Opinion
Education Opinion

Leadership for Education Innovation

By Tom Vander Ark — May 24, 2014 5 min read
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By: Michele Cahill

Educators have heard the good news this year that the United States has for the first time reached a high school graduation rate of 80%, with gains in
large urban districts and among African American and Latino students as significant contributing factors. Reactions to this achievement have been mixed,
ranging from celebration to cautious optimism to dismissal, the latter due to recognition that graduation does not equal college readiness, particularly
for low-income students. At a time when earnings are tracking so closely with educational achievement and income inequality is growing, our young people
will depend more than ever on schools to prepare them with the meaningful knowledge and skills needed for success in postsecondary education and careers.
Without effective high schools, the social contract with young people that lies at the heart of the American dream--Invest in yourself, work hard and learn,
and you will have opportunities for rewarding work and meaningful choices about your future--is clearly at risk. While there are broader, non-education
factors involved in our country’s high rates of child poverty and growing inequality that need to be addressed, the stakes are high and the need is urgent
for redesigning our high schools. We need to ask, as rigorously as we can, what it will take to get to 90% graduation rates with college readiness
in the coming decade.

Fortunately, we have existence proofs that it is indeed possible to provide adolescents--even those who enter high school substantially behind--with an
academically challenging curriculum and accelerated learning that enable them to catch up, get on track, and graduate ready to succeed in postsecondary
education. Greg Duncan and Richard Murnane write about “High Schools That Improve Life Chances” in their recent book, Restoring Opportunity: The Crisis of Inequality and the Challenge for American Education, which profiles the New York City Small Schools of Choice
initiative and its evaluation results. The evidence they cite is highly encouraging, especially now that researchers from MIT and Duke Universities have
confirmed the original MDRC findings and are identifying positive outcomes in students’ first years of college.

Looking to implications for the country, the question is, What will it take to do this at scale? As someone involved in the New York City work and in high
school reform more generally, and with more than forty years of experience in K-12 and higher education, youth development, and the nonprofit, government
and philanthropy sectors behind me, I have come to see that an ecosystem for learning is essential; moreover, design thinking is essential for
creating this ecosystem and for enabling it to work at scale. An ecosystem draws in energy and contributions from a broad base of leadership, including
educators, advocates, policy makers, philanthropy, government and civic voices. To be effective, their efforts must be rooted in common design principles
that guide them in creating good secondary schools that significantly improve life chances.

At the heart of an ecosystem for learning is an ability to draw upon the assets of an entire city or community to support students as they grapple with the
two primary tasks of adolescence: building competencies and forming their identities. In New York City, this involved a competitive design process rooted
in common principles informed by research about teaching, learning, the organization of schools, and youth development and resiliency. Educators who
proposed schools had to engage in a rigorous planning and approval process, and their plans had to demonstrate the capacity to put in place core elements:
strong and capable school leadership, a school culture that promoted positive youth development through caring relationships, high expectations for all
students, and student voice and contributions; high-quality teaching across disciplines, accountability for all students, an academically strong
curriculum, and parent and community engagement. Only teams that met these criteria were approved to open schools.

Where does the ecosystem come in? To meet these challenging criteria, we needed to redefine “school” as a porous organization and redefine “partnership” as
a core design element, not an add-on. When partnership is a core element of school design, students have opportunities for relationships with adults and
experiences that literally expand the world that is well-known to them through connections with cultural organizations, professional and business settings,
science and technical organizations, or community services. Students have opportunities to take on new roles and try out identities that can motivate them
and build confidence and effort. Partnerships that are designed as core to schooling also can expand and deepen curriculum through themes, project-based
learning, internships, student research, and expeditions.

Design thinking gives real roles to partner organizations in a learning ecosystem. New approaches are pushing the boundaries, as digital and blended
learning open up new opportunities for educators to think creatively about how to credit student work accomplished outside a traditional classroom in an
expanded learning time framework. From an equity perspective, building a eco-system that affords access to learning opportunities that extend and enrich
academics is highly promising, as economically advantaged families are dramatically increasing their investments in student talent-building activities and
experiences in the out-of-school time hours.

Moving this agenda in a time of tight budgets and high standards is challenging. Yet it can be a powerful strategy for increasing student engagement and
effort, for supporting teachers in meeting college-ready standards, and, most of all, for tapping the extra capacity we will need to get to college
readiness at scale.


Michele Cahill is vice-president for national program and program director of urban education at Carnegie Corporation of New York. From 2002-2007, she
was senior counselor to the chancellor for education policy in the New York City Department of Education under Chancellor Joel Klein

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The opinions expressed in Vander Ark on Innovation are strictly those of the author(s) and do not reflect the opinions or endorsement of Editorial Projects in Education, or any of its publications.