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- <text id=92TT1245>
- <title>
- June 08, 1992: Knowledge for Sale
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- June 08, 1992 The Balkans
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- EDUCATION, Page 69
- Knowledge for Sale
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Media mogul Chris Whittle gets a prestigious educator to head
- his controversial Edison Project. But can the venture help solve
- the problems facing America's public schools?
- </p>
- <p>By DAVID ELLIS -- Reported by Sam Allis/Boston and Sidney
- Urquhart/New York
- </p>
- <p> Call it the Perot complex: a successful businessman
- achieves great wealth early in life and casts about for a higher
- mission. He sees the paralysis gripping a big national problem
- and decides the only course is radical change. Ross Perot wants
- to change the country from the White House; Chris Whittle wants
- to alter the future from your child's classroom.
- </p>
- <p> The media mogul plans to create a new system of private
- schooling that he hopes will produce a smarter generation of
- American kids -- and make him and his partners a profit as well.
- He also expects to inspire -- indeed, compel -- the existing
- public school system to change the way it instills knowledge.
- "Kids today are disconnected from the education process," says
- Whittle. "We need to figure out how they are motivated and tap
- into that." At this point Whittle's enterprise is little more
- than an ambitious blue-sky notion, yet it is attracting
- considerable interest and some high-level talent: Yale President
- Benno Schmidt last week resigned his post to head the venture.
- </p>
- <p> Schmidt brings a great deal of credibility to the project.
- Nonetheless, some educators wonder if access to schooling, long
- considered one of the most vital public missions of a democratic
- society, should be entrusted to people also concerned with the
- bottom line. Critics of the venture argue that it diverts energy
- and attention from efforts to reform the public education
- system from within. Every other major democracy educates its
- children in public schools, they say, so why should the U.S.
- rely on entrepreneurs? Schmidt's reply: "We need the freedom to
- try to create new conceptions on a completely clean slate,
- without the constraints of inherited institutions. I don't think
- gradual reform is likely to produce the improvements the country
- desperately needs."
- </p>
- <p> Whittle has already rankled many traditionalists with his
- profitable Channel One television network. That controversial
- venture provides a 12-minute morning newscast, complete with two
- minutes of commercials, to 7.8 million students each weekday.
- "I dread the thought of the profit motive infiltrating a noble
- area of public aspiration," says educator Jonathan Kozol. "Do
- we really want to give that power to Chris Whittle?"
- </p>
- <p> Yet there is a consensus among education experts that the
- public school system is in desperate need of change, which helps
- explain why many greet Whittle's project with cautious optimism.
- "The important thing is that kids have a chance to learn," says
- Gregory Anrig, president of the Educational Testing Service. "If
- Whittle or anyone else can open up some doors, that's a good
- thing."
- </p>
- <p> The plan, called the Edison Project, envisions a
- nationwide chain of at least 100 for-profit grammar schools by
- 1996, serving 150,000 students. By the end of this decade,
- additional campuses would open, providing day care and primary
- and secondary education for 2 million students. Tuition for
- individual students would not exceed the $5,500 current average
- spent on each child now in public education.
- </p>
- <p> Whittle is confident that private schooling is an
- investment with the potential to bring a 15% annual return. "The
- motive of profit and the motive for public good are not mutually
- exclusive," says Whittle, a stylish 44-year-old who sports fancy
- bow ties and a shaggy hairstyle. "We are a private institution
- with a public mission." He has already attracted commitments of
- $60 million from corporate interests for research and
- development (including Time Warner, parent company of TIME,
- which owns 37% of Whittle Communications). Whittle will have to
- raise an additional $3 billion to implement his plans fully.
- </p>
- <p> A team of experts from the fields of education, business
- and journalism has been working out the details of the school
- system since March. The eclectic group includes Chester Finn
- Jr., a former Assistant Secretary of Education in the Reagan
- Administration; John Chubb, an expert on government and public
- policy; and Lee Eisenberg, the former editor in chief of
- Esquire.
- </p>
- <p> The planning group dismisses the notion that the only way
- to impart knowledge is to place a teacher in front of a small
- group. Technology would play a primary role in Whittle's new
- classroom. Each Whittle school would be linked by closed-circuit
- television to a central studio, which might result in a 1-to-1
- million teacher-to-student ratio. Interactive electronic data
- banks would allow students to do comprehensive research on their
- own. Notebook computers would be as common as lunch boxes.
- </p>
- <p> Over the next two years, the team will design an ambitious
- core curriculum, which will assume that today's high school
- education could be completed by a Whittle pupil by the age of
- 12. The first schools will initially accept children only from
- three months to six years of age. With each succeeding year,
- another class can be added, as the system grows along with its
- first generation of students. Whittle is leaning toward a
- "campus" approach for the schools, with all grades (including
- day-care facilities) located at the same site. Working parents
- are to be offered flexible class times to accommodate their
- schedules. Admission would be open to everyone. To broaden
- access, 20% of students would be given full scholarships.
- Whittle plans effectively to redistribute wealth from richer
- schools to districts populated mainly by the poor.
- </p>
- <p> Some of the other planned innovations, however, seem
- clearly driven by the need to cut costs. Teachers might make up
- only 30% of the total instructional force. The private schools
- would try to harness the talents of pupils in a variety of ways,
- including expecting students to tutor their peers as a way to
- develop leadership ability. Parents could be asked to work one
- day a month on a volunteer basis, helping out in the day-care
- center or study hall.
- </p>
- <p> The teachers who join the new schools would be asked to
- exchange the security of tenure for a potentially lucrative
- equity stake in the company. Their base salary would be
- augmented by performance bonuses, a feature that could attract
- the type of highly motivated, career-oriented men and women who
- today tend to shun teaching in favor of better-paying
- professions. Whittle's application of free-market techniques to
- schooling is what most troubles his critics, who fear that the
- traditional interaction between teachers and students will get
- lost amid the high-tech gadgetry and the chase for profits.
- </p>
- <p> Assistant Secretary of Education Diane Ravitch thinks the
- traditionalists aren't recognizing the benefits that come with
- competition, and says they must abandon the attitude that "if
- everyone can't have it for free, don't do it at all." She is
- convinced that examples set by for-profit schools like Whittle's
- will spur positive change across the board. "You are not
- betraying the American ideal if you leave a public school," says
- Ravitch. "It doesn't matter where kids go to school, as long as
- they get a good education."
- </p>
- <p> The Bush Administration strongly supports the concepts
- that underlie the Edison Project, but Education Secretary Lamar
- Alexander has not endorsed the plan publicly because he once
- served as a consultant to Whittle Communications and used to own
- stock in the company. Alexander has issued an "America 2000"
- program to encourage innovative, "break the mold" schools.
- </p>
- <p> Although Whittle's group is not directly federally funded,
- another Bush reform could benefit the Edison schools. The
- President's Choice Plan would give parents vouchers that would
- in effect transfer tax money to whatever school their child
- attends, even if it is a parochial or private institution. The
- voucher plan appears politically dead for now, but many
- observers believe Whittle's long-term plan anticipates the use
- of these funds. If adopted, the reform could funnel billions of
- public dollars into private schools.
- </p>
- <p> Whittle is confident that his concept for new schools will
- be able to survive, even without government assistance, and
- stay ahead of any potential competitor. "Twenty years from now,
- there will be three or four major private providers of
- education," he says. "We will be just the first to get there."
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps. But Whittle's plan leaves many questions
- unanswered. What about the vast majority of American kids who
- must continue to rely on public schools? Will they be the
- victims of a new system of separate but unequal education --
- this one based not on race but on income and geography? If
- Whittle's mission is not simply to educate but to educate for
- a profit, what happens to his franchise -- and its clients --
- if the profits dry up? Do the schools just close their doors or
- pick up stakes and move to greener pastures, as other industries
- would do? And if educational entrepreneurs like Whittle succeed
- at making the public system collapse -- playing "West Berlin"
- to the publics' "East Berlin," as he put it last week -- what
- guarantee is there that private providers would or could pick
- up the slack? Whether the Edison Project becomes yet another
- failed reform experiment or an agent for meaningful change
- depends on how well Whittle combines the profit motive with
- quality education.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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