interesting, getting rid of all the crappy teachers and replacing them worked in Chicago....
http://chicagoweekly.net/2010/02/04...transforming-chicagos-worst-public-schools-2/
Harvard Elementary School in Englewood was a teacher's worst nightmare. Kids ran in and out of classrooms in the middle of class, started fights, and swore at faculty. Principals cycled through without making any impact. In 2007, less than a third of Harvard students passed the Illinois Standards Achievement Test (ISAT), putting the school in the bottom ranks of Illinois public schools.
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Koldyke approached Duncan with his idea for turning around the lowest-performing schools in the district. "
The kids stay, the adults leave, and we would train this cadre of residents and put them in en masse into a school with new leadership," Koldyke says. Duncan, meanwhile, was launching CPS's Renaissance 2010 initiative, which aimed to close failing schools and open one hundred new ones by 2010, a goal CPS is on track to meet. Although CPS counts AUSL's turnaround schools towards that total, Feinstein makes clear that "to me, it was never about Renaissance 2010 with our program." Unlike many Renaissance 2010 schools, AUSL's turnaround schools aren't charter schools, don't receive Renaissance 2010 funding, and are staffed by unionized teachers.
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Barrett's instinct was right. "They came in and they just changed this school from bad to excellent," she says. "I was shocked, because being here so long I didn't think anyone could change it." Between 2007 and 2009, while the average composite score on the ISAT in both the city and state crept up a few points, Harvard's score nearly doubled, from 32 to 56 percent. Today, students at Harvard arrive in uniforms, walk quietly in the halls, and treat teachers with respect. "At the old Harvard, you would tell them they would suffer the consequences, but the children who wouldn't listen knew they were going to get out of it," says Barrett, who says their attitude was, "Well, go ahead, tell the teacher, go ahead tell the principal, what they gonna do?" "You don't hear nobody here saying, 'Well, go ahead, tell Mr. Cowling, what he gonna do?' They don't say that here."