As Good As It Gets: What School Reform Brought to Austin
by Larry Cuban
Harvard University Press, 2010 eISBN: 978-0-674-05369-4 | Cloth: 978-0-674-03554-6 Library of Congress Classification LB2802.A87 2010 Dewey Decimal Classification 371.20709764252
ABOUT THIS BOOK | REVIEWS | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Take an economically and racially diverse urban school district emerging from a long history of segregation. Add an energetic, capable, bridge-building superintendent with ambitious district-wide goals to improve graduation rates, school attendance, and academic performance. Consider that he was well funded and strongly supported by city leaders, teachers, and parents, and ask how much changed in a decade of his tenure—and what remained unchanged?
Larry Cuban takes this richly detailed history of the Austin, Texas, school district, under Superintendent Pat Forgione, to ask the question that few politicians and school reformers want to touch. Given effective use of widely welcomed reforms, can school policies and practices put all children at the same academic level? Are class and ethnic differences in academic performance within the power of schools to change?
Cuban argues that the overall district has shown much improvement—better test scores, more high school graduates, and more qualified teachers. But the improvements are unevenly distributed. The elementary schools improved, as did the high schools located in affluent, well-educated, largely white neighborhoods. But the least improvement came where it was needed most: the predominantly poor, black, and Latino high schools. Before Forgione arrived, over 10 percent of district schools were failing, and after he left office, roughly the same percentage continued to fail. Austin’s signal successes amid failure hold answers to tough questions facing urban district leaders across the nation.
REVIEWS
Cuban is always great--and this is a marvelously level-headed and gripping account of a school reform process we know all too well, told with sympathy for everyone involved. Reminding us how uncertain our certainties often are, Cuban prods, provokes, and teaches.
-- Deborah Meier, author of Many Children Left Behind: How No Child Left Behind is Damaging Our Children and Our Schools
As Good As It Gets is a gem that only Larry Cuban could write. A personal, provocative rumination on Pat Forgione's decorated, decade-long tenure in Austin, it draws on both Cuban's "been-there" savvy and his scholarly acumen. With a title intended as a wry observation rather than a celebratory one, Cuban explores both what Austin has done right and why it has so far to go. Studded with smart observations regarding history, race, politics, leadership, and accountability, this is a book that will long echo with those seeking to reform American education.
-- Frederick M. Hess, Director of Education Policy Studies at the American Enterprise Institute
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Introduction
1. The Past Is Never Dead: Austin School Reform,
1950–2000
2. Turning Chaos into Stability, 1990–2009
3. Reinventing the High School, 2005–2008
4. Assessing Austin Leadership and Reforms
5. The Future of Austin Reform and
Three-Tiered
Schooling
6. Urban District Reform Strategies:
Common Errors and Assumptions
As Good As It Gets: What School Reform Brought to Austin
by Larry Cuban
Harvard University Press, 2010 eISBN: 978-0-674-05369-4 Cloth: 978-0-674-03554-6
Take an economically and racially diverse urban school district emerging from a long history of segregation. Add an energetic, capable, bridge-building superintendent with ambitious district-wide goals to improve graduation rates, school attendance, and academic performance. Consider that he was well funded and strongly supported by city leaders, teachers, and parents, and ask how much changed in a decade of his tenure—and what remained unchanged?
Larry Cuban takes this richly detailed history of the Austin, Texas, school district, under Superintendent Pat Forgione, to ask the question that few politicians and school reformers want to touch. Given effective use of widely welcomed reforms, can school policies and practices put all children at the same academic level? Are class and ethnic differences in academic performance within the power of schools to change?
Cuban argues that the overall district has shown much improvement—better test scores, more high school graduates, and more qualified teachers. But the improvements are unevenly distributed. The elementary schools improved, as did the high schools located in affluent, well-educated, largely white neighborhoods. But the least improvement came where it was needed most: the predominantly poor, black, and Latino high schools. Before Forgione arrived, over 10 percent of district schools were failing, and after he left office, roughly the same percentage continued to fail. Austin’s signal successes amid failure hold answers to tough questions facing urban district leaders across the nation.
REVIEWS
Cuban is always great--and this is a marvelously level-headed and gripping account of a school reform process we know all too well, told with sympathy for everyone involved. Reminding us how uncertain our certainties often are, Cuban prods, provokes, and teaches.
-- Deborah Meier, author of Many Children Left Behind: How No Child Left Behind is Damaging Our Children and Our Schools
As Good As It Gets is a gem that only Larry Cuban could write. A personal, provocative rumination on Pat Forgione's decorated, decade-long tenure in Austin, it draws on both Cuban's "been-there" savvy and his scholarly acumen. With a title intended as a wry observation rather than a celebratory one, Cuban explores both what Austin has done right and why it has so far to go. Studded with smart observations regarding history, race, politics, leadership, and accountability, this is a book that will long echo with those seeking to reform American education.
-- Frederick M. Hess, Director of Education Policy Studies at the American Enterprise Institute
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Introduction
1. The Past Is Never Dead: Austin School Reform,
1950–2000
2. Turning Chaos into Stability, 1990–2009
3. Reinventing the High School, 2005–2008
4. Assessing Austin Leadership and Reforms
5. The Future of Austin Reform and
Three-Tiered
Schooling
6. Urban District Reform Strategies:
Common Errors and Assumptions