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The Burden of
Law
By Diane Ravitch
The Miami Herald (Fl.)
March 1, 2005
Not
long ago, I visited an inner-city Catholic high school. I was
impressed with what I saw. The halls were quiet, the students
respected their teachers, and the principal was the ultimate
authority on issues regarding students and teachers.
I had a nagging suspicion
that I had seen a school very much like this long ago. Then I
remembered: I was seeing a reflection of the public high school in
Houston that I had attended a half century ago.
What had happened during
the past five decades? A recent report by a non-partisan legal
reform group called Common Good gives the answer: Schools today are
being strangled by a ton of laws, regulations, contracts, mandates
and rules. The report (which can be found at
http://cgood.org/burden-of-law.html) analyzes the
many steps that principals in New York City must take if, for
example, they want to suspend a disruptive student who is making it
impossible for other students to learn or to repair the heating
system or to remove an inept teacher.
In every situation, the
principal must take care not to violate federal laws, state laws,
court decisions, consent decrees, case law, union contracts and
chancellor's regulations. Common Good's website has links to 50
legal authorities that limit or control what the principal can and
cannot do.
All these sources are more
than any one individual can possibly read or comprehend: 850 pages
of state law (in small print); 720 pages of state regulations;
15,000 formal decisions by the state commissioner of education;
hundreds of pages of collective bargaining agreements; thousands of
pages of federal laws affecting the schools; and thousands of pages
of chancellor's regulations.
The principal who
determines that a student is disrupting the learning environment or
is a danger to himself or others must embark on a very lengthy legal
process that involves multiple letters, notifications, conferences,
hearings, appeals, decisions at the local level, more conferences,
more hearings, more appeals, decisions at the regional level, more
hearings, more appeals and so on. It may take several weeks to
resolve the matter.
Philip Howard, the chairman
of Common Good and a lawyer, has been leading a campaign against the
procedural burden imposed by law on our institutions. Howard insists
that we should make educating our children our top priority, not
complying with a mountain of laws, mandates and regulations.
According to Howard, ``We should let the administrators and teachers
use their judgment and then hold them accountable for their
performance.''
Common Good has not placed
a price tag on the cost of compliance, but it is bound to be huge in
terms of inefficiency, wasted time, resources diverted and the
inability of the schools to focus relentlessly on education.
Is it possible to free the
schools from the smothering embrace of their friends who write the
rules, laws, regulations and mandates? If we do not figure out how
to restore authority to teachers and principals, then our schools
will continue to become ever more expensive and ever less effective.
Diane Ravitch, a research
professor at New York University, is a distinguished visiting fellow
at Hoover Institution.
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