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Wednesday, February 9, 2011

The TALENT Gap..

I've been silent over the last few weeks, waiting patiently for all the grandstanding and major network blogging and hoopla to die down regarding the drama and change (or lack thereof) in the educational landscape, so that I can could have the ammunition and the persepctive to identify the most urgent issue in public education...the TALENT GAP.

The past few weeks have put educational issues in the national spotlight yet again, but like the group-think, mob-mentality style people that we are, we have been sucked into a debate about American educational standards, child-rearing (see: Tiger Mom fiasco), and educational funding that still does not include the critical factors of student and teacher success.

There a few things we KNOW about public education:

1. The system is archaic and in need of major re-invention.

2. The system works for SOME PEOPLE.

3. The quality of a child's teacher is the SINGLE MOST IMPORTANT FACTOR in their educational success.

4. Our inability to support high-quality teaching in many of our schools is driven not by too few teachers coming in,but by too many going out, that is, by a staggering teacher turnover and attrition rate.

We need to balance our efforts to prepare high quality teachers with strong strategies to support good teaching in our schools. So, why can't we do this? What is it that is really holding America back? Well, the answer is nothing!

If we wanted to address the very solvable issue of educational inequity we could do so in four years. We could drive reform using the established educational reform strategies of the great Ron Edmonds and his associate Larry Lezotte or we could take the re-worded versions of Ron Edmond's work from the likes of Dr. Roland Fryer or the much heralded charter school kings (Feinberg, Barbic, Canada, etc.). The evidence exists, we know what to do to provide all kids a through and efficient education. We simply do not have the desire.

I once attended a lecture by Michelle Rhee, where she said, she had met with Billionaire Warren Buffett to discuss the challenges she was having with managing human capital and community support while she was Chancellor of D.C. Public Schools. In this meeting, she explained, that Mr. Buffet said, " If we really want to fix public education, outlaw private schools, and assign every student in this country to a public school by random lottery. You'd see the fastest re-distribution of resources in the history of the world!" Mr. Buffet's sentiments while somewhat humorous, ring with a sad truth. The redistribution of resources he refers to is in the levels of community support and involvement but also in the quality of the teachers and leaders in the buildings!

It is no secret that new teachers in low-income schools often have higher turnover, larger classes, and generally pathetic instructional support. It's also true that these teachers often have lower levels of instructional/pedagocial understanding (Sorry TFA, but it's true, says a proud TFA Alum!) and in many cities serve under leadership teams that would be run-out of schools in more affluent communities. Fixing the system will require extensive policy and practicioner reforms, but schools MUST ADDRESS THE TALENT GAP.

If you poll any of the highest performing charter school districts in America and ask their human resources directors for their staff profiles, you will find a gold mine of top tier talent! Your typical candidate would average an undergraduate G.P.A. of 3.8, have served in a series of leadership postions in college, and a come from a wide swath of college majors. You would find people who would have any law, business, or public policy school recruiter salivating just looking at them! But more importantly, you would find like-minded, mission-driven, people who come together and make innumerable sacrifices for the benefit of their students.

You would find rigorously evaluated and meticulously selected leadership teams. People selected not because of who they know and how they look, but on what they've done and what they can do! You'd find structured and organized support for teaching and learning coupled with high expecations for students and staff. These things aren't pie in the sky dreams....they should be the norm for every school in this country!

As states struggle to identify ways to address the challenges created by a struggling economy they will inevitably turn to public education as a quick fix to monetary issues (because education is expensive!). States will moronically cut schoool district budgets by millions forcing school district to take drastic actions regarding teacher layoffs and potential school closings. I say moronically, because this will produce an environment that will further the cause of entrenched interests and force districts to "release talent" regardless of the their efficacy! 

If I were Superintendent, and layoffs were necessary, guess who would be out the door? The least effectiive teachers, administrators, and district personnel. Oops, that would require a district to have a fair and accurate appraisal and human talent retention system, which sadly, most do not.  I applaud HISD for its work in this area and its new teacher appraisal system will be a game-changer in the teacher quality debate, but its just one-step in multi-tiered battle for top talent. Next, districts must address the challenge of creating meaningful, objective, evidence-based pathways to leadership for aspiring leaders. Otherwise, potential leaders and teachers will continue to do what all talented, resourced, and non-foolishness tolerating people do -- chuck up the deuces!

- But hey, I'm just talking out loud...



Sunday, January 23, 2011

Married by 30...

Today, I'm gonna address an amazingly common but ridiculous issue in American young professional culture, the idea that you MUST be married by 30. I believe that this concept may be developing into a worldwide epidemic! Every year thousands of women (and a rapidly increasing number of men) ruin perfectly good birthday parties, class reunions, and after work happy hours with their pining about the need to find marriage (read: love) by the big 3-0. Come on, you know them too. The "we ain't getting any younger" type. The one friend who constantly talks of what married life would be like and obsesses over it, despite the fact that it makes other people around the table uncomfortable. The folks who talk about life like a series of carefully calculated steps. Like marriage is the prize at the end of the game. One you win with good behavior, patience, and militaristic planning.

Come on, be honest, you know the ones. They have a checklist. Go to college. Check. Graduate from college. Check. "Have fun" for most of my early twenties. Check. Try to erase the myriad of mistakes that I made in my early twenties. Check. Have a young adult life crisis (circa 26 - 29). Check. Proceed to put all my expendable energy into trying to get married by 30. Incomplete. I mean, this issue may be one of the most serious cultural issues facing modern America.

So okay, let's address the skeptics first. Let it be known, this is not a argument against the institution of marriage. This is not an attack on the concept of marriage as an expression of love. It is not a diatribe of someone who fears marriage or who doesn't believe in love. Let me tell you. I believe in love. I am a stupid, over the top, fall in head first romantic who can't wait to spend the rest of his life with the woman he loves. I know what a good marriage looks like and my faith teaches me that it is a sacred institution to be respected and honored. So skeptics, this is NOT ABOUT MARRIAGE. This is about two generations of society that are growing up and navigating the treacherous scene of ".com" era dating without the proper prospective about marriage. It's about someone finally having the courage to say what only people over 65 are willing to about marriage in modern America. It's about addressing the piss poor modeling, educating, and coaching that parents in generations X and Y have done that is resulting in the married by 30 epidemic.

Married by 30. I really don't know how we got to a point in society where you were abnormal if you weren't married by 30. I'm living in a generation that believes to our core that marriage by 30 and a house in the suburbs are the ultimate aims of life. Women and men alike cave to ridiculous amounts of socio-cultural pressure associated with being "married" and living the dream. Its hogwash. The fact is, anyone born after 1970 has matured in a society that continues to change and redefine what is considered normal and appropriate. The lack of genuine and widely understood global threats and unifying national hardships or ideals allows modern adults to grown and mature at a more leisurely pace. The are no drafts, no widely recognized civil rights movements (unfortunately), no global wars (remember Iraq and Afghanistan are armed conflicts), so there is no need for modern adult to mature quickly. No need for forced social change. No need for unnatural maturity in youth. In short, because the modern generations have it so good--they do marriage really bad!

But what do we do. We model our lives after our parents. Relics of a bygone era. We say, " Mom and Dad were married at 24 so I'm gonna do the same thing!". In our haste, youth, and ignorance we forget to acknowledge the different social contexts of the times and the role that they played in what marriage represented at the time and what it is today.

Ahh, I see. So by now you're probably making some opinions. You're saying, he doesn't know a thing. So, I got one stat for you...about 50% of all American marriages end in divorce (Americans for Divorce Reform). But wait, lets dig deeper. Let's examine the data distributed by age range. Why you ask? Well, because my argument is predicated on the belief that the "married by 30" epidemic contributes to the high divorce rate because they weren't ready to marry before 30!


                                  Age at marriage for those who divorce in America
                                     (Forest Institute of Professional Psychology)

AgeWomenMen
Under 20 years old27.6%11.7%
20 to 24 years old36.6%38.8%
25 to 29 years old16.4%22.3%
30 to 34 years old8.5%11.6%
35 to 39 years old5.1%6.5%



Sooooo..I could drag this analysis out, but I think its pretty clear that the divorce rate is much, MUCH, lower for those who marry after thirty. I believe this is because adults after 30 are more mature, career secure, competent, and ready for the trials and tribulations of marriage.  The data speaks for itself. As you can see marriage is under attack, but not by me! By the married by 30 crew! It's a national epidemic and we must begin to develop programs that explain to the general public that its okay to be single in your twenties. It's okay to chase your dreams in your youth. Its okay to work on making your self the best man or woman you can be so that you can be a better husband or wife in the future.

We have to tell our children that they must first seek their own whole, before they can be someone else's better half. Think about it. That's all I'm saying, but I'm just talking out loud. 

Saturday, January 22, 2011

First Words

I'm guessing I should have more anxiety about writing my first words. I mean, after all this is going on the internet for all to see! Wait, let me cut the bull, when people say its going on the internet for all to see, they really just mean their real friends, a few tech-savy family members, and a handful of "Facebook" friends. I mean seriously, how many of us truly think the people we are "cyber friends" with really care. Anyway, I digress. In all seriousness, I'm writing because I want to raise my voice. I want to take the time to chronicle life, the issues young professionals face, and bring an additional layer of attention to the greatest civil rights issue of our time - educational inequity. I plan to write a lot and sometimes it just won't make sense, but the goal is to create a body of work that is so captivating and inspiring in its depth that it eventually cost me my future in public office 10 years from now.

So, the name "Talking Out Loud", was stolen from an expression my dad and I use a lot. It just means that your saying what's on your mind, just to say it and people can take it either way they want. So, just know I'm gonna say some stuff that you might have some issues with, but feel free to challenge me and my opinions...cause I'm just TALKING OUT LOUD!!