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School & District Management

Management Guru Says 鈥楽tudent Load鈥 Key to Achievement

By Debra Viadero 鈥 September 28, 2009 4 min read
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Management expert William G. Ouchi wants to let educators in on a secret: The key to improving student achievement is lightening teaching loads.

Mr. Ouchi lays out that message in a new book, The Secret of TSL, published this month by Simon & Schuster of New York City. The letters stand for 鈥渢otal student load,鈥 which Mr. Ouchi defines as the number of students that teachers come in contact with each academic term and the number of papers they grade.

In a not-yet-published study of 442 schools in eight large urban districts that have devolved power to local principals, Mr. Ouchi finds that schools that have reduced TSL in measurable ways also tend to have higher passing rates on state exams.

鈥淲hen you reduce TSL, you increase by far the likelihood that a student will encounter a teacher in a hallway or an office and have a one-on-one conversation that will motivate the student to keep going,鈥 Mr. Ouchi said. And that鈥檚 different, he added, from simply reducing class sizes.

The concept of TSL is not new. Theodore R. Sizer, the noted education thinker, advocated a similar idea in his 1992 book, Horace鈥檚 Compromise. But Mr. Ouchi, a professor of corporate renewal at the University of California, Los Angeles, offers new quantitative evidence suggesting how much lower teaching loads might matter for schools.

Decentralization

The book is the second that Mr. Ouchi, a best-selling author of books on organizational management, has devoted to schooling. His first 2003 education book, Making 69传媒 Work, was a call for decentralizing schools. Its ideas were adopted by six of the 10 largest districts in the nation and embraced by prominent education leaders ranging from New York City 69传媒 Chancellor Joel I. Klein to U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, when he ran the Chicago school system.

But that鈥檚 not to say everyone is completely sold on Mr. Ouchi鈥檚 ideas.

鈥淚 think there is much to like and agree with in this new book, but I also have some concerns and caveats,鈥 said Chester E. Finn Jr., the president of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, a Washington think tank. For one, he said, 鈥淚 wonder if Bill tends to overvalue management and underemphasize content and pedagogy.鈥 Mr. Finn spoke last week at a forum on the book featuring Mr. Ouchi and hosted by the American Enterprise Institute, another Washington think tank.

When it comes to improving schools, decentralization is a strategy that has yielded mixed results. While some districts鈥攕uch as the 80,000-student Edmonton system in the Canadian province of Alberta鈥攈ave enjoyed long-lasting success with decentralized management systems, others, such as Chicago, have had more checkered experiences.

鈥淏ut were they really doing decentralization?鈥 Mr. Ouchi asked. 鈥淚 say, nobody can say it doesn鈥檛 work if they haven鈥檛 measured it.鈥

In his new book, Mr. Ouchi and his 21-member research team attempt to do just that in the eight districts they studied鈥擝oston; Chicago; Houston; New York City; Oakland, Calif.; San Francisco; Seattle; and St. Paul, Minn.,鈥攁nd find out what successful schools do with their freedom. The researchers gauged decentralization by asking principals how much control they have over the budget, curriculum, schedule, and staffing in their schools.

Nationwide, principals control an average of 6.1 percent of the money spent in their schools, Mr. Ouchi said. But, even in the decentralized schools, such percentages vary from as little as 13.9 percent in Chicago to 85 percent in New York.

When empowered to make decisions, the study found, principals often take steps that end up lowering teaching loads. They hire more teachers, eliminate nonteaching positions, such as registrars and front-office attendants, and roll social studies and English classes into an integrated humanities class.

Knowing What to Do

Lower levels of TSL, in turn, linked statistically to better student achievement. The researchers calculate that cutting a school鈥檚 TSL from a mean of 115 students to 80 translates to a 16 percentage-point increase in the rate of students scoring 鈥減roficient鈥 on state exams.

If that鈥檚 the case, skeptics have asked, why not just mandate low teaching loads? But Mr. Ouchi contends that the statistical relationships are more powerful in decentralized school settings.

Mr. Ouchi鈥檚 optimal load of 80 students is higher than that in elite private schools, he said. In New York, which is closest to a national model for Mr. Ouchi鈥檚 ideas, the mean TSL for schools in the 鈥渁utonomy zone鈥 launched in 2004 is 88 students, compared with 111 for more-traditional city schools.

鈥淒ecentralization allows us to capitalize on the best work of our principals,鈥 said Eric Nadelstern, the chief schools officer for the 1 million-student system. 鈥淚f, in a centralized school district, we knew what to do, we would鈥檝e done it.鈥

He noted that zone schools are among a package of strategies under way. The district also trains principals, has downsized schools, and began closing failing schools and rewarding successful ones. Yet, while the city鈥檚 four-year graduation rates have increased from 50 percent to 60 percent over five years, Mr. Nadelstern added, system leaders have yet to engage parents and teachers in some of their school reform efforts.

Coverage of leadership is supported in part by a grant from The Wallace Foundation, at .
A version of this article appeared in the September 30, 2009 edition of Education Week as Management Guru Says 鈥楽tudent Load鈥 Key to Achievement

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