Everything changed. That’s how Arturo Monsiváis described life this year for his fifth-grade son, who attends Houston ISD’s Raul Martinez Elementary School. Teachers raced through rapid-fire lessons.
Students plugged away at daily quizzes. Administrators banned children from chatting in the hallways. Sitting in the parent pickup line on the last day of school, Monsiváis said his son often complained that the new assignments were too difficult.
But Monsiváis, a construction worker, wouldn’t accept any excuses: Study hard, he advised. “I tell my son, ‘Look, do you want to be working out here in the sun like me, or do you want to be in an office one day? Think about it,’” Monsiváis said. The seismic changes seen by Monsiváis’ son and the 180,000-plus students throughout HISD this school year are the result of the most dramatic state takeover of a school district in American history, a grand experiment that could reshape public education across Texas and the nation.
In stunningly swift fashion, HISD’s state-appointed superintendent and school board have across the district, sought to tie teacher pay , boosted some teacher salaries by and on many non-classroom expenses. The changes in HISD rival some of the most significant shakeups to a public school system ever, yet they’ve received minimal national media attention to date. Still, district leaders, citing private conversations with researchers and superintendents, said education leaders throug.