WASHINGTON, D.C. – Former Detroit Public Schools Emergency Manager Robert Bobb has seen squalor and corruption up close and personal.

StopcorruptionHe was tasked with cleaning up the mess at DPS, one of the worst school districts in the nation.

In a Washington Post op-ed, he points out the Atlanta teacher test cheating scandal is indicative of a much bigger problem: corruption.

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Via The Washington Post:

The recent 65-count cheating indictment against 35 Atlanta school officials, including the superintendent, has reignited an intense national debate on the use of standardized test scores as a key feature in teacher evaluations. “This says that something about our incentive system and our accountability system is way off,” Randi Weingarten, the president of the American Federation of Teachers, told the Christian Science Monitor. The Post’s Valerie Strauss called the scandal “the result of test-obsessed school reform.”

The Atlanta case may seem to be all about teachers and administrators who faked students’ test scores to improve their own ratings. But that analysis is far too narrow. The problem in Atlanta is, simply, corruption.

An exploding culture of corruption imperils public education in the United States. Financial misconduct and outright theft are depleting and misdirecting resources critical for the nation’s children to secure the skills and tools they’ll need to become solid citizens and global competitors.

Nevertheless, these issues have been ignored by many education reformers. I did the same thing until 2009, when I was named emergency financial manager of Detroit Public Schools, which was running a sizable deficit. I soon learned that Detroit, like Atlanta and other major urban school districts, had far broader problems.

In Atlanta, Superintendent Beverly Hall and cohorts were determined to register dramatic hikes in test scores, not necessarily to enhance the quality of education. Motivated by the money available from promotions and performance bonuses, the indictment charges, they systematically changed students’ answers. The results were large numbers of wrong-to-right erasures and incredibly high scores. At one school, the math scores for eighth-graders went from a 24 percent proficiency rate one year to 86 percent the next. Those faked achievements helped Hall rake in $500,000 in bonuses, according to the indictment.

Money also animated Sherry Washington in Detroit — an art gallery owner who was perceived as an ally of the city’s less fortunate. Behind that facade, she was scamming the system. According to news media reports, between 2005 and 2006 she and others used a kickback scheme involving a “wellness” program to steal $3.3 million from the schools.

Indeed, I found Detroit Public Schools to be a magnificent vessel of wholesale theft and graft. Not one area of management escaped the thieves and defrauders: One high school food service worker stuffed as much as $200 daily from lunchroom sales into her apron and bra. A teacher and her mother, a contract accountant, placed $500,000 worth of orders for supplies from a sham company they had created. Ten people collectively stole more than 1,500 laptops. Even sworn police officers assigned to my security detail committed fraud, submitting phony overtime reports.

I chose a former FBI executive as my inspector general to root out waste, fraud and abuse. The laptop thieves were charged with operating a criminal enterprise under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act. Many culprits pleaded guilty or were convicted by a jury. Washington was sentenced to seven years in prison.

Meanwhile, children suffered. In 2010, more than 60 percent of Detroit fourth-graders and 77 percent of eighth-graders scored below basic levels in mathematics, according to the National Assessment of Education Progress.