Education Gadfly Weekly

Volume 2, Number 16

April 18, 2002

The war on charter schools

Chester E. Finn, Jr. / April 18, 2002

I'm not prone to paranoia but lately I see an awful lot of folks bent on stopping the charter movement dead in its tracks and I also see them making much headway. I don't think it exaggerates to say that a war is being waged against charter schools. As with many wars, however, both sides have something to answer for. Those who want this decade-old education reform strategy to have a longer opportunity to show what it can accomplish need to recognize that their own failings aren't making its defense any easier.

Attacks are coming from many directions. State officials lead some of them (e.g. Ohio, Indiana, New Jersey, Michigan). Local school systems spearhead others (e.g. California, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts). Teacher unions, having failed in legislative chambers to arrest the charter movement, are turning to the courtroom (in Ohio, Pennsylvania). Governors who claim to be pro-charter (e.g. Georgia's Barnes, Texas's Perry) are going along with newly restrictive legislation. Blue-ribbon panels convened to solve charter problems end up compounding them.

The specifics take many forms and sometimes those behind them are actually trying to help. For instance, Ohio auditor Jim Petro thought he was improving the Buckeye State's charter program with his scathing report on the Ohio Department of Education's sloppy stewardship of that program. But Ohio's teacher unions had blood in their eyes when they brought ever-widening lawsuits against the program itself. The Georgia legislature (and Governor Barnes) strengthened that state's limp charter

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The war on charter schools

Parents protest income-based integration

April 18, 2002

San Francisco made headlines last year when it announced that it would begin integrating some schools on the basis of income. This year, the school board in Cambridge, Massachusetts voted to do the same thing. Many experts are excited about this new strategy for diversifying schools, particularly since courts have begun to limit the use of race in student assignments. (Richard Kahlenberg's 2001 book All Together Now: Creating Middle Class Schools through Public School Choice offered a ringing defense of the idea, for instance.) But after learning that their children have been assigned to low-performing schools that will require cross-town busing, some parents in San Francisco are less thrilled with the plan. Hundreds of Asian American parents who would prefer that their children attend neighborhood schools protested at a school board meeting last week, and city and community leaders are backing the parents. For more see "School district diversity plan under microscope," by Joyce Nishioka, The San Francisco Examiner, April 10, 2002.

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Parents protest income-based integration

Will teenagers connect with higher standards?

April 18, 2002

Researchers believe that teenagers who feel "connected" at school are less likely to be violent or suicidal, to abuse drugs or to get pregnant. A major study released last week tried to identify features of schools where teenagers are likely to feel connected. Their conclusion: class size and teachers' experience and degrees have no bearing on school connectedness, but school size and what the analysts call "classroom management" do. In smaller schools, and those in whose classrooms students get along with each other, pay attention, and hand in assignments on time, teenagers report stronger feelings of connectedness. (Of course, this last variable may be picking up much more than the teacher's classroom management skills.) The study relied on data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, which includes written surveys filled out by 75,000 students.

In articles about the new research, some reporters alluded to studies that have linked school size to academic achievement, but that connection is not well understood or documented. A new study by two professors at Teachers College has found that many of New York City's small high schools teach "a diluted version of social studies that does not adequately prepare students for citizenship's demands." While the small high schools do have a more caring atmosphere, their handling of social studies has been hurt by a "less is more" curriculum philosophy, in which teachers focus on big themes that they deem relevant to minority students

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Will teenagers connect with higher standards?

Alignment Among Secondary and Post-Secondary Assessment in Five Case Study States

Chester E. Finn, Jr. / April 18, 2002

Vi-Nhuan Le, RAND Corporation
2002

Vi-Nhuan Le is the author of this 200-page RAND study on behalf of the "Bridge Project" of the Stanford Institute for Higher Education Research. The core question is how well do the high school tests (of English and math) required by these five states line up with tests of the same subjects administered to first-year college students (for admissions and/or course placement, particularly decisions about whether a student needs remediation or is ready for college-level work). The states under review are California, Georgia, Maryland, Oregon and Texas, each of which gets a substantial case study here. The "alignment" being examined, however, has mostly to do with the tests' coverage or content, not their "performance standards." Do high school math achievement tests, for example, probe the same kinds of math and contain the same kinds of exercises as tests administered for college entry or placement? The less-than-electrifying conclusions are apt to hold greater interest for testing experts than education policy watchers, and in several cases the definition of "alignment" strikes me as too relativistic: "In math, there are no instances of misalignments, as discrepancies among assessments reflect variations in test use." In other words, the tests differ because they're used for different purpose but (in the author's conceptual framework) that doesn't mean they're mis-aligned. Much the same conclusion is reached in English, except for "one notable misalignment" when it comes to "the scoring criteria of the writing measures."

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Alignment Among Secondary and Post-Secondary Assessment in Five Case Study States

Bridging the Gap Between Standards and Achievement

Chester E. Finn, Jr. / April 18, 2002

Devotees of professional development for teachers will be interested in this thoughtful paper by Harvard education professor Richard F. Elmore, published by the Albert Shanker Institute. In 40 pages, he contends that more and better professional development is an "imperative." He explains (in fairly general terms) how to improve today's standard-issue professional development and what conditions must obtain in a school for it to have the desired effect on teacher practice and student performance. He concludes that there's generally enough professional-development money in the education system but that much is being mis-spent. He also points to some of the political and organizational barriers in the way of improving this situation, having mostly to do with dicey changes in roles, responsibilities and power relationships within schools. Insightful and welcome, if somewhat abstruse. You can request a free copy by sending an e-mail to cpre@gse.upenn.edu.

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Bridging the Gap Between Standards and Achievement

Charter Schools in New York: A New Choice in Public Education

Kelly Scott / April 18, 2002

Charter Schools Institute, State University of New York
March 2002

As this week's Gadfly editorial makes plain, charter schools are under assault nationwide. But supporters of choice in education can take some comfort in the findings of a recent report from the Charter Schools Institute at the State University of New York. In reviewing the performance of New York's 32 charter schools, the Institute concluded that they are largely achieving the goals established for them in the state's 1998 Charter Schools Act. Parents are clamoring to send their kids to charters in New York, where 70 percent of the schools have waiting lists. Most of the charters are located in high need areas and serve students near the bottom of the academic barrel, many of whom make rapid progress thanks to the rigorous standards, quality teaching, innovative practices and personal attention they receive in these new schools. Officials in school districts that have lost students to charters say they're fighting to win them back by copying charters' appealing features and practices. What accounts for such success? Careful quality control. The SUNY Trustees, who leave the day-to-day management and support of charters to the Institute (along with New York's Board of Regents and local school boards), closely scrutinize charter applicants to make sure they're focused laser-like on the bottom line: student achievement. Although it is more self-congratulatory and descriptive than rigorous, this report-which includes a short profile of each of the 22 operating

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Charter Schools in New York: A New Choice in Public Education

Quality Teachers: Can Incentive Policies Make a Difference?

Terry Ryan / April 18, 2002

Lynn Cornett and Gale Gaines, Southern Regional Education Board
2002

Incentive policies can make a difference when it comes to improving teacher quality, argues Lynn Cornett, senior vice president, and Gale Gaines, director of legislative services, at the Southern Regional Education Board (SREB). Some incentives work better than others, however, and Cornett and Gaines argue for using past experience to design new efforts to attract and retain good teachers. The idea of using incentives-including performance or merit pay, scholarships, distinguished educator awards and the like-to attract new teachers or teachers of high-demand subjects or teachers for tough school situations goes back to at least the 1980s. One popular approach targeted incentives directly at teachers who were deemed to be high performers or those in subjects facing acute supply problems. Performance pay faced resistance from teacher unions, however, and by the late 1990s was no longer seen as a viable option for most states. This is not surprising, considering surveys that show up to 80 percent of teachers confident that they're among the top 20 percent performers. According to Cornett and Gaines, this history offers valuable lessons for today's policymakers as they search for ways to boost teacher quality and recruit skilled practitioners. Two messages are especially clear: 1) changing the structure of teacher work and teacher pay is almost impossible; and 2) teachers need to be involved in the development of any program that seeks to tie financial rewards to individual performance.

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Quality Teachers: Can Incentive Policies Make a Difference?

Rankings & Estimates. Rankings of the States 2001 and Estimates of School Statistics 2002

Chester E. Finn, Jr. / April 18, 2002

National Education Association
2002

The National Education Association's research department has put out this joint edition of two annual data sources, one ranking the states on a wide variety of quantitative education indicators in 2001, the other estimating some of the same statistics for states and the nation in 2002. There's tons of data here, much of it fairly accessible and much of it credible. Readers may not realize, for example, that average per-pupil public school spending has risen to an estimated $7425 in the current school year (not counting capital costs, interest payments, etc.) But some of the NEA's blind spots and policy agendas show up, too. There is nary a mention of charter schools, for example, and teacher pay figures do not include fringe benefits. If you'd like your very own copy, visit http://www.nea.org/nr/nr020408.html.

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Rankings & Estimates. Rankings of the States 2001 and Estimates of School Statistics 2002

The Cost of Accountability

April 18, 2002

Carolyn Minter Hoxby, National Bureau of Economic Research
April 2002

The creative and prolific Harvard economist, Carolyn Minter Hoxby, authored this working paper for the National Bureau of Economic Research. Her conclusion is that "The costs of accountability programs are...tiny...relative to the cost of other education programs." She estimates the costliest of state testing programs at about one-quarter of one percent of per pupil spending. It's such a bargain, she says, that "even if the benefits of accountability are small, its benefit-to-cost ratio is likely to be extremely high relative to that of other programs." This is highly relevant at a time when state officials are complaining that their education budgets will be broken by the costs of complying with the testing requirements of the new federal No Child Left Behind act. Hoxby says, in effect, that that's a red herring, that "the main barrier to good [testing] programs is not expense but the support and interest of education experts, policy-makers and the public." Note, though, that she is dealing here with the costs of testing itself, not the rewards and interventions that would be attached to a fully wrought "accountability" system. You can download this 25-pager from www.nber.org/papers/w8855. (Depending on your relationship with the N.B.E.R., you may have to pay for it.)

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The Cost of Accountability

Announcements

March 25: AEI Common Core Event

March 21, 2013

While most discussion about the Common Core State Standards Initiative has focused on its technical merits, its ability to facilitate innovation, or the challenges facing its practical implementation, there has been little talk of how the standards fit in the larger reform ecosystem. At this AEI conference, a set of distinguished panelists will present the results of their research and thoughts on this topic and provide actionable responses to the questions that will mark the next phase of Common Core implementation efforts. The event will take place at the American Enterprise Institute in D.C. on March 25, 2013, from 9:00AM to 5:00PM. It will also be live-streamed online. For more information and to register, click here.

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