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November 17, 1999 
Pulling in Many Directions 
 
By Lynn Olson 
 
Before the 20th century, education was a decidedly local affair. The young 
American democracy, 
which 
had grown up in opposition to the hierarchies of Europe, operated on the simple 
premise of keeping 
government limited and close to home. Local citizens decided whether to have 
schools, raised the 
money, hired the teachers, and chose which books to use. They also elected lay 
leaders, in the form 
of local school trustees, to oversee the job. 
           |  The early decades of the century saw a wave of changes 
designed to reduce 
corruption and shift power over big-city schools to professional 
administrators. In 1905, 
Philadelphia had 43 school districts and hundreds of board members. By 1931, 
above, power had been 
consolidated in a single, much smaller board. --Temple University 
Libraries |   That made eminent sense for a widely dispersed, overwhelming rural 
population, in which 
education 
lasted eight years at best, schools had to be within walking distance, and 
raising funds for even a 
single one-room schoolhouse was a struggle.But since then, the voices of 
school trustees have 
been joined by a cacophony of players on the education scene: the courts, the 
federal and state 
governments, teachers' unions, and groups representing racial and ethnic 
minorities, women, the 
disabled, and others. Policymakers have responded with a raft of laws and 
regulations that have 
spawned new bureaucracies and removed decisions further from local 
communities. The result, 
according to Stanford University professor Michael W. Kirst, is a "political 
system with everybody 
and nobody in charge."  It's messy, untidy democracy writ large. And while 
it's a system that 
makes no one very happy, there is no unified view of the alternative. "We're 
in a big muddle, as 
we always are," says Paul T. Hill, a professor of political science at the 
University of 
Washington. 
Indeed, school governance seems to be pushing and pulling in contradictory 
directions 
simultaneously. 
   
 The Rise of the ExpertOn one hand, education governance has never been 
so 
centralized: From the state capital come academic standards, tests for every 
student, and 
accountability systems that reach down into individual schools. At the same 
time, states are 
experimenting with such decentralized, market-driven approaches as charter 
schools, vouchers, and 
tuition tax credits."I believe that governance is the cutting edge of school 
reform in America 
today," says Donald R. McAdams, a member of the Houston school board. "It is 
not a silver bullet, 
but without it, it's very difficult to do anything else right." Writing about 
the history of 
American education in 1919, Stanford professor Ellwood P. Cubberley reflected 
on "how completely 
local the evolution of schools has been with us." "Everywhere," he 
observed, "development has 
been 
from the community outward and upward, and not from the state downward." Some 
states had as many 
as 45,000 local school trustees. In many rural counties, noted one writer, 
there were more than 100 
districts, some not more than two miles apart. Rapid industrialization and a 
swelling populace, 
however, soon put a strain on this organically grown system of school 
governance. As high schools 
became a permanent fixture of public education, small, rural districts 
struggled to pay for them. 
In 
cities, the large number of local school trustees invited graft and other 
corruption. Reformers 
contended that board members elected by wards advanced their own, parochial 
interests at the 
expense 
of the larger school system. In some cities, an excessive number of 
subcommittees made it difficult 
to get things done. In 1905, Philadelphia had 43 elected district school boards 
with a total of 559 
members. The Cincinnati school board had 74 subcommittees. Many of those 
elected, lay leaders 
were 
immigrants, small-business owners, and other members of the lower-middle and 
working classes. In 
contrast, those seeking to change the governance structure typically 
represented the business and 
social elites and a new cadre of university-trained education 
professionals. "Our American school 
systems are thoroughly 'of the people, for the people, and by the people,' " 
Cubberley wrote. "This 
is both their strength and their weakness. They are thoroughly democratic in 
spirit and thoroughly 
representative of the best in our American development, but they also represent 
largely average 
opinion as to what ought to be accomplished and how things ought to be done." 
  
 'Above' 
Politics?The solution, he and others asserted, was to operate schools more 
like industry. 
Inefficient, one-room districts would be eliminated or "consolidated" into 
larger jurisdictions. In 
the cities, smaller school boards, composed of prominent citizens, would 
appoint a superintendent, 
to whom the board would delegate large amounts of authority.By reducing 
decentralized, lay 
control, and eliminating the cronyism and patronage that were then rampant, 
such a system would 
place education "above politics" and leave its guidance to experts. The 
historian David B. Tyack 
dubbed this model the "one best system." And it would dominate education for 
the first half of the 
20th century. "If you see the way the reformers talk about democracy," he 
says, "they talk about 
the schools being an instrument of democracy run by apolitical experts, with 
authority in the hands 
of those who really represent the interests of the children of the United 
States." But, he adds, in 
reality it has been impossible to divorce education from politics: "The 
question isn't whether 
politics, but whose politics." A 1927 study showed that the 
newly centralized boards in urban districts were composed heavily of upper-
class professionals and 
businesspeople. In St. Louis, after reforms were adopted in 1897, the 
proportion of professionals 
on 
the board jumped from 4.8 percent to 58.3 percent, and representatives drawn 
from big business rose 
from 9 percent to 25 percent. In contrast, small-business men dropped from 47.6 
percent to 16.7 
percent, and wage earners from 28.6 percent to none. It was a model, notes 
Jerome T. Murphy, the 
dean of Harvard University's graduate school of education, that served the 
growing class of 
education administrators well. "If they could argue that they were 'above 
politics,' then it gave 
them much more influence to do the kinds of things that they thought needed to 
be done," he says. 
"I'm not making the argument that this was any sort of diabolical plot. But 
they just subsumed 
under 
their authority lots of things that no longer are assumed to be technical 
questions of 
expertise." 
  
 District ConsolidationBy 1930, the reorganization of urban school 
governance was 
largely complete. Between 1890 and 1920, Tyack points out, the average size of 
school boards in 
large cities declined from 21 to seven members. Sometimes, a small contingent 
of reformers secured 
statutes or charters from state legislatures that reorganized urban systems 
without any popular 
vote.In contrast, the consolidation of thousands of rural districts was a 
much slower, more 
painful process—one that, in many ways, continues today. The people, after all, 
liked their 
schools. 
Although the push to consolidate one-room districts began in 1900, it didn't 
gain much momentum 
until the Great Depression, and didn't really accelerate until after World War 
II. In 1897, a 
committee on rural education of the National Education Association recommended 
a thorough 
reorganization of school districts. Between then and 1905, some 20 states 
enacted legislation 
authorizing and encouraging districts to consolidate. Even so, by 1917, the 
United States had an 
estimated 195,400 school districts, compared with fewer than 15,000 today. In 
those days, state 
education departments were typically small, sometimes only two or three people. 
Their work was 
primarily confined to gathering statistics, preparing reports, rallying public 
support for 
education, and distributing what little state aid there was. In 1890, 
California's entire education 
department consisted of the superintendent, a deputy, a statistical clerk, a 
textbook editor, a 
textbook clerk, and a porter. The rise in state power and the shift toward 
consolidation picked 
up 
steam with the Depression. By 1933, local financing—which accounted for about 
80 percent of school 
support—was in a shambles in many districts. States stepped in to pick up the 
pieces. Between 
1930 
and 1940, state support for public education increased from 17.3 percent of the 
total to 29.2 
percent. By 1950, it was 39.8 percent. Today, state funding for K-12 education 
makes up, on 
average, 
the single largest component of local school budgets. 
  
 Mandates From On HighWith state support 
came state oversight. In 1915, only five states had adopted a minimum teacher 
salary, for example. 
By 1930, 15 had, and by 1955 the number had risen to 34 states. Even so, local 
decisionmaking 
retained its pre-eminence until midcentury, when several events would propel 
both the states and 
numerous other players more prominently onto the education stage.After the 
1950s, local control 
of education would remain sacrosanct in theory, but was significantly curtailed 
in practice. The 
U.S. Supreme Court's 1954 decision in Brown v. Board of Education of 
Topeka led to 
the 
desegregation of previously segregated school systems. The decision immediately 
made the court a 
powerful player on the education scene. It also threw the established practices 
of local school 
boards and administrators into doubt. Then, in 1957, the Soviet Union 
launched Sputnik I. 
Americans worried that the nation was slipping behind internationally, in part, 
because of 
shortcomings in the schools. The following year, Congress passed the National 
Defense Education 
Act, 
which provided federal money to promote better math, science, and foreign-
language instruction in 
the schools. In the 1960s, the civil rights movement and the Great Society-era 
anti-poverty 
campaign 
led to a torrent of education-related legislation in Congress, including the 
Vocational Education 
Act of 1963, the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Elementary and Secondary 
Education Act of 1965. 
  "The legislative branch for the first time in our history 
has assumed in the 1960s a major voice in American educational policy," wrote 
James D. Koerner in 
his 1968 book Who Controls American Education? A Guide for Laymen. Since 
the Soviet launch 
of 
the tiny satellite, he observed, the U.S. Office of Education had nearly 
tripled in size. "No 
longer 
an obscure bureau that cab drivers can't find," he quipped, "the Office of 
Education now has plenty 
of 'visibility.'"  In 1930, the federal government provided only 0.3 percent 
of public 
school revenues. By 1960, the federal share of school spending had increased to 
about 4 percent. 
And 
by 1965-66, to about 8 percent. Harold Howe II remembers stepping in as the 
U.S. commissioner of 
education in December 1965, during those first, heady days of federal 
largess. "I picked up at the 
point when the [ESEA] legislation had been passed but nothing had been done," 
he recalls. Writing 
the regulations and distributing the money according to them, he says, was a 
complicated 
undertaking. "It really meant building a whole new bureaucracy in Washington 
and in the districts 
of 
the country. But we pulled it off, and we got it going." While state 
officials fretted that 
federal activism would usurp state authority in education, the new initiatives 
contributed to the 
growth in state government. Before the 1960s, state education departments often 
were viewed as weak 
links in the education system, lacking the manpower or the expertise to play a 
dominant role. As 
Koerner noted, the states were "better in pushing from the rear than in 
marching boldly out in 
front." The ESEA would change all that. As part of the good-government 
reforms of the 1960s, the 
act encouraged better-managed and -staffed state departments of education. It 
required state 
agencies to approve local projects that requested federal aid. And it set aside 
1 percent of 
federal 
funding specifically to strengthen state education agencies. With the influx 
of cash and federal 
mandates, the state agencies swelled. The number of people employed in them 
doubled between 1965 
and 
1970, to 22,000, according to the Education Commission of the States. In states 
such as California, 
the expansion was financed almost wholly with federal money. Moreover, the 
proliferation of 
federal programs was mirrored at the state level. By the early 1980s, 20 states 
administered their 
own bilingual education programs, and 16 had programs for compensatory 
education for poor students. 
States also spent six times as much as the federal government on educating 
students with 
disabilities. At the local level, parallel bureaucracies to administer the 
new programs 
flourished. In large urban districts, the bureaucratic staff increased faster 
than the teaching 
force. In the mid-1950s, there was an average of one professional administrator 
for every 18 
teachers in the big urban systems. By the late 1970s, the ratio had shrunk to 
one for every 
12. 
  
Other Voices, Other DemandsAt the same time, the social militancy 
of the '60s swept 
through 
the schools. Suddenly, everyone was fighting for a voice and for an equal 
opportunity to succeed in 
America. In the schools, such activism took the form of separate advocacy 
organizations for racial 
and ethnic minorities, children with handicaps, and other interests. Teachers 
were becoming more 
militant as well. In the 1950s, teachers began to employ such tactics as labor 
strikes and work 
stoppages to improve their salaries and working conditions.In 1960, the 
United Federation of 
Teachers led a one-day strike to demand a collective bargaining election for 
New York City's 43,500 
teachers and then went on to win the election in December 1961. The ensuing 
publicity led to huge 
increases in the national membership of the American Federation of Teachers, of 
which the UFT was 
the largest local affiliate. Soon after, the rival National Education 
Association embraced 
collective bargaining and more forceful labor tactics. The number of strikes 
nationwide escalated, 
reaching 131 in 1969-70. Where school boards could not meet the demands for 
higher salaries, they 
bargained over work rules, from class size to the use of classroom aides. In 
New York City and 
other urban centers, minority groups—frustrated with the slow pace of 
integration and the failure 
of 
urban schools to improve—demanded community control. If they could not create a 
common school for 
all, they would create separate schools that were more responsive to their 
needs. One of the most 
infamous—and influential—fights occurred in New York City. In May 1967, the 
Ford Foundation 
announced that it would provide the financial backing for three experimental 
school districts, in 
the Bronx, Brooklyn, and the Lower East Side of Manhattan, to be carved out of 
the regular school 
system. The idea was to give parents and other community leaders in those pilot 
districts a greater 
say over principal selection, school programs, and other education 
policies. From the outset, the 
historian Diane Ravitch points out in her 1974 book The Great School 
Wars, the authority 
granted to the pilot districts was unclear. In early 1968, their governing 
boards drew up a 
position 
paper that demanded, among other authority, total control of all money, the 
power to hire and fire 
all school personnel, and the authority to contract for the building and 
rehabilitation of schools. 
In some cases, the New York City board of education had never promised such 
power, Ravitch writes. 
In other cases, the shift in authority would require a change in state 
laws. By April 1968, state 
legislators in Albany were on the verge of approving a decentralization plan. 
But it fell far short 
of the pilot districts' demands.  An unsuccessful attempt in one of the three 
districts, Ocean 
Hill-Brownsville in Brooklyn, to oust teachers who were deemed unsupportive of 
the project—and the 
ensuing fight over decentralization—provoked a bitter struggle with the United 
Federation of 
Teachers that culminated in a series of citywide strikes in the fall of 1968. 
Race, and allegations 
of racism, were never far from the surface. The union was overwhelmingly white; 
the governing board 
in Ocean Hill-Brownsville was overwhelmingly black. "I think it really set 
back the schools 
terribly because you ended up with, first of all, wariness and conflict among 
people who really 
needed to be cooperating and collaborating to improve the schools," says Sandra 
Feldman, who is now 
the president of the AFT. Feldman, then a UFT field representative, was 
involved in efforts to set 
up the pilot districts, and later helped negotiate a decentralization law in 
the state 
legislature. "You had schisms and anxiety between parents and teachers," she 
recalls, "between 
principals and teachers, between superintendents and school boards. And then, 
we lost any sense of 
a 
citywide curriculum, which we had before. That was totally 
dismantled." Finally, in April 1969, 
the legislature passed a decentralization bill. Some 30 community school 
boards, which until then 
had been purely advisory, were given much more power, including the ability to 
select principals 
and 
superintendents. The pilot districts were dissolved, and the fight for 
community control 
dissipated. Based on her research, Marilyn Gittell, a professor of political 
science at the City 
University of New York, who had served as a consultant to the Ford Foundation, 
argues that parents 
in the pilot districts felt more empowered and positive about the schools as a 
result of community 
control. "I think it had a profound influence on the country as a whole," she 
says. "I don't think 
people remember how schools excluded parents, and I think Ocean Hill-
Brownsville blew that 
open." But she admits that, with the exception of Chicago, community control 
has remained more 
rhetoric than reality. In 1988, the Illinois legislature's Chicago School 
Reform Act gave 
parent-dominated councils at every school in the city the power to hire and 
fire the principal, 
approve a school-improvement plan, and allocate anti-poverty funds. Feldman 
is less positive 
about 
the legacy of community control in New York. "I think it imploded because it 
was really divorced 
from substantive school improvement efforts," she says. "It was purely a fight 
over power and 
governance. It had nothing to do with what it takes to improve schools." 
  
Erosion of Local ControlBy the late '70s and early '80s, some 
observers were warning 
that the large number of 
pressure groups in education and the increasing tendency of the courts and the 
state governments to 
step in were seriously undermining local control.In a 1979 book, 
Legislated Learning, 
Arthur E. Wise warned about the rise in centralized, bureaucratic authority. 
Collective bargaining 
by teachers, the demands of special-interest groups, and increased litigation 
on matters from 
school 
finance to desegregation, he wrote, were shifting the locus of control over 
schools and colleges to 
the state. The result, he cautioned, would be an "incremental bureaucratic 
centralization" that was 
neither flexible nor desirable. Wise predicted that the winners in that 
struggle would be elected 
and appointed officials associated with general government, such as mayors, 
state legislators, and 
governors. The losers would be local school boards, teachers, and ordinary 
citizens. In 1982, 
Thomas W. Payzant became the superintendent of the San Diego Unified School 
District, the 
second-largest in California. He remembers his surprise at learning that the 
system had one 
full-time and one part-time employee representing the district year round in 
Sacramento. "That 
was 
new to me," he says. "And then, I very quickly learned that in terms of 
governance ... that's where 
most of the decisions get made. Local school districts really had to have a 
major presence in 
Sacramento and be very much a part of the legislative debate in order to make 
the case for 
schools." Moreover, the most aggressive policymaking on the part of states 
was yet to come. In 
the 
early 1980s, concerns that the United States was falling behind economically 
spurred a renewed bout 
of educational policymaking. At the same time, court rulings overturned the 
school finance systems 
in 18 states and set the stage for more aggressive state control of 
education. Once again, 
business leaders pushed for improvement, as they had early in the century. But 
this time, they were 
allied more with governors and state legislators than with education 
professionals. Between 1982 
and 1984, more than 200 state-level commissions on education were formed as 
part of efforts to 
improve the schools.  And soon, state after state passed omnibus reform 
packages that addressed 
everything from the number of course credits required to graduate to the pay 
and qualifications of 
teachers. In 1984, Kirst, a former president of the California state school 
board, complained that 
the state education code's five volumes were so thick they would "sprain the 
back of almost any 
adult who tried to lift them." Many of the new state initiatives were aimed 
at the core of 
instructional policy: what should be taught, how, and who would teach 
it. That trend has become 
even more pronounced in the 1990s, as states have set standards for what 
students should know and 
be 
able to do, devised tests to measure their progress, and begun to hold schools, 
students, and 
educators accountable for results. "From a local school district's 
standpoint, this development 
on 
the standards front should be viewed as good rather than bad news," argues Gary 
K. Hart, who served 
in the California legislature for 20 years and is now the state secretary of 
education. "If a state 
has a system of standards-based education that is clear and precise, people 
know what the rules 
are, 
and the system has credibility, I think there will be growing pressure for the 
state to get out of 
the rules-based business." 
  
 A Counter-MovementToday, Americans are closer to a centralized 
system of governance in education than their forefathers could likely have 
imagined. The president 
of the United States has promoted federally supported national achievement 
tests (albeit voluntary) 
in reading and mathematics. Even such strong local-control states as Colorado 
now test students in 
the core academic subjects and threaten to penalize districts that are not up 
to par."Without 
question, American school reform is being led at the state level," says William 
J. Moloney, the 
Colorado commissioner of education. "It is being led not by educators, but by 
elected officials, by 
governors, by legislators." "Although much of the public expresses support 
for the concept of 
local control," adds Ron Cowell, who served in the Pennsylvania legislature for 
24 years, "it's 
that 
same public that goes to state capitals and demands that state officials 'do 
something' to fix the 
education system." But while centralization has squeezed the system pretty 
hard in the past 20 
years, it has also generated a counter-movement. The same states that are 
threatening to take over 
local districts are also reducing and consolidating their education codes, 
promoting the creation 
of 
charter schools, and permitting families greater freedom to choose public 
schools. Such policies 
are 
meant to increase flexibility and choice in education and to create competition 
that will spur 
schools and districts to improve. They're also based on the recognition that 
individual schools 
can't be held accountable for results unless they have real control over day-to-
day decisions such 
as staffing and budget allocations. Eighteen states now have open-enrollment 
policies that allow 
parents to send their children to any public school in the state.  Thirty-
five states permit the 
creation of charter schools. And states such as Arizona and Iowa provide 
tuition tax credits to 
help 
parents cover the costs of K-12 education, whether their children attend a 
public or a private 
institution. A few states also are experimenting with vouchers to increase 
the educational 
options 
available for poor children, in particular. In Cleveland and Milwaukee, low-
income parents can 
receive state-financed tuition vouchers to send children to the private or 
parochial schools of 
their choice, with the money following the child. In 1999, the Florida 
legislature agreed to 
provide 
vouchers to students in academically failing public schools. In several 
cities—notably Baltimore, 
Chicago, Cleveland, and Detroit—mayors have been given more direct control of 
the public schools, 
rebuffing the traditional notion that education is, or should be, "above 
politics." "I think the 
choice movement has put a lot of pressure on the existing system to change," 
says Terry Moe, a 
professor of political science at Stanford University and an advocate of the 
use of market forces 
in 
education. "We're getting more magnet schools, more open enrollment, more 
charter schools. In 
another 10 or 20 years, things will look very different because the power 
structure is being 
nibbled 
to death." 
  
Challenge on All SidesSome worry, though, that in the rush toward 
market or 
quasi-market forces, public education will lose its concern with the common 
good and focus too much 
on individual ends. They also worry that inequality in educational 
opportunities will increase and 
that permitting each school to do its own thing will result in a lack of 
standards.What both the 
accountability movement and the parental-choice movement have in common is a 
focus on individual 
schools as the locus for change and improvement in education. Chester E. Finn 
Jr., the president of 
the Thomas B. Fordham Foundation, argues that standards-based improvement 
efforts and 
competition-based innovations are mutually reinforcing. Competition and 
choice put additional 
pressure on the existing system to improve, he says, and provide for the 
creation of new and 
different schools when existing ones cannot meet the standards.  On the other 
hand, virtually all 
advocates of school choice agree that well-informed consumers and comparable 
data are necessary for 
the marketplace to thrive. Most also acknowledge that schools must make their 
standards and results 
public. "Thus," Finn writes, "we shouldn't be surprised to see a hybrid 
strategy appearing in many 
places." This month, for example, the National Commission on Governing 
America's Schools, 
appointed by the Education Commission of the States, recommended two 
alternative approaches to 
school governance. The first approach would build on the existing framework, 
but clarify the 
roles 
and responsibilities of those within the system. States and districts, for 
example, would focus on 
establishing clearly defined goals for schools and districts, and providing 
them with the 
resources, 
tools, and supports they needed to succeed. Most schools would still be 
directly operated by 
local 
districts, but they would have more autonomy and flexibility—such as writing 
their own budgets and 
allocating resources as they saw fit—in exchange for greater 
accountability. Under the second 
model, districts would no longer directly run schools. Instead, districts 
and "chartering boards" 
would contract with independent entities—such as nonprofit and for-profit 
organizations, sole 
proprietorships, and cooperatives—to run schools, in much the same way they now 
do with charter 
schools. Districts would reward schools that fulfilled the requirements of 
their contracts and 
withdraw funding from those that did not, but the central administration would 
essentially be 
reduced to a contracting agency. "With the current governance system, good 
schools are going to 
remain the exception," argues Adam Urbanski, a member of the commission and the 
president of the 
Rochester (N.Y.) Teachers Association, an affiliate of the aft. "We're looking 
for a governance 
system that would make good schools the norm." In some ways, the tumult in 
school governance 
that's occurring now resembles that of the 19th century, when a wide mix of 
public and private 
schools competed to provide educational services. "What you're seeing is a 
monolithic education 
system being challenged from every angle," Murphy of Harvard says. "And I think 
that kind of 
turbulence that's being created in the short run feels as if it's a bad thing, 
but in the long run, 
it's a good thing."  
	 
		
		 
  
	PHOTOS: As U.S. commissioner of education, Harold Howe II was put in charge of implementing many of the new federal education programs passed in the 1960s, including the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965. --Corbis/Bettmann-UPI In September 1968, members of the United Federation of Teachers in New York City voted to strike on the first day of the school year to demand reinstatement of teachers transferred from the Ocean Hill-Brownsville district.  Corbis/Bettmann-UPI In the 1980s and '90s, states began assuming a greater role in local education issues. In Kansas, citizens packed a January 1993 hearing of a state Senate committee to protest a new accreditation system that they believed strayed too far from basic academics and usurped local control. --AP/Wide World In 1988, the Illinois legislature passed a law creating local school councils for each Chicago school as part of an effort to shift decisionmaking away from the central office. In November 1989, council members were sworn in during a ceremony at the University of Illinois at Chicago. --Bill Stamets/Catalyst
	
			
 
 
© 1999 Editorial Projects in Education  Vol. 19, number 12, page 27-30, 32
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