Monday, June 05, 2006

Are White Students Dragging Down Our International Standing?

Last week the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) released the 2006 Condition of Education, a congressionally mandated annual report of trends in American education. This year’s special analysis compared U.S. student performance to our global counterparts on a series of recent international assessments in reading, mathematics, and science. The study shows that while 4th and 8th graders perform relatively well, American high schoolers fail to keep up with their international peers. Though the international comparisons rely primarily on assessments administered to 15-year-olds, national assessments administered to 12th graders (17-18 year-olds) reveal a similar pattern of poor performance on average.

Interestingly, the demographics of America’s high school population who are failing to achieve might not be what one would expect.

As the immigration debate rages on, many are quick to cite the growing number of Hispanic immigrants as contributing to our nation’s poor academic performance. Yet Hispanics are more likely than any other racial or ethnic group in the United States to drop out of high school, with a dropout rate of 25%* compared to slightly over 10% of Blacks and less than 10% of Whites. Furthermore, the dropout rate for Hispanics born outside the United States is 38%, more than double the drop out rate of 15% for second-generation Hispanics. If Hispanics and Blacks are more likely to drop out of high school than Whites, one would expect that high schools are “more white” than are elementary or middle schools.

While scholars debate whether or not these dropout statistics are accurate, most agree that the gap in dropout rates for whites versus minority students is real, and some argue that dropout rates may be even higher than the census data suggest.

According to a recent Charts You Can Trust posting by my colleague, Kevin Carey, Hispanics make up 54% of immigrants coming to the United States (as of 2000). Thus given their high dropout rate, foreign-born Hispanic high school youth seem to be disproportionately missing from this NCES report of high school student performance. The implication is that more diverse elementary and middle schools are performing better on national and international assessments than are our more homogenous high schools.

NCES projects that public school enrollment will increase by 2.5 million students over the next 10 years, largely due to immigration and an increase in the number of children born to immigrants. Yet if our public high schools are struggling to educate an unrepresentative, whiter-than-average student body, how will they cope with these changing demographics?

-Posted by Margaret Price

* The status dropout rate indicates the percentage of 16-through 24-year-olds who are not enrolled in high school and who lack a high school credential relative to all 16-through 24-year-olds. High school credential includes a high school diploma or equivalent credential such as a General Educational Development (GED) certificate.

Sunday, June 04, 2006

Prop 82 in Trouble?

With the California primary this coming Tuesday, a new Field poll has 46 percent of likely voters saying "no" on the proposed "Preschool for All" referrendum, with 41 percent saying "yes." Thirteen percent say they remain undecided. This is down from over 50 percent support in the last Field poll in April, and the first time Prop 82 has trailed in the polls.

Friday, June 02, 2006

Debating Universal vs. Targeted Preschool: Part II

This week, researchers Steven Barnett and Bruce Fuller have been debating the merits of universal versus targeted preschool on the Education Sector website. Yesterday, I explained why I find Steven Barnett's case for universal preschool compelling--but also why I still have some questions. Today I'll explain my reaction to Fuller's arguments for targeting investments.

I should start out by noting that I'm inclined to be sympathetic to Fuller's arguments here. In general, I tend to believe new public spending on education should be targeted to the most needy youngsters. But I'm perplexed by Fuller's assertion that advocates for universal preschool believe "that pre-K should become just another grade level in the public schools" or that "early development is about getting three and four year-olds ready for standardized testing." Fuller seems to think universal preschool advocates want to create a standardized, one-size-fits-all program of school-like environments for preschoolers that ignore critical aspects of children's social and emotional development in favor of test prep.

I'm at a loss to understand where Fuller gets this idea. I've spent a decent amount of time around universal preschool people and read a lot of what they produce, and I've never gotten the sense these were their beliefs or objectives. Preschool people tend to emphasize that preschools should not look like elementary schools or even kindergartens. The work and resources produced by advocacy organizations such as Pre-K Now and Barnett's own research group NIEER emphasize the importance of children's social and emotional development in preschool. Many states have made community-based and other non-school providers a key part of their preschool systems.

If I thought universal preschool was part of some plot to standardize early childhood and eliminate diverse, comunity-based providers, I'd probably oppose it, too. I do have concerns about how Prop. 82 would govern preschool in California, and whether or not it would be equitable to community-based and private providers (and the families that prefer them). But these are policy and program design questions--not issues inherent in the idea of universal preschool.

One of the reasons I do find the idea of universal preschool appealing is the opportunity it would provide to build a new kind of educational system outside of the existing one. I certainly don't think that publicly-funded preschool should look like just another, earlier, year of the existing public schools. But I think that practical realities and the desires of parents will ensure that it can't in most places. What's exciting to me about the preschool movement is the opportunity it creates to build a new early education system in many places: A system that incorporates diverse providers, a system that uses new governance and accountability models to oversee these providers and hold them accountable in ways that are more holistic and developmentally appropriate than plain old pencil-and-paper-standardized tests (because you CAN'T use those with kids this little). I think a system like this would look a lot like the kind of educational system I'd like to see available to older kids, as well, and making such a system parents' first encounter with publicly-funded education would help put pressure on the existing K-12 system to change. Now, creating a system like that is hard, and a lot of places aren't going to do it with the limited resources and ad hoc nature of their preschool programs, but I still think it's an interesting prospect.

Fuller makes a lot of other worthwhile points in his piece: Some of the evidence on preschool has been overhyped; just like in K-12 teaching, we don't know as much as we'd like to think about the characteristics that make preschool teachers effective; and community providers are a critical piece of the early childhood infrastructure that need to be maintained and integrated into any publicly-funded system. His piece is well worth reading.

So, where did I come down after this debate? I'm positive but still ambivalent about the idea of universal preschool, because I think it needs to be weighed against alternative, more-targeted investments. I also wonder if there's not a smart design way to achieve some of the benefits Barnett argues come from universal preschool while keeping some of the cost burden on more affluent parents, rather than the public. And I do think the design and policy details of specific programs and proposals matter a lot.

The Costs of Cost-Benefit Analysis

Reason Foundation takes on RAND Corporation over cost-benefit calculations for California's Prop. 82 universal preschool proposal. RAND found Californians would reap benefits of about $2.62 for every $1 spent on universal preschool; Reason critiques their analysis and says the state would actually lose money on its investment. I'm not an expert on cost-benefit analysis, so I'll leave that to others to sort out.

The Reason report is worth a look, if only for the hilarious graphic (on page 18) of a sweating little boy pouring buckets of greenbacks down the gullet of a big purple monster label "Prop 82." I do think, though, that the Reason authors misunderstand aspects of Prop. 82. For example, they keep referring to publicly-funded preschool under Prop. 82 as "government-run" preschools. But the referrendum is written to allow non-government providers--such as community-based providers and charter schools--to become part of the publicly-funded preschool system if they meet quality standards. Understanding this idea could clear up some of their mystification at certain assumptions in the RAND report.

More seriously, I do wonder sometimes if the preschool movement doesn't put entirely too much stock in cost-benefit analyses. Sober assessments of costs and benefits do have an important role in policymaking, and they can be useful advocacy tools, but, contrary to what we learned in school (apologies, Professor Walter), they aren't the only, or even necessarily the main, factor driving policy decisions. The RAND report's looking at returns to preschool investments throughout children's lives--60 years down the road! That's a much longer timeline than it's easy for most elected officials to think in terms of. And, because the set of assumptions analysts choose can have dramatic effects on the costs and benefits they arrive at, these estimates can seem wierdly fragile and subject to challenge by those who employ alternative assumptions.

Further, just because society eventually reaps returns on preschool investments doesn't make it any easier to find the funds governments need to spend to establish preschool programs NOW. Many of the benefits prominent cost-benefit analyses of preschool capture accrue to private citizens or other parts of government (such as the criminal justice system), so it's not really accurate to say these investments will pay for themselves down the road--that's just not how budgets work.

That's not to deny the significance of the preschool cost-benefit analyses or the value of the work done by researchers in this field. But I do think it would behoove the preschool movement to make sure its case doesn't rest too heavily on these cost-benefit calculations. Other aspects of the case for preschool must also be fully developed.

Thursday, June 01, 2006

NCLB Causes Head Lice

I'm not even kidding. The article($) is in today's Wall Street Journal:

Education-reform mandates like the No Child Left Behind law are putting a contentious new spin on a classroom issue that makes parents' skin crawl: head lice. Schools used to take a hard line on the sesame-seed-sized parasites, which suck human blood and glue their eggs to individual hairs. At the first sign of an outbreak, pupils got scalp checks. Those with lice were immediately banished from the classroom until all lice and eggs -- known as nits -- were gone.

But to the dismay of many parents, these "no nits" policies are disappearing as school districts face state and federal pressure to reduce absenteeism and boost academic achievement. No Child requires that 95% of students be present for mandatory achievement tests. It also allows states to use attendance to help determine whether school districts are making adequate educational progress under the federal law. Those that don't do so face sanctions that could include state takeovers of their schools.


This is the first NCLB critique I've seen that's both nit-picking and about nit-picking at the same time.

Seriously, there's a certain not-grown-up quality to stories like this. The Washington Post ran basically the same article this morning, except the focus there was how NCLB is causing schools to get rid of recess. It's only a matter of time before the New York Times goes above the fold with an expose of how schools are supposedly abolishing restrooms, school lunches, and the Pledge of Allegiance to free up class time for test prep.

NCLB holds schools accountable for the most important things--reading, math, coming to school. Inevitably, that means conflicts and tradeoffs with other important things--social studies, recess, personal hygiene. That's worth noting, and worrying about. But that's also life--conflicting priorities, difficult tradeoffs, limited resources.

Too much of the reaction to these conflicts is along the lines of "Therefore, NCLB is bad idea." As opposed to "Let's work hard to reconcile these competing but important priorities and come to the best solution for students."

Debating Universal vs. Targeted Preschool: Part I

This week on the Education Sector website, researchers W. Steven Barnett and Bruce Fuller have been debating the merits of universal versus targeted approaches to publicly funded preschool. The question, essentially, is: "Does it make more sense for governments to spend money on publicly-funded preschool for all children, or just for those who are most needy?"

As someone who works on early-childhood policy issues, I find this question a particularly difficult one, so I'm excited that Education Sector is able to host this debate. Each of these gentlemen presents the case for his respective position more clearly and compellingly than anyone I've yet heard from. And, with voters in our nation's largest state poised to vote on a statewide universal preschool proposal less than a week from now, it's an important and timely question--one we're likely to see raised more places around the country in the near future. All good reasons you should check out the debate itself now.

Today, I'm going to offer a few quick reactions to Steven Barnett's case for universal preschool. Tomorrow, I'll talk about my response to Bruce Fuller's arguments.

I find Steven Barnett's case for universal preschool pretty compelling. The argument that "programs for the poor are too often poor programs," isn't easily dismissed--we see this play out in a lot of policy areas, and it is part of the reason some much-hyped early-childhood programs have delivered disappointing results. Richard Kahlenberg's work arguing for socioeconomic integration of K-12 schools can be helpful to understanding why this is the case in education, and it also offers another argument against targeting preschool programs so narrowly that they segregate low-income children from their more affluent peers. In addition, Barnett makes an important point that the kids with families at the median income level--those whose families aren't poor enough to qualify for public programs but aren't affluent enough to afford private preschool--are the least likely to be enrolled in preschool, even though many of these children, whose families are hardly rich, could probably benefit from it.

Still, there's a big hole for me in Barnett's arguments, and that's the issue of trade-offs. If we lived in a climate of infinite resources, it would certainly make a lot more sense to invest in universal rather than targeted preschool programs. But we don't. Policymakers have to decide between competing priorities and make trade-offs. So, where are the trade-offs worth making? For example, is it better to invest in universal preschool for all four-year-olds, or targeted preschool for poor four-year-olds, combined with greater funding for childcare for poor infants and toddlers? Would we be better off providing one year of preschool to all children or two years only to the most disadvantaged?

I also worry that the emphasis on universal preschool may create an incentive for policymakers and politicians to cut corners on quality in order to stretch limited resources so they can say they accomplished universal preschool. We saw this in Florida after voters there passed a referendum for universal preschool--Governor Bush and the state legislature implemented a program with quality standards much lower than Barnett or other experts say are necessary to have the kinds of positive impacts we want preschool to have on children's development and achievement down the road. If this happens, we eventually wind up in the same place--a poor program serving poor kids--that Barnett fears we'll wind up with a targeted approach.

Engineering Better Content Standards

With the release of new NAEP science scores last week, there has been a flurry of commentary about what these scores mean for students and what we are doing- or should be doing- to improve science education in our schools. Many in the K-12 world are centering the discussion on improving science content standards, particularly as states and districts prepare for mandatory science testing under NCLB (beginning 2007). AAAS's Project 2061 provides a great history and some updates on national and state efforts to create science standards.

Part of the conversation is about revising content standards. Another part is about adding new content areas altogether, namely engineering. Engineering is somewhat of an unusual suspect in this K-12 science conversation. It’s a hot topic in higher education for many reasons, including that engineering enrollment has recently begun to climb but has still not reached its 1983 peak. Read NSF’s Science & Engineering Indicators 2006 report for more about the overall state of science and technology. The last section, as an aside, includes some interesting data about what Americans think about science and where we get our information (sadly, not from reading).

The idea to introduce and formally incorporate engineering into the K-12 curriculum has been gaining popularity. Several states have added “pre-engineering” components to their curricula and other states seem ready to follow. Massachusetts is the first state to have a pre-college engineering curriculum in place and to formally add it to its statewide framework.

The notion seems like a good one. Introduce engineering early in education and students will be more engaged, or at least familiar, with the subject before entering college. It makes sense that learning real-world engineering applications (imagine high school students learning how to build their own iPods, for instance) might increase student interest in and aptitude for science and engineering. But there are some important practical questions to consider first. How and where will “pre-engineering” fit into the curricula (or into state assessments)? Do we have teachers who are prepared to teach these courses? Will engineering courses be required, or will “enrichment" programs meet the requirements? (There are, by the way, many examples of excellent engineering programs and competitions for youth, and activities for teachers to incorporate into their current lesson plans). Finally, are we adding more content because more seems better? The seminal reports on the subject, Project 2061's Benchmarks for Science Literacy and the National Research Council's National Science Education Standards, recommend depth over breadth for student learning so this last point may be the most salient consideration.

There is no argument that basic engineering principles should be included in any science curriculum, and that students should be exposed to engineering concepts early in their education. But formally incorporating another content area into statewide frameworks might not be the most resourceful way to achieve this goal. As the front-runner, Massachusetts will be worth watching.

Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Teacher Policy: Backwards, Forwards, Upside-Down

A few years ago there was a great magazine advertisement that showed a picture of a napkin. On the napkin was written:

1. Build Computer.
2. Sell Computer.

Except someone had crossed out the "1" and written in "2," and then crossed out the "2" and written in "1." In other words, the business plan for Dell Computer that allowed Michael Dell to make a hundred jillion gazillion dollars by age 40 by having all his customers order and pay for computers over the Internet before Dell built and shipped them, saving vast sums of money on warehousing, inventory, etc.

I thought of this ad during the last few weeks while I watched Eduboss Andy Rotherham cajole the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards into finally coughing up a largely critical evaluation from value-added guru Bill Sanders. Sanders' main finding was:

The amount of variability among teachers with the same NBPTS Certification Status is considerably larger than the differences between teachers of different Status.

At first, the implications here seem limited to NBPTS. But they're actually much more significant and far-reaching, touching on the foundations of contemporary public policy as it relates to teachers.

The Sanders value-added system estimates teacher effectiveness by comparing the actual year-to-year growth in learning (as measured by standardized tests) of each teacher's students to amount of learning growth those student would be expected to gain given their previous academic history. The more actual growth exceeds expected growth, the higher the rating.

In essence, the Sanders study found that individual NBPTS-certified teachers differ more from one another than they collectively differ from non-NBPTS teachers. On the surface, the imlications of this finding seem straightforward: the NBPTS folks have some work to do to improve their process and states that have tied many millions of dollars in salary bonuses to NBPTS status should give those policies a second look.

But both of these ideas flow from the same premise: that this study is just another step forward in the ongoing search for the characteristics of the effective teacher. A definitive list of such characteristics is the holy grail of teacher policy. If we only had that list, so the thinking goes, we could do all kinds of important and useful things. We could reshape education schools to impart those characteristics. We could set up certification systems to filter out teachers who don't have those characteristics. We could design compensation systems that pay teachers with those characteristics more money.

In other words:

1. Identify effective teacher.
2. Hire effective teacher.

The problem is that this entire approach is flatly contradicted by the evidence. The essential findings of the Sanders study--more variation among teachers with or without NBPTS status than between teachers with our without NBPTS status--is also basically true for every other teacher characteristic that's ever been studied.

Experience, education level, certification status, training, content knowledge, selectivity of the undergraduate institution, verbal ability -- all of these things have been shown by some studies to influence teacher effectiveness (although some more than others--having a Master's generally seems to have no effect, which is , given the resources devoted to putting millions of teachers through graduate school, an enormous problem).

But even in combination, these factors explain only a minority--often a small minority--of the overall variation among indvidual teachers in helping students learn. There are great inexperienced teachers and terrible inexperienced teachers, effective certified teachers and ineffective certified teachers, etc. etc. etc. It's not that these things don't matter. But other, unknown things clearly matter more.

Yet a lot of teacher policy conversations are based on the idea that if we just keep looking--or created elaborate processes like the NBPTS--we will, someday, finally nail down the prototype of the elusive effective teacher, and then proceed to stamp out millions of copies of him or her.

Underlying this idea is a kind of commodified view of teachers -- that they all have pretty much the same job requiring pretty much the same characteristics to succeed. Obviously this varies somewhat by grade, subject, and type of student, but the essentials are supposed to be the same. This view is reinforced by most collective bargaining agreements, which enforce further uniformity on how teachers are hired, managed, and paid.

My strong suspicion is that this whole way of thinking will ultimately turn out to be profoundly wrong. That teaching is actually a much more complicated, difficult, and idiosyncratic process than our mainstream, characteristics-based teacher policy suggests. That knowing teacher characteristics like experience, training, etc., is useful, but only marginally so. That we could double, triple, or magnify tenfold our efforts to refine and expand things like the NBPTS and still never get close to identifying the effective teacher, for the simple reason that she doesn't exist.

In the long run, I think we'll eventually conclude that the best and only way to consistently and usefully identify teachers who are good at helping students learn is to assess how much teachers' students are learning. We can and should wonder why they're so successful, but we shouldn't let the inherent limitations of our ability to do so limit the plain logic of shaping public policy around the fact that they are successful, or are not, or are somewhere in between.

In other words, I think we'll utimately come to grips with the fact that the combination of knowledge, skill, motivation, work ethic, talent, focus, and myriad other factors that make for an effective teacher are 1) very different for different teachers who nonetheless produce similar results, and 2) far beyond our ability to identify and categorize for the purposes of crafting good public policy.

Or:

1. Hire effective teacher.
2. Identify effective teacher.

It worked for Michael Dell.

Friday, May 26, 2006

Poll Shows Americans Completely Misunderstand, But Are Nontheless Angry About, the Federal Education Budget

The National School Boards Association recently released the results of a new poll focused on federal education spending. I'm a big, big supporter of increased federal support for education. But--NSBA press release to the contrary--the poll results say very little that's useful or new. The release said:

As members of Congress prepare to head home for the Memorial Day Holiday, a national poll from the National School Boards Association finds a majority of likely voters believe that Congress is out of touch with the public’s expectations when it comes to funding federal education programs and want Congress to fulfill its funding commitment to schoolchildren. Seven in 10 likely voters (70 percent) say that Congress should restore funding for No Child Left Behind and special education programs in next year’s budget to the authorized levels.
As is always the case with polls, it's absolutely crucial to read the specific questions asked. Let's start with the contention that Congress is "out of touch with the public's expectations when it comes to funding federal education programs." Here are the actual questions and results:

If you had to guess, what PERCENTAGE of the FEDERAL budget would you say is spent on education programs for PUBLIC elementary, middle and high schools? [MEAN=20.06% ]

Regardless of what PERCENTAGE of the FEDERAL budget you THINK is spent on education programs for PUBLIC elementary, middle and high schools, please tell me what PERCENTAGE in your opinion should be spent? [MEAN=36.64%]

In other words, the average person thinks that one-fifth of the federal budget is spent on K-12 education, and that more than one-third of the federal budget should be spent on education.

The thing is, only two percent of the federal budget ($57 billion out of $2.7 trillion) is spent on K-12 and higher education combined. So all this poll really shows is that when it comes to the federal budget, the average American doesn't know their ear from their elbow.

The fact that people wish a third of the money went to education is meaningless. If you conducted a series of identical polls that substituted words like "national defense," "health care," "retirement security," "transportation," "scientific research," and "support for veterans" for "public education," do you think the sum of all the preferred percentages would add up to 100? Of course not. You can't ask questions like this in isolation; you have to give people a sense of the competing priorities, difficult tradeoffs, and limited resources that define the process of making a budget.

The survey also asked this question:

Congress authorized spending $42 billion dollars NEXT YEAR to fund TWO of the largest federal education programs that aid public schools across the country – the No Child Left Behind Act and Special Education. However in the current budget proposal, Congress is providing only $23 billion for these two programs—a little more than HALF of the $42 billion they originally authorized and promised. Hearing that, what, in your opinion should Congress do?

Restore the funding for these education programs back to their authorized and promised levels for next year. [70%]

OR

Keep the proposed spending cuts for these education programs in place for next year regardless of what was originally authorized and promised [19%]

DK/Refused [11%]
Again, I bow to no one in my unhappiness with Congress' insistence on passing huge yearly tax cuts for extremely rich people while refusing to give NCLB more money. But an authorization level is not the same thing as a "promise." It's a ceiling, a limit on the most Congress can spend on a program, not an iron-clad guarantee of how much it will spend. To conflate the two gives the game away.

As does asking if Congress should "restore...back" funding to authorized levels. The clear implication is that funding was actually at those levels at some point, only to be taken away, creating a need for restoration. This simply isn't true. While federal education funding is down slightly from last year and has been stagnant for the last several years (again, much to my dismay), overall funding levels are significantly higher than they were five years ago, or at any other time in the past.

Budgeting is a serious, difficult business. Even in the best of times--and I've seen them, having been an assistant state budget director during the go-go late 1990s--the demand for needed, worthwhile public spending far exceeds available resources. Setting priorities isn't easy, and it's not made easier by meaningless polls like these.

Thursday, May 25, 2006

Next They'll Say That Nigerian Guy Isn't Sending Me a Million Dollars...

Truth be told, I don't normally read the mass e-mail announcements I get from the U.S. Department of Education, which tend to deal with grant competitions, statements on Secretary Spellings' visit to Egypt, and the like. But yesterday one headline--Statement by Deputy Press Secretary Chad Colby Regarding "Certificate of Completion" Hoax EMail--caught my attention. When, I wondered, did the U.S. Department of Education get into the business of debunking chain letters? I was curious to see for myself what exactly this e-mail said that had so offended the Department as to require a formal press release. Thanks to the magic of Google, I was able to quickly find the hoax e-mail online. Its text is posted below, courtesy of About.com's urban legends site, which also offers a thorough debunking of the e-mail's claims as well as responses to it from the U.S. and Indiana Departments of Education (the e-mail appears to have originated in Indiana, and the tests to which it refers are part of Indiana's assessment system).

Subject: Certificate of Completion or Attendance

The "Certificate of Completion or Attendance" that is being offered in lieu of high school diplomas, is a part of Bush's "No Child Left Behind". This is how it works:

It is for students who are unable to pass both the Language Arts and Math portions of the 10th grade ISTEP. Students must take the same 10th grade test over in the 11th and 12th grades until they pass both portions. If they are unable to pass the 10th grade test by the 12th grade then they have two options:

1. Drop out and go to a GED program or,

2. accept a "Certificate of Completion" - it is NOT a diploma. Once a student accepts it, they cannot ever get a diploma or a GED. A certificate of completion means that a student can never (as long as they live):

1. go to the armed services
2. go to college
3. go to trade school
4. go to journeyman's school
5. go to beauty school
6. go to culinary arts school
7. get a federal loan in their lifetime

This is the portion of NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND (2001) that Bush slipped in during the 2004 revision of the NCLB bill. It has not been publicized. At a high school in Indiana, in 2005, there were 87 seniors in the graduation class. Five got diplomas and 82 got "Certificates of Completion".

This is being referred to as the "Paper Plantation". It is better for students to drop out and get into a GED program so they may seek other forms of education, later in life, if they desire to do so. All 50 states have "Certificates of Completion or Attendance".

Please pass this information along to EVERYONE you know who has school age children. Clergy, please preach it from the pulpits. Our people MUST know this information. Thank you & stay blessed.

Anyone who knows much about NCLB can see the serious factual flaws here, but it's just as easy to see how most people, who have no reason to know much about the law's details, might be deceived. (I won't get into pointing out the flaws or debunking here, since the folks at About.com and the Department of Education have already done a qutie thorough job of this. It's also fascinating to learn that NCLB has reached the level of cultural currency where it has its own chain hoax e-mail, or that anti-NCLB propaganda (and anti-Bush paranoia in some communities) has taken such hold that people would believe such sensational claims.

It's good that the Department's correcting rampant misinformation about the law. But, as my colleagues Kevin and Andy have noted elsewhere, misinformation about NCLB is also rampant in mainstream media coverage of the law, which is read by a lot more people and commands more respect than your typical chain e-mail.

I'm also curious to see if anyone out there knows more about the actual origins of the e-mail itself. It appears to have started in Indiana, and the "paper plantation" reference is also suggestive, but please send me info if you know anything more.

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Scientific Method?

New 2005 NAEP science scores came out today. A familiar pattern -- elementary school scores up since the last test in 2000, middle and high school scores steady. But the high school scores are down from 1996, which is obviously cause for much concern. That said, this--per today's NYTimes--really doesn't make any sense at all:

Some teachers blamed the decreasing amount of time devoted to science in schools, in part because of the No Child Left Behind Law, whose requirements for annual testing in reading and math during the elementary grades have led many schools to decrease the time spent on science or to abandon its teaching altogether.

"Overall interest in science is down," said P. John Whitsett, a physics teacher at Fond du Lac High School in Wisconsin, who has taught physics and chemistry for 36 years. "When kids are given the opportunity to do science in elementary school, it excites them. But when the elementary and middle schools neglect science because of their focus on math and reading, it turns them off, and that disinterest carries on into high school."

So, NCLB has supposedly forced elementary schools to focus on reading and math and "abandon" science, so much so that elementary school science scores have gone--up? The fourth graders who took the NAEP science exam in 2005 have been living under NCLB for most of their academic careers, and their scores were the only ones that increased, at a statistically significant level to boot.

2005 12th graders, by contrast, entered high school in 2001, which means they took their one and only NCLB test just as the law's provisions were coming into effect, and long before they might have been subject to the allegedly disinteresting effects of curricular narrowing in elementary school.

If anything, these numbers support exactly the opposite conclusion: that focusing on getting all students up to speed in reading and math results in higher science scores, but current 12th graders suffered from the lack of that focus in the early grades.

Shouldn't these anti-NCLB criticisms be a little more, I don't know--scientific?

Pre-KPalooza

Lots of action on the Pre-K front this week:

A new report from Pre-K Now summarizes state governors' preschool proposals for the 2007 fiscal year. Additional analysis from Stateline here, along with some coverage of the debate over Proposition 82, the California ballot initiative that would establish voluntary universal preschool in that state. Californians are scheduled to vote on Prop. 82 on June 6, and both proponents and opponents of the initiative are going into overdrive. On Sunday, the Los Angeles Times editorial page came out opposing Prop. 82, largely because of design flaws (I happen to share some of these concerns--particularly about bureacracy and requirements that preschool teachers obtain a special credential). And today the paper ran an op-ed by preschool researcher Art Reynolds arguing that Prop. 82 would be a wise public investment. Reynolds is not only the primary investigator for the Chicago Longitudinal Study, one of the most impressive studies finding positive impacts from large-scale preschool investments, but he's also an expert in cost-benefit analysis who has studied the returns to a variety of public investments in child health, education, and well-being, so his views on the subject are well-worth consideration.

If you really want to get a grip on this issue, though, I suggest you check out this website, created as part of the follow-up to a national conference on univeral preschool held at Berkeley earlier this spring. I was fortunate to be able to attend this conference, which featured as speakers many of the nation's leading thinkers on early childhood education and offered some of the most thoughtful discussion I've heard on this issue. You can watch streaming video of the presentations and discussions, or read research by participants at the website.


And stay tuned for an Education Sector online debate on the merits of universal preschool later this month.

Monday, May 22, 2006

Even-Handed to a Fault

As a rule, it doesn't make sense to criticize newspapers that publicize reports you write. There's a lot going on in the world, some of which is arguably more interesting than how states inflate their performance under NCLB. One appreciates all the ink one can get.

But I'm going to make an exception in the case of this editorial from today's Fort Wayne News-Sentinel, which said:
Here’s what happens when the federal government, through the No Child Left Behind act, takes over so much control of local education. Indiana, says a new national analysis by the nonprofit Education Sector research group in Washington, ranks eighth in the nation “in the degree to which education leaders exaggerate statistics to make schools look better under federal accountability laws.” The state, says the report released by Kevin Carey of the organization, uses data that “defy reality and common sense,” falsely claiming that every teacher receives top-notch training, that student test scores are well above average and that nine of 10 students graduate from high school.

Not so, say state education officials. The federal government ensures states such as Indiana stick to reporting guidelines, said Mary Jane Michalak, a spokeswoman for the state Department of Education. But, Carey counters, Washington lets states define their own terms of success, which fuels embellishment.

This will all get sorted out, and it will be found that Carey is partly right and the state is partly right. But what does any of it, really, have to do with teaching children?

I was basically with them until the last graf. "It will be found"? That's a pretty strong statement, given that at no point has the Indiana State Department of Education said why it disagrees with the report's findings. It just disagrees on principle, because the people there are smart enough to realize that this is usually all it takes to trigger the lamentable journalistic tendecy to fall back on nominally objective, judgement-free "he said she said" presentations of public policy debates.

Then comes the final pox-on-both-their-houses flourish, "what does any of it, really...." Maybe there are people out there who really don't think that reporting accurate public information about the success of the school system has anything to do with the success of the school system. I just didn't expect to find newspapers among their number.

Principals: The Next Generation

Last year I spent a Saturday morning participating in a mock interview process designed to help New Leaders for New Schools participants prepare to get their first jobs as school principals. I left with two strong impressions: (1) being a principal is an even harder job than I'd thought, and (2) the candidates, many of whom were 30 or younger, seemed exceptionally bright, focused, and up to the challenge.

So I was glad to see the article in today's NYTimes focusing on the rapidly growing number of young principals in the New York City school system. This is an important issue--the long-awaited demographic turnover driven by retiring baby boomers has arrived, with potentially seismic consequences for education.

But the article's focus--whether youthful principals are up to the considerable challenge of running an urban school--is too narrow. The most important question is not whether new principals are better than retiring principals in the short term. The real issue is the long-term impact of a new generation of leaders who may have very different ideas about how to lead public schools.

Harvard's Susan Moore Johnson has done some great work focusing on inter-generational difference between teachers, and the same questions apply at the leadership level. While public education is often characterized as a huge, immobile blob, impervious to reform, this may turn out to be the long-sought-for unstoppable force to change things--not new laws or policies but the steady accumulation of new people implementing new ideas, one by one.

Thursday, May 18, 2006

Secretary Spelllings Adds Value

There was a landmark event in the history of American education yesterday. Secretary Spellings announced that she is going let North Carolina and Tennessee change the way they rate their schools under NCLB. With that seemingly unremarkable bureaucratic declaration, Spellings set in motion a fundamental shift in education policy that stands, in time, to dramatically improve the nation's public education system.

In their desire to encourage schools to improve by linking sanctions to school performance, NCLB's drafters embraced a crude system of measuring school performance because it was the only system available that could be put in place in every state at the time. It tested students once a year and held schools accountable for having a sufficient percentage of students in various subgroups pass the tests. Unfortunately (and ironically), that snapshot system didn't measure how much schools were teaching students over the course of a school year. It was (and is) a school-performance system that didn't (doesn't) measure school performance. To actually measure how much school were teaching students, schools would need to compare individual students' scores at the beginning and then again at the end of a school year.

That, in effect, is what Spellings has permitted Tennessee and North Carolina to do. The result is that parents, educators, and policymakers alike in those two states stand to get school-rating systems that they can trust and that will give educators stonger incentives to improve the education of all students.

Skeptics of the so-called growth, or value-added, rating systems that Spellings approved yesterday worry that such systems could result in schools getting credit for educating low-achieving students to lower standards. Schools, they reason, could improve test scores but students entering school performing at very low levels could still not meet state standards. Spelling required that students eventually meet state standards uner the newly approved value-added plans. That provision helped win over value-added skeptics and liberal activists like Kati Haycock of the Education Trust and William Taylor of the Citizens Commission on Civil Rights, who sat on the review panel that Spellings created to vet the states' plans. The panel, and Spellings, rejected over a dozen other applications from states that lacked the infrastructure they needed, or that sought to use very different types of growth models to weaken rather than strengthen NCLB's accountability provisions.

North Carolina and Tennessee are among the few states that currently have the sophisticated student-tracking systems needed to create value-added school-rating systems. But many other states are building the same capacity and the prospect of every state using the promising new rating systems that North Carolina and Tennessee are pioneering is increasingly real. Spellings could speed the process by giving states financial incentives to catch up to their Southern brethern.

ABCTE Teachers Performing Well, Aside From the ABCs....

Some interesting new findings were released last week about the effectiveness of teachers certified by the American Board for Certification of Teacher Excellence (ABCTE).

ABCTE provides an alternate, test-based certification for mid-career professionals who want to enter teaching but don't want to endure the cost and the pain of taking countless hours of education courses. Such“fast track” alternate certification programs are hotly contested by critics who fear that unqualified teachers may be placed in our country’s classrooms. Despite the documented success of alternate programs like Teach for America, traditional ed school folks continue to defend teacher education programs as the only acceptable form of teacher training. (Disclosure: I taught for two years in Colorado with an alternate license and helped develop the social studies component of the ABCTE test).

Last week ABCTE released findings from a study* of elementary school teachers in Tennessee who passed the ABCTE tests. But while the overall findings look positive for ABCTE (despite the small sample of 55 teachers analyzed) student reading scores are a potential source of concern.

To conduct the study, researchers gave the two ABCTE tests (one for subject matter knowledge, one for knowledge of teaching skills) to a group of classroom teachers and compared the performance of students taught by teachers who passed both exams to that of students taught by teachers who failed at least one. On average, students of passing teachers had a B+ grade point average (3.36 on a 4.0 scale) compared to a C or 2.0 average earned by students of teachers who didn't pass.

This may underestimate the value of the ABCTE process, since the teachers in the study were given far less time to prepare for the exam than those who normally take the tests. It wasn’t too long ago that I was pouring over my teacher’s manuals and old AP study guides in preparation for my own licensure exam, grateful for the time I spent reviewing the British Civil Wars prior to its unveiling as the essay topic.

Yet while these preliminary results suggest ABCTE may be helpful in identifying good new math, science, and social studies teachers, the results for reading were far less encouraging. Math, science, and social studies results for students taught by passing teachers were two letter grades higher than for failing teachers. Reading results were not; students of passing and non-passing teachers alike had the same low average of 2.0.

This is disconcerting considering that the majority of teachers in the study hold a teaching license and over half hold masters degrees. All elementary teachers should know how to teach reading, but this suggests many don't. However, given that only the results for math were statistically significant, further analysis with a larger sample size is necessary to see if the low reading scores for ABCTE certified teachers are anything to raise a stink about.

Interestingly, ABCTE also offers a reading endorsement for certified elementary teachers, yet no information has been provided on the correlation between passing rates on the reading endorsement exam and student outcomes. Until such results are made available to contradict the ABCTE study, it seems ABCTE reading standards and candidate performance may require a second look.

-Posted by Margaret Price

*This post originally stated that Mathematica had conducted this study. In fact, they are doing the longitudinal evaluation; this study was done by Josh Boots at ABCTE. Sorry for anyconfusion.

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

Quick and the Ed Roster Expands

The post below marks the first entry from a new member of Education Sector's policy team, Elena Silva. Elena has a Ph.D in education from UC-Berkeley and previously worked as the director of research for the American Association of University Women, where she directed a number of national research projects on gender equity in education and the workplace. Much more from Elena to come.

Dreaming About College

Kevin Carey's Crying Wolf About Immigration clarifies some key points about immigrant youth, including the fact that most children of immigrants are not undocumented. Yet as the debate on immigration reform rages on, there are gnawing questions about how we will educate the nearly 5 million children of undocumented immigrants who are currently living in the United States.

According to a recent Pew Hispanic Center report, an estimated two-thirds of children of undocumented immigrants are U.S. citizens by birth (leading to a large number of "mixed status" families). That leaves more than 1.5 million children who are themselves undocumented, although many of these youth have been in the U.S. for as long as they can remember and have attended U.S. public schools since kindergarten. This is possible, of course, because the United States provides free public elementary and secondary education to all children, regardless of immigrant status.

College, however, is another matter.

Under federal law, undocumented students are not eligible for in-state tuition rates (unless all other U.S. citizens are also made eligible for the same rate). The added fact that undocumented students cannot qualify for financial aid is the dealbreaker for many of these students. States are now grappling with the issue, and many have introduced legislation to change residency requirements (California already offers resident tuition). Meanwhile, the Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act would provide qualified undocumented students conditional legal status to attend college and would also give states the power to determine residency policies for tuition purposes. Read the full text of the Dream Act as introduced in 2005 (type "S.2075" into search).

The legislation is now sitting in committee as the nation debates the broader issue of immigration reform. Meanwhile, barely half of undocumented students are attending or have attended college, compared to nearly three-quarters of documented immigrant and native-born students. As it is likely that these students will remain in the United States, we must consider if the cost of making college more accessible and affordable to them is more or less than doing nothing.



Tuesday, May 16, 2006

Why Club-Hoppers Should be Interested in DC Schools "Rightsizing"

Several folks have e-mailed me links to or questions about Washington, D.C., Superintendent Clifford Janey's announcement yesterday of six D.C. schools that will be closed as part of DCPS's plan to eliminate 3 million square feet of vacant space by August 2006. Parts of nine other D.C. campuses will be opened for co-location with city agencies or charter schools.

Analysis from DC Education Blog tells me that three of the 6 schools slated for closure are in Ward 7, and one is in each of Wards 2, 6, and 8. The predictable carping that 75 percent of the closures are east of the Anacostia River has already begun. I don't know as much as I probably ought to about the schools in Ward 7, so I'll refrain from saying anything much about the specific choices.

I will offer two random bits of trivia, however. One of the schools, Van Ness elementary in Ward 6, is only a few blocks down M street from my home. With only 90 students, it's been severely under-enrolled, although I continue to hope the new Hope V I development in near southeast will mean more kids in that neighborhood's public schools soon. In addition, one of the schools slated for merger--Adams Elementary in Ward 1, slated to merge with Oyster Bilingual--is the source of half of the name of D.C.'s Adams-Morgan neighborhood, known to D.C.-area 20-somethings for its bar and club scene.

More substantively, I will say that I respect Janey for having the guts to move with this.
Excess space has been a tremendous financial drain on the district and a foolish and unecessary one when the district's growing population of charter schools are scrambling for space. Closing schools is something that has to happen, but it's an incredibly difficult thing to do politically--no one will thank you for it, and a lot of people will be pissed off. Janey deserves credit for facing these tough facts and moving forward.

Monday, May 15, 2006

That Doesn't Sound Like Curricular Narrowing to Me


So, this weekend was the last one for the production of A Midsummer Night's Dream in which I appeared (I'm the one in pink). Lots of terrific things about the experience, not related to education, that I won't go into here. One very interesting and educationally-relevant thing I learned about, though, was some of the great work the Washington, D.C., area theaters are doing with local public and private schools to expose youngsters to theater--including kids who otherwise wouldn't get this kind of experience.

Our phenomenal Puck, Niki Jacobsen (below, in red), works professionally with several local theater companies teaching acting and other classes to children in a variety of schools throughout the area. Another member of the cast, Joe Angel Babb, manages community outreach programs with the Shakespeare Theatre, which operates some of the most extensive educational and community outreach programs in the country. Most of the area's other theaters provide educational and outreach programs in a variety of ways too numerous to mention here.

These partnerships between local theaters and schools are broadening kids' cultural and educational opportunities. At their best, they also give lie to the myth that standards means narrowing the curriculum and eliminating "fun" activities, like theater, that get students engaged in school. For example, Young Playwrights' Theater--a unique program that brings playwrighting into the schools--designed its curriculum in alignment with D.C.'s English Language Arts Standards, so that students are building literacy skills and learning towards the standards even while they're learning to express themselves creatively.

If you're interested in learning more about how to bring these programs into your school, or your child's school, click on the links above.

Saturday, May 13, 2006

Free Market Uber Alles

My wife and I moved into our house on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC almost five years ago. At first we got a lot of mail addressed to the previous owners, but that quickly slowed to a trickle and then stopped altogether, with two exceptions: a seed catalogue based in the Midwest (tithonias, only $2.45 for 50), and regular propaganda from the Cato Institute. Apparently, the wondrous efficiencies of an unfettered free market don't extend to updating your mailing list.

The Spring 2006 "Cato's Letter" arrived this morning, feauturing some kind of manifesto from Tucker Carlson--ack--and an interview with Andrew Coulson, director of Cato's "Center for Educational Freedom." In addition to the usual monomaniacal focus on vouchers he adds:

"We have to fight for market reforms at the K-12 level and also against state and federal government encroachment at the preschool and university levels."


This is a nice summary of where logic takes you when you embrace one and only one principal--"markets, good; government, bad"--to the exclusion of all else, such as the obvious best interests of students and children.

The free market does a pretty decent job of providing Pre-K services to children of people who can afford them. It does a lousy job of providing them to low-income children, just as it does a lousy job of providing nearly everything to low-income people: witness the shady pawn shops, grungy grocery stores, check cashing outlets, and payday lenders common to low-income neighborhoods.

That's why a lot of people are pushing for universal preschool. There are legitimate arguments about how to get there, whether to expand rapidly or focus on the most vulnerable populations. But to reject helping all children get a decent education in the critical early years on principle--well, you'd have to be some kind of extremist organization that simply doesn't believe in public education at all. As Education Sector's Sara Mead recently wrote, there are ways to expand Pre-K funding while preserving the diversity and dynamism of the market. One doubts Cato would have interest, there are larger anti-government principles at stake.

Ditto the concern about higher education--again, it's abundantly clear that higher education does a bad job of serving many students, particularly low-income and minority students, less than half of whom graduate on time and who appear to be learning much less than their more affluent, white peers. The smart solution is for the government to bring more information about student success into the higher education market through mandatory transparency and reporting--like the SEC does for publicly-traded companies--but again, that's just not as hard-core as rejecting government involvement out of hand.

Markets, competition, choice--these are all good things, of which public education needs more, not less. But bringing the benefits of choice into the education arena while staying true to bedrock public values of access, community, and fairness is difficult and complicated. It's possible, but it means opening your mind to multiple--even competing--principles. But if you're pure of heart like Cato, that kind of thinking just marks irresolution and weakness. Free market today, free market tomorrow, free market (and, apparently, quarterly publications I don't want) forever.

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

CNN.com Award for Egregious Sensationalism


Today's award goes to ABC.com's third leading story (in their continuously updating stream of five) running under the banner "Sexy Video Sends Teacher Back to Jail." Clicking on the link brings you to the less egregiously titled story "Ex-Teacher Back in Jail," but rest assured it's filled with the requisite voyeurism, sexploitation, and parental outrage.


Posted by Ethan Gray

Monday, May 08, 2006

Is Wendy Kopp Today's Jane Addams?

After reading Christine Stansell's New Republic review of it, I'm really eager to read Louise W. Knight's Citizen: Jane Addams and the Struggle for Democracy. While I certainly don't agree with everything they did, I feel a particular debt to the early 20th century Progressive women reformers such as Addams, both for the positive social changes to which they contributed and the doors they opened for me asa woman.

I did have to question one line in Stansell's review, though:
By 1900, a stay in a settlement house was de rigueur for new college graduates who wanted to make the world better. Now, few things could seem less appealing to the best of my college students; what Addams called "the subjective necessity of the settlement"--the need to be in contact with others different from oneself--is more likely to propel young idealists to go live with the poor in the barrios of Mexico City or the shantytowns of Johannesburg rather than Chicago, Boston, or New York.

But, with tens of thousands of our nation's brightest college graduates applying to teach in some of our nations most disadvantaged urban and rural communities through Teach for America, I wonder if Stansell isn't missing a piece of the picture here. While we know that many of these young people remain in the classroom, it's also clear that Teach for America alums are emerging as a key source of leaders in both education and other social and public service and policy realms. Certainly, Teach for America is very different from the settlement movement in its methods, aims, and focus. But is it serving a similar function in developing connections between bright, priviledged, driven young people and disadvantaged communities, and in fostering a crop of future leaders for social and political justice?

Terrorist U?

Don't look now, but there's a terrorist at Yale, or so many folks would have you believe. Rahmatullah Hashemi, the former "roving ambassador and spokesman" for the Taliban has been enrolled in a special, non-degree program at Yale University and is now—after securing a 3.33 GPA with little more than a 4th grade education, lots of self motivated study, and a keen interest—attempting to enroll in a full-fledged, four-year undergraduate program. Some, including my colleague Kevin Carey, believe that Hashemi has no right to study at one of America's greatest institutions of higher learning. Despite the arguments that Yale would be "good" for Hashemi, and vice versa, these critics argue that there is a proverbial line in the moral sand, and that once crossed, individuals of ill-repute ought not to be afforded the opportunity to, well, learn.

It's true that a Yale education is a privilege that very, very few in this country are afforded. So why should the former public face of one of America's post-9/11 enemies be given the chance to study in New Haven? Would we offer the same opportunity to a bureaucrat in Kim Jong-il's regime? What about an official from Stalin's Russia, or Hitler's Germany? Should these types of people get to (or have gotten to) study at a great American university despite all the bad things they've been involved in?

My answer is an equivocal yes.

There is a fundamental difference between those who commit atrocities—and should thus be put in jail—and those who play administrative roles to enable or explain them. Some are evildoers and the others are often the evildoers' puppets. Hashemi is a man whose job required him to spout an evil and vicious party line. Had he not been so good at his job, we might respect him more, but he'd probably be dead. Do you really think that he, having never been raised to challenge authority, would have dared to do anything other than what Mullah Omar told him to do? Keep in mind, as the NYT Magazine profile ($) that first brought this story to light notes, that on returning to Kabul from his trip to the states (where he was bombarded by questions about women's' rights and free exercise of religion) he immediately went to Omar to ask why the Taliban was failing to educate Afghan women. His conscience was beginning to be stirred.

Besides, in terms of judging how bad a person he is, it's important to remember one basic fact: if you can get a visa from the feds to study in the US, then you can't really be that bad, right?

So take a guy like Hashemi from any crackpot regime, assume they pass the feds security clearance, and then ask should they get to study at Yale (also assuming, and this is important, that they have the drive to apply and want to be there in the first place) and I'll say yes they should and the reason has profound implications: The more representatives of horrible governments that we can expose to scientific reason, a plurality of viewpoints, moral relativism, tolerance, diversity, and a free marketplace of ideas—all of which are the hallmarks of the American academy—the more we can hope to reduce the existence of political and religious extremism over time.

As the NYT Magazine wrote, Hashemi "had been raised in a faith, buoyed at every turn by the certainty of a higher order, a purposeful universe, and now here in this shrine of critical thinking he was learning to doubt, not to believe."

It is hard to absolve a person when they have participated, or been complicit in criminal atrocities. But if it's not our role to offer intellectual salvation, then whose is it, especially if that salvation holds the potential to help insert doubt into the most overzealously fundamental regimes on earth.

Posted by Ethan Gray

Meaning from Marshmallows

In yesterday's NYT, columnist David Brooks argued* that "structural" education reforms--such as accountability, school choice and teacher pay reforms--have a lousy track record of success because they fail to address "core questions, such as how do we get people to master the sort of self-control that leads to success." According to Brooks,
If you're a policy maker and you are not talking about core psychological traits like delayed gratification skills, then you're just dancing around with proxy issues. You're not getting to the crux of the problem.


Brooks is basing his arguments on the famous "Marshmallow Test" performed by psychologist Walter Mischel in the 1960's: Small children (about age 4) were given a marshmallow and told that they could have a second marshmallow if they waited until a researcher returned to eat the marshmallow they had; longitudinal follow-up found children who were able to wait had better life outcomes down the road. Brooks is joining a litany of researchers and commentators who have seized on this result to argue that "emotional intelligence" or psychological traits, such as the ability to delay gratification, may be more important to children's longterm success than academic skills. I doubt that many reasonable people disagree with that conclusion, but what kind of pragmatic guidance that's supposed to offer policymakers is far less clear than Brooks seems to think it is.

After all, it's not as if schools have never tried to impact children's emotional and psychological development or personal habits. In fact, the history of the Progressive education movement is littered with efforts to inculcate specific habits and values--from personal hygiene, to how to make friends, to good work habits, to self-esteem--in youngsters, often at the expense of academic content. Far from a lack of interest in intervening in what Brooks labels "the murky world of psychology and human nature," politicians and educators have evidenced a seemingly insatiable desire to do so, but one which history shows us has often been poorly implemented or focused on misguided ends. And fights between different schools of educators and idealouges over precisely what aspects of children's psychology and nature our public schools ought to seek to alter, and in what ways, have consumed an extraordinary amount of energy and produced a great deal of unproductive division within our nation's education system.

Contemporary education reformers focus on structural and organizational concerns not because they are myopic but because these tools are the most effective levers policymakers have to drive broad change. For example, high-quality preschool programs--the very type of structural reform Brooks derides--have shown positive long-term impacts in children's lives in large part because they focus on supporting children's social and emotional development--including the type of self-regulatory skills the Marshmallow Test measures--at least as much as academics. More broadly, when policymakers set clear expectations, hold educators accountable, and give them the freedom to run schools effectively, teachers and school leaders--who realize the importance of fostering children's moral, social and emotional as well as their cognitive development--choose to run schools in ways that foster the very skills Brooks wishes to see inculcated. Parents who are given choices also tend to choose such schools.

Throughout the country we find examples of high-performing public, private, and charter schools that seek to educate children to high standards in both academics and such virtues as responsibility, self-control, integrity, and respect. But numerous structural policy barriers conspire to prevent the creation or expansion of more such schools. Eliminating these barriers will do far more to generate the type of results Brooks seeks--and would do so with more respect for basic conservative values of family privacy and autonomy--than would legislating another indifferently implemented and controversial "values" program at the state or federal level.

*Sorry for Times Select link. Normally I try not to highlight anything many people can't access.

Friday, May 05, 2006

Summer Daze

Ok, I have to admit that I've had a bit of a case of spring fever lately. The weather's gotten warmer and suddenly all I really want to think about is how soon my pool will open, when I can get in that first weekend trip to the beach, and how long I'll have to spend in the sun to get rid of the ghastly pasty white color now covering my arms and legs. I love summer, even hot, sticky, humid D.C. summers.

But the reality is that, for education policy wonks, summer should actually be a pretty grim time. During the summer months, we see a significant widening in achievement gaps between poor and affluent children. That's largely because, while summers for middle-class kids mean organized sports, day- and sleep-away camps, horizon-widening family vacations, parentally-encouraged reading for fun, and lots of other brain-stimulating and school-reinforcing activities, for lower-income kids, like many of those in my neighborhood, summer mostly means boredom, opportunities to get in trouble, and losing a lot of educational ground. Another casualty of the outdated agricultural model of public schooling.

Former Clinton economic wonk Gene Sperling writes about this in his latest column, as well as two recent policy proposals--one from Princeton economists Alan Krueger and Molly Fifer for Brookings' Hamilton Project, the other from New Vision Institute smarties Scott Winship, Matissa Hollister, Joel Horwich, Pat Sharkey, and Christopher Wimer, who are working with the Center for American Progress--that would establish government-funded summer opportunity scholarships to give disadvantaged youngsters access to the same educational opportunities middle-class families take for granted during the summer. (It's also worth noting that a number of high-performing charter schools already have created some type of summer institutes, extended school years, or summer enrichment connections to help their disadvantaged students get up to speed and stay there.)

Stay tuned for this topic--along with the weather--to heat up in the coming months.

Thanks to reader CC for the tip on this article.

More Kid Lit and a Book for Grown-ups, Too (Special Notice Readers in D.C. and Philadelphia)

Q&E's comrade-en-blog Joanne Jacobs is touring to promote both her recent book, Our School: The Inspiring Story of Two Teachers, One Big Idea, and the School that Beat the Odds. The book tells the tale of Downtown College Prep, a high-performing San Jose, Calif., charter school that serves academically disadvantaged students and prepares them to succeed in four-year-colleges.

Next week, on Thursday, May 11 at 5:30 P.M., Jacobs will be speaking and signing copies of her book in Washington, D.C., at the William E. Doar Jr. Public Charter School for the Performing Arts (click link for address and contact info), a very cool performing-arts themed charter school in Northeast D.C. that currently serves children in pre-k through fifth grade. (WEDJ eventually plans to expand to serve students through high school). Attendees will also be treated to a musical performance by the school's students.

Then, on Wednesday, May 17, also at 5:30 P.M., Jacobs will speak and sign books at the Russell Byers Charter School in Center City Philadelphia (click link for school address and info).

Both events are open to the public free of charge, and no advance registration is required. Jacobs does request, however, that guests bring a children's book to donate to the schools' libraries. Here are a few ideas.

Thursday, May 04, 2006

The Yale - Taliban Connection

The NYTimes reports that Rahmatullah Hashemi, a former spokesman and roving ambassador for the Taliban who is currently taking classes at Yale, has formally applied for admission to a degree-granting program at the university.

There appear to be two arguments for why Hashemi belongs at Yale. The first is that he would benefit from a Yale education. Well, sure. Who wouldn't? There are a thousand times more people for whom that is true than Yale has space for. Why choose him? Why not give the golden ticket in the American education lottery to someone less morally compromised, like one of the countless Afghan women the Taliban barred from school?

That leads to the second argument, which is that Yale would benefit from having Hashemi as a student:

In a statement issued in March, the university said: "We acknowledge that some are criticizing Yale for allowing Mr. Hashemi to take courses here, but we hope that critics will also acknowledge that universities are places that must strive to increase understanding, especially of the most difficult issues that face the nation and the world."

Mr. Hashemi worked for the Office of Foreign Affairs under the Taliban, serving initially as a translator and then as a diplomat in the Afghan Embassy in Islamabad, Pakistan. He was named a roving ambassador in 2000, traveling to the Middle East and Europe. He toured the United States early in 2001, speaking at Yale and several other universities and appearing on public television and radio; he defended the abridgement of women's rights by the Taliban and the destruction of huge Buddhist statues, among other things.
The "abridgement" of women's rights? Abridgement is a, shall we say, somewhat muted way of characterizing things like shooting women in the back of the head with a rifle in a soccer stadium full of cheering spectators. Just to take one example of many.

The supposed benefits of Hashemi's presence seems to be animated by the idea that only through communication and understanding can we ultimately come to reconciliation and peace. As a principle of human relations, I agree with this idea wholeheartedly. But where is the supposed lack of understanding here? Is there any outstanding ambiguity left to resolve regarding the Taliban, any uncertainty as to what it's done or what it stands for? This is an organization that has defined itself in the most unambiguous terms imaginable.

Some would say principles of diversity and tolerance are only meaningful when defended at unpopular extremes. But this is a case of worthy principles extended to illogical lengths, to the point of obvious self-contradiction. It's clear that the relatively small number of universities with the luxury of choosing the composition of their student bodies have a powerful--if somewhat vague-preference for diversity along a large number of dimensions. Again, a good thing. But does it make sense to extend the principle of diversity to people who have aided and abetted regimes that are ruthlessly preoccupied with stamping out diversity by deadly means, particularly when it comes at the expense of some other student?

Kid Lit Is the Answer to Everything

This hillarious Slate article by Jacob Weisberg,* about how impossible it is to comprehend, let alone sing, our national anthem, put me in mind of this episode from one of my favorite children's books:**

Next Miss Binney taught the class the words of a puzzling song about "the dawnzer lee light," which Ramona did not understand because she did not know what a dawnzer was. "Oh, say, can you see by the dawnzer lee light," sang Miss Binney, and Ramona decided that a dawnzer was another word for a lamp.

Once again reinforcing my belief that you can learn everything you could possible want to know about a culture from reading its children's books and childrearing manuals.

*Hat tip to Matt Yglesias.

**The first person who e-mails me the title and author of this book gets a free copy of A Qualified Teacher in Every Classroom, which, sadly, is not children's literature but is, according to Amazon, a $49.95 value.

UPDATE: Congrats to Marjorie Cohen, who was the first to correctly identify the source of this excerpt as being Ramona the Pest, by Beverly Cleary.

Tuesday, May 02, 2006

The Lou Dobbs Award for Shameless Opportunism

So there I am last Friday, on vacation, sitting with my lovely wife in a bar about 100 yards from the beach on Grand Cayman. Temperature in the low 80s, sun starting to set over the clear blue-green ocean waters. Thoughts of upcoming snorkeling trip (see right) make me happy. A warm tropical breeze is blowing through my hair as I drink my second (third? fifth?) glass of the local rum/pineapple/coconut concoction.* I am relaxed, and (not coincidentally) education policy is far from my mind.

Then I glance at the television hanging above the bar, and what do I see? CNN, and the regularly scheduled broadcast of "Lou Dobbs Hates Foreign People." Lou is talking about high school graduation rates for Latino students.

My shoulders tense. Hard-won relaxation drains away. Quickly, I beckon to the bartender, a deeply-tanned ex-pat Australian scuba diver named Nigel, for a third (seventh?) concoction. But it's too late.

Lou explains to his audience that because the borders are broken, our great nation is being overrun by illegal Mexican immigrants who are overwhelming our hospitals by selling computer technology to the Chinese, who then outsource IT jobs to Bangalore, which inevitably leaves us vulnerable to infiltration by Al Qaeda agents entering the country in uninspected shipping containers arriving at foreign-owned ports. This can be proved by the fact that the nationwide Hispanic high school graduation rate is barely 50%.

Lou's mostly right on this last point--on-time Hispanic high school graduation rates are much too low. He just didn't bother to mention that most of those Hispanic students aren't immigrants, illegal or otherwise, or that graduation rates for black students are equally low. Or that these numbers were bad long before the current wave of immigration. (For some more actual data on education and immigration, see this month's Charts You Can Trust).

But in briefly entering the education arena in pursuit of another, non-education agenda, Lou isn't breaking any new ground. This kind of thing unfortunately happens all the time. From creationism and school prayer to sex education and "self-esteem instruction," people with all manner of axes to grind use the public schools as a convenient forum for other cultural and societal debates.

Thus, we at the The Quick and The Ed are hereby instituting the "Lou Dobbs Award for Shameless Opportunism," given to people who thoughtlessly wade into education policy debates for reasons that have nothing to do with actually helping students or improving schools. Nominations for future awards are welcome.

*Concoction Recipe:
2,3, or 4 parts dark Caribbean rum (depending on circumstances, i.e. need to counteract effects of Dobbsian television broadcasts)
4 parts pineapple juice
1 part cream of coconut
1 part orange juice
Serve over ice, top with shavings of fresh nutmeg

The Best We Can Expect?

I don't want to overplay the reasons why I don't think Newsweek's "America's Best High Schools" list lives up to it's name, but, now that I've had a chance to look at this year's list, I've got a bit more to say.

One of the things I found most striking, when Andy and I were putting together our analysis of schools on last year's list, was that several schools in the "Top 100" reported half or fewer of their African American students graduating. All of those schools are still on Newsweek's list this year. (I haven't had a chance yet to see if any addition schools on this year's list have similarly low graduation rates.) Considering that a lot of states are still grossly underreporting the percentage of students who fail to graduate, this troubled me. Certainly, we know from research by the Manhattan Institute and Urban Institute that only slightly more than half of African American students nationwide graduate in four years, but shouldn't the schools on a list of the nation's "best" be doing better than that, rather than a little bit worse?

Now, Jay Mathews, who created the list, argues that including graduation rates in the analysis would mean high-poverty, high-minority schools will never make Newsweek's list of Top 100 schools, because their populations ensure they will have high drop-out rates. But I think that gives some of the schools on his list more credit than they deserve.

For example, Atlantic Community High School, in Delray Beach, Florida, ranked #25 on Newsweek's list, reported a 50 percent graduation rate for its African American students in 2004, according to its detailed NCLB report card from the Florida Department of Education. About 45 percent of the school's 2,000+ students are African American, and about 35 percent qualify for free and reduced-price lunch. That's not an affluent, lilly-white suburban school, like many on Newsweek's list, but it's not "high-poverty, high-minority," either. In fact, the percentage of economically disadvantaged students at Atlantic Community is lower than the statewide average in Florida, which is 46 percent. Now, I think it's a scandal that nearly half of Florida's kids are economically disadvantaged, but does that mean we shouldn't expect the state's high schools to get more than half their black students to graduation?

Further, there are schools on Jay's own list that prove him wrong. For example, this year's school #87, YES College Preparatory School in Houston, Texas, has a student enrollment that is 92 percent Hispanic, 5 percent black, and has 75 percent of students eligible for free and reduced-price lunch--a higher percentage of economically disadvantaged students than all but one other school in Newsweek's list. But YES reports a 93.9 percent graduation rate, and 100 percent of its graduates are accepted to four-year colleges.

Atlantic may be doing great things for some of its students, but a method that ranks it higher than YES seems to defy common sense.

Monday, May 01, 2006

There's no May 1 Heffalump, either

But there is a series of immigration-related protests taking place nationwide, as some advocates have called for immigrants to boycott work and school to participate in protests and demonstrate their economic significance to the country. The "boycott" isn't universally supported within the movement. Schools and a number of pro-immigrant leaders have urged students to attend classes rather than participating in protests, and many districts have put parents and students on notice that those who skip school to attend the rallies will be disciplined. Nevertheless a reported quarter of middle and high school students in the predominantly Hispanic Los Angeles Unifed School District are absent today.

I'm torn about this issue. On the one hand, education is key to the opportunity that immigrants come the this country to pursue, so their children should be attending school today to help them take advantage of that opportunity. On the other hand, what could be a more American lesson for children to learn than how, through grassroots organizing, a large group of people with little individual power can make those in power listen to them? Of course, the corrolary to this lesson is that true civic disobedience means accepting the consequences of one's actions, so students who do violate compulsory attendance laws and school policies to participate in protests deserve to be punished.

But there's something else that troubled me, too. We know that many of the schools that enroll large numbers of immigrants or their kids are not succeeding. There is a large achievement gap between white and Hispanic students; drop-out rates for Hispanic students--especially males--are abysmal; and overall we're not doing a great job educating English language learners. And organized, empowered parents and communities are critical to addressing these problems. Wouldn't it be cool if these protests generate longer-term political organizing that gives parents a voice and the skills to advocate for their kids? Then we might start to see more of this kind of thing happening. I'm not holding my breathe, though.

In Related News:

Alexander Russo notes that, in contrast to past waves of anti-immigration sentiment, this time around there's not as much talk about the cost of educating illegal immigrant students.

Of course, that might be partly because, as Kevin Carey points out in the latest Charts You Can Trust, undocumented immigrants are just a teensy percentage of children in our public schools. Kevin's got lots of other interesting factoids on immigrants in public education, so be sure to check out his timely piece.

(Over)Simply the Best?

Newsweek's annual list of America's Best High Schools is up online now. Earlier this year, Andy and I wrote a piece raising some concerns with Newsweek's methodology--particularly how the list ignores schools' graduation rates and equity between student subgroups in a school. Jay Mathews, who creates the list, has been kind enough to engage with Andy and me in a dialogue about those concerns, which he mentions in this story.

This year there are two changes in Newsweek's rankings. First, Mathews et. al. opened the list up to include more schools that admit students on a competitive basis (previously, schools that selected more than half of their students competitively were excluded). Second, each school's information is now accompanied by an "Equity and Excellence Percentage" (E and E%), which reflects the percentage of a school's senior class that passed at least one AP exam. The E and E% is an interesting idea, but I think it would be more useful if Newsweek allowed readers to look at the two different pieces of information that comprise it--1.) across what share of a school's students the AP tests that contribute to the school's ranking are distributed, and 2.) how students performed on those tests--separately, since they are very different concepts. (Just to be clear: Newsweek doesn't have these two separate pieces of information and combine them to create the E and E %. But the E and E %, as calculated, conflates those two pieces of information into one statistic.)

And, if you want to know what I really think, check me out on Newsweek radio, here.

What Did the National Charter Schools Week Heffalump Bring You, Sara?


Ok, so there's really no such thing as a National Charter Schools Week Heffalump, and I didn't wake up and find a backpack full of jelly beans and school supplies on my doorstep this morning, nor has the charter community received any great policy treats so far this week. But this week is National Charter Schools Week, anyway. Learn more here.