The Two Root Causes of America’s Education Crisis
Spoiler Alert: School Boards and School Administrators
The following is excerpted from my forthcoming book, tentatively titled Aspects of Expressive Writing: The International Lectures, and specifically from the new commentary I am writing for each of the eight lectures. This excerpt is from Lecture 4, “Psychoanalytic Criticism and the Creative Writer,” delivered remotely as the principal seminar lecture to the National University of Modern Languages in Islamabad, Pakistan, in 2024, hosted by the Department of English and arranged by Dr. Amina Ghazanfar.
This excerpt is being published simultaneously at Twelve Winters Miscellany.
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I retired from full-time teaching (high school) in 2021, and an unstated consensus remained that technology, in all its forms, made schools better, made students smarter—minus any evidence, and really for decades minus any serious effort to determine if it’s true. The tech industry sold this snake oil to society, and society gulped it down. I have already drifted far afield from the lecture’s topic, psychoanalytic criticism, but while I’m here I must drift a bit further. The sad state of affairs in the U.S. (with Trump and the GOP taking a wrecking-ball to the Constitution as well as common decency, meanwhile promoting the rise of every kind of vile hate one can imagine) leads many to point a finger at our education system. How could it have produced a citizenry that would be so easily duped by Fox News and nitwits like Joe Rogan and Tucker Carlson? How could it embrace a well-documented liar, conman, sexual predator, and all-around sleazebag like Donald Trump?
What can we do as a nation to improve our schools and prevent such miscarriages of democracy in the future?
Well, here’s something: Put teaching in the hands of teachers. No improvements in the effectiveness of education are going to take place unless some fundamental and systemic changes take place. The two biggest problems in education are school boards and administrators. Public schools are run omnipotently by a group of non-educators elected from the community. Sometimes they may be retired educators or educators not connected to the school, but almost always they are people who have no training and no experience in teaching. They may be well meaning, but oftentimes people run for school boards with specific agendas and axes to grind. To be clear, I’m not suggesting that all members of school boards have nefarious intentions. I am saying that it is ridiculous to put a group of people elected from the community in charge of schools when they have no qualifications whatsoever to make educationally sound decisions.
Educating children—especially nowadays—is one of the most complex and challenging professions someone can undertake. Yet well-trained and experienced educators have practically no agency when it comes to making decisions within their school. The board of untrained and inexperienced community members (car salesmen, bank managers, farmers, insurance agents, bar owners, handymen, homemakers, bakers, tinkers, tailors, and candlestick makers) have total control over every decision: whom to hire, whom to fire; what curriculum to approve, which textbooks to buy; what technology to purchase, how it should be implemented; how each penny should be allocated, which contractors should be hired for this or that project. Every decision ends up in the hands of these untrained school board members.
Well o.k., you say, but they’re not operating in the dark. They’re making decisions based on recommendations that are provided to them by the administration, i.e., the superintendent (perhaps assistant superintendents, of curriculum, of transportation, of facilities) and the building administrators (principal, vice principal, vocational director, athletic director, possibly special education director, et al.). True enough, but one might assume that the cream rises to the top, and the best-of-the-best teachers become administrators; therefore, the most qualified, most experienced educators assume the mantle of administration. Sometimes, of course, really gifted teachers become administrators, but based on my nearly four decades of experience this metamorphosis is the exception. For one thing, really gifted teachers are gifted with a love of teaching. They truly enjoy being with their students and facilitating and nurturing their skills and intellect. They have no desire to leave the classroom and with it the thrill of exercising a skillset they have mastered—a mastery that requires melding science and art and empathy. Just as Yoyo Ma has no desire to give up the cello, nor Spielberg filmmaking. A teacher who flourishes in the classroom will unlikely flourish in the role of administrator, a job of pandering to pushy parents, of milling paperwork (budgets, formal requests, mandated reports, assessment criteria, legislative updates), of disciplining unruly students, of kowtowing to higherups (especially those untrained school board members).
It’s true that sometimes, sometimes really talented teachers are lured from the classroom to the administrative office, mainly because the discrepancy in pay is so profound. Figures vary widely from state to state, and even within a state, like my home state of Illinois, the numbers can vary significantly, between, say, a well-heeled Chicago suburb and a small town in the sparsely populated southern part of the state. According to recent data, however, the average teacher salary is about $76,000 annually, while the average principal’s is at least double that, ranging from around $145,000 to $165,000. For assistant principal (usually a school’s chief disciplinarian) the average is around $127,000. Meanwhile, the top dog, the superintendent, pulls in between $142,000 and $250,000 (according to the Illinois Report Card, 2024-25).
Granted, school administrators are generally on an 11-month or full-year contract, whereas classroom teacher pay is based on a 9-month (180-day) contract. Yet the statement “Teachers have the summer off” is a fiction on its face. Teachers aren’t getting paid, but they’re still developing curriculum, taking courses, advancing in their degrees, increasing their content knowledge through reading and travel, making materials for their classrooms, attending conferences and professional assemblies, and myriad other teaching-related activities. They’re not getting paid, but they’re still being teachers, even in the allegedly lazy days of summer.
So, if really talented teachers, by and large, aren’t becoming administrators, who is? In the upper grades the clear majority is men, and often these men are former coaches. Hard data is difficult to come by, but it seems to be a universal phenomenon, the tendency for school administrators to come up through the coaching ranks, which also means they tend to hail from nonacademic fields of education—physical education of course, drivers education, vocational ed., perhaps business and accounting. There are several factors that likely contribute to the phenomenon. For one, the lower rungs of the administrative ladder are tailormade for coaching types. In larger school districts, “athletic director” is an administrative post; in really large districts one may have an “assistant superintendent of athletics” (alongside an assistant superintendent of finance, an assistant superintendent of transportation, an assistant superintendent of facilities, etc.).
In more modest-size school districts, the A.D. position is commonly combined with the job of a high school’s vice or assistant principal, who is the school’s chief disciplinarian (the dude who is supposed to intimidate unruly students back into line and physically break up fights when necessary). It makes sense, then, that you would hire a coach, who understands the intricacies of an athletic program (hiring coaches, ordering uniforms and equipment, organizing schedules, arranging transportation, building budgets, and so on—the responsibilities are many and intricate). Moreover, it makes sense that you would want your chief disciplinarian (the person scaring kids straight and breaking up fights) to be a big guy, maybe a former football or basketball player, turned football or basketball coach. Thus, a lot of coaches are ushered into the administrative ranks because they have the background and the physical presence for these lower-order positions.
But these athletic directors and vice principals almost always have their sights set on grander things, like becoming building principals and perhaps even, one day, superintendents. When there are openings, internally or at other school districts, these large men (hired mainly for their girth and their ability to move a blocking-sled several yards) now have experience as administrators, and so their applications move to the head of the line, placed before those other teachers with administrative credentials but no administrative experience (perhaps too small or too athletically inexperienced to have been hired as vice principals and A.D.s). Before long, many of those ex-coaches do become principals; meanwhile, they acquire their superintendency endorsement, and, lo and behold!, superintendent jobs become available, and the applicants with experience as building principals are those ex-coaches.
To be fair, these coach-types who achieve the upper echelons as school administrators may possess qualities that make them effective leaders. They have a tendency to exude confidence, which can be motivating for a staff of teachers. They may have top-flight organizational skills, and they may be very good with budgets and the many mundanities that are part and parcel of running a school or a whole district. Unfortunately their responsibilities encompass other things, in fact, essentially every other thing: curriculum development and delivery, purchasing priorities, teacher trainings, teacher hirings and firings, teacher evaluations, teacher contracts, as well as dealing with the public and with those seven noneducators who are, ultimately, in charge of everything, the school board, a.k.a. the board of education.
The common-coach-to-administrator path results in administrations that are quite adept at organizing and nurturing athletic programs but largely clueless when it comes to nurturing the academic side of the school equation. My experience has been that these ex-coaches aren’t especially critically minded when it comes to decision-making. Thus, they tend to take at face value much of the snake oil pitches lobbed their way, which leads to their forcing into the curriculum and the classroom methods and materials that are ineffective or actually counterproductive. And one can imagine how frustrating it is for the experts in charge of delivering instruction when they can see so clearly and so obviously why this or that method or material is wrongheaded in so many ways. Yet they are forced to employ them with their students. They are forced, in essence, to commit pedagogical malpractice, again and again and again.
There has been a well-documented mass exodus of teachers from the classroom. Learning Policy Institute published a report March 17, 2026, that said 7% to 8% of teachers in the U.S. leave the profession annually (i.e., approximately 600,000 teachers); and as many as half of new teachers quit within five years. There are myraid reasons why teachers—new, mid-career, and veteran—may walk out of the classroom never to return. People will cite low pay, which is true; people will cite exponentially mounting responsibilities, which is true; people will cite increasingly unmanageable children and parents, which is true; and people will cite lack of respect, which is true—and it is this last one that I believe is the main reason dedicated teachers give up on teaching. But it’s not society’s general disrespect, per se, a kind of external disrespect. Rather, it’s the internal disrespect, the disrespect within each teacher’s specific educational environment. No matter how much classroom experience a teacher acquires, no matter how much advanced education in their field and degrees they obtain, no matter how professionally they conduct themselves and their careers, their agency within the school system remains the impotent agency of a first-year teacher; that is, practically nil. They forever have to answer to those ex-coach administrators and those untrained school board members. They forever have to follow their asinine directives, enforce their dipshit policies, and embrace their farcical educational philosophies. Time and again, they are mandated to do things that run counter to their knowledge and experience—then, time and again, they are blamed for the failings of their students, for the failings of their school . . . and ultimately for the failings of their society.
Schoolteachers are routinely faced with the outright aggressive behavior of parents and students (and administrators at times), but almost daily their lack of professional agency is illustrated. Decisions are made and actions are taken by “superiors” who are not qualified to teach their subject matter, and who, eventually, have a fraction of their experience in the classroom (most administrators exit the classroom after only a few years of teaching). Here is one concrete illustration, from one of my last years of teaching high school. It was not part of my normal teaching schedule, but I was assigned a low-ability sophomore English class. Several of the students had Individualized Education Programs (I.E.P.s). I don’t recall the exact assignment (something based on one of our readings), but it was a writing assignment. The school was really into Chromebook labs, these rolling racks of laptops that could be moved from room to room, and they were connected to the school’s network for internet access, etc. My students spent a class period writing a draft of their paper on the Chromebooks; at the end I instructed them to print their drafts so that we could work on editing and revising them. Alas, the Chromebooks were not connected to the printer in the old-fangled stationary lab across the hall (a lab that was designated for use by others, which is why I had to request a mobile lab in the first place). A minor hiccup. I put in a tech request with our I.T. guys to work their magic and connect the Chromebook lab to the printer via the network, the sort of thing they did all the time, connecting this tech to that tech along the ever-expanding yet invisible tentacles of the network.
I would have my students print their drafts the next day. No problem. Writers and teachers of writing know that people are able to edit text more effectively when it’s on paper, much more effectively in fact. Study after study has demonstrated it. Reading on paper leads to deeper comprehension, while reading on the screen is more superficial, rendering errors and other issues more easily missed. And these were students who had some cognitive processing issues. I was trying to facilitate their success with this specific assignment, but I was also hoping to establish a pattern whereby they would always print their drafts for editing and revising.
Well, the building principal (a former business teacher and athletic coach) had to approve all tech requests (something I didn’t know), and he wouldn’t approve mine. He wouldn’t let the I.T. guys connect the Chromebook lab to the printer across the hall because “it was going backward” (they told me). So, this administrator, who wasn’t a writer, beyond writing emails and filling out bureaucratic forms, believed that editing a draft on paper was passé, and that all editing and revising should be done on the screen, even for struggling students. He didn’t even bother to consult with me before rejecting the request.
These are the kinds of microaggressions that schoolteachers have to deal with day in and day out. They spend years accumulating knowledge and experience, earning advanced degrees in their subject matter, and yet their expertise is ignored by the untrained, unqualified, inexperienced few at the top of the pedagogical pyramid.
The evaluation system for teachers is especially emblematic of this lack of agency and respect. In most school districts, teachers are evaluated throughout their careers as if they were nontenured newbies, and the process includes observations of the teacher in the act of teaching their students. Setting aside the artificiality of the whole enterprise due to the Hawthorne effect (i.e., the observer effect)—the artificiality and the likely inaccuracy—teachers eventually reach a point where the person doing the observing and assessing and judgment-passing is inappropriately unqualified to do so. Depending on the hierarchy of the school, which depends on its size and administrative complexity, various people will be involved in the evaluating and observing of classroom teachers. For simplicity’s sake, let’s think of the building principal as the evaluator (which is common). It’s reasonable that they observe, offer advice, and assign some level of proficiency to newer, less experienced teachers (generally nontenured teachers). Meanwhile, though, if the teacher continues in the profession, they accumulate more and more experience, and more and more expertise in their field (by taking subject-matter courses, acquiring advanced degrees, attending conferences, presenting at conferences, perhaps writing and publishing in their field . . . not to mention the expertise that comes with having taught a subject for a number of years).
All of which leads to the situation where a principal is responsible for evaluating someone who is more experienced and more qualified than they are. In a junior high or high school setting the subject areas are quite diverse (English, math, biology, chemistry, history, business, health, et al.), and yet the principal was probably only certified to teach in one of those areas (health, let’s say); and because they became an administrator early in their career (became an athletic director or vice principal), they had only a few years as a classroom teacher. Therefore, a former health teacher, with less than a decade of classroom experience, is in the elevated position of observing, assessing and passing judgment on a teacher with twenty or thirty years of classroom experience and a master’s or even a Ph.D. in their subject area (English or calculus or chemistry).
Clear-headed administrators will realize they have nothing of value to offer the highly qualified classroom teacher, so the process becomes a rubber-stamping formality that must be ritualistically performed every other year. Unfortunately there are wrongheaded, egotistical and axe-grinding administrators who freely offer advice on the teaching of a subject they themselves are neither qualified nor certified to teach. They will nitpick for any rationale to give a lower-order evaluation to a teacher they don’t like on a personal level, or just because they don’t want to be seen as a pushover who gives “excellent” marks to everyone. Some people (educational consultants, school board members) believe that there should be a spread of evaluation marks, statistically. That is, not all teachers can be excellent; some, surely, must be satisfactory, and some, surely, must be unsatisfactory.
Yes, of course, some educators excel more so than others, but they may all be excellent in their field.
Let me use a sports metaphor; golf, say. Yes, one golfer wins the Masters, others get second place or third place, top 10, top 25, etc.; and yes, some golfers miss the cut after 36 holes and leave Augusta National early. But every golfer who qualified to play in the Masters in the first place is excellent at golf. You wouldn’t say the players who finished in the top 10 are excellent, and the rest of the field who made the cut are satisfactory at golf, and the half of the field that missed the cut are unsatisfactory at golf. Therefore, it’s more than reasonable—it’s expected—that every teacher who accumulates years of classroom experience and works at advancing in their subject expertise is excellent at teaching. Some may win the Masters, some may miss the cut after 36 holes—but they’re all excellent at teaching. Why, then, would you give them less-than-excellent ratings just to satisfy some unqualified person’s misguided notions about the evaluation process and the way data ought to align on a graph?
I’ve gone much further afield here than intended, but I so frequently here experts weigh in regarding the education crisis and the exodus of teachers from the classroom, and not once have I heard one even mention the root cause of both issues: the wrong people are in charge of the system. Majority-elected noneducators wield all the power, based on the advice of the least-experienced, least-qualified “educators” who wear the mantle of “administrator” and reside at the top of the hierarchy. To fix education—and produce a citizenry that can tell valid information from villainous propaganda—schoolteachers must be put in charge of schools; and the most-qualified, highest-achieving among them should ascend to positions of authority in each school setting. A system that does that—lets the best and brightest rise to the top (instead of the largest and loudest)—could assume any number of forms, but it’s vital that the administrative educators (who perform the equivalent functions of “principal,” “vice principal,” and so on) must continue to teach part of the time. The world changes so rapidly, technology changes so rapidly, kids change so rapidly—educators who leave the classroom rapidly become out-of-touch with the types of students they’re tasked with teaching.
As things stand now, an administrator who hasn’t taught in a decade may as well have taught Depression-era tykes who walked to school after milking Bessie and giving a ladle of unpasteurized milk to each of their little brothers and sisters, raggedly dressed in homespun hand-me-downs. In 2026, the students of 2016 were a different breed of cat altogether. Imagine how clueless the principal or superintendent is who hasn’t taught in twenty or thirty years. Yet they are the ones making the recommendations to the board of the even-more-clueless whose yea or nay controls everything. Madness.
It’s no wonder that nearly a quarter of the U.S. population is functionally illiterate, and half read below a sixth-grade level— making them easy prey for propagandists and unprincipled politicians. And making the rest of us the victims of their ignorance and barely-breathing critical-thinking skills.
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Ted Morrissey is the publisher of Twelve Winters Press and its various entities, including Twelve Winters Journal, Twelve Winters Miscellany, and the podcast A Lesson before Writing, which he co-hosts with Brady Harrison and Grant Tracey. His most recent book is Aspiring Child: A Biography of Mary W. Shelley in Sonnets. He is on Instagram, Bluesky, TikTok, YouTube, and elsewhere.
An Open Letter to the 30%
As a schoolteacher my number-one priority is my students’ safety. An English and speech teacher, I’m charged with improving their reading, writing, speaking, listening and thinking skills, but, by mandate, curricular objectives are secondary to assuring my students’ physical and emotional well-being. To that end, I appeal to the 30 percent of parents in my district who appear open to reason and rationality: Keep your children home. Allow them to be remote learners for their safety and the safety of your family.
The Illinois Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics analyzed the school district’s “Return to Learning” plans and found them “insufficient.” In other words, the schools are not safe. The Academy’s final recommendation: “We recommend schools not open, unless the recommended modifications/clarifications are made to protect the health and safety of students and staff.” (see the report)
The Academy, which analyzed the plans at the request of the Illinois Education Association and our local association, identified five areas of concern: 1) the classrooms are overcrowded and cannot establish the three feet or six feet of social distancing recommended, depending on the age of the students; 2) students move from class to class in the upper grades, which makes keeping areas sanitized next to impossible; 3) the hallways and stairwells are overcrowded and cannot establish proper social distancing during passing periods, regardless of traffic flow; 4) during lunch, an extended time when masks cannot be worn, students are crowded into spaces that are too small and unventilated; and 5) bathroom hygiene is questionable.
If the schools could rectify these problems, then they could be deemed safe by the Academy, but they cannot. In spite of everyone’s best efforts — from administrators to teachers to aides to custodians to cooks to bus drivers and to the students themselves (who have been amazingly cooperative) — the physical reality of the buildings and the way human beings function cannot be overcome. Making the schools safe from Covid-19 infection is literally impossible.
We have been operating in a hybrid model that splits the student body into two groups who have been attending two days a week (Mondays are non-attendance days devoted to remote learning and planning). The hybrid model was not safe, according to the Academy’s standards, but it came closer to being acceptable. During the first quarter, we had Covid-positive students and staff, and many people had to quarantine or isolate.
According to surveys, the relative success of the hybrid model was irrelevant to about 70% of parents in the district, and they wanted to see the schools go to full attendance. The Board of Education acquiesced to the majority, even though Covid numbers are on the rise in the country, in the state, in the county, in the community, and in the school buildings. Thus far, no amount of data or logic or appeal to compassion has been able to move the Board off their decision to start full attendance beginning next week.
It is a surreal situation for those of us who are trapped. In recognition of the schools’ dangerousness, students have been allowed to opt for full remote from the start of the year. At first it was a small percentage (about 10 percent at the high school), but it grew throughout the first nine weeks; and since the Board’s decision to move to full attendance, there has been a spike in students moving to full-remote status, especially among older students.
Moreover, teachers who have special medical situations — confirmed by a doctor — are being allowed to teach remotely now that we are transitioning to full attendance. I’m thankful that some teachers are allowed that option. However, for the rest of us — those who cannot establish a medical necessity for teaching remotely — we have no choice. We must teach in buildings that the American Academy of Pediatrics deems unsafe, and the Board, too, must understand on some level are unsafe: otherwise, why would they allow students and some staff to opt out of attendance?
This letter is addressed to the 30 percent of parents who seem open to logic and rationality based on scientific data. The other 70 percent — who, I would wager, are getting their information from faulty sources — are beyond being reached at this point.
For the sake of your children’s safety and the safety of your families, do not send them into unsafe school buildings. My colleagues and I will continue to do our best to make their remote-learning experiences beneficial. It can never be the same as in-person learning, but at the same time in-person learning during a deadly pandemic is not the school situation we’re all used to either.
I know remote learning is challenging for many students and parents — perhaps traumatic for some. I get it, and I sympathize. But the difficulties have no bearing on whether or not schools are safe. They are not. We must deal with the problems associated with remote learning — no question — but the solution is not to send children into dangerous spaces.
Again, I write and post this because I am mandated by law to safeguard the health and safety of the children in my charge. At this time, in-person learning is inherently dangerous, and I would be shirking my responsibility as an educator (and, frankly, as a human being) to turn a blind-eye to the reality of the situation.
The photo is not from my school. It is from this site: https://www.kunr.org/post/special-education-faces-additional-challenges-person-learning-during-covid-19#stream/0
Principals unwitting soldiers in Campbell Brown’s army
(This is a long post — and for that, my apologies. But it’s important, and I encourage you to take your time and read it thoroughly.)
Because of my interest in the subject (as demonstrated in my blog posts over the past few months), I was invited to participate in a video roundtable via Skype with administrators from several schools about implementing the Danielson Framework for Teacher Evaluation, and I found many of the comments, well, bewildering. Even though it was a select group, I strongly suspect that their attitudes and approaches are representative of not only administrators in Illinois, but across the country — as the Danielson Framework has been adopted by numerous states. Before I go any further I must stress that these are all good people who are trying to do their job as they understand it from the State Board of Education, their own local school boards and the public at large. Around the video table were a superintendent of a k-12 district, building principals of elementary, middle, junior high and high schools, and even a k-12 curriculum director, along with three teachers — elementary, junior high and high school (yours truly). I’m going to try to represent their words accurately, but without attribution since their comments were not on the record. In fact, as the two-hour video chat became more heated, several people were speaking with a good deal of candor, and clearly their remarks were not intended for all ears. (By the way, kudos to the tech folks who brought us all together — it worked far better than I would have suspected.)
I considered not writing about the video conference at all, but ultimately felt that I owe it to the profession that I’ve devoted my adult life to (as I enter my 31st year in the classroom), a profession that has been beleaguered in recent years by powerful forces on every side: attacking teachers’ integrity, our skills, our associations, our job security, our pensions. We feel we have so many enemies, we don’t even know where to focus our attention.
What is more, most teachers are afraid to speak candidly with their own administrators and they’re especially afraid to speak out about what’s going on in their buildings. In spite of education reformers blanketing the media with the myth of “powerful teachers unions,” the truth is that associations like the National Education Association and American Federation of Teachers aren’t all that powerful — if they were, would teachers be in the plight we are now? — and individual teachers are very vulnerable. Nontenured teachers can be terminated without cause, and tenured teachers can be legally harassed right out of the profession. In fact, it happens all the time. Moreover, teachers tend to be naturally non-confrontational, which is why they chose to go into teaching in the first place. People with more aggressive personalities will seek other kinds of professions. As a result, we’ve been lambs to slaughter at the hands of reformers, legislators, school board members, administrators … at the hands of anyone who wants to take a whack at us. Rather than fight back, it’s easier to keep quiet and bear it, or to move on.
I’ve been writing about educational issues for the past several months — the unfair termination of young teachers, the inherent flaws of the Danielson Framework, the way the Framework affects teachers, and my issues with PARCC and the Common Core. My posts have been garnering hundreds of hits, and a few online likes, but many, many private, under-the-radar thumbs-ups and thank-yous. Teachers appreciate that someone is speaking out, but they’re not only afraid to speak out themselves, they’re even afraid to be seen agreeing with my point of view. If this isn’t evidence of the precariousness of being a teacher and the overall weakness of “teachers unions,” I don’t know what is.
Public Opinion and the Rarefied Air of Excellence
Much of the round-table discussion had to do with the Framework’s insistence that very, very few teachers rank in the top category (identified as “Excellent” in many districts’ plans). Before Danielson, districts tended to have three-tier evaluation instruments, which were often labeled as “Excellent,” “Satisfactory” and “Unsatisfactory.” Danielson adds a tier between “Excellent” and “Satisfactory”: “Proficient.” Many veteran teachers who had consistently received an excellent rating under the previous model were downgraded to merely proficient under Danielson. This downgrading was predicted as early as two years ago when the new instrument emerged on the educational horizon. I didn’t want to believe it would be that severe, but it has been this past year, the year of implementation, with very few teachers being rated as excellent. For the record, I was rated as proficient — not as excellent for the first time since I was a nontenured teacher, more than 25 years ago.
In fact, as I wrote in a previous post, the Illinois Administrators Academy offered a special workshop this past summer to train administrators how to deliver the unpleasant news that a veteran teacher has been downgraded to proficient — the downgrading was so pervasive across the state. The Framework was originally developed by Charlotte Danielson in 1996 as a way to evaluate first-year teachers, so it made perfect sense that a single-digit percentage would be deemed as excellent. The Framework has undergone three revisions since then and now purports to be an instrument that can assess every teacher, K-12, every subject, and even nonclassroom professionals like librarians and school nurses. Nevertheless, the notion that very, very few teachers will rate as excellent has clung tenaciously to the Framework throughout each revision.
I asked the administrators why that aspect of the Framework remains even though the Framework’s purpose has been expanded dramatically since it was conceived in the mid-1990s. I was told by the k-12 superintendent that the Framework has gained such wide acceptance in large part due to that very aspect. Under previous evaluation instruments, 90% of teachers were judged to be excellent, and the public doesn’t accept that as true. In fact, the public believes (and therefore school boards, too, since they, like the public at large, are almost always noneducators with no classroom experience) that the traditional bell curve should apply to teachers. The bell curve, or Gaussian function, is of course the statistical representation that says the fewest examples of anything, qualitatively speaking, are at either extreme of the gathered samples, and the vast majority (let’s say 80%) fall somewhere in the middle, from below average to above average.
According to the superintendent, then, the public believes that the bell curve should apply to experienced, career teachers as well — that only a small percentage are truly excellent, and the vast majority fall somewhere in the middle (to use Danielson terms, in the satisfactory to proficient range). First of all, who cares what the uninformed public thinks? In our country we have a fascination with asking pedestrians on the street what they think of global warming, heightened military involvement in the Middle East, and allowing Ebola victims to enter the country. John Oliver of “Last Week Tonight” did a segment on this phenomenon that went viral on social media:
Assuming this is true — that the public believes only a small percentage of teachers are excellent based, unconsciously, on the principle of the bell curve (and I’m willing to believe that it is true) — the belief yet again speaks to the ignorance of the “man on the street.” In this instance, the bell curve is being fallaciously applied. If you take a random sampling of people (let’s say, you go to the mall at Christmas time and throw a net around a random group of shoppers) and task them with teaching some random topic to a random group of students, then, yes, the bell curve is likely to be on target. In that group of shoppers, lo and behold, you netted a couple of professional teachers, so they’re able to teach the material pretty effectively; another much larger group of shoppers who are decently educated and reasonably articulate could do a passable job imparting the information; and a smaller group on the other extreme would really make a botch of it.
But career teachers are not a random sampling of shoppers at the mall. They’re highly educated professionals who have devoted their lives to teaching, who have constantly worked to improve their craft, and who have honed their skills via thousands of contact hours with students. It stands to reason, in fact, that career teachers should be excellent at what they do after all that training and experience. No one, I suspect, would have an issue with the statement that all Major League baseball players are excellent at baseball — some may be bound for Cooperstown and some may go back to the minors or to some other career altogether after a season or two, but they’re all really, really good at playing baseball compared to the average person. Why is it so hard to believe that 90% of career teachers are excellent at what they do?
The Fallacy of the Bell Curve and Nontenured Teachers
Unfortunately, the acceptance of the bell-curve fallacy has an even more devastating impact when applied to teachers in the beginning of their careers. One administrator shared that her board expects a few nontenured teachers to be terminated every spring, that the board implies the administrators aren’t doing their jobs if every nontenured teacher is retained. I was dumbfounded by this statement. It’s barely a figurative comparison to say that it’s like having to sacrifice a virgin or two to appease the gods at the vernal equinox. It’s no wonder that many young teachers feel as if they’re performing their highly complex duties with a Damoclesian Sword poised above their tender necks. I know firsthand one young teacher who resigned last spring after two years in the classroom to pursue another career option because she’d seen the way other young teachers were treated and had already experienced some administrative harassment. And this was a teacher who by all accounts was doing well in the classroom (in a specialized area in which there aren’t a lot of qualified candidates). She didn’t even know what she wanted to do for a living, but it will have to be better (and professionally safer) than teaching, she believed. I have to believe she’s right.
But, again, in the case of young teachers, the bell curve is being applied erroneously. Generally speaking, when teachers are hired, administrators are drawing from an applicant pool in the hundreds. They’re college educated, trained in their field, and they’ve passed their professional exams. They often have to go through multiple rounds of interviewing before being offered a position. Of course, even after all of this, there can be young teachers who have chosen their profession poorly and in fact they’re not cut out for teaching — but school board members shouldn’t just assume a certain number should be cut from the herd to make room for potentially more effective young professionals — and if that sort of pressure is being applied to administrators, to be the bearers of the bloody hatchet every spring, that is grossly unfair, too.
The Danielson Group’s Indoctrination
The evaluation training that administrators have to undergo, all forty hours of it, indoctrinates them to the Danielson Framework’s ethos that excellent is all but attainable, and it has led to all kinds of leaping logic and gymnastic semantics. An idea that was expressed multiple times in various ways during the roundtable was that proficient really means excellent, and a rating of excellent really means something beyond excellent — what precisely is unclear, but it has to do with teachers going above and beyond (above what? beyond where? … no one seems to know or be able to articulate). The Framework was often referred to as “fact-based” and “objective,” yet administrator after administrator couldn’t put into words what distinguishes a “proficient” teacher from an “excellent” one. It’s just a certain feeling — which is the very definition of subjectivity. The Framework for Teacher Evaluation approach is fact-laden, but it is far from fact-based.
The Danielson model is supposed to be an improvement over previous ones in part because it requires evaluators to observe teachers more than in the past. In the old system, typically, tenured teachers were observed one class period every other year. Now they’re observed one class period plus several pop-in visits, which may last only a few minutes, every other year. The Framework recommends numerous visits, even for veteran teachers, but in practicality evaluators are doing well to pop in a half dozen times or so because they have so many teachers to evaluate. Nevertheless, the increased frequency seems to give administrators the sense that they have a secure hold on the behaviors of their teachers and know with confidence what they’re doing in their classes. This confidence, frankly, is troubling. Let’s be generous and say that a principal can observe a teacher for a total of three class periods (one full period, plus bits of four or five other ones). Meanwhile, the typical teacher teaches, say, six periods per day for 180 days, which equals 1,080 periods. Three class periods represent less than one percent (0.3 percent, rounding up) of that teacher’s time with students during the year. How in the world can an evaluator say with confidence Teacher A is excellent and Teacher B is really close, but definitely only proficient based on seeing them teach less than one percent of the time?
Yet one principal said with confidence, bravado even, that he could observe two high-performing teachers who had always been rated as excellent in the past, and based on his Danielson-style observations he could differentiate between the excellent high-performing teacher and the proficient high-performing teacher, because, he said, the excellent teacher was doing something consistently, whereas the proficient teacher was doing that something only some of the time — what that something is was left undefined. If a writer submitted an academic article to a peer-reviewed journal and was drawing rock-solid conclusions based on observing anything .03% of the time … well, let us say that acceptance for publication would be unlikely.
The same standards of logic should be applied to judging teachers’ careers and assessing their worth to the profession. Period.
The Portfolio Conundrum
The confident administrator may point to another component of the Danielson model that is supposed to be an improvement over the previous approach: a portfolio prepared by the teacher. Teachers are supposed to provide their evaluator with evidence regarding their training and professionalism (especially for Danielson domains 1 and 4, “Planning and Preparation” and “Professional Responsibilities”), but there are some inherent problems with this approach and a lot of confusion. As far as confusion, principals seem to be in disagreement about how much material teachers should provide them. Some suggest only a few representative items, but the whole idea is for the portfolio to fill in the blanks for the evaluator, to make the evaluator aware of professional behaviors and activities that he or she can’t observe in the classroom (especially when they’re observing a teacher less than one percent of their time with students!). However, if teachers hand in thick portfolios, filled with evidence, the overburdened principal (and I’m not being sarcastic here), the overburdened principal hardly has time to pore through dozens of portfolios that look like they were prepared by James Michener (I debated between Michener and Tolstoy) — which leaves teachers in a conundrum: Do they turn in a modest amount of evidence, thereby selling themselves short, or do they submit copious amounts of evidence that won’t be read and considered by their evaluator anyway?
And it’s a moot question, of course, since nearly all teachers are going to be lumped into the proficient category to satisfy the public’s erroneous bell-curve expectations.
The Undervaluing of Content
I’ll add one bit more from the conversation because it leads to another important point — perhaps the most important — and that is one principal’s statement that he mainly focuses on a teacher’s delivery of the material and not the validity of the content because he usually doesn’t have the background in the subject area. In larger school districts, there may be department chairs who are at least in part responsible for evaluating teachers in their department (so an English teacher evaluates an English teacher, or a math teacher, a math teacher, etc.), but the vast majority of evaluations, for tenured and nontenured teachers alike, are performed by administrators outside of the content area. This, frankly, has always been a problem and largely invalidates the entire teacher evaluation system, but when the system was mainly benign, no one fussed too much about it (not even me). Now, however, when tenure and seniority laws have been weakened, and principals are programmed to be niggardly with excellent ratings, the fact that evaluators oftentimes have no idea if the teacher is dispensing valid knowledge or not undermines the whole approach.
Not to mention, the Danielson Framework claims to place about fifty percent of a teacher’s effectiveness on his or her knowledge of the subject. The portfolios are supposed to help with this dilemma (the portfolios that aren’t being read with any sort of care because of time issues). I’m dubious, though, that this is a legitimate concern of the framers of the Danielson Framework because they definitely privilege an approach to teaching that places the burden of knowledge production with the students. That is, ideally teachers are facilitating their students’ acquisition of knowledge through self-discovery, but they’re not imparting that knowledge to them directly. Indeed, excellent teachers do very little direct teaching at all.
This devaluation of content-area knowledge has been a growing trend for several years, and it’s not surprising that administrators are easily swayed toward this mindset. After all, teachers who go into administration have made the choice to pursue knowledge not in their subject-area field. Very, very few administrators have a masters degree in their original content area in addition to their administrative degrees and certificates. In theory, they may accept the idea that broader and deeper knowledge in your subject area is important, but they can’t truly understand just how valuable (even invaluable) it is since they didn’t teach as someone with an advanced degree in their field. They’re only human after all, and none of us can truly relate to an experience we haven’t had ourselves.
Campbell Brown and Her Unwitting Campbell Brown-shirts
We didn’t talk about this during the video round-table, but it seems clear to me that none of the administrators had any sense of the role they’re playing in the larger scheme of things. The players are too numerous and the campaign too complex to get into here in any depth, but there’s unquestionably a movement afoot to privatize education — that is, to take education out of the hands of trained professionals and put it in the hands of underpaid managers so that corporations can reap obscene profits, and turn traditional public schools into barely funded welfare institutions. The well-to-do will be able to send their sons and daughters to these corporate-backed charter schools, and middle-class parents can dig their infinite hole of financial debt even deeper in an effort to keep up and send their children to the private, corporate schools as well.
Campbell Brown and the Partnership for Educational Justice were behind the lawsuit that made teacher tenure unconstitutional in California (the Vergara decision), and they’re at it again in New York (Wright v. New York). The Danielson Framework, wielded by brainwashed administrators, is laying the groundwork for Vergara-like lawsuits across the land. Imagine how much easier it will be for Brown and partners in “reform” like David Boles to make the case that public schools are failing because, see, only a handful of teachers are performing at the top of their field. The rest, 90-something percent, are varying shades of mediocre, with powerful teachers unions shielding their mediocrity from public view.
Superintendents and principals have drunk the Campbell Brown-colored Kool-Aid. In this instance the metaphor is especially apropos because there are already movements underway to dismiss traditionally trained administrators as underqualified. In Illinois, the State Board of Education is changing from certificates to licenses and in the process requiring additional training to become an administrator. It is a recent change, but already there are insinuations that administrators who received the traditional training are going to be underqualified compared to their newly licensed colleagues.
Moreover, what does it say about a principal as recruiter of young talent when a significant number of his new hires have to be terminated year after year? What a waste of money and resources, and what a disservice to children! And what does it say about a principal as educational leader of his building when he can’t even shape the majority of his veteran teachers into excellent practitioners? Clearly, he’s not especially excellent either. And all those well-paid superintendents who hired all those lackluster principals, well … And all those publicly elected boards of education who hired all those lackluster superintendents, well … the gross mismanagement of taxpayer dollars is bordering on criminal fraud.
As I see it, the Partnership for Educational Justice’s grand scheme is to have principals help them dismantle professional associations like the NEA and AFT via their use of the Danielson Framework, state by state. Then they’ll systematically replace public schools with corporate-backed charter schools which will be staffed by undertrained, low-paid “teachers,” and instead of principals, each school/franchise will be overseen by a manager — just as it works in the corporate world now. Instead of boards of education who answer to taxpayers there will be boards of directors who answer to shareholders. Brilliant.
So every time principals sign an evaluation that undervalues their teachers, they’re also signing their own resignation letter. It’s all right: they’ll look quite fetching in their Brown-shirts as they wait in the unemployment line.


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