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All right.

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Hello, and welcome to another episode of the Transformative Principal podcast.

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This is Mike Caldwell, your host, and joining me all the way from Indiana is Scott Bess.

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Scott, welcome.

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Mike, good to, good to see you.

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Happy to be on.

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Well, let's, let's break, break things up a little bit.

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I have five rapid fire questions, and then we'll get into a little bit of your background- Sure

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and, and then get into the meat, meat of, meat and potatoes of the thing, of this conversation.

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But let's, let's start with, uh, what do you see as one outdated practice in education you would eliminate tomorrow?

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Oh, for sure.

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The, uh, um, discrete subject areas, uh, where, in high school where you go from math to English to social studies, and then the time block.

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Like, everything lasts 18 weeks or 36 weeks.

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I would blow that up tomorrow if I could.

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Ooh, love it.

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What's one innovation you think will become mainstream within the next decade?

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I think I know the answer.

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Yeah.

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It's gotta be, but I'm curious on what you- Well- … you're gonna say on this.

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No, I think, I think we're gonna see even more proliferation of micro schools, um, and distributed education.

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Um, and I think as the tools catch up with some of that, it's gonna become even more prevalent.

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Not, not what I expected.

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I'm, I'm, I'm intrigued with the answer, though.

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What's something schools should measure that they currently don't?

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I think measuring everything a student is doing inside and outside of school.

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There's so much learning that happens outside the school walls, and it may as well not happen in terms of, of how the schools see it.

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So I think if they could find ways to capture everything a student is doing, 'cause they're doing amazing things on their own, and we just don't, we just never see it.

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Yeah.

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Well, building off of your, a little bit of your background in IT, what's one lesson education could learn from the tech sector?

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Oh, I think, um, innovate or die.

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Like I, you know, in the tech sector, if you haven't innovated, you just, you just go away.

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And I think in education we just haven't learned that lesson yet, and we c- we hang on, we hang on, we hang on.

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You know, everybody talks about, you know, if you look at the diploma from the, you know, early 1900s, it looks a lot like the diploma today, right?

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And if you look at how you got that diploma, it looks like how you get the diploma today.

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So I think that innovation that ha- has happened everywhere else hasn't happened in education.

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And I, my fear is that we're going to become obsolete if we don't adapt quickly.

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Last question.

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Uh, what's a misconception people have about charter schools or s- or school innovation?

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You choose.

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Oh, God.

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Yeah, charter schools, it's easy.

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Like, that's… You know, they, you know, they, they skim kids.

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They only take, uh, high-end kids.

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They, they, uh, don't take special education.

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They're, you know, they're… It costs money to go to voucher school.

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Like, there's a, there's like a greatest hits that, like, teachers unions and others trot out every time and, you know, it, it's… We spend a lot of time going, "No, that's actually not true. This is, this is the reality and this is what happens."

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So yeah, those are, those are, like, the big misconceptions that, that exist.

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Yeah.

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Awesome.

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Well, if we were doing a three minutes and 20, uh, minute podcast, we'd be wrapping up right now.

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Boom.

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And those are, those are some good nuggets right there.

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Yeah.

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Yeah, maybe that's why we should… Micro pods.

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That's right.

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Um, three minutes or less.

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Well, Scott, you're the president of the Indiana Charter Innovation Center.

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Yep.

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Uh, previously founded the Indiana Charter School Association.

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Yep.

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And also a member of the Indiana State Board of Education.

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Right.

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So you have your hands in a lot of different, uh, pots- Yeah … all connected to education, but that's not where you, you've- Yeah

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you've had, you've had an interesting career.

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Yeah.

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Talk a little bit about your, your background- Yeah … and IT and… Well, yeah, I won't spoil it for the, for the, for the audience here.

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Yeah.

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Give me a little flavor of where you're coming from.

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No, I always tell people, like, you should never come to me for career advice, 'cause my career path has been a meandering journey.

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Um, I started off my career as a teacher, like, you know, came out of college, went right into teaching.

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Uh, coached, um, for several years and then I went, "Man, there's gotta be a different way to do this." And again, this, to give you some context, I was teaching computers to sixth, seventh, and eighth graders on Apple IIEs.

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So that'll give you a little bit of a timeframe reference.

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Um, and I just got frustrated with- Someone in their 20s, I'm really surprised- Yeah, right.

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Yeah, yeah … 'cause you basically spill it.

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Yeah, as young as I am, yeah.

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I, um, went into the museum and got those IIEs.

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Um, but I got frustrated with, like- It didn't, even then, back in the mid-'80s, it didn't feel like that there should be better ways to do it, and it just wasn't possible then.

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And so I left and went into the IT world and worked my way up at a couple different companies, um, and eventually wound up as a CIO at Goodwill Industries of Central Indiana.

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Um, and so that, you know, I learned a lot.

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I, I did… I was working for a somewhat soul-sucking, uh, utility company as I was head of IT for one of their business units for a bit, and went through a
corporate re-engineering, which say what you want about that, and you get all these big, uh, consulting firms that were, you know, getting paid a lot of money.

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But I learned a lot about how do you look at an enterprise and think about how do you redo that?

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Like, how do you get, take the practices that you were doing and look ahead and say, "How should we start doing this, um, in the future?" And so that was a kind of a pivotal moment for me, going, "Oh, wait, like, this is IT stuff and…

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but it c- it applies almost anywhere." And so as I got back into education, um, at Goodwill, um, and we can talk about more about that.

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But, you know, we, we started a small charter school because I had all this education background.

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I'd also been on my, uh, got elected to my local school board, and I was on that for 16 years.

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And so taking that education experience and then going, "Hey, you're the CIO. You've got all this education experience. Can you help oversee our
charter high school?" And that got me back into education, which then led to some other things Now, is that when you created the Excel Center?

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It was, yeah.

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So the, the recession hit in 2008, right?

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So people, your listeners would remember… I mean, that was nationwide.

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And it turns out that people who did not have a high school diploma, they just got annihilated in the workforce.

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Um, and so they would come into Goodwill, and obviously Goodwill helped people prepare for, find, and keep jobs.

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And what we found is people came- lost their job, came in through the doors.

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We helped them get a job, typically a low-paying job.

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Then they would lose that job, come back in the doors.

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And our president at the time, um, at Goodwill, Jim McClellan, who's a mentor of mine, uh, said, "Hey, look, we've got to figure out
what's the commonality of these folks." And we found that over half the people coming in for assistance didn't have a high school diploma.

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And so there was a, I don't know if it's famous or infamous weekend.

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I went home and looked through Indiana State Code and came back in on a Monday and said, "Hey, you know, Indiana does not have an upper age limit on who can get a diploma, nor a limit on who can get
funded for one." And so we put together a really small group of people, actually came up with the design of the Excel Centers, went into the Indianapolis mayor's office and said, "We've got an idea.

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Would you guys authorize this?" And they were like, "Absolutely, yes." And so we launched in 2010 with one school.

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We were gonna launch with 200 people.

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The demand drove it to 300.

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And then we, within that first year, we I told a story the other day to some folks, like, we had this idea of what the school would be, and this is like the innovative part, re-engineering part comes around.

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Like, what we thought would work, didn't.

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And like in October, November of that first year, we're like, "Not only is no one going to graduate, I'm not sure anyone's ever going to get a credit." And so rather than get fired, we're like, "Now what do
we do?" And that's where we came up with essentially the basic function of what the Excel Centers are today, with five terms a year, flexible scheduling, all the things, but a lot of in-person instruction.

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Um, and so- Then the second year we added two new schools.

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The year after that we added two more.

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The year after that we added four more.

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Then we also started to license that to other Goodwills around the country.

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And, you know, today I'm on the board of the one in Washington, DC.

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We have two schools now, and likely have a third in a couple of years.

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And I think there's now 60-plus Excel Centers around the country serving tens of thousands of students.

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And I was just reading a, a, uh, University of Notre Dame did a study of, of, uh, graduates of the Excel Centers, and they found that the economic outcomes of the graduates are amazing.

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Like tens of thousands of dollars after they graduate and are, uh, you know, they have a credential that they can take into the workforce and their income is rising tens of thousands of dollars.

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So people who are on public assistance no longer are on public assistance and actually are paying taxes.

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And, you know, if you've got someone in their late 20s or early 30s, they're gonna be paying taxes for 30-plus years.

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And so the return is amazing.

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Um, and so every state we've been in where we talk to the legislators, they're like, "Oh yeah, we need, we need more of that."

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So that was a… That really got me back into education and fired up that, that innovation thing.

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And I honestly tell people I'm more of a problem solver.

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Like, here's a problem, how do we go about do- fixing that and then, uh, create something?

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Yeah, I love that.

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I'm, I'm just curious, when you said, you know, it wasn't working- Yeah

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you launched, you had this idea- Yeah … of what it should look like, and then you, you, you pivoted.

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Yeah.

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What was it that, that, that existed originally and- Yeah … and, and why wasn't it working?

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Yeah, this, this will probably come as no shock to the, to your listeners, and, uh, w- probably something we should've known then.

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Our original idea was, "Hey, we're gonna use a lot of, um- Online instruction, and we're still gonna have supports around them, so we're gonna have teachers and life coaches and all those things.

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But it's gonna be self-paced 'cause we think, you know, students are gonna come at different levels.

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We'll let them advance at their own pace.

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And then again, it was around October, November, we went, "Oh, wait a minute. Every single student here has quit something that they knew was really important, and so their general
s- uh, level of self-motivation probably isn't incredibly high." And so, 'cause what we found was they just were spinning their wheels and nothing happening, nothing happening.

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And we started to see, when we started to do, like, some small group instruction with some, with some students, we're like, oh wait, then they start moving.

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And so that's where we said, "Okay, look, we really do need to keep this as flexible as possible because adults have different needs. They're gonna,
they're gonna float in, they're gonna float out because of, you know, stuff their kids have going on or they picked up another part-time job."

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But You do have to have high quality teacher-led instruction for them, and setting some deadlines for them to help them go, "Oh, wait, this is something I can do." And once we did that, then people took off.

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They, they were able to amass credits quickly, 'cause we knew that if someone came to us with, you know, no high school credits, we couldn't have them put their life on hold for four years.

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So you had to integrate a bunch of stuff.

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So we did integrated classes like English and government and, um, you know, other social studies.

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Like, being, bringing those things together so that they could earn multiple credits in one class, that really helped people accelerate.

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And once they started to accelerate, then it became self-fulfilling.

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It's like, "Oh, wait, I'm really moving towards my graduation. I can get there." And so, uh, yeah.

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But that, those first few months of self-pace on your own, that… And again, I think we found that during the, uh, you know, pandemic.

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Uh, students who were kind of on their own just didn't do well and still aren't doing well.

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Yeah.

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Yeah, for sure.

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Well, I, I'm on a board for a charter school that works for, with, uh, pregnant parenting teens- Mm … here in Idaho, and, um, just this last year kind of flipped the, the
learning model from more of a traditional kind of structure to self-paced- Mm … with, with still a teacher in the room and… But, um, they're still trying to figure it out.

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Yeah.

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So I think this would be, you know, it's… Th- they have some elements, I think, of what, what you're talking about.

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Yep.

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But I think they're still, they're still trying to figure out how do you, how do you get these kids oftentimes that are, you know, well behind- Right … um, fast track to a, to a degree.

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And one of the thing- things that, uh, we, we haven't talked about, I don't believe, with them is, is the idea of the, um, integrated kind of coursework- Yep

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where you're kind of getting multiple credits for, from one type of experience.

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That's right.

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So, yeah.

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W- so, um, I mean, I, I could probably spend the whole podcast just talking about the Excel Center.

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Yeah.

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I'm, I'm really intrigued with, with that, but we'll, uh… You, you have a lot of other things- It- … going on, so we'll, we'll skip that.

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Um, but, uh, yeah, Excel Center and just m- how many different states?

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Just, just so to clear.

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Oh, gosh.

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I, I think- 15 different states.

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Um- And they're all kind of following the same- Yeah … model that you evolved to?

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They do.

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Yeah.

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Okay.

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They're all f- and they're all affiliated with Goodwills across the country.

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Okay.

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Um, and I think, actually, I just saw something today, looks like Puerto Rico is the next one to come online, so.

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Oh, wow.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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And y- do they… Do, do you have any, like, touchpoints with these schools, or are they kind of just like adopt a, a program and, and almost like a franchise-type, type deal?

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It's, it's somewhat of a franchise.

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I think the Goodwill of Central Indiana, which still cen- quote-unquote, "Owns" the concept, um, they have a team that works with, um, all the different states.

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Now, you'll see some individual differences, um, based on local needs and, and so forth, but- Sure … really, they're all, they all follow the same ba- basic pattern.

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Five terms a year, eight week… The terms last eight weeks.

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Um, they do rolling enrollments out of those terms, um, rolling graduations.

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So it's, um, yeah, it's pretty, it's pretty unique.

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Again, I've gotten to stay involved, uh, I… since I went on the board of the, of the, uh, Excel Center in DC.

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And so I was actually just out there.

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They had their 10th anniversary.

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And this, this coming year they'll hit their 1,000th graduate.

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Um, and even in a city the size of DC, if you take 1,000 adults and g- take them from not having a diploma to having one, plus some kind of credential, you start to notice that in
the workforce and then the impact on their children, because now th- now they're not the child of a dropout, they're the child of a graduate who's now has higher level employment.

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That child's, um, graduation status is likely gonna be really strong, too.

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So I think you start to see this generational impact of that.

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And as you get the numbers up, you really do start to feel a difference, um, in the city.

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You know, I'm curious, um, you know, for, for our listeners, you know, you might have a listener out there that's, you know, high school principal that, you know, in a traditional public school or even, you know, it doesn't matter, private- Sure, yeah

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charter, whatever.

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And th- and they're, they're trying to figure out, you know, how do we, um, provide a better maybe environment for these kids that fail the traditional system?

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Yep.

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Um, and they're probably not in a position just to go start a charter school- Right, right … or adopt maybe the Excel.

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Like, what, what are some like- Yep

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ingredients that maybe kind of any, any principal- Yeah … should- that's listening s- should say, "Okay, I, I need to, I need to rethink how we're doing X- Yeah, yeah … move closer to Y because that's showing success"?

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Yeah, and I think my, my answer, and I, at some level put my state board of ed hat on.

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Um, as I talk to my peers around the country, almost every state board has some sort of waiver, freedom to…

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Like, if the schools have an idea, typically most state boards are saying, "Bring us your ideas. Like, we'll, we'll listen to it," right?

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And, and even there are some things where principals will say, "Well, I'd want, I want to do this thing, but we can't," and the reality is they actually could.

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Like, there's, there isn't anything that prohibits it.

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So a great example, um, I've got a good friend that runs a, um, it's a small rural high school here in Indiana, and he has, um, a set of kids every year that he knows, just as you described, are probably not on a track to graduate successfully.

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And so he has created a sub group within the school that says, "Hey, look, you're gonna come in here.

00:18:01.468 --> 00:18:09.228
We're going to… If you're in…" And again, looking at interest, whether you're interested in manufacturing, interested in construction, interested in something, right?

00:18:09.238 --> 00:18:15.436
That's, we're going to actually teach every subject In the context of that.

00:18:15.506 --> 00:18:24.646
And so they'll spend, um, and really starting their freshman year, spend part of their time out of the building understanding and learning about the thing they're interested in.

00:18:24.976 --> 00:18:30.286
And then the rest of the time they're in, but it's… they're not going math to English to social studies to science.

00:18:30.656 --> 00:18:34.996
They're doing everything in the context of that, and team teaching a lot of that.

00:18:35.016 --> 00:18:40.286
And what he's found is the engagement of those students goes off the charts.

00:18:40.546 --> 00:18:48.066
Um, kids who had chronic absenteeism in middle school or their freshman year, all of a sudden are like, "Well, no, I'm coming to school because I get to go do this thing."

00:18:48.416 --> 00:18:51.266
And he literally didn't have to do anything.

00:18:51.386 --> 00:18:52.646
He didn't have to ask for a waiver.

00:18:52.666 --> 00:18:54.926
It's like you're still teaching the courses.

00:18:55.006 --> 00:18:57.386
You're a certified teacher who's granting the credits.

00:18:57.386 --> 00:19:12.776
There's like no one comes in and polices how you teach, and so he's been able to do that, and he's-- I would say he's one of the more innovative, uh, superintendents in the state, um, or in the country for that matter.

00:19:13.186 --> 00:19:31.056
Um, 'cause he also started his own charter micro-school, um, that's adjacent to his district, and he's pulling a lot of kids who were
previously homeschooled back into the public system, um, because he's got a really flexible system and, you know, the kids love it.

00:19:31.066 --> 00:19:45.476
So there you have a traditional public school superintendent who's doing innovative things within his district and started a charter micro-school, um, kind of off to the side, which now is gonna grow into a network of micro-schools around the state.

00:19:45.936 --> 00:19:52.446
So I think the answer my-- to your question, there's almost no limit to what people can do.

00:19:52.446 --> 00:19:54.296
They sometimes get stuck.

00:19:54.986 --> 00:20:03.536
I remember I was talking to a principal one time, I said, "Hey, what's the most innovative idea you've ever had? Like that you, you're almost scared to go ask your superintendent 'cause you think you were crazy."

00:20:03.536 --> 00:20:09.656
And he looked at me, he goes, "Man, if we could just do a double block trimester." I'm like, "All right.

00:20:10.136 --> 00:20:10.616
Sure.

00:20:10.706 --> 00:20:11.066
Yep.

00:20:11.196 --> 00:20:23.096
Double block trimester, that'll change everything." Like y- it's… People get stuck in this like th- like there's almost no limit to what you can do in the public systems.

00:20:23.156 --> 00:20:27.096
Um, and I tell people all the time, like try to break out.

00:20:27.116 --> 00:20:46.106
And I-- by the way, one of my criticisms of the charter sector is by and large, while the outcomes are generally better, we have a couple studies
that just released here in Indiana that shows the charter sector has outperformed their peer districts in growth of students since the pandemic.

00:20:46.106 --> 00:20:47.996
Like, so we got some really strong evidence.

00:20:48.266 --> 00:20:48.616
But

00:20:50.744 --> 00:20:55.984
I don't think anyone would say that the sector has been terribly innovative.

00:20:56.554 --> 00:20:59.324
Um, they're probably better run.

00:20:59.334 --> 00:21:03.194
They've got more, you know, they've got people that work really hard.

00:21:03.694 --> 00:21:10.034
But if you walk into the school, you still see kids sitting at desks and listening to a teacher and taking tests.

00:21:10.034 --> 00:21:10.974
Like it, it doesn't…

00:21:12.094 --> 00:21:14.984
We haven't really changed much of anything.

00:21:15.024 --> 00:21:24.784
Um, again, there are some that kind of push the boundaries a little bit, but I think that's my challenge to the charter sector here in Indiana is take advantage of the freedoms you got.

00:21:24.914 --> 00:21:30.454
Like no one says you have to keep a kid in a, in a seat for 36 weeks to get a credit in algebra.

00:21:30.484 --> 00:21:37.554
Like if they, if they can do it in 12, do it in 12, like, you know, or if they need to take 50, take 50.

00:21:37.564 --> 00:21:44.554
Like there's no Nothing says you have to do that other than that's how it's been done.

00:21:44.794 --> 00:21:55.824
And I think that's, you know, kind of back to our point when we started, like there's… If we're gonna get rid of the Carnegie Unit and all those things, which by the way, the Carnegie Foundation is trying to get rid of the Carnegie Unit.

00:21:55.914 --> 00:21:58.444
Like, that's, that's their, that's their new mission, right?

00:21:59.074 --> 00:22:03.214
And we've gotta, we've gotta start pushing to make that happen.

00:22:04.764 --> 00:22:05.114
Yeah.

00:22:05.334 --> 00:22:07.274
We think it- if they're behind it Yeah.

00:22:07.274 --> 00:22:07.974
Right, right.

00:22:08.694 --> 00:22:11.294
That, that should, uh, be enough, I guess.

00:22:11.294 --> 00:22:11.424
Yeah.

00:22:11.424 --> 00:22:11.954
Maybe not.

00:22:12.084 --> 00:22:30.964
Um, micro schools- Yeah … have been, you know, a, uh, I was just meeting with a, with a, um, leader similar, in similar role to you in a
different state yesterday, and we were talking about micro schools, and he's actually starting his own, uh, with his wife, um, in Colorado.

00:22:30.964 --> 00:22:39.534
And, and it's, it's, it seems like it's really… I mean, the, the micro school movement track is, is really gain- gaining a lot of traction.

00:22:39.924 --> 00:22:41.884
I know it's not necessarily a new thing.

00:22:41.884 --> 00:22:50.484
I think, I think they've been a long time, but for s- for, you know, post-pandemic, it seems like they're really gaining traction and, and I can understand why.

00:22:51.484 --> 00:22:56.754
You know, there's some challenges with it, I think that are still trying to, to, to figure out and, and, and things like that.

00:22:56.754 --> 00:23:02.384
So what are you, what are you seeing in your state- Yeah … from a, on the micro school th- side?

00:23:02.384 --> 00:23:11.394
And m- maybe before you answer that question, how do you, I guess, describe or, or define what a, what a micro school- Yeah

00:23:11.424 --> 00:23:13.994
is, and, and then kinda what are you seeing in your state?

00:23:14.464 --> 00:23:15.944
Yeah, no, that's a, that's a great question.

00:23:15.984 --> 00:23:29.184
I think the definition, 'cause I get that all the time, like, like, "Well, how big?" Like, well, okay, I've seen micro schools with five kids in someone's house to 200 kids in a building where everybody goes, right?

00:23:29.244 --> 00:23:44.314
And if… I think what I've come down to is it's more about how the school operates, and if it is largely teacher driven, without a lot of administrative overhead, and there's a ton of flexibility.

00:23:44.324 --> 00:23:52.034
So in other words, it's not necessarily time-based in terms of, you know, this, this class lasts this long and then you'll get a grade.

00:23:52.624 --> 00:24:02.384
But it's largely mastery based, a lot of flexibility in, in how kids interact with the school, and a ton of teacher autonomy.

00:24:02.764 --> 00:24:05.094
Like, to me, that's a, that's the heart of a micro school.

00:24:05.204 --> 00:24:07.844
Um, and I think you'll, you'd see that in different places.

00:24:08.374 --> 00:24:13.424
Um, you know, I went to one- So more about the modality- That's right

00:24:13.424 --> 00:24:15.994
or kind of structure- That's right … versus the size.

00:24:16.004 --> 00:24:16.324
That's right.

00:24:16.324 --> 00:24:17.054
Yeah, yeah.

00:24:17.074 --> 00:24:17.824
I like that, yeah.

00:24:17.864 --> 00:24:23.684
And I think we're seeing, you know, as you mentioned, you know, since the pandemic especially, you saw a lot of homeschool pods get created.

00:24:24.714 --> 00:24:34.500
And the interesting thing was a lot of those were- More with people with means who could group of parents say, "Hey, we're gonna hire a teacher and, you know, our kids will come together."

00:24:35.220 --> 00:24:41.760
Um, whereas low-income kids by and large were stuck doing virtual and then had to go back to school when it opened.

00:24:42.510 --> 00:24:50.250
And I think this idea of a public micro-school really appeals to me, and we're seeing that.

00:24:50.350 --> 00:25:05.330
I think we're gonna see that take off here in Indiana because it's bringing kids who might have been out of the system back into the system, or kids
who were disaffected in a large district being able to come to something that's smaller, more intimate, but you still can actually track results, right?

00:25:05.330 --> 00:25:16.960
So I think if you, in some other states where micro-schools are flourishing, where they have universal ESAs, for example, and again, check your local listings on how tightly those operate.

00:25:17.020 --> 00:25:22.282
Like here in Indiana, home schools like Have zero tracking.

00:25:22.322 --> 00:25:24.292
Like, we don't, we don't even know who's in it.

00:25:24.832 --> 00:25:29.472
You don't have to register, you don't have to do anything, and there's no tracking of your results.

00:25:29.472 --> 00:25:30.692
You don't take state tests.

00:25:31.072 --> 00:25:36.552
Um, the parent can issue the diploma and, like, no one knows if they actually know anything or not.

00:25:37.332 --> 00:25:47.302
Whereas at a, a public micro school, they, they're, they participate in state testing so we can see how those students are doing, what they know, what they don't know.

00:25:47.942 --> 00:25:53.172
Um, I think it was interesting, the one I was talking about, Indiana does a through-year assessment.

00:25:53.352 --> 00:25:59.522
Um, and so instead of one formative end of the year assessment, we do three assessments during the year.

00:26:00.322 --> 00:26:14.922
And when a lot of the kids that were in this micro school had never come, had never been in school before, and so when they signed up,
their parents are like, "Hey, they're, you know, they did all the fourth grade curriculum and, you know, they're moving into fifth grade."

00:26:15.902 --> 00:26:17.762
Whereas age-wise, they're a fourth grader, right?

00:26:18.522 --> 00:26:30.272
And but when they took this, the f- the first assessment, what they found was they were off the charts in some areas and way below in others, and it really depended on what the parent's capacity was.

00:26:30.282 --> 00:26:39.262
Like, like they, they- Sure … they read at a middle school level but did math at a second grade level because they just hadn't spent a lot of time on it, right?

00:26:39.312 --> 00:26:43.712
And so it's a way of kind of evening it out, making sure that everyone is, is moving.

00:26:43.742 --> 00:26:54.612
But there's also then accountability, 'cause again, these are public, so they're getting state dollars, and now you have accountability to that school that, yes, you're doing your job in educating the students, right?

00:26:54.642 --> 00:27:07.762
So I think, um, but there's also a ton of flexibility, um, where some of the students come three or four days a week, some come five because the parent still wants to be engaged or involved.

00:27:07.842 --> 00:27:16.742
And as long as the student is learning and, like, the school's responsible for saying, "Yes, you've mastered the material.

00:27:17.532 --> 00:27:21.472
Where you got the mastery from, whether it was inside school or outside of school, doesn't matter.

00:27:21.592 --> 00:27:22.472
Like, you're learning.

00:27:23.092 --> 00:27:27.302
We're making sure that, um, you're proficient.

00:27:28.012 --> 00:27:29.692
We don't necessarily have to teach everything," right?

00:27:29.692 --> 00:27:32.892
And so the students then get to have all these different experiences.

00:27:33.522 --> 00:27:35.032
Parents can still be involved if they want to.

00:27:35.032 --> 00:27:36.252
And again, some do, some don't.

00:27:36.502 --> 00:27:40.492
And but they have a ton of flexibility.

00:27:41.112 --> 00:27:49.024
And a kids school has like 60 kids in it, so- They can group, regroup, multi-age, right?

00:27:49.024 --> 00:27:58.004
So you'll have a second grader who reads really well with the middle school kind of group of kids, but then she's back doing math with her peers 'cause she's not strong there.

00:27:58.014 --> 00:28:03.574
Like, there's ability to… And the te- the teachers, they manage it themselves.

00:28:03.574 --> 00:28:11.064
Like, they, they talk daily about which kids should be with who, and they group, they regroup.

00:28:11.524 --> 00:28:15.044
And I think it's that type of instruction.

00:28:15.054 --> 00:28:16.554
So again, a lot of it is teacher-driven.

00:28:16.554 --> 00:28:21.774
There's not a ton of technology, um, but there's also a lot of group work.

00:28:21.834 --> 00:28:23.434
You know, we talk about durable skills.

00:28:23.434 --> 00:28:25.514
There's a lot of that problem-solving that's happening.

00:28:25.954 --> 00:28:36.754
Um, they've gotten Project Lead the Way to develop some curriculum for them that's really helped, um, where the kids can actually, uh, do work, again, inside of school, outside of school, using some of that curriculum stuff.

00:28:37.034 --> 00:28:43.234
So anyhow, the point is, we think that that network is gonna grow from a… Now it's a single site.

00:28:43.234 --> 00:28:45.744
I think next year they'll have six or seven sites.

00:28:46.524 --> 00:28:49.944
Um, probably grow up to a total of, you know, five hundred kids.

00:28:50.394 --> 00:28:58.724
And then we think that kind of growth is gonna happen year over year, where we could have ten thousand kids in those micro schools or scattered around the state.

00:28:58.974 --> 00:29:01.514
Um, and this one happens to be rural.

00:29:01.944 --> 00:29:03.664
Some of the sites next year are gonna be urban.

00:29:03.834 --> 00:29:05.104
A couple are gonna be suburban.

00:29:05.534 --> 00:29:13.584
And so I think you're gonna see this really interesting mix of students at these different sites, and it's not cookie cutter, right?

00:29:13.764 --> 00:29:16.614
If you have, you know, this teacher wants to do things one way.

00:29:16.614 --> 00:29:19.464
Like, here's a Montessori teacher that wants to do something.

00:29:19.464 --> 00:29:21.294
Like, okay, that's gonna be more of a Montessori base.

00:29:21.514 --> 00:29:23.604
This one's gonna be more hands-on project base.

00:29:23.614 --> 00:29:34.834
Like there's, um… But the point is, going back to the definition, proficiency-based, teacher-driven, um, teacher autonomy, and then a ton of flexibility

00:29:37.360 --> 00:29:39.840
So let me test some a- assumptions.

00:29:39.880 --> 00:30:09.090
Um, for the, for the microschools, it seems that if they're born out of an existing, whether it's a district- Yep … school or an existing charter network- Yeah … or whatever else, um, be much easier- Yeah … to
start because- That's right … you have that kind of critical mass- Exactly … support versus, you know, a couple parents or whatever, like, have this idea, or whoever, a teacher has an idea- That's right

00:30:09.090 --> 00:30:10.840
and they want to go start it from the ground up.

00:30:10.850 --> 00:30:14.610
That's a lot harder to doable, and that's how some of them start.

00:30:14.610 --> 00:30:14.810
Yep.

00:30:15.270 --> 00:30:18.130
But, uh, it seems like it's a great opportunity really.

00:30:18.130 --> 00:30:28.600
If I'm a district superintendent and, and I wanna just create more choice within my district, a microschool creates- Yep … a, a really fast track way to do that.

00:30:28.690 --> 00:30:29.270
It does.

00:30:29.330 --> 00:30:29.710
It does.

00:30:29.710 --> 00:30:37.650
And I think it's very attractive to people who have chosen to opt out of the system, um, because they didn't, you know, for whatever reason.

00:30:37.650 --> 00:30:42.400
But to, the idea that here's something that's small, it's flexible, it's a ton of engagement.

00:30:42.430 --> 00:30:51.250
Um, and to your point, no one goes into education going, "Man, I really wanna learn how to do payroll and finance," and like…

00:30:51.530 --> 00:31:13.870
So if you have a district or a charter network that already does those things, it really becomes pretty easy to say, "Look, we're gonna have another site and it's microschool-based." And I, I will
guarantee, 'cause I, um, right before I left Purdue Polytechnic, we, we started a, uh, our own microschool and we said, "Hey, do we have teachers who would really like to go work in this way?"

00:31:13.910 --> 00:31:19.170
And people raised their hand right away, and then they took off and ran with it, right?

00:31:19.320 --> 00:31:32.030
And I think, I guarantee there are teachers in every school building in the country who are like, "Man, if I could just go run my own thing with, you know… If I could have three of us and we could have 60 or 70 kids, like that'd be awesome."

00:31:32.640 --> 00:31:34.370
Well, you could do that, right?

00:31:34.410 --> 00:31:39.750
And again, there's nothing, there's almost nothing special you have to do to, to do it.

00:31:39.760 --> 00:31:47.660
You could even do it within your own building and say, "Look, we're gonna… Here are these three rooms at the end of the hallway. They're gonna be their own thing, and we're not gonna, we're not gonna bother them."

00:31:48.630 --> 00:31:49.970
You could literally do that next school year.

00:31:51.060 --> 00:31:51.330
Right.

00:31:51.510 --> 00:31:51.860
Yeah.

00:31:52.810 --> 00:31:53.180
Love it.

00:31:53.540 --> 00:31:54.720
I kinda wanna go start one myself.

00:31:54.910 --> 00:31:55.170
There you go.

00:31:55.190 --> 00:31:58.020
Um, maybe I'll, maybe I'll get going on that after this podcast.

00:31:58.580 --> 00:32:08.830
Um, y- one of the things you talked about, which I love, is talking about learning experiences outside- Yeah … of the school walls.

00:32:08.860 --> 00:32:09.020
Yep.

00:32:09.030 --> 00:32:11.010
And, and recognizing those.

00:32:11.010 --> 00:32:22.976
And one of the things that I've been talking to my 20-something year old daughters, um- recently, and, you know, they're, they're in, they're in really good, you know, places.

00:32:22.976 --> 00:32:24.336
You know, my daughter's in law school.

00:32:24.346 --> 00:32:29.096
My, my older daughter has, has got her first, you know, big kid job and those types of things.

00:32:29.096 --> 00:32:36.416
But we, you know, we look back and go, it was really the things they did outside- Uh-huh … of the school system.

00:32:36.596 --> 00:32:38.196
They had great education, don't get me wrong.

00:32:38.196 --> 00:32:38.366
Yep, yep.

00:32:38.836 --> 00:32:51.006
But it was the internships that they did, the, the clubs that they were part of, all the things that were outside- Yeah … of the walls that really helped them excel- Yeah

00:32:51.066 --> 00:32:56.656
you know, and grow and, and also feed their, their, their passions and things like that.

00:32:56.686 --> 00:32:59.966
And again, I'm not taking away from their education, kind of their core education.

00:32:59.966 --> 00:33:01.176
That was really important, too.

00:33:01.746 --> 00:33:10.896
Um, but other than setting themselves up for opportunity, yeah, you- those things weren't… There's no place to recognize that- That's right

00:33:10.896 --> 00:33:12.496
like within, within the environment.

00:33:12.516 --> 00:33:18.486
So what do, what do you see as, um, maybe missed opportunity when- Yeah … it comes to that?

00:33:18.516 --> 00:33:26.796
And, um, what can be done to, to better recognize and better, um, I guess, encourage- Yeah … those types of experiences?

00:33:26.956 --> 00:33:32.036
Yeah, and this is, boy, this is, I don't know if it's the million-dollar question or maybe the billion-dollar question, right?

00:33:32.076 --> 00:33:36.686
I think it's, as we… So I'll do a couple things.

00:33:37.716 --> 00:33:54.916
Again, with my state board of ed hat on, in Indiana, we, we did a lot of stuff with our… We redesigned our diploma, new accountability system,
and all of that work was designed to, as our, uh, S- Secretary of Education, Katie Jenner, talks a lot about, is you reinvent high school, right?

00:33:55.146 --> 00:33:59.266
And it's really about creating conditions that enable that to happen.

00:33:59.876 --> 00:34:05.436
Um, and so part of the diploma was recognizing that we have these portrait of a graduate things, right?

00:34:05.436 --> 00:34:09.946
We, in Indiana, we call ours the Graduates Prepared to Succeed, the Indiana GPS.

00:34:10.986 --> 00:34:12.106
And it's aspirational, right?

00:34:12.106 --> 00:34:19.236
And so we want students, again, to have the academic things as you suggested, but we also want them to be great communicators, collaborators.

00:34:19.276 --> 00:34:21.546
We want them to have responsibility.

00:34:21.556 --> 00:34:22.626
Like, there's all these things.

00:34:22.626 --> 00:34:25.646
We want them to be c- civic and digital literacy.

00:34:28.018 --> 00:34:33.448
And none of those things can really be measured now in some ways, right?

00:34:33.478 --> 00:34:43.028
And I think what we didn't wanna have happen is where students or schools go, "Okay, we're gonna create a class on collaboration, and you can take the class, and if you get the credit, then you check the box."

00:34:43.028 --> 00:34:46.258
Like, no, that's… Are you actually a good collaborator, right?

00:34:46.888 --> 00:35:06.658
And I think the, um, the idea, and this is where I see a huge need, you know, everybody talks about AI in education, and I think some of the
attention has been misplaced, and it, it really focuses on tools and, you know, s- personalized tutors for kids and, and those are great.

00:35:06.668 --> 00:35:10.668
Like, I, I… Yes, we should be using those tools and be thinking about it.

00:35:11.388 --> 00:35:18.028
But I think where AI can really play a role is in, like, the education ecosystem.

00:35:18.628 --> 00:35:35.518
Because now, honestly, if, if you're a school principal out there and you've got, you know, 1,000 kids in your high school, you're like, "Well, yeah, I
would love to do personalized learning for kids, and I would love to have people be proficiency-based, and so they, they can, you know, they could do things.

00:35:35.568 --> 00:35:37.678
They don't have to sit in an algebra classroom for 36 weeks.

00:35:37.788 --> 00:35:38.468
I'd love that.

00:35:39.248 --> 00:35:47.988
I got 1,000 kids and, you know, 50 teachers, and I gotta have a schedule, 'cause I gotta know where they are, and I gotta be able to measure this stuff.

00:35:48.848 --> 00:35:53.318
And yes, I'm sure there's stuff happening outside of school, but I got no way to measure it."

00:35:53.698 --> 00:36:08.678
And there are no spreadsheets big enough to be able to allow students to move at their own pace and be able to track and maximize your resources, your teachers, in a way that, that you just can't do it.

00:36:08.678 --> 00:36:09.858
Like, it, it blows up.

00:36:09.978 --> 00:36:13.788
Um, we tried to do some of this at Purdue, and we did it in the first year when we had 150 kids.

00:36:13.798 --> 00:36:14.838
It worked.

00:36:15.528 --> 00:36:18.328
The next year when we had 300 kids, it blew up, right?

00:36:18.358 --> 00:36:20.228
You just, the scale got to you.

00:36:21.148 --> 00:36:21.478
Mm-hmm.

00:36:21.488 --> 00:36:22.568
But AI can do it.

00:36:23.308 --> 00:36:27.628
Like, AI can be looking at, first of all, what is a student interested in?

00:36:27.938 --> 00:36:30.568
What do they want to do post-high school?

00:36:32.282 --> 00:36:38.802
What are the skills they need to do that, both on the academic side and on the interpersonal, you know, all the durable skills?

00:36:39.802 --> 00:36:43.562
What experiences are they having inside and outside of school?

00:36:43.632 --> 00:36:47.362
And so now we're starting… AI is starting to get all the inputs.

00:36:47.362 --> 00:36:58.742
Like, they took this, they took this test, and they're doing well in algebra, and they're, they're moving on this, and they are the captain of the dance team, and they're showing leadership, and they're communicating well.

00:36:58.752 --> 00:37:04.362
Like, and then if they decide they wanna go do something different, now there's a different set of skills they need.

00:37:04.992 --> 00:37:07.742
And so I can help them chart a different course.

00:37:08.652 --> 00:37:11.702
But it can actually then start to maximize your resources.

00:37:11.702 --> 00:37:28.502
Say, "Hey, look, you've got 30 kids that need this skill." Let's say it's in biology, and so, "Hey, biology teacher, you need to do a seminar that's gonna last a couple weeks, couple hours a day for this group of 30 kids so that they can be proficient."

00:37:29.112 --> 00:37:32.602
And now they've got that skill, and they go on to the next thing, right?

00:37:32.802 --> 00:37:38.682
But then there's a new group of kids who now need that six weeks later, they need the same thing, right?

00:37:39.352 --> 00:37:41.892
Well, you can't do that without AI.

00:37:41.922 --> 00:37:43.212
Like, it's just impossible.

00:37:43.402 --> 00:37:51.072
And so we're-- I would love to see the ed tech sector start to look at that and go, "Wait, we can…"

00:37:51.962 --> 00:37:56.722
AI is scheduling everything in every industry except education.

00:37:57.292 --> 00:37:57.762
Right?

00:37:57.882 --> 00:38:02.742
Now, you have, you have people using AI to create their master schedule, but like, great.

00:38:03.042 --> 00:38:04.332
That's awesome.

00:38:04.332 --> 00:38:08.962
You just- Just building it in the traditional sense … you just automated, you know, the, uh, a dinosaur.

00:38:08.962 --> 00:38:17.812
So, like, I get excited about possibilities because that could mean fundamental restructuring that can scale.

00:38:17.862 --> 00:38:22.162
Like, you can do what I just described at a micro school, and we're gonna be doing that.

00:38:22.162 --> 00:38:28.092
We have-- we'll have some micro high schools next year with kids who are in apprenticeships, right?

00:38:28.092 --> 00:38:40.612
And so you can actually then start to capture what the student's doing in the apprenticeship and get both kinda academic, what I'd call little c credit, like they're doing bits and pieces of all these courses and their durable skill stuff.

00:38:40.622 --> 00:38:43.222
You can capture that, and kids can move at their own pace.

00:38:43.662 --> 00:38:45.692
Like, you can do that in a micro school.

00:38:46.022 --> 00:38:48.072
You know, 50 kids, 100 kids maybe.

00:38:48.892 --> 00:38:59.022
When you start to scale above that, again, if, if someone's a principal of a three thousand-student high school, they're gonna look at you and go, "You are absolutely nuts. There is zero way I can do that."

00:38:59.682 --> 00:39:00.572
But AI can.

00:39:00.802 --> 00:39:02.192
We just don't have the tool set yet.

00:39:02.192 --> 00:39:11.952
And I-- as I've talked to ed tech people, they're like, "Yeah, you're right, but there's no market for it." Like, well, there's not gonna be a market for it until the tools exist to make it possible.

00:39:11.982 --> 00:39:14.032
Like, there's this chicken and egg thing that's going on.

00:39:14.032 --> 00:39:14.542
So I think…

00:39:15.242 --> 00:39:16.222
But I think it's going to happen.

00:39:16.262 --> 00:39:26.452
Like, we'll see that, which then allows us, if we want to, to fundamentally restructure what high school looks like and even going down into some of the lower, the lower grades as well.

00:39:27.382 --> 00:39:27.702
Yeah.

00:39:28.688 --> 00:39:34.638
Well, it really just gets to, um, kind of that per- just truly personalized- That's right

00:39:34.638 --> 00:39:47.128
kind of, uh, um, you know, we talk about that a lot, but it gets, gets it to the point where it's, um, each student has their own playlist- Yeah … um, within, within their- Yeah … environment.

00:39:47.148 --> 00:39:50.728
And, and what they do is also feeding their, their playlist.

00:39:50.758 --> 00:39:51.048
Yeah.

00:39:51.148 --> 00:39:51.508
Um, if you will.

00:39:51.928 --> 00:39:53.328
Well, and I, and I like it.

00:39:53.878 --> 00:40:02.168
The idea that I don't wanna see where all instruction is, you know, an AI bot delivering it.

00:40:02.908 --> 00:40:03.238
Sure.

00:40:03.328 --> 00:40:20.968
This, this lets you say, "Look, I'm still gonna have teachers, I'm still gonna have human beings delivering instruction. I'm just now able to maximize their effect
'cause they're only teaching students who actually need the thing that I'm going to teach at the time they need it." Like, that, that's like the Holy Grail, right?

00:40:20.968 --> 00:40:22.078
Everyone talks about that.

00:40:22.698 --> 00:40:24.178
Well, again, you can do that with AI.

00:40:24.188 --> 00:40:32.618
It can, it can manage all these different inputs and aggregate it and go, "Yeah, I've got 30 or 40 kids who need this thing.

00:40:33.008 --> 00:40:37.248
Some might be seniors, a couple might be freshmen, like they just need it.

00:40:37.298 --> 00:40:45.278
And so I can do it just in time with every kid, and I don't have to have predefined groups of kids moving in block from one thing to another.

00:40:45.828 --> 00:40:49.608
I can mix and match and, you know… And again, it optimizes everything.

00:40:49.618 --> 00:40:58.868
And I think as a teacher, imagine if you went to a group of teachers and said, "Hey, you, you only have to teach kids who really want the thing you're teaching." They'd be like, "Well, sign me up for that."

00:41:01.360 --> 00:41:01.790
Yeah.

00:41:03.330 --> 00:41:07.170
Scott, I could ask you and- … and talk about this kind of stuff for, for days.

00:41:07.170 --> 00:41:08.400
This is, this is good stuff.

00:41:08.400 --> 00:41:09.920
I was wondering if you were gonna get to AI.

00:41:09.930 --> 00:41:12.470
When I asked you about the innovation, I thought you were gonna go right to AI.

00:41:12.470 --> 00:41:12.670
Yeah.

00:41:12.670 --> 00:41:14.320
I thought I was throwing you a softball there.

00:41:14.330 --> 00:41:14.350
Yeah.

00:41:14.360 --> 00:41:16.160
But you said micro schools, which I love.

00:41:16.170 --> 00:41:16.190
Yeah.

00:41:16.210 --> 00:41:18.940
Um, and so that- that's, that's good.

00:41:19.660 --> 00:41:20.340
Let's see.

00:41:20.370 --> 00:41:20.920
Um-

00:41:24.024 --> 00:41:25.304
Maybe the last couple questions.

00:41:25.324 --> 00:41:47.314
For school leaders or, or f- school founders, executive directors, whoever- Yeah … whoever listening right now who really want to innovate but feel constrained- Yeah … by the existing
systems, and you've kinda talked a little bit- Yeah … about this, what advice do you give them to kinda help them kinda push outside of this box that they feel that they're under?

00:41:47.394 --> 00:41:47.684
Yeah.

00:41:48.084 --> 00:41:52.874
No, I think I, I have a pretty strong belief that almost every state

00:41:54.938 --> 00:41:58.568
has, has an idea, like, we, we need to move forward with something.

00:41:58.658 --> 00:42:07.758
And I think, and again, I'm a, you know, ask forgiveness not permission kind of person.

00:42:07.768 --> 00:42:14.448
Like, there are ways- Oh, my … there are ways you can do this within the existing structures, and it could be pilots.

00:42:14.458 --> 00:42:15.488
You can start small.

00:42:15.488 --> 00:42:21.788
You know, we talked about doing your own little micro school thing as part of your d- Like, those are things you could launch easily.

00:42:22.268 --> 00:42:26.908
And again, all you have to do is report back to the state what they expect to see.

00:42:26.938 --> 00:42:32.078
Like, they expect to see a transcript that says, "Here's a, here's courses that kids took, and here are the grades they got."

00:42:32.188 --> 00:42:33.198
Like, okay.

00:42:33.808 --> 00:42:37.168
How they did that can be radically different, right?

00:42:37.198 --> 00:42:41.018
And I think that's my encouragement to people is just do it.

00:42:41.108 --> 00:42:44.488
Like, start small and completely voluntary, right?

00:42:44.618 --> 00:42:45.898
You're not making kids do it.

00:42:45.898 --> 00:42:48.788
You're not making parents do something they don't want their kids to do.

00:42:48.798 --> 00:42:49.918
You're not making teachers do…

00:42:50.008 --> 00:43:10.708
You can say, "Look, I've got two or three teachers that have volunteered to kind of do this thing, and kids, if you wanna do it, parents, if you want your kid to do it, we'll do it, and
we'll learn together." Like, you could do that with 30 or 40 kids, and I'd say I, I would almost guarantee every single high school in the country would find people going, "I wanna do that."

00:43:10.738 --> 00:43:12.748
And the same thing happens at the elementary level.

00:43:12.778 --> 00:43:26.738
Like, you could say, "Hey, I've got two or three elementary teachers that wanna team teach, and group and regroup, and we're gonna do this."
And I've… Again, as long as it was voluntary, and you didn't make people do it, like, they would… I think people would jump at it.

00:43:26.748 --> 00:43:28.768
So that's my encouragement is go, go do it.

00:43:30.018 --> 00:43:30.618
Absolutely.

00:43:30.638 --> 00:43:36.708
And I think the, the, the c- cover of, of the pilot- Yeah … makes a lot of sense.

00:43:36.708 --> 00:43:43.058
I mean, I remember every time as a school leader I wanted to do something, it was always easier just to put pilot- That's right … in front of it.

00:43:43.258 --> 00:43:46.798
Um, and it also gave you, like, it's kind of a disclaimer.

00:43:46.798 --> 00:43:48.308
If it doesn't work- That's right … well, it was a pilot.

00:43:48.308 --> 00:43:49.628
And, and- And we're learning and adjusting.

00:43:49.628 --> 00:43:56.028
Yeah … it also kind of prevents you from feeling that, you know, it has to be perfect, you know, before you, you move forward.

00:43:56.028 --> 00:44:01.348
It's like, no, we're gonna start somewhere, and, and, uh, this, pilot this and- Yeah … see where it goes.

00:44:01.378 --> 00:44:10.278
And- Absolutely … and like you, you talked about with the Excel Center is sometimes you start something, and you quickly realize nope- That's right … this is not the right direction, and you gotta pivot.

00:44:10.308 --> 00:44:10.498
Yep.

00:44:10.508 --> 00:44:10.868
So.

00:44:12.278 --> 00:44:14.268
Well, maybe the second to last question.

00:44:14.268 --> 00:44:18.128
What gives you the most hope right now for the future of public education?

00:44:18.968 --> 00:44:25.638
I think it's the, those early beginnings of things like, you know, I talked about the micro school stuff, and the people who are willing to step out.

00:44:25.638 --> 00:44:29.428
There's enough groups, and they're, you know, they're out there.

00:44:29.428 --> 00:44:34.098
It's Education Reimagined, Learner Studio, um, XQ.

00:44:34.978 --> 00:44:47.078
Um, uh, Carnegie is pushing for the… Like, there's this groundswell of people who are like, "Hey, there's gotta be a different way, a better way of doing this," and it's got a lot of really smart people in it.

00:44:47.088 --> 00:44:53.492
And I… You're starting to see this- People willing to try, right?

00:44:53.522 --> 00:45:06.612
I think, uh, like Carnegie put together their high school transformation network, and it's got… It's a mix of charters and districts, and it's like five or six different states, and they're coming together to talk about, "Here's what we're gonna try," right?

00:45:06.612 --> 00:45:21.172
And I think you can get to some level of critical mass, and when I see the ideas, and I think I'm gonna be with this group in Chicago next month, and, like, I'm excited to hear their ideas.

00:45:21.172 --> 00:45:27.922
And these are people who, again, for most part are, are sometimes working in really traditional districts and are like, "Now, we gotta push the boundary a little bit."

00:45:27.932 --> 00:45:29.642
And I think that gives me hope.

00:45:29.782 --> 00:45:40.802
I, I see that, I see the excitement, and I see the infrastructure starting to get built around that, and you're like, "Okay, I really think this could happen." Yeah, absolutely.

00:45:41.002 --> 00:45:48.232
And you see a lot of policies that have- Yeah … had to change to maybe give a little bit more- That's right

00:45:48.292 --> 00:45:49.622
space for these things- That's right.

00:45:49.632 --> 00:45:50.502
Yep … to happen, right?

00:45:50.532 --> 00:45:51.202
At the state level.

00:45:51.212 --> 00:45:51.462
So- Yep.

00:45:52.362 --> 00:45:52.712
Yeah.

00:45:52.762 --> 00:45:53.652
And we didn't get to that.

00:45:53.652 --> 00:45:59.942
Is any- anything that you wanna share from what, what Indiana has done that you're really excited about from a policy perspective?

00:46:00.162 --> 00:46:05.372
Well, I, I think what I would say is it, it has been a journey, and it's taken…

00:46:05.372 --> 00:46:08.722
You know, we started on this probably f- I've been on the state board I think six years now.

00:46:08.722 --> 00:46:22.562
We started probably five years ago, um, with some of this, and it's a seemingly somewhat disconnected s- series of things, but it actually was really well thought out, and I give our, again, Secretary Jenner a ton of credit.

00:46:23.212 --> 00:46:31.892
You know, we started by saying, "Look, we have way too many standards, and so let's streamline that." We got our legislator- legislature to mandate it, so we had no choice.

00:46:32.442 --> 00:46:37.742
And so we had to eliminate a third of all s- standards across all subject areas across all grade levels.

00:46:38.222 --> 00:46:42.872
And then of the ones that were left, only a third could be deemed essential.

00:46:44.352 --> 00:46:51.052
And so taking that and then say, "Okay, now let's redo our assessments," and first of all, we wanna- Was that kind of arbitrary, by the way?

00:46:51.052 --> 00:46:51.122
It was.

00:46:51.122 --> 00:46:53.482
It was just kinda like- Yes … let's just- Yes … a third.

00:46:53.492 --> 00:46:53.842
Okay.

00:46:53.852 --> 00:46:53.882
Yes.

00:46:53.892 --> 00:46:55.742
Just- Just- That, that seems about right.

00:46:55.772 --> 00:46:57.552
Like, that just was kind of that- … that thing.

00:46:57.552 --> 00:46:57.812
I love it.

00:46:58.062 --> 00:46:58.222
Yeah.

00:46:58.272 --> 00:46:59.722
But what it forced, though, was…

00:46:59.952 --> 00:47:08.902
'Cause typically when people get together to do standard setting, every standard is crucial, and all of a sudden they were legislatively mandated to get rid of a third.

00:47:08.922 --> 00:47:11.222
And so that process happened.

00:47:11.652 --> 00:47:18.012
And then said, "Look, make the assessments focus almost entirely on the essential standards," right?

00:47:18.012 --> 00:47:29.888
And so, and to give a, a math problem, if, let's say there were 100 English language art standards in fourth grade- Getting rid of a third says you're gonna go down to sixty-six.

00:47:30.758 --> 00:47:34.138
Then making a third of those essential takes you to twenty-two.

00:47:34.568 --> 00:47:38.378
So now as the teacher, you can focus on the twenty-two instead of the one hundred.

00:47:39.138 --> 00:47:53.538
And now you're able to go deeper, and now you're able to start to do things like, we should do some problems and projects and to get some hands-on
because now we're-- And we know that the assessments are gonna focus mostly on those twenty-two, and we're doing a through-year assessment.

00:47:53.608 --> 00:48:03.608
So in the first twelve weeks, we're gonna get an assessment, get the results back in a couple of days, and I know which kids get it and don't, and now I can reteach as I need, or I can accelerate.

00:48:03.638 --> 00:48:08.638
Like, so we did that, like non-sexy blocking and tackling stuff.

00:48:09.408 --> 00:48:25.618
Then it was redoing our high school diploma to give a ton more flexibility to students and schools and really start to encourage this idea of our durable skills, our portrait of a graduate, work-based learning, hands-on.

00:48:26.228 --> 00:48:27.868
Um, so we did that.

00:48:28.158 --> 00:48:43.818
Then we just did the accountability system, which got approved a couple of months ago, which reinforces the diploma at the high school level and at the elementary levels, brings in much more of a complete look at a kid versus just your test score.

00:48:44.758 --> 00:49:02.178
And then we got the legislature with the diploma to incentivize schools if they get the-- we have what's called diploma seals, which employment,
enrollment, and enlistment seals, that the highest level seals get incentivized by a twenty-five hundred dollar payment to the school per kid.

00:49:02.438 --> 00:49:08.638
So now the school is highly incentivized to get kids to high-level seals, which creates more opportunities for the students.

00:49:08.968 --> 00:49:10.658
So everything kinda lined up, right?

00:49:10.658 --> 00:49:26.678
So I think And at the same time, we also did science of reading, but you're… You know, I've been reading a ton of studies about that, and
states who have said, "Yeah, we're doing science of reading," but they haven't actually invested in the infrastructure to support teachers.

00:49:27.098 --> 00:49:48.988
We did that, and we were fortunate in that we have a local philanthropy that's one of the largest philanthropies in the, in the, uh, world that said, "Hey, look, we're gonna
pitch in, like, tens of millions of dollars to support cohorts for teachers to learn and really understand the science of reading." And we've seen our reading scores take off.

00:49:49.028 --> 00:49:55.848
I think I saw something, we've had the sixth-highest gains in the country in reading, um, since the pandemic as, as a state.

00:49:55.848 --> 00:50:02.168
So, like, those are things, I think, that have been really well thought out, really well done.

00:50:02.178 --> 00:50:07.638
The combination of the legislature, the secretary of education, and the state board kind of being in lockstep.

00:50:08.258 --> 00:50:15.758
Um, so sometimes I talk to my peers across the country, and that is not true, and then it just gets dysfunctional, and you can't get anything done.

00:50:16.118 --> 00:50:19.058
We've been able to do all this because we've had that, that alignment.

00:50:20.008 --> 00:50:20.288
Yeah.

00:50:20.668 --> 00:50:24.028
Seems like that's maybe the exception, for sure, and not the- Yeah … not the norm.

00:50:24.038 --> 00:50:24.548
Unfortunately, yeah.

00:50:24.558 --> 00:50:25.448
So good, good.

00:50:26.188 --> 00:50:26.928
Great place to be in.

00:50:26.928 --> 00:50:27.048
Well- Yeah.

00:50:27.358 --> 00:50:30.038
Well, Scott, this has been a great conversation.

00:50:30.058 --> 00:50:30.128
Yeah.

00:50:30.238 --> 00:50:42.418
Um, I, I appreciate your time and, uh, all the… Just learning all the things that you're, you know, you're- you've done and are doing and, and your thoughts about the future of education has been really insightful, so I appreciate your time.

00:50:43.008 --> 00:50:43.798
Um, so thank you.

00:50:43.868 --> 00:50:43.978
Yeah.

00:50:43.988 --> 00:50:44.568
This was fun.

00:50:44.688 --> 00:50:45.208
Appreciate it.

00:50:46.728 --> 00:50:48.908
For our listeners, thanks again for joining us.

00:50:48.948 --> 00:50:54.148
Um, make sure you come back next time for our, uh, any future episodes that we have.

00:50:54.148 --> 00:50:55.278
Scott, have a great day.

00:50:55.358 --> 00:50:55.678
Thank you.

00:50:55.678 --> 00:50:55.808
Thank you.

00:50:55.808 --> 00:50:56.128
Appreciate it.