With the Obama administration’s signature education initiative, Race to the Top, officially concluded, states and districts should resist the temptation to try new reforms and should focus on improving implementation of the initiatives adopted to increase student success and close achievement gaps. We need to get better at following through on what we begin, rather than constantly shifting to new ideas just because they’re new.
Education First helped Hawai’i, Maryland, Ohio and Tennessee win their grants and we provided technical assistance to all 19 RTTT states through the U.S. Department of Education’s Reform Support Network. We also supported non-RTTT states and districts to design and implement similar reforms. We know that states and districts need more than five years to succeed with these ambitious reforms.
In Race to the Top: Following Through on What We’ve Started, we map out 10 Action Steps to help states, districts and educators strengthen policy and implementation. The brief also includes promising practices from leading states and districts, as well as areas where states still have room to improve. We drew from our extensive experience to recommend these 10 Action Steps that state and local education leaders can take to follow through on their commitments:
The reforms states and districts are undertaking are vital but difficult—which is why they’re controversial. States and districts must continue to adjust policies and support better implementation. In a country so in love with innovation, it’s time to think of follow through as the new innovation.