January 10, 2017
On September 15, 2016, the Philadelphia School Reform Commission approved a $200,000 contract with Cambridge Education for investigation of the cash-strapped Philadelphia School District that stated:
RESOLVED, that the
School Reform Commission authorizes the School District of Philadelphia,
through its Superintendent or his designee, to execute, deliver and perform a
contract with Cambridge Education, to develop, manage, and execute a
comprehensive School Quality Review process, to gather data and develop
qualitative reports on school quality and to engage the school community and
gather community input, for an amount not to exceed $200,000, for the period
commencing September 16, 2016 through June 30, 2017.
The information gathered during the
School Quality Review process will be
used to inform recommendations on appropriate measures to be taken to promote
sustained school improvement through the System of Great Schools process. The
vendor's purpose in the School Quality Review Process will be to provide
additional on-the ground data to inform decision-making. All final
recommendations on the investments and interventions to be made in schools will
be made by the District.
Since the September 15th, 2016 meeting, the SRC has held hearings at its eleven Priority Schools. They were deemed low performing based on test scores. All are in low-income communities. No consideration of the economic status of the student population or lack of resources for the schools due to underfunding was considered.
The SRC will look at five options for these eleven public schools:
• Entering the school into the District’s Turnaround Network
• Merging the school with a nearby high-quality school
• Merging the school with a nearby high-quality school
•
Engaging a contract partner
• Initiating an evidence-based plan for academic
improvement
• Restarting the school
• Restarting the school
According to its website, Cambridge has 350 consultants:
We work with academies, schools and colleges to develop
appropriate strategies to bring about sustainable and embedded practice,
improving life opportunities for future generations. We recognise all
educational institutions have unique needs and we collaborate with you to
develop tailored approaches to some of today’s urgent questions.
As education systems grow in independence and
sophistication, we can help to track and manage them. Wherever you are, we are
your local company – but with global backing.
Cambridge Education’s recent activities in the U.S. are listed on its parent company Mott MacDonald website.
Our education experts at Cambridge Education worked with
Springfield Public Schools to provide 130 administrators and district staff
with training to meet the new Massachusetts Educator Evaluator Rubric and
supporting the design and implementation of a curriculum alignment plan. The
District is now able to provide more targeted professional development
customised to requirements of individuals.
For Hillsborough County Public Schools we helped implement the Empowering Effective Teachers initiative, requiring that teachers are observed by administrators, peer evaluators and mentors. In 2013, we collected and analysed over 2,500 lesson observation scores with the resulting analysis being used by the county to help inform its decision making.
Through a partnership with Dr Ronald Ferguson of Harvard University, Cambridge Education delivered The Tripod Project®, a system for US educator evaluation using staff and student surveys. These surveys have been an integral part of the Gates-funded Measures of Effective Teaching project, which is improving results in English and Mathematics.
For Hillsborough County Public Schools we helped implement the Empowering Effective Teachers initiative, requiring that teachers are observed by administrators, peer evaluators and mentors. In 2013, we collected and analysed over 2,500 lesson observation scores with the resulting analysis being used by the county to help inform its decision making.
Through a partnership with Dr Ronald Ferguson of Harvard University, Cambridge Education delivered The Tripod Project®, a system for US educator evaluation using staff and student surveys. These surveys have been an integral part of the Gates-funded Measures of Effective Teaching project, which is improving results in English and Mathematics.
The British website British Expertise says:
Cambridge Education has been in existence for more than 30
years, and was originally a joint venture between Sir M MacDonald and the
University of Cambridge. We still maintain close links with the University, but
are now part of the Health and Education arm of Mott MacDonald, a major, international
multi-disciplinary consultancy company with more than 12,000 employees
worldwide. Cambridge Education itself has over 160 staff members at its HQ in
Cambridge and 220 worldwide, of which about a third are educational
professionals.
The Mott MacDonald Group Executive Board
A current report of Mott MacDonald says it employs over 16,000 people in 150 countries. Education, with its subsidiary Cambridge Education, is only one sector of its portfolio. Others include aerospace, bridges, buildings communications, environment, health, industry, international development, city development, oil and gas, power, railways, transportation, water.
The Our Hertage page of Mott MacDonald Group highlights some of the companies developed by MMG.
Mott MacDonald Group’s current projects in North America says they are expecting “unprecedented growth in North America.”
The article “Transforming teacher education and learning” shows that they are aiming to become an international leader in digital
learning. They are using their Raspberry Pi system and tablets to “demonstrate
the value of technological resources and digital learning in teacher education,
helping colleges see the value of embedding these practices into their teaching
curriculum.”
Members of the Alliance for Philadelphia Public Schools attended
many of the Cambridge Education focus group meetings for the
Priority Schools. In their APPS Review
of Cambridge Education Reports on Priority Schools they
concluded:
After attending several
focus group meetings at six of the eleven schools designated by the Hite
administration as Priority Schools, after reviewing Cambridge Education’s
contract with the district, and after closely reviewing the Cambridge final
reports on the eleven schools, there is no other conclusion for us to come to: the Cambridge reports cannot be considered
reliable on any level, including anecdotally.
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