Race to the Top Over for Washington State
Posted by Diana Cieslak - July 27, 2010This morning Secretary of Education Arne Duncan announced the finalists for the second round of the Race to the Top grant competition. Washington didn’t make the cut.
Gov. Gregoire, Randy Dorn and State Board of Education Chairman Jeff Vincent issued this statement in response to Washington state’s elimination:
The News Tribune reports Mary Lindquist, president of the Washington Education Association, saying:

According to the folks quoted above, the money isn't that important because we made significant strides toward improving education in our state. But did we? No.
What we got was watered-down policy and proof that collaboration between the state and the WEA results in policies that better serve the interests of adults more than kids.
Washington’s failure to qualify as a Race to the Top finalist shouldn’t surprise anyone. Why not? Because the legislation that was supposed to qualify us was full of good intentions and weak policy.
For example, Washington committed to reforming teacher and principal evaluation procedures, but fell short of including the single most important indicator of effectiveness: whether or not students learn. Plus, rather than improving the dismissal process for
persistently poor-performing teachers, the state maintained an archaic system that simply shuffles them to a different classroom or pays them not to work.When it came to “turning around our lowest-achieving schools,” Washington’s reform efforts were unimpressive. Legislators created a new three-year improvement process, but any glimmer of reform fell flat when you reached the end of the legislation and found that there are no consequences for schools that fail to improve after the three years. The bill merely creates a working group that will decide what to do next. While they’re meeting, more students will be deprived of a good education. Oh, and they forbid the creation of charter schools in school turnaround models. (Other states increased the number of charter schools.)
Thoughts? Add Comment -
SouthernRoots said on Jul 28 2010 at 1:34pm
If losing this funding is no big deal, then why are we always hearing about our schools lacking funding?








