Gelberg, Denise. (1997). The "Business" of Reforming American
Schools. Albany:
State University of New York Press.
ISBN 0-7914-3505-9
$65.50
(cloth) $21.95 (paper)
Reviewed by Kate Rousmaniere
Miami University, Ohio
April 6, 1998
After teaching elementary school for fourteen years, Denise Gelberg
took a leave to
study for a Ph.D. at Cornell's School of Industrial and Labor Relations.
Two years later,
she returned to work "calmed by a new understanding of how and why
the school
organization operated as it did" (p. xi). But the calm period was
short because
Gelberg's new understanding made her less tolerant of the inadequacies
and contradictions
that she now saw in her work place. She noticed that new curricular
demands for whole
language that had been decided upon by the central office so quickly
that on the first day
of school her classroom had none of the required books. Nor did her
classroom have any
furniture due to a clog in the central bureaucracy. Then suddenly she
began receiving
directives from on high to begin cooperative learning. And she learned
that her
superintendent was publicly proposing site-based decision making even as
he was pushing a
revision of the teacher union contract that would strip teachers of the
right to consult
in curricular decisions. Now that Gelberg understood the way
organizations were supposed
to work, she was all the more shocked by the ways in which they actually
did
workfrom the top down and with little consistency. What bothered
Gelberg most was
what she suspected were the rationales behind these reform initiatives.
Why had school
administrators' concepts of good teaching and learning changed so
quickly?
This book is Gelberg's investigation of the guiding influence behind
American school
reform movements. She argues that whether it be scientific management
initiatives of the
early twentieth century, collective bargaining agreements with teachers
unions in the
1970s, or site based decision making reforms in the 1980s and 90s, the
guiding impetus
behind American educational reform has been the training of children for
economic
purposes. In each wave of reform in the last one hundred years, the
economic interests of
employers have been central to the initiatives while teachers have been
excluded from real
decision-making authority in schools.
This is a good book which still has a few problems. Gelberg's use of
evidence is
inconsistentat times she draws on research from specific schools
and school managers
and at other times she makes sweeping generalizations from the
statements of a single
superintendent or policy maker. In fact the book is not a study of
reforms as implemented
in American schools, but a study of the rhetoric of educational
reformers and, to a lesser
extent, the legal and political structures of the school contexts in
which reforms are
proposed. We see no classrooms in this book, even though Gelberg does
take a close-up view
of the infamous reforms of Rochester, New York, in the 1980s. We do see
a lot of
superintendents, business executives, and teacher union leaders, and to
the extent that
this book is a discussion of their wrestling over terms, rhetoric, and
politics, it is a
good read that offers some fascinating insights into educational
priorities in this
country.
Another problem is Gelberg's tendency to over-generalize the term
"efficiency" and the effect of what she calls
"pro-efficiency reforms"
in actual schools. It's never exactly clear what she means by the term.
Does she mean
actual practices of scientific management and cost accounting in school
management, or is
she implying a business philosophy about the efficient production of
good workers? This is
especially confusing later in the book when she describes modern reforms
like school based
management as "new pro-efficiency" reforms, although school
based management is
hardly the lock-step, top-down efficiency model that Frederick Taylor
described. What does
a "new pro-efficiency school" look like? Is it by definition
one with a business
partnership or a school-to-work program? Is it a school with school
based management or
collective bargaining, both of which Gelberg argues ultimately work in
the interests of
school managers? Are school managers by definition pro-business? The
author suggests all
this, but does not explain, thereby often raising more questions than
answers.
The first part of the book is Gelberg's exploration of the history of
business
influence on schools. These chapters are to a great extent a modernized
version of Raymond
Callahan's wonderful study of the same topic published in 1962 and still
engaging reading.
Here we see our old friends, the pro-efficiency education experts of the
early twentieth
century who were so influenced by Frederick Taylor's scientific
management theories. Here,
too, we see the progressive opponents of the efficiency experts in
educationMargaret
Haley, Francis Parker, George Counts, Jesse Newlon, and John Dewey. Like
Callahan, Gelberg
tends to paint the efficiency experts as arrogant, controlling
bureaucrats and the
pedagogical progressives as passionate child savers hoping in vain for a
restructured and
enlightened management of schools. Gelberg judges the efficiency
advocates as experiencing
"resounding success" (p. 65).
The problem is that it is not so simple. For one thing, as Barbara
Berman argued in her
1983 reconsideration of Callahan, educational reformers' interest in
business efficiency
did not originate with Frederick Taylor's industrial plans of the early
20th century, but
was a basic tenet of common school reformers since the mid-19th century.
Nor did school
efficiency plans result from voters' pressure for cost cutting, or from
businessmen's own
self-interested projections, but rather they were techniques to
alleviate financial and
organizational problems caused by the expansion of public schooling in
the early twentieth
century. Granted, business played a significant role in shaping
responses to those
problems, but were businessmen the single, most important arbiters of
the modern school
system as Gelberg suggests? Most historians would say no, and would
argue that
"pro-efficiency" reforms in curriculum or administration were
never as
monolithic as Gelberg believes them to be. Even as the National
Association of
Manufacturers was weighing in on what job related studies should be
taught in schools in
the early twentieth century, so too were the emerging professional and
academic
associations effectively promoting social education programs in social
studies,
psychological guidance, and the arts. In part because it is so much fun
to laugh at
early-twentieth century school administrators' rhetoric of industrial
orderAndrew
Draper's metaphoric division of Americans into the military ranks of
corporal, colonel and
general is a particularly hilarious oneit is tempting to see the
business efficiency
experts as the all-controlling force of schools, but historians of
education have argued
that it is simply not so clear cut. Unfortunately, Gelberg does not draw
on extensive
secondary historical sources, and this limits her first chapters to a
kind of cartoon-like
set-up of "pro-efficiency" reformers as bad, and progressive
educators as good.
Gelberg's treatment of the modern period allows for more subtleties
and more in-depth
exploration of the issues at hand. She charts the origins of collective
bargaining for
teacher unions in the 1960s and 70s and argues that a guiding business
ideology focused
collective bargaining exclusively on labor aspects of teaching, thus
legally minimizing
teachers' role in decision-making in broader school issues such as class
size, curriculum,
and school management. Collective bargaining as it was shaped in the
1970s made teachers
"legally and functionally divorced from responsibility for the
effectiveness of the
school organization" (p 98), and collective bargaining became not a
medium of
structural reform, but rather a part of the centralized bureaucracy.
Gelberg blames school
managers and business interests for this development: at this moment of
teacher activism
that could have led to a major restructuring of public schools'
missions, reformers sought
only business models in the form of industrial labor law that kept
management in control
of schools. Reforms following the publication of A Nation at
Risk in 1983
were similarly limited in vision, even though to some extent they
promised both more
teacher participation in schools and more community involvement. Gelberg
does a nice job
of describing and taking apart Total Quality Management (TQM) as an
organizational scheme
that promises worker representation but that retains managerial control.
She criticizes
school business partnerships, the "for profit" ventures of
Chris Whittle's
Edison Project, and Education Alternatives Incorporated as blatant
examples of business
agendas that guide educational reform.
Gelberg also sees school based management programs and other
decentralization plans as
flawed because they lack the social vision of democratic schooling that
Dewey and Haley
promoted years before. Current day "pro-efficiency reformers"
promote site based
decision making schemes not to empower teachers to change schools but to
train students to
be more productive workers. In an ironic twist of rhetoric, the modern
pro-efficiency
reform of school based management promotes teacher participation, while
its ancestor
promoted a more top-down factory model organization, but both still
prioritize student
performance and not student learning. Furthermore, managers still resist
the loss of their
power that a truly democratic workplace could promise, and school based
management allows
managers to maintain that final control. A chapter on the famous school
reforms in
Rochester, New York, concludes that while these reform ideas sounded
good, they were
sabotaged by school managers who feared losing power and by teachers
themselves who
resisted change. Gelberg does not expand on the role of teachers in
school based
management. She assumes that teachers want more decision making power in
schools, although
recent studies suggest that teachers often have good reasons for wanting
to focus on their
classroom work and not on tasks they feel could be best addressed by a
qualified
administrator. Gelberg's final take on site based decision making is
confusing. Does she
believe that TQM and school based management could work, but only if it
were organized
around a different philosophy that gave teachers real decision making
power? Or is she
arguing that TQM and school based management are by their very nature
administrative ploys
to give the image of shared decision making?
The book is somewhat uneven and unwieldy. The historical chapters are
essentially a
consolidation of prior historical work and replicate Callahan's thesis
with less of the
skillful rhetoric that marked his text. The chapters on the modern
period are insightful,
but lack clarity of purpose. It is obvious that business interests have
influenced
American schooling, and Gelberg recognizes that she is not the first to
say that. Still,
at times she seems to be beating a dead horse, offering little new to
the discussion, and
laying out an extreme binary opposition between sides. As a school
teacher herself,
Gelberg must know that schools are more complicated, that many
principals and
superintendents also care about students and teachers, and that
complicated bureaucratic
structures also allow for fudging, resisting, adapting, and undermining
of the system. The
extent to which a school or district is simply "controlled" by
anybody or any
philosophy is hard to tell. Gelberg's book might have been improved by a
continuation of
her own personal reflections as a teacher in her study. She believes
that education could
just as well be organized around other purposes than economic
productivitycreativity
for example, or community development or child healthbut she does
not always
articulate these alternative visions. At her finer moments, she steps
back from her
critique to comment with the clear vision of a teacher who wonders how
it has happened
that schools are the way they are. "Given the host of issues facing
educators at the
close of the twentieth centuryschool children compromised
prenatally by cocaine,
increased childhood poverty, difficulty in attracting and retaining the
best young people
in teaching, to name just a fewit is not immediately apparent why
the nation's
attention has been heavily focused on education's contribution to the
skill level of the
American work force" (p. 132). Gelberg's curiosity about the
driving force behind
educational structures and her ultimate outrage about what she finds are
the driving force
of this book and the reason why, in spite of its flaws, it is a good
book to help
educators critically re-think American style school reform.
In the end, Gelberg's study is a nice consolidation of history and
contemporary reform
material. She is making sense out of what she sees in schools, stepping
back from the
classroom and reviewing the whole sweep of educational history from the
perspective of
reformers and administrators. Sadly, she concludes that "democracy
in the school
house is not the point of the current reform agenda; the point is higher
levels of
achievement for more students so that America's place as a world
economic leader can be
maintained" (p. 170). She may not prove this point so much as she
passionately
persuades us to attend to this theme and to look critically for it in
every element of
school reform and rhetoric that comes our way.
References
Berman, B. (1983.) Business efficiency, American schooling and the
public school
superintendency: A reconsideration of the Callahan thesis. History
of Education
Quarterly, 23, 297-321.
Callahan, R. E. (1962.) Education and the cult of efficiency: A
study of the
social forces that have shaped the administration of the public
schools. Chicago:
University of Chicago Press.
About the Reviewer
Kate Rousmaniere is the author of City Teachers: Teaching
and School Reform in Historical Perspective, published by
Teachers College Press in 1997.
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