When Mark Zuckerberg’s hundred million dollar gift to the Newark schools was announced, I was thrilled. I love philanthrocapitalism and social entrepreneurship. I was looking forward to follow up coverage of the schools’ progress. With a hundred million dollars, how could they fail? But apparently, money alone isn’t enough. Newark’s problems were too entrenched, the public was too distrustful of the people administering the money, and ideological and personality differences got in the way. To cut to the conclusion, the main problem was poor communication between the donors, the receivers, and the many people in between them. Had there been more direct communication with the community about what their most pressing needs were, perhaps the money would have been applied more effectively. The author gives everyone involved credit for the best of intentions, but the best of intentions don’t always lead to the best results.
For me, the book was a cautionary tale. My own school district, East Ramapo, has been in the news in recent years for problems of its own. Though we are much smaller than Newark, all the problems of poverty are the same, plus there’s the complication that a sizable portion of our population are religious Jews who opt out of the public school system. In Newark, the African American community had been burnt by reform efforts before Zuckerberg’s, so it was suspicious of outsiders coming in. One of the quotes the author cites two separate times is that in Newark, people get conspiracy theories with their mothers’ milk. The conspiracy theory here is that the Jews are in charge of everything and are stealing from the public schools and giving to the yeshivos. The Jews are in charge of the school board, so some of the charges may be true. With all that distrust, it will be hard and perhaps impossible for me, a wig-wearing Orthodox Jewish woman, to talk about peace here and be believed, much less accepted. Cami Anderson, the hand-picked superintendent of the Newark schools after the gift, ended up forced to resign. And she was strong, sympathetic, and immensely qualified. She still failed to win over the people’s trust.
Zuckerberg’s gift was applied both to the public schools’ teachers’ salaries and to fund several charter schools. The book makes a fair case of the pros and cons of both systems. At the charter schools, the teachers had more freedom to do things outside of class to support their students’ education, even going so far as to carpool the kids. Non-teaching activities are forbidden by public school teachers’ contracts. Now, I can understand why the teachers’ union negotiated for that, but in driving the kids to school, the charter school teachers improved their students’ attendance and therefore, their educational outcomes. I also can’t blame any parent or teacher for preferring the charter schools. They’re more innovative. But they are effectively starving the public school system. I don’t know which way is right.
Ultimately, the most compelling sections of the book were about the students and teachers themselves, stories of underserved kids who made great strides because of the teachers who worked with them. Such kids and teachers came from both types of schools – the public and the charters. Every one of them did remarkable, inspiring work. But there was so much else against them, the kids ultimately backslid in their teen years. The tragedy of Alif Beyah is far more profound than the failure of Cami Anderson. May G-d help him to bounce back.
The teachers who made the biggest difference were the ones who addressed the individual needs of each child. The book emphasizes the “bottom up” approach to change, as opposed to “top down.” Addressing the needs of the individual child really is getting to the bottom of the issue. Ideally, all education should be tailor-made to the individual, though of course, socialization in a group must also be part of it. But that kind of education would require many more teachers, and therefore, much more money. Does the political will exist for that? Somehow, I doubt it.
Even still, there’s reason to hope. I heard the author on an interview, and she said that gains were made in all this. Now Newark is correcting the mistakes it made. Progress is never a straight line upward. May G-d help all of us to solve the education problem.