T. Lynne Pixley for The New York Times |
One of the ugliest,
if not the most ugly ever school cheating
scandals took place in the Atlanta
school
system over the past ten or more years. And it was criminal.
Dr. Hall and the 34 teachers, principals and administrators “conspired to either cheat, conceal cheating or retaliate against whistle-blowers in an effort to bolster C.R.C.T. scores for the benefit of financial rewards associated with high test scores,” the indictment said, referring to the state’s Criterion-Referenced Competency Test.
The impetus was to improve test scores so that the school system in Atlanta would be seen as
a great success, and provide great rewards for the administrators, including
the district superintendent, Beverly Hall.
During
the decade she led the district of 52,000 children, many of them poor and
African-American, Atlanta
students often outperformed wealthier suburban districts on state tests.
Those
test scores brought her fame — in 2009, the American Association of School
Administrators named her superintendent of the year and Arne Duncan, the
secretary of education, hosted her at the White House.
And
fortune — she earned more than $500,000 in performance bonuses while
superintendent.
While the trial is to be held, that cheating took place is a
foregone conclusion. Many teachers have accepted their guilt and confessed to the activity.
The impetus was clearly the pressure brought by Ms. Hall.
Dr. Hall was known to rule by fear. She gave principals three
years to meet their testing goals. Few did; in her decade as superintendent,
she replaced 90 percent of the principals.
Teachers
and principals whose students had high test scores received tenure and
thousands of dollars in performance bonuses. Otherwise, as one teacher
explained, it was “low score out the door.”
And while the evidence against those who changed test scores
appears to be overwhelming, Ms. Hall claims she is innocent and that there is
no direct evidence to charge her with a crime or knowledge.
As she has since the beginning, Mr. Deane said,
Dr. Hall has denied the charges and any involvement in cheating or any other
wrongdoing and expected to be vindicated. “We note that as far as has been
disclosed, despite the thousands of interviews that were reportedly done by the
governor’s investigators and others, not a single person reported that Dr. Hall
participated in or directed them to cheat on the C.R.C.T.,” he said later in a
statement.
and so Ms. Hall will have her day in court, and the state
will have to prove their case against her.
The hero, if there is one in all of this may be former Republican
Governor Sonny Perdue who pushed for the investigation despite huge pressure to
leave it alone. Being a Caucasian and a conservative Republican naturally there were suspicions about the Governor. But he was convinced he was right and he went ahead anyway.
But no state has come close to Georgia in appropriating the
resources needed to root it out.
And that is because of former Governor Perdue.
“The more we were stonewalled, the more we wanted to know why,”
he said in an interview.
In August 2010, after yet another blue-ribbon commission of Atlanta officials found
no serious cheating, Mr. Perdue appointed the two special prosecutors and gave
them subpoena powers and a budget substantial enough to hire more than 50 state
investigators who were overseen by Mr. Hyde.
which once again reinforces the concept that when
Republicans are elected and do the job of good governing they are
successful. And if they do a good job,
they should be.
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