Obvious, but not well understood. 


The educator’s dilemma

When and how schools should embrace poverty relief | Christensen Institute
http://www.christenseninstitute.org/publications/the-educators-dilemma/
(via Instapaper)

The educator’s dilemma

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

For decades, school reformers and poverty relief advocates have argued about 
what it takes to close the achievement gap. Some scholars, like Abigail and 
Stephen Thernstrom, argue that school-based interventions are the most 
promising solution. Others, like Richard Rothstein, argue that schools are not 
the most efficient platform for fighting the effects of poverty and that 
society could better help low-income students succeed in school by spending 
scarce dollars on programs that target children’s health and well-being.

With the aid of sound theory, the theory of interdependence and modularity, we 
can see that both sides are right—and that both are also wrong.

Insights from the theory of interdependence and modularity

The theory of interdependence and modularity shows that:

When an organization must improve to serve more demanding and challenging users 
who are underserved by existing options;
and the way the parts within the given system interact are not yet well 
understood and are therefore unpredictably interdependent;
the organization must integrate to control every critical component of the 
system in order to make any part of the system function.
When there are no unpredictable interdependencies in the design of the 
service’s parts, organizations can use a modular architecture;
modular parts fit and work together in well-understood, crisply codified ways 
and can be developed in independent work groups or by different organizations 
working at arm’s length.
In other words, when driving toward greater performance with moving parts that 
are unpredictably interdependent, in order to do anything, the organization 
must do nearly everything.

For schools, this means that to help low-income students who are underserved by 
existing schooling options succeed academically, they must integrate backward 
in an interdependent way into the nonacademic realms of low-income children’s 
lives. This approach heeds the wisdom of both the Thernstroms and Rothstein but 
in contexts that neither imagined.

Education institutions that are integrating backward

The conundrum the U.S. education system faces is that society is asking it to 
deliver breakthrough academic results for the highest need students, but in a 
world in which we don’t understand the precise solutions that can drive these 
outcomes. We have constrained our ability to succeed by structuring the school 
system in a modular, rather than an interdependent, manner.

There is hope though. Over the past decade, several educational institutions 
serving low-income students have begun to attack the effects of poverty by 
integrating beyond schools’ traditional academic domain to embrace the sorts of 
supports—mental health services, pediatric care, and mentoring, to name a 
few—for which poverty relief advocates have long called.

The paper profiles four of these efforts in:

KIPP
Community schools
Harlem Children’s Zone
The SEED schools
Studying these institutions’ different approaches to integrating backward, 
whether and how they do so to drive academic outcomes, and the level of 
interdependence in their architecture helps explain their different levels of 
success in driving student outcomes. Analyzing their efforts offers two key 
lessons:

Merely integrating backward to offer wraparound services with outside providers 
in a modular fashion is not enough to help low-income students succeed 
academically; the architecture must be interdependent so that the school can 
control the balance, mix, and type of services offered to each student.
The success of these models appears to turn on the end goal around which they 
are integrating; if addressing the achievement gap is not the driving force 
that causes a school to integrate backward, such that all the services offered 
are deployed to achieve this goal, then we are unlikely to see dramatic changes 
in academic results for low-income students.
Looking ahead: A flip to a modular world

Today, schools must integrate backward in an interdependent way in order to 
drive breakthrough results for the most demanding students. A key criticism is 
that it is costly for school systems to integrate into nonacademic realms. The 
theory of interdependence and modularity, however, shows that the costs of not 
integrating are in fact higher to society; they are just hidden from the 
financial statements of any one organization. The theory also predicts that, 
over time, as integrated schools start to succeed in serving low-income 
students and we gain a clear sense of the causal mechanisms that lead to this 
success, the education system will modularize, which will in turn create 
greater efficiencies.

In education, however, we are attempting to short circuit this process by 
operating in a modular manner, despite the fact that we have not achieved 
breakthrough results for the highest need populations at scale.



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