How Hurricane Katrina Made Radical School Choice Possible in New Orleans
"Katrina literally and figuratively washed away many of the institutional barriers that had prevented us from even imagining that we could make systemic changes to this school system," says Patrick Dobard, superintendent of Louisiana's Recovery School District.
At the National Summit on Education Reform in Washington, D.C. Dobard told Reason's Katherine Mangu-Ward how the curse of Hurricane Katrina became a blessing. New Orleans' corrupt and incompetent school board was so entrenched that it took a massive disaster that literally washed away buildings to effect change. A national tragedy became an extraordinary opportunity to make bold reforms to a school system that had resisted organizational change for decades.
In the wake of the storm, the New Orleans school district effectively became an all-charter district, meaning that students and their parents were allowed to choose among a wide range of public schools that are less regulated than traditional public schools to which students are assigned based on where they live.
One ongoing reform involves closing the city's worst schools. Dobard is charged with this politically unpopular task, but he does so knowing that students will benefit in the long run. "We have to try to be balanced and be sensitive to community concerns," Dobard says. "But at the end of the day, we value having students in higher quality environments, and we're going to do everything we can within the law to ensure that happens."
Nine years after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans schools have seen an historic turnaround. Central bureaucracies have shrunk, individual schools have more autonomy (and responsiblity) than ever, and student test scores and graduation rates are on the rise. Over 90 percent of students attend publicly funded charters, the highest percentage of any major urban school district in the country.
Dobard likens the emphasis on smaller, more responsive schools to swift boats versus giant ships. "We're able to change directions nimbly and quickly. Traditional schools have been like luxury liners. If you want to turn that thing around, it takes forever and a day."
Runs about six minutes.
Produced by Todd Krainin. Hosted by Katherine Mangu-Ward. Cameras by Jim Epstein and Krainin.
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OK, how do we get a hurricane aimed at Chicago? Or Los Angeles?
How long until they fuck it all up?
Well, it took some decades for the Public School system to get totally FUBAR.
Sad that it took a freakin' hurricane.
Not every city is lucky enough to get hit by a mega-storm.
Maybe if global warming floods/freezes New York City, they can establish school choice in the refugee camps?
To be fair, large school districts like NYC (or even smaller ones with multiple schools, like where I grew up in Rochester) already have some amont of "choice". For example, I got to choose my school from 4th grade on. It is simply not true that all kids are forced to go to a certain school.
Of course not everyone takes advantage, and go figure - those are the kids that wind up in "failing" schools.
So the "success" is that you are achieving what the rest of Louisiana is doing but likely for a lot more money? You were worse than average and now are average even though cities typically spend more than rural area on schools. Remember too that the rural areas we are talking about is the Mississippi delta.
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