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The Reforms Rhee Leaves Behind

Michelle Rhee’s tenure as D.C. Schools Chancellor ends Monday. In Saturday’s Wall Street Journal, she and Mayor Adrian Fenty published an “Education Manifesto” summarizing their reform legacy and the breakthrough they hope it represents for other troubled school systems.

Their rallying cry: Education policy should serve the needs of children, not the demands of adults.

That conviction brought Rhee into direct conflict with the Washington Teachers’ Union as she sought to revive one of the worst school districts in the nation. Despite spending $18,000 annually per pupil, D.C. public schools have some of the lowest test scores in the nation, fewer than 50 percent of students graduate on time, and almost one in eight students have been threatened with a weapon.

Rhee focused particularly on union demands, such as tenure, that compete with students’ interests. In 2008, she brought a bold new proposal to the bargaining table during the district’s teacher contract renegotiation. It offered teachers significant pay raises if they would forego tenure and agree to compensation based on their performance.

“At first, union leadership was dead-set against it and simply refused to allow their members to vote,” write Rhee and Fenty. The clash lasted more than two years. But when teachers eventually did get a say, they voted overwhelmingly for a new contract.

Rhee and Fenty describe the contract’s key provisions as a model for other cities to put students first:

While D.C. public education has a long way to go (which is one reason students need private school choice now), Rhee’s contract reform has set the right course.

Moreover, during Rhee’s four-year tenure, D.C. gets the “Most Improved” award:

The improved achievement of our secondary students was unprecedented in D.C.’s history and unparalleled anywhere in the country, with an uptick of 14 points in reading and 17 points in math in three short years. SAT scores of District students are also rising: up 27 points this year, on average, with a 40-point jump for African-American students and a 54-point jump for male students.

D.C. students have benefited from a tough-minded reformer. Now other struggling districts need similar leaders who will tackle the bureaucratic bloat and look beyond spending increases for real solutions to educational stagnation.

Since the 1960s, per-pupil federal education expenditures have more than tripled (adjusting for inflation). Non-teaching staff has increased 83 percent since 1970, while the student population has grown only 7 percent. Meanwhile, student achievement has languished and the graduation rate has hovered around 75 percent.

Resources aren’t lacking. The problem is getting money to the classroom level and to hard-working teachers who can make a real difference for individual students. Leaders who can stand up to the unions and cut through the red tape to accomplish this, like Rhee, will make a lasting difference for American education.

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