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96 Nat'l Civic Rev. 2 (2007)

handle is hein.journals/natmnr96 and id is 1 raw text is: 
















Note from the Editor


   On August  15,  1894, Detroit Mayor  Hazen  Pingree walked
   into a meeting of the local school board. Frustrated by the
   board's noncompliance with a law regulating the awarding of
   district contracts, the reformist mayor advised recalcitrant
   board members  to resign quietly and save themselves and the
   city from public embarrassment. When  no one volunteered to
   step down, he ordered the police to cuff four members  and
   march them  off the premises.

   Such a scene would be unimaginable  today, but big city may-
   ors are nevertheless taking a more activist role in dealing with
   the challenges facing public education. Several urban school
   districts have experienced mayoral takeovers. Other mayors
   have used the bully pulpit and their power to convene to guide
   and improve the performance of local schools.

   Over the years, growing  concern from  community   leaders,
   business, and outside agencies about equity and performance
   have led to recurring cycles of reform and experimentation.
   Financial crises and political conflicts have triggered direct
   intervention by municipal, state, and even federal government
   in local schools governance and administration.

   At the end of the  nineteenth century, urban school boards
   were similar to local city councils and boards of aldermen.
   They were  large and divided into wards. Membership   on a
   school board was often viewed as a patronage  position, and
   the ward mentality, reformers said, sometimes resulted in cor-
   rupt contracting practices, balkanization, and a lack of clear
   lines of accountability. Just as reformers changed the way
   many  cities were governed, reformed  school boards in the
   early 1900s became  smaller and were often elected at large.

   More of an emphasis was  put on accountability, clear lines of
   authority, and professional expertise. Reformers, university
   presidents, and professors began to take a greater interest in
   school curriculum and management,  and ward-based  political
   leaders lost their clout. Muckrakers wrote about the corruption
   of school officials and ward leaders. In the 1890s, school
   boards with more than twenty members  were not unusual; by
   the 1920s,  the median  number  of board members   per city
   was seven.

   During  the  1960s,  attitudes about  local school  boards
   changed  dramatically again. The civil rights movement and
   the push for greater equity between districts and schools led
   to an increase in state funding and oversight. Litigation often
   led to more court-based equalization plans. At the same time,
   parents began to demand   more  control over the classroom.



   ©  2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
   Published online in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com)
2   National Civic Review  DOI: 10.1002/ncr.161  Spring 2007


Chicago  and New  York, among  other cities, undertook bold
experiments in decentralization and school-site management.
Other school districts went from at-large elections for their
board members  to district elections to ensure that all parts of
the city had representation and political clout.

More  pressures  to change  came   during  the 1980s   and
1990s.  Businesses and  political groups charged that public
schools were doing a poor job of educating the workforce. A
combination  of financial crises and ongoing concerns about
equity and performance  added yet more  pressure. State and
local officials began to take a more activist role in educa-
tional governance.

Mayors  know  that good  schools yield political benefits,
writes Kenneth Wong, a professor at Brown University, in this
issue of the National Civic Review. When mayors are willing
to spend their political capital on public education, school-
children are likely to benefit from broader public support.
Mayoral leadership can reduce the institutional insulation of
public schools, sharpen  the  focus on  accountability, and
improve organizational and fiscal conditions to support teach-
ing and learning.

Although  mayors  and  other outside  officials have clearly
played positive roles in helping improve schools and uniting
communities   in support of school programs,  the changing
political realities of school administration raise complex ques-
tions about the future of school governance and the model of
the elected, independent local board.

Barbara  Hunter is communications  director of the National
School Boards Association. Statistically, we don't see an in-
crease in appointed boards, she noted in a recent interview.
I think that approximately 4 percent of school boards across
the country are appointed, while 96 percent are elected.

Although the association does not take a position on whether
boards should be elected or appointed, Hunter does empha-
size that the school board absolutely needs to represent its
community,  whether it is elected or whether it is appointed,
and that means  a lot of listening and engaging communities
about what  they want from schools. We  really advocate that
school boards listen to their communities and ask their com-
munities what they want. The school system needs to serve its
community's  interests and needs.

                                          Michael  McGrath
                                                     Editor


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