I knew the military ran schools for children of service-people stationed overseas but did not know they also did it for the stateside personnel.Amy Dilmar, a middle-school principal in Georgia, is well aware of the many crises threatening American education. The lost learning that piled up during the coronavirus pandemic. The gaping inequalities by race and family income that have only gotten worse. A widening achievement gap between the highest- and lowest-performing students.
But she sees little of that at her school in Fort Moore, Ga.
The students who solve algebra equations and hone essays at Faith Middle School attend one of the highest-performing school systems in the country.
It is run not by a local school board or charter network, but by the Defense Department.
The article notes that the DoD spends as much per student as the highest-spending states. That surely helps in attracting/retaining good teachers. But the highest-spending states aren't all getting these good results.
The more telling point is that the DoD school system is not subject to an elected school board. it is not roiled by the culture wars and fads in education that locally-controlled schools may be. Democracy makes for poor management of a school system, apparently.
Also alarming: a chart in the article shows that the DoD schools have the a higher percentage of reading-proficient eighth-graders than any state... but that winning percentage is still only 55%.
Read the unlocked NYT article:
Who Runs the Best U.S. Schools? It May Be the Defense Department.