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The Bostonian: Tom Payzant's focused approach to school reform.


In a national landscape dotted with dysfunctional urban school systems and short-lived superintendencies, the Boston Public School Boston Public School is a feeder school to Townsend Central Public School and Waterford District High School, part of the Grand Erie District School Board. It is located in Boston, Ontario, near Waterford, Ontario, at 2993 Cockshutt Road, Waterford, Ontario N0E 1Y0.  district (BPS (Bits Per Second) The measurement of the speed of data transfer in a communications system.

1. BPS - Basic Programming Support
2. bps - bits per second
) and its superintendent, Tom Payzant, both stand out. With over a decade at the helm, Payzant is arguably ar·gu·a·ble  
adj.
1. Open to argument: an arguable question, still unresolved.

2. That can be argued plausibly; defensible in argument: three arguable points of law.
 the best big-city school leader in the nation and Boston the most improved urban district. This June he retires.

The success side of the Payzant story is known to many. Academic progress in Boston increased steadily under his leadership, with Boston's 4th and 8th graders handing the 65-year-old Boston native a nice farewell gift by coming out on top in math improvement on the National Assessment of Educational Progress The National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), also known as "the Nation's Report Card," is the only nationally representative and continuing assessment of what America's students know and can do in various subject areas.  (NAEP NAEP National Assessment of Educational Progress
NAEP National Association of Environmental Professionals
NAEP National Association of Educational Progress
NAEP National Agricultural Extension Policy
NAEP Native American Employment Program
) 2005 assessments among ten participating urban districts (see Figure 1). Boston public school students are also among the top (along with San Diego San Diego (săn dēā`gō), city (1990 pop. 1,110,549), seat of San Diego co., S Calif., on San Diego Bay; inc. 1850. San Diego includes the unincorporated communities of La Jolla and Spring Valley. Coronado is across the bay.  and New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
) in making the most overall progress over the past two years, outperforming students in Atlanta, Cleveland, and Chicago. Boston has a smaller gap than most other urban districts in achievement between white students and black and Hispanic students. On state tests, Boston's scores have almost kept pace with the state average since the tests were first given in 1998. The district has been a finalist for the Broad Foundation award for urban school districts for each of the past four years.

Payzant himself has won numerous awards, including state and national superintendent of the year. He was recently named one of Governing magazine's public officials of the year--the only school official to be so recognized. He has been praised for his intelligence and his doggedness, traits that many believe are key to understanding his success over almost 40 years as an educator.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

He reads voraciously vo·ra·cious  
adj.
1. Consuming or eager to consume great amounts of food; ravenous.

2. Having or marked by an insatiable appetite for an activity or pursuit; greedy: a voracious reader.
 and responds to an enormous amount of e-mail. His stamina has abandoned him only once, five years ago, when he fell ill with viral meningitis and had to take a few weeks off to recuperate re·cu·per·ate
v.
To return to health or strength; recover.
. A grandfather of five, Payzant is still working long days, nearly every day of the week, right up to retirement.

For his hard work and depth of knowledge, Payzant is admired almost universally in mainstream education circles. "Everybody likes Tom a lot and really respects him," says Harvard Graduate School of Education The Harvard Graduate School of Education (HGSE) is a graduate school at Harvard University, and is one of the top schools of education in the United States.

It offers six doctoral concentrations and thirteen masters programs.
 professor Susan Moore Susan Moore could refer to:
  • Susan Moore, Alabama, a city in the United States
  • Susan Moore (General Hospital), a character on the TV series General Hospital
 Johnson. "I don't think there's any doubt that the district is better off for having him here."

But even in the praise there is a hint of what it is about this Harvard-educated superintendent that frustrates people. "Many people would like the pace to quicken here," says Moore Johnson, who calls herself a Payzant supporter. "I think people would like to see more improvement on test scores, stronger schools, and more autonomy given to those schools that are performing well."

Indeed, the most common criticism of Boston's improvement--and Payzant's leadership style--is that there isn't more of it; the changes have been "incremental Additional or increased growth, bulk, quantity, number, or value; enlarged.

Incremental cost is additional or increased cost of an item or service apart from its actual cost.
," suggesting that he could have made more substantial, dramatic, or even radical changes, but instead made only small moves that produced marginal achievements (see Figure 2).

And so a question lingers: Could Tom Payzant have done more? Other, more flamboyant and hard-charging district leaders, like former San Diego superintendent Alan Bersin Alan Bersin is a former Secretary of Education for California, as well as a former superintendent of San Diego City Schools, past federal assistant district attorney for the United States District Court for the Southern District of California, and former Attorney General’s  and former Chicago superintendent Paul Vallas Paul G. Vallas is the new superintendent of the Recovery School District of New Orleans in Louisiana.

He first gained fame as CEO of the Chicago Public Schools (CPS).
, have come and gone (some of them, like Vallas, popping up again in new locations), while Payzant remained. And yet, the appeal of the hard-charging noneducator (think Roy Romer Roy R. Romer (born October 31, 1928 in Garden City, Kansas, United States) was the 39th governor of Colorado and served as the superintendent of the Los Angeles Unified School District from 2001 to 2006.  in Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. ) remains powerful.

As it turns out, the questions often have as much to do with expectations thrust on him, and the differing ideologies surrounding school reform, as with Tom Payzant himself or the results that he did and did not achieve.

These questions certainly aren't parochial or relevant to Boston alone. Many other major school districts are currently trying to decide whether to find someone who can emulate Payzant's focused strategy or someone who is going to break down doors and take few prisoners.

A Life in Education

Born Thomas William Payzant on November 29, 1940, in Boston, a third-generation French-American (via Nova Scotia Nova Scotia (nō`və skō`shə) [Lat.,=new Scotland], province (2001 pop. 908,007), 21,425 sq mi (55,491 sq km), E Canada. Geography
), the future educator moved to nearby Quincy in his early years. He attended public school there until his mother packed him off to the private Mount Hermon Mount Hermon (; Arabic: جبل الشيخ, Jabal el-Shaiykh, Djabl a-Shekh, Hebrew:  School for Boys, founded by famed Protestant evangelist evangelist (ĭvăn`jəlĭst) [Gr.,=Gospel], title given to saints Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. The four evangelists are often symbolized respectively by a man, a lion, an ox, and an eagle, on the basis of Rev. 4.6–10.  Dwight Moody (in 1881). Payzant says he considers it a great sacrifice on his mother's part to send him to Mount Hermon, in part because it meant she was left alone at home. Payzant's father died when he was six. At the school, Payzant says he learned the value of hard work, as all the students had duties, in addition to their classwork, cleaning bathrooms and waiting tables for faculty in the dining hall.

From Mount Hermon, Payzant decamped to Williams College Williams College, at Williamstown, Mass.; coeducational; chartered 1785, opened as a free school 1791, became a college 1793, named for Ephraim Williams. The Williams campus, noted for its fine old buildings, includes West College (1790), the Van Rensselaer Manor , where he earned a bachelor's degree in American history and literature. He moved back to his native Boston, to receive a master's in teaching, then a doctorate in education from Harvard in 1968. He began his teaching career just a few miles away at Belmont High, then went west with his new wife, also a teacher, to Tacoma, Washington. The couple's first child was born there in 1964, but in 1969 Payzant was tapped for his first district leadership position and came back east to take the reins to take the guidance or government; to assume control.

See also: Rein
 of a small, 4,500-student school district in Springfield, Pennsylvania. He was just 28.

For the next ten years, Payzant cut his teeth as a superintendent all over the country, moving from Springfield to Eugene, Oregon The city of Eugene is the county seat of Lane County, Oregon, United States. It is located at the south end of the Willamette Valley, at the confluence of the McKenzie and Willamette rivers, about 60 miles (100 km) east of the Oregon Coast. , to Oklahoma City Oklahoma City (1990 pop. 444,719), state capital, and seat of Oklahoma co., central Okla., on the North Canadian River; inc. 1890. The state's largest city, it is an important livestock market, a wholesale, distribution, industrial, and financial center, and a farm , then to San Diego. In southern California Southern California, also colloquially known as SoCal, is the southern portion of the U.S. state of California. Centered on the cities of Los Angeles and San Diego, Southern California is home to nearly 24 million people and is the nation's second most populated region,  he tested the tenets of longevity as a tactic in school leadership, staying in San Diego from 1982 until 1993, about the same amount of time he would preside pre·side  
intr.v. pre·sid·ed, pre·sid·ing, pre·sides
1. To hold the position of authority; act as chairperson or president.

2. To possess or exercise authority or control.

3.
 over Boston schools.

One of the main things Payzant says he learned from his San Diego experience was how to deal with issues of race, class, and culture when there are more than two dominant racial groups in the community. This would prove helpful in Boston, where long-established African American African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race.  and Hispanic communities have in recent years been joined by immigrants from the Caribbean and elsewhere.

In San Diego, he also had his first taste of continuity. "San Diego had a five-member elected board, but the board that hired me did not turn over until I was there for seven years," says Payzant. "It turned over one board member at a time."

Taking the Reins in Boston

Payzant returned to Boston by way of Washington, D.C., where he had a two-year stint as an assistant secretary in Bill Clinton's Department of Education, helping to write and then to persuade Congress to pass the Improving America's Schools Act, the Elementary and Secondary Education Act “Title I” redirects here. For other uses of "Title I", see Title I (disambiguation).

The Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) (Pub.L. 89-10, 79 Stat. 77, ) is a United States federal statute enacted April 111965.
 reauthorization that was the immediate predecessor of the No Child Left Behind Act The No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (Public Law 107-110), commonly known as NCLB (IPA: /ˈnɪkəlbiː/), is a United States federal law that was passed in the House of Representatives on May 23, 2001 . He also endured a brutal confirmation process focused mainly on his decision to deny the Boy Scouts of America Noun 1. Boy Scouts of America - a corporation that operates through a national council that charters local councils all over the United States; the purpose is character building and citizenship training  access to San Diego school facilities for their ban on gay scout leaders A Scout Leader generally refers to the trained adult leader of a Scout unit. The terms used vary from country to country, over time, and with the type of unit. Roles
There are many different roles a leader can fulfill depending on the type of unit.
.

While Payzant's time in Washington was relatively brief, it gave him lots of practice working in a very political environment. "It is tougher to be an urban superintendent than an assistant secretary in D.C.," says Payzant. "But I was better prepared for Boston and the complexity of the city and its politics than I would have been if I had come to Boston directly from San Diego."

When he arrived back home in 1995, 26 years after leaving, Payzant was a veteran superintendent with a clear vision of what he wanted to do:

"I came to Boston to see whether or not you could lead a midsized urban school district toward systemic reform," says Payzant. "I wanted to create a whole system of schools that would be improved, so that my legacy would not be a few more good schools."

Thus began Payzant's relentless focus on a small set of interconnected instructional issues, a strategy of implementing a few ideas carefully and thoroughly so that they would, like the proverbial stone dropped in the water, ripple throughout the system. Over the next decade Payzant would create new programs only when needed and only for a specific purpose. This is a stark contrast to the modus operandi [Latin, Method of working.] A term used by law enforcement authorities to describe the particular manner in which a crime is committed.

The term modus operandi is most commonly used in criminal cases. It is sometimes referred to by its initials, M.O.
 of many urban superintendents, who roll out new initiatives nearly every year, stretching district resources (and credibility) along the way. "Nearly everything Tom does is purposeful, and planned for, and executed very, very well," says Robert Peterkin, director of Harvard's Concentration on the Urban Superintendency Su`per`in`tend´en`cy

n. 1. The act of superintending; superintendence.
. "It's just very, very thorough."

During his first five years as chief of Boston schools, Payzant focused the district on literacy instruction, creating a new team of literacy coaches who worked with classroom teachers in a small set of schools, using money freed up from an "audit" of professional development endeavors that revealed too many disparate efforts around the district. The coaching program was later expanded to include math as Mathematics courses named Math A, Maths A, and similar are found in:
  • Mathematics education in New York: Math A, Math A/B, Math B
  • Mathematics education in Australia: Maths A, Maths B, Maths C
 well.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Payzant would go on to encourage teachers and principals to use test data and develop formative assessments Formative assessment is a self-reflective process that intends to promote student attainment [1]. Cowie and Bell [2] define it as the bidirectional process between teacher and student to enhance, recognise and respond to the learning.  for use throughout the year. He also pushed for a gradual narrowing of curriculum options for most schools. Instead of letting each teacher in each school come up with his or her own curriculum and approach, resulting in an incoherent and in some cases ineffective system of instruction, Payzant gradually narrowed the range of options for schools and teachers to materials and teaching strategies that he and his teams of coaches thought worked best for Boston students. This included pacing guidelines and home-grown efforts to improve principal and teacher preparation.

Payzant created one of the nation's only in-house teacher training and certification programs, the Boston Teacher Residency, through which the district prepares a small but growing number of teachers largely independent of traditional colleges of education.

Along the way Payzant fired seven principals, not all of whom went easily. His district-wide curriculum prescriptions would also eventually engender en·gen·der  
v. en·gen·dered, en·gen·der·ing, en·gen·ders

v.tr.
1. To bring into existence; give rise to: "Every cloud engenders not a storm" 
 a certain amount of pushback push·back  
n.
1. A device or mechanism that affords movement of another object backwards: the pushback on a subway door.

2. Forced movement of troops back from the line.
 from the teachers union. In the early years he tried to close a school, but was forced to relent re·lent  
v. re·lent·ed, re·lent·ing, re·lents

v.intr.
To become more lenient, compassionate, or forgiving. See Synonyms at yield.

v.tr. Obsolete
1.
 in the face of community opposition. At one point he threatened to decline outside funding that did not match his collaborative, focused vision for the district. In this endeavor, he eventually prevailed. More recently, low initial pass rates by high-school students on state exams led to calls for him to criticize the state standards and exams, which he refused to do.

Throughout, Payzant's concentration has been on a small set of classroom and "schoolhouse" issues including school leadership, instructional capacity, and quality curriculum, combined with a careful approach to implementation.

The Perks perk 1  
v. perked, perk·ing, perks

v.intr.
1. To stick up or jut out: dogs' ears that perk.

2. To carry oneself in a lively and jaunty manner.
 of Perseverance

The intensity of Payzant's vision did much to undo the resistance and cynicism of career educators who had seen many superintendents--and many short-lived initiatives--come and go. He was also at the helm long enough for educators to see that he was not going to go away and was not going to change his focus from year to year. He returned to the same issues of instruction and curriculum year after year, adjusting and correcting along the way, but always moving consistently forward along a narrow path.

And his longevity had other benefits as well: private funds (estimated at $100 million over ten years) poured in from education foundations looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 a district with stable leadership. Along the way Payzant cultivated a generally positive relationship with the wide variety of education groups in and around Boston, including the local teachers union. Key among nonunion nonunion /non·union/ (non-un´yun) failure of the ends of a fractured bone to unite.

non·un·ion
n.
The failure of a fractured bone to heal normally.
 groups to support him was the Boston Plan for Excellence, an organization that grew in part out of the 1993 Annenberg Challenge and continues to receive funding from that foundation. Run for many years by Ellen Guiney, a former education advisor to Senator Ted Kennedy For other persons named Ted Kennedy, see Ted Kennedy (disambiguation).
Edward Moore "Ted" Kennedy (born February 22, 1932) is the senior United States Senator from Massachusetts and a member of the Democratic Party.
, the Plan (as it is known) has helped develop pilot schools and administer several of the district's initiatives, such as the literacy coaching program and the teacher preparation program.

"The hard part is not inventing new things but translating what the standards are into actual instructional supports that can work at scale," says Guiney. Payzant was "lucky enough to be given the first four or five years, but also brave enough to do a few things at a time and not try and be a big glitz glitz   Informal
n.
Ostentatious showiness; flashiness: "a garish barrage of show-biz glitz" Peter G. Davis.

tr.v.
."

He avoided significant resistance from teachers by being very careful in the materials he required and approaches he implemented, trying out his ideas on a small set of teachers and schools, and making adjustments as needed as needed prn. See prn order. , before rolling them out district-wide.

Only of late, after a change in union leadership, has the Payzant method come in for criticism. Richard Stutman, current president of the Boston Teachers Union, recently called the Boston curriculum that Payzant helped create "one-size-fits-all."

Turnover at the top and well-warranted resistance from the bottom are often cited as reasons that progress has been so slow in so many big cities. Today the average tenure for urban superintendents is only two and a half years, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 a Council of the Great City Schools report that surveyed big-city school leaders. Just 14 percent of urban superintendents last more than five years.

Built-In Advantages

Some Payzant critics--and even he has them--believe that the veteran superintendent's accomplishments must be viewed in the context of the relatively good hand he was dealt in Boston.

For starters, they say, the district is small; fewer than 150 schools and 60,000 students make it much more manageable than Chicago, for instance, which has some 600 schools and more than 435,000 students. In fact, Boston ranks number 67 in the nation in enrollment, and its student poverty rates--73 percent--are lower than in many other urban districts (Chicago's is 85 percent). Boston does not suffer from a tremendous falloff fall·off  
n.
A reduction or decrease: a falloff in car sales.

Noun 1. falloff - a noticeable deterioration in performance or quality; "the team went into a slump"; "a gradual slack in
 in student spending and teachers' salaries compared with neighboring neigh·bor  
n.
1. One who lives near or next to another.

2. A person, place, or thing adjacent to or located near another.

3. A fellow human.

4. Used as a form of familiar address.

v.
 districts. The average teacher's salary in Boston is almost $79,000. Average spending per pupil was about $10,000 in FY2003, according to the district--just $500 less than nearby Brookline and more than $1,500 more than the statewide average.

Payzant also benefited from a 1993 state education overhaul, which, among other things, took principals out of the collective bargaining collective bargaining, in labor relations, procedure whereby an employer or employers agree to discuss the conditions of work by bargaining with representatives of the employees, usually a labor union.  process and gave the superintendent control over administrative appointments. This allowed him to transfer and fire administrators and principals as needed, without involving the board or having to deal with a collective bargaining agreement The contractual agreement between an employer and a Labor Union that governs wages, hours, and working conditions for employees and which can be enforced against both the employer and the union for failure to comply with its terms. .

The 1993 state law also called for new standards and test-based accountability for student achievement--an approach that fit well with Payzant's background in Washington.

Finally, since 1991 Boston schools have been controlled by the mayor, who appoints school board members and the superintendent. Mayor Tom Menino, first elected in 1993, chose Payzant for the schools job in 1995. In ways large and small, Payzant and the Boston Public Schools were protected by Menino, elected to his fourth four-year term in 2005, throughout his tenure as schools chief.

Such a close relationship with the mayor was not always a plus, however, especially from the perspective of those who felt Payzant could have taken better advantage of that liaison for the benefit of the schools. According to John Mudd, senior project director for Massachusetts Advocates for Children and perhaps Payzant's most vocal critic, the mayor gave Payzant nearly everything he could ask for: "continuing support, freedom to create education policies, to hire and fire people, and help fighting for city budget support even in a time when our state hit hard times. And he didn't try to meddle med·dle  
intr.v. med·dled, med·dling, med·dles
1. To intrude into other people's affairs or business; interfere. See Synonyms at interfere.

2. To handle something idly or ignorantly; tamper.
. Given the ten years," says Mudd, Payzant "could have--and should have--done more."

The Stealth Radical

It is a testament to Payzant's skills as an education diplomat that he survived despite the length of the various "wish" and "to do" lists that others had for him. The things still undone after 11 years include a relatively small but stubborn achievement gap, a high dropout (1) On magnetic media, a bit that has lost its strength due to a surface defect or recording malfunction. If the bit is in an audio or video file, it might be detected by the error correction circuitry and either corrected or not, but if not, it is often not noticed by the human  rate, and struggling programs for English language English language, member of the West Germanic group of the Germanic subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages (see Germanic languages). Spoken by about 470 million people throughout the world, English is the official language of about 45 nations.  learners and special-education students. Compared with 2003, the 2005 NAEP showed that the achievement gap broadened in 8th-grade math and 4th-grade reading. Minority enrollment in the city's three exam schools and preparation programs is also declining, though this appears to be because of a legal mandate to drop affirmative action affirmative action, in the United States, programs to overcome the effects of past societal discrimination by allocating jobs and resources to members of specific groups, such as minorities and women.  programs.

For reform-minded educators to the center and right of the political spectrum, calling Payzant's efforts a success refutes the notion that radical changes are needed to improve urban education. He was never the type of reformer to talk about "blowing up" the system or "turning things on their head" to achieve laudable laud·a·ble
adj.
Healthy; favorable.
 ends. "No doubt there is a sense of urgency that needs to be created around the gaps that exist in urban school systems," he explains. "But there's not a lot of evidence that the strategy of trying to blow up a place and start over will get the long-term results that can come from continuity of leadership."

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

School closings, new-school creation, merit pay Noun 1. merit pay - extra pay awarded to an employee on the basis of merit (especially to school teachers)
pay, remuneration, salary, wage, earnings - something that remunerates; "wages were paid by check"; "he wasted his pay on drink"; "they saved a quarter of all
 for teachers, technology initiatives, and other common stand-ins for innovation have been few and far between under Payzant's tenure. He hasn't spent a lot of time trying to take on union work rules that affect transfers, overtime, and, to some extent, recruitment and diversity. And he hasn't focused very much attention on school choice and competition, key issues for conservative and centrist reformers alike. As of 2005-06, there are just 16 charter schools in Boston, all authorized by the state, and 19 "pilot" schools, which are charter-like schools created in partnership between the district and the teachers union. The union blocked the expansion of pilot schools for two years--a move that Payzant complained about but did not take dramatic action to undo.

For these reasons, Payzant gets a mixed review from pro-choice reform groups like the Pioneer Institute. "He's been tentative on choice issues," says the institute's executive director, Jim Stergios, citing Payzant's refusal to push for more charters and his slowness in expanding the student assignment system used to determine where children attend school. "But he's been very good about expanding the number of pilot schools, and the small steps he's taken, combined with the stability, have had a big cumulative impact on the school system here."

His approach seems also to have disappointed some liberals and progressives, for whom the fact that he has made so much progress without a strong commitment to parent and community engagement is troubling. Payzant hasn't gotten deeply involved in community issues, and in fact admits that the racial divide that long dominated Boston school politics before his arrival was one of the main considerations he had before taking the job. His slowness on this front is widely cited among community and minority leaders as a Payzant fault. Even his supporters concede that Payzant has moved too slowly. "It is his fault," says Guiney about community and parent engagement by the district. "He kept trying, but he never got it quite right. It has taken too long." This concern and others detailed in a recent Aspen Institute The Aspen Institute is an international nonprofit organization founded in 1950 dedicated to "fostering enlightened leadership, the appreciation of timeless ideas and values, and open-minded dialogue on contemporary issues.  report on Payzant's tenure are already issues in planning for Payzant's successor.

In the end, there is no real way to know what might have been. Of course, Payzant might have gotten a lot more done had he pushed harder or worked more closely with community groups; at the same time, he might have gotten a lot less done--and helped fewer schools make progress--had he rolled out half-baked initiatives or gotten himself fired.

"He could have made a lot of bone-headed decisions," says Guiney. "No matter what the situation, he still had to be able to deliver."

And he did. In fact, since he did reform the school system without always appearing to, he has earned a reputation for what one former Payzant deputy called his "stealth radicalism."

Whatever his flaws, no other big-city superintendent seems to have done a better job steering an urban district in the right direction. For reformers on both sides, the underlying problem may be that Payzant simply doesn't fit the current vision of school district leader. He's white and male. He's a career educator, not a former general or federal prosecutor or governor. He is smart and articulate, but not media hungry. Though capable of standing up to vested interests vested interest
n.
1. Law A right or title, as to present or future possession of an estate, that can be conveyed to another.

2. A fixed right granted to an employee under a pension plan.

3.
 and outside agendas, he generally favors private conversations over public confrontation. He has no apparent political ambitions.

In short, there's nothing flashy about him or his ideas. Instead, he's dogged, persistent, and--to use the term many use to describe his focus--"technical." He's that much-maligned thing: a traditional educator, a professional who communicates most, and best, with other educators. Substantively, Payzant's agenda seems quaint to those on both ends of the political spectrum who want immediate improvement.

"I've struggled my whole career to figure out the right balance," says Payzant. "I've been very top-down on some things, and as a result convinced some people that that's my style. Then when I've been more deliberative de·lib·er·a·tive  
adj.
1. Assembled or organized for deliberation or debate: a deliberative legislature.

2. Characterized by or for use in deliberation or debate.
, I'm characterized as an incrementalist."

To some extent, Payzant may simply be a victim of his own success. Having brought stability and demonstrated some positive change and stuck around long enough to have to clean up his own messes, he had to face the never-ending demand by all education stakeholders Stakeholders

All parties that have an interest, financial or otherwise, in a firm-stockholders, creditors, bondholders, employees, customers, management, the community, and the government.
 for him to do more--to do everything.

After 37 years in the business, Payzant leaves Boston a strong believer in staying focused, even if it means no more than steady progress and a BPS still in need of improvement. "The great thing about Boston is that there are so many institutions and organizations interested in education," he says. "The challenge is that this is a very complex city--much more so than some larger school districts. You've got to take advantage of the talent and the potential and interest but try and keep everyone focused on the teaching and learning agenda."

Alexander Russo is a Chicago-based education writer whose web site, This Week In Education (www.thisweekineducation.com), covers school reform policy and media coverage of education issues.

RELATED ARTICLE: In His Own Words

Tom Payzant looks back

Q: What are you most proud of about your tenure in Boston?

TP (Tom Payzant): I think we've kept a laser-like focus on teaching and learning and closing the achievement gap.

Q: Has the state standards and accountability system (known as MCAS McCune-Albright syndrome (MCAS)
A genetic syndrome characterized in girls by the development of ovarian cysts and puberty before the age of 8, together with abnormalities of bone structure and skin pigmentation.

Mentioned in: Ovarian Cysts
) helped or hindered your efforts?

TP: I'm a supporter of the MCAS. Compared with state assessments in other places, it is probably in the top half dozen or so with respect to rigor rigor /rig·or/ (rig´er) [L.] chill; rigidity.

rigor mor´tis  the stiffening of a dead body accompanying depletion of adenosine triphosphate in the muscle fibers.
. The percentage of students passing has improved significantly, but now the goal is to accelerate the number of students reaching proficiency. Getting there has been very tough.

Q: How important have principal selection and assignment been to your success?

TP: I have appointed roughly 75-80 percent of the principals who are now leading our schools. The goal in Boston is to improve a whole system of schools. Developing knowledgeable and effective school leaders through grow-our-own programs has been a top priority. The quality of school leadership is second only to the quality of classroom instruction to improve student achievement.

Q: You're known for slow, careful implementation, starting with a handful of guinea pigs guinea pig (gĭn`ē), domesticated form of the cavy, Cavia porcellus, a South American rodent. It is unrelated to the pig; the name may refer to its shrill squeal. . Any downsides to that approach?

TP: We didn't have the resources to go with all schools at once in the literacy initiative, but still I wish that we had pushed it. I would have moved the math effort up by a year or two, even though there would have been some major pushback from the elementary schools about bringing in a new program in more than one subject at a time. It's worth noting that with math we went with a single math curriculum and didn't give choices as we had with literacy.

Q: Boston was one of the first districts to implement a broad coaching approach to professional development. Did it work as you'd hoped?

TP: The coaching model has changed a lot over the years, but I still believe it is critical to support teachers in the improvement of their instruction. In the beginning, coaches focused on school-wide professional development and some one-to-one work with classroom teachers. Now we have a collaborative coaching and learning model, where groups of teachers during common planning time focus on data, curriculum, and instructional strategies.

Q: Have the pilot schools lived up to their promise?

TP: The pilot schools have enabled us to compete with the charter schools approved by the state. They have most of the same autonomies granted to the charter schools, and they provide more school options, adding to the broad range of school choices for parents in the Boston Public Schools. The achievement results are strong, and the pilot schools are doing better than the charter schools at attracting special-education students and English-language learners to their already diverse student populations.

Q: You've got a reputation as a top-down technician and an incrementalist. Is that accurate? Or fair?

TP: I see my leadership style as somewhat eclectic. I try to get the balance right between the top-down and bottom-up approaches. This requires collaborative leadership, but sometimes those who are resisting change must be prodded and directed so that the interests of children will be served. I do believe that leaders have to focus on a few priorities, go deep, and get good results rather than play to many special interests. That approach can lead to fragmentation and poor results.

--Alexander Russo
Average or Above? (Figure 1)

The scores of Boston students improved the most on the National
Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) Trial Urban District
Assessment in mathematics between 2003 and 2005.

Improvement on the Grade 4 Math Section of the NAEP Trial Urban
Assessment, 2003-05

                Change in percent at or above proficient

Boston          10
San Diego        9
Houston          8
Los Angeles      5
New York City    5
Atlanta          4
Cleveland        4
Chicago          3
Charlotte        3
Washington, DC   2

However, the math scores of Boston students still hover in the middle of
those for other urban districts.

Performance of 4th Graders on the NAEP 2005 Trial Urban Assessment in
Math

                Percent at or above proficient

Charlotte       44
Austin          40
San Diego       29
Houston         26
New York City   26
Boston          22
Los Angeles     18
Atlanta         17
Chicago         13
Cleveland       13
Washington, DC  10

SOURCE: National Center for Education Statistics, "Trial Urban District
Assessment"

Note: Table made from bar graph.

Just Keeping Pace (Figure 2)

Over the past seven years, the test scores of Boston Public School
4th-grade students have improved at about the same rate as those of the
average Massachusetts 4th grader.

Note: New performance standards for the Massachusetts Comprehensive
Assessment System (MCAS) reading section were established in 2001.
Independent of any real improvement between 2000 and 2001, the
proficiency percentage for Massachusetts increased by about 30 percent;
for Boston the increase was about 20 percent.
SOURCE: Massachusetts Department of Education
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Author:Russo, Alexander
Publication:Education Next
Geographic Code:1U1MA
Date:Jun 22, 2006
Words:4458
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