the basic building blocks of educational quality, then Vice
President Gore has nothing to fear from the comparison with Governor Bush.
There have been some slashing TV ads back and forth in Illinois, in the
primary coming up. The Bush education ads...[are] saying that the Title I money
that's being given to failing schools should be taken away from those schools
and given directly to parents to use as vouchers. What's wrong with that?
So what Governor Bush is unwilling to defend at the front door, and indeed
unwilling to defend as educational policy for his own state, he's now trying to
achieve through the back door at the national level. I wonder why? Everybody
agrees that the single largest federal program for poor kids and poor schools,
namely Title I of the Elementary Education Act, needs to be reformed in order
to make it more effective in reaching its goals.
The fundamental question is: what kind of reform? Vice President Gore
believes that the best way to make Title I more effective is to make schools in
poor areas more effective in doing their job for all students. And the Vice
President does not understand how that objective can be furthered by giving
some students the opportunity to remove money from the schools that are the
hardest pressed as things now stand. So reform of Title I? Yes. A back door
voucher program? No.
What do you think of charter schools? That's been something that's been
pushed by a lot of educational reformers, Republicans and Democrats. In his
State of the Union address again, President Clinton said that charter schools
should double to 3000. Republican rebuttal never mentioned charter schools,
which I thought was interesting that night.
Charter schools are one of the unsung success stories of public education
reform, not only at the state and local level but also at the federal level. If
memory serves me right, when President Clinton took office, the number of
charter schools in this country could be enumerated on the fingers of two
hands. Today, at last count, there were more than 1700. The Vice President is
strongly in favor of the most rapid possible expansion of charter schools,
consistent with basic regulatory and quality standards. He has called for a
major increase in federal support for states that are moving in that
direction...[Making] public school choices available to parents can create the
kinds of incentives for improvement throughout school districts that are needed
in order to catalyze change. So charter schools--absolutely--[should be] part
of our future.
School choice is a hot phrase for the politics of education these
days. When you talk to some people and they say school choice, what they mean
is privatization. What do you mean by school choice?
School choice means the use of public funds in order to provide the widest
possible range of effective choices among public schools for parents....In this
country, unlike some others, we do not compel students to attend public schools
if their parents don't wish them to attend public schools. So we believe,
constitutionally and culturally, in choice. The Vice President believes that
the best use of public resources and the most appropriate use of public
resources is to dramatically expand the range of choices available among public
schools. So that means more choice within districts. It can mean more choice
across district lines, a strategy that a number of states are now experimenting
with. One state, Minnesota, has done it comprehensively so that if you're a
parent with a school-aged child, [you can] in effect...send your child to any
school in the state.
Public school choice means a lot more charter schools. Public school choice
may well mean a movement away from the large mega-schools, that are
characteristic of a number of urban districts and some suburban districts, to a
larger number of much smaller schools, including schools that are focused on
more specialized subjects that lead down particular career tracks. There are
very, very exciting developments in public school choice going on across the
country and the Vice President, as part of his program for the revolutionary
reform of American education, is interested in backing as many [school choice
programs] as states and localities are willing to experiment with.
So, alternative schools, magnet schools, school experiments within the
public school system, charter schools, yes, but vouchers, no?
The widest possible range of experimentation in public schools, charters,
magnets, inter-district choice, a cross-district choice, specialized schools,
schools within schools, breaking up larger schools into smaller schools--to all
of those, yes, absolutely. To the use of public funds for non-public education,
the answer is no....
We are talking about education here--public education--but ultimately, given
what you've been saying [about] the disparities in education, we're really
talking about race and class in America, aren't we? If we're talking about this
new economy and people having to be highly skilled, highly trained, well
educated, deal with computers and so forth, then the danger is that you'll
leave a substantial portion of America behind unless schools in urban areas get
a whole lot better.
When anyone speaks of the distinction between the suburbs and the cities
in America, and the distinction between suburban school districts and urban
school districts, one is speaking to a significant extent about race and
ethnicity and class. If we do not close the gap between the two systems of
public education in America, the system that could and should be better, but
which is not failing its students, on the one hand, and the system that is
failing its students on the other, then we will be condemning our society to
the perpetuation of the distinctions and the inequalities across lines of race,
ethnicity, and class that we've been struggling to overcome in recent
generations.
I don't know of very many people at any point along the political spectrum who
want to look forward 10 or 20 years and see an America divided along lines of
race, ethnicity, and class. I think that all Americans of good will want to see
that those divisions narrow in the next generation. Public education reform
that brings all public schools up to a common standard of achievement and
expectation is one of the best ways of closing that gap that I can think of.
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