Education Gadfly Weekly
Volume 2, Number 17
April 25, 2002
Opinion + Analysis
Opinion
Can state standards & market-based reforms be reconciled?
By
Chester E. Finn, Jr.
News Analysis
Charter schools spark positive changes in Dayton
News Analysis
New teacher of the year went from the trenches to the classroom
News Analysis
Test protests thinning out in Massachusetts
Reviews
Research
Adoption and Adaptation: New York State School Districts' Responses to State Imposed High School Graduation Requirements: An Eight-Year Retrospective
By
Chester E. Finn, Jr.
Research
Exploring the Democratic Tensions within Parents' Decisions to Homeschool
By
Chester E. Finn, Jr.
Research
Going Charter: New Models of Support
By
Chester E. Finn, Jr.
Research
Implementing the Boston Teachers' Contract
By
Chester E. Finn, Jr.
Research
Mustering the Armies of Compassion in Philadelphia: An Analysis of One Year of Literacy Programming in Faith-Based Institutions
By
Kelly Scott
Research
The Effects of Town Tuitioning in Vermont and Maine
By
Katherine Somerville
Gadfly Studios
Can state standards & market-based reforms be reconciled?
Chester E. Finn, Jr. / April 25, 2002
Both standards-based and market-style reforms come from outside the system but they follow different theories and many people believe they are incompatible. After all, standards-based reform-typified by statewide academic standards, tests and rewards/sanctions a la President Bush's No Child Left Behind legislation-is top-down, driven by elites that tell schools what results to achieve and reward and punish them. Market-style reform-vouchers, charters, privately operated public schools, home-schooling, "virtual" schooling, etc.-is populist and bottom-up, relying on the preferences of clients to signal to schools what must be done and on the individual actions of schools and educators to satisfy those clients.
In today's education policy tussles, each has many fans and partisans, but their advocates tend to be leery of one another. Advocates of the marketplace don't think a dirigiste, state-run accountability system can ever work well, while cheerleaders for "systemic" reform doubt that markets will be good for schools, children, or the common weal.
Can they work together? Can a hybrid system succeed? We have promising evidence from charter schools, which must contend with both forms of accountability at the same time and which generally find it possible to balance them. We also find an interesting example in Florida, which has devised a standards-based accountability system that uses exposure to the marketplace as the ultimate "consequence" that can befall a failing school. Enacted in 1999, Florida's "A+" plan assigns a letter grade to every public school based primarily on its school's
Can state standards & market-based reforms be reconciled?
Charter schools spark positive changes in Dayton
April 25, 2002
What effect do charter schools have on school districts as a whole? Do they inspire improvements in regular district schools or merely drain money from the district's budget? A cover story in this week's Education Week by Catherine Gewertz takes a close look at how the charter school drama is playing out in Dayton, Ohio, an economically embattled Rust Belt city where 15 percent of the district's school-age children now attend a dozen charter schools. Besides the students lost to charter schools, the district has also watched them depart via privately-financed school vouchers, declining birthrates, and middle class flight, and this downward enrollment trend has led to cutbacks in the district's administrative, custodial, and support staff. But instead of viewing charter schools as threats or denying that they'd ever amount to much, school district leaders in Dayton acknowledge that the out-migration by students reflects some of the failings of the district's schools and compels them to improve. A newly unified district administration and reform-minded school board are now embarking on a series of initiatives to raise student achievement in Dayton, Gewertz writes. "People are coming together more now and focusing on how to create a viable education system that includes all these various options," says Tom Lasley, the dean of the ed school at the University of Dayton. For more see "Dayton Feels the Heat from Charter Schools," by Catherine Gewertz, Education Week, April 24, 2002.
Charter schools spark positive changes in Dayton
New teacher of the year went from the trenches to the classroom
April 25, 2002
President Bush introduced the 2002 teacher of the year-a retired Army colonel from southern California-at a Rose Garden ceremony yesterday. Chancey Veatch, a social studies teacher at Coachella Valley High School in Thermal, California, said he believes that struggling teachers can improve by looking to colleagues for help; "I'm a really strong advocate that you don't have to wait until somebody trains you." After retiring from the Army in 1995, Veatch, who had no teaching experience, called up the local school district a few days before the beginning of the school year, looking for a substitute teaching job. He was offered his own classroom, teaching eighth-grade science and math. Veatch said he looked to his brother and sister, both teachers, for guidance. He spent the next three years taking classes at night, on weekends, and in the summer to receive certification. President Bush has championed the Troops to Teachers program, which matches retired military personnel with public schools. For more see "The new teacher of the year, a retired Army colonel from southern California..." by Greg Toppo, AP Wire, April 23, 2002. More information is available at http://www.ccsso.org/ntoy/2002/ntoy02.html.
New teacher of the year went from the trenches to the classroom
Test protests thinning out in Massachusetts
April 25, 2002
Opponents of high-stakes testing in Massachusetts are running out of time to convince a public that has largely accepted testing and academic standards, according to reporter Ed Hayward of the Boston Herald. A rally in Boston organized by a handful of students who spent their spring vacation lobbying for an end to the Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System (MCAS) graduation requirement drew only 40 people, mostly the students' parents and hard-core organizers of efforts to end the exam. While opponents of the MCAS remain in some of the state's most liberal locales, the high profile boycotts that took place in 2000 have declined drastically as scores have risen, Hayward writes. The percentage of students who passed the English section of the test jumped from 66 percent to 82 percent between 2000 and 2001, and the percentage who passed the math section rose from 55 percent to 75 percent. For more see "MCAS protests waning as exam gains acceptance," by Ed Hayward, Boston Herald, April 21, 2002.
Test protests thinning out in Massachusetts
Adoption and Adaptation: New York State School Districts' Responses to State Imposed High School Graduation Requirements: An Eight-Year Retrospective
Chester E. Finn, Jr. / April 25, 2002
David Monk, John W. Sipple and Kieran Killeen, New York State Educational Finance Research Consortium
September 10, 2001
This 45-pager from the New York State Educational Finance Research Consortium was written by Penn State's David Monk and two colleagues. The basic questions it examines are how well school districts in the Empire State are complying with stiffer Regents requirements for high school graduation and what effects this is having. It includes both statistical analyses and interview data from five districts. Though fairly technical, it offers several interesting findings. First, as one might expect, the State Board of Regents' decision to require nearly all high-school students to take and pass more Regents exams before graduating has led more high-school students to take those exams, though there's much district-level variation in whether instructional and organizational changes are made to help them pass those exams. Second, as more students take these exams, the average score declines, with marked gaps between urban and non-urban districts. Third, more pressure from Regents exams does not seem to be producing more dropouts. Fourth, there's no clear correlation between district per-pupil spending levels and Regents exam participation rates. And fifth, there is a notable lack of consensus as to whether, in fact, "all children can learn" and whether the state should be requiring them to pass these exams in order to graduate. Teachers and community leaders are the most doubtful, superintendents and principals more apt at least to voice support
Adoption and Adaptation: New York State School Districts' Responses to State Imposed High School Graduation Requirements: An Eight-Year Retrospective
Exploring the Democratic Tensions within Parents' Decisions to Homeschool
Chester E. Finn, Jr. / April 25, 2002
Kariane Mari Welner, Teachers College, Columbia University
March 2002
This somewhat recherch?? paper by Kariane Mari Welner of the UCLA School of Education is another in the burgeoning series sponsored by the National Center for the Study of Privatization in Education at Teachers College, Columbia. The author interviewed 26 home-schooling families to ascertain (among many things) how these parents conceive of democracy and whether there's a tension between their civic views and their decision to home-school their children. The conclusion: sometimes there is. The author sorts home-schoolers into the "civic minded" and the "autonomy minded" and examines various of their values and attitudes and how these intersect with different conceptions of democracy and philosophies of education. It may hold mild interest for political theorists and people trying to understand what makes home-schoolers tick (though it seems from this paper, as from most research on the subject, that they tick in many different ways that defy easy generalizations and categorizations-the more so when one's sample contains barely two dozen of them!). You can find it on the web at www.ncspe.org by clicking on "Occasional Papers."
Exploring the Democratic Tensions within Parents' Decisions to Homeschool
Going Charter: New Models of Support
Chester E. Finn, Jr. / April 25, 2002
Carol Ascher et al., Charter School Research Project, New York University
December 2001
New York University's Charter School Research Project, led by Carol Ascher, recently issued this 30-page report, covering the second year (2000-1) of a research project that's studying a sample of Big Apple charter schools (actually 8 of the 14 true charters then operating in the city plus two "alternative schools considering charter status"). The focus of this report is how the schools obtained support from other sources, including non-profit organizations, other charter schools, their sponsors and traditional public education providers. Since nearly all New York charter schools have such "partnerships," it's interesting to see how they make use of them. The answer is that they received a wide range of supports (money, experience, expertise, training, facilities, etc.) from their partner organizations, which in turn exerted considerable influence on them. This sometimes complicates school governance and leads a school's teachers and parents to feel marginalized. The authors offer a half dozen policy recommendations that would clarify these relationships, strengthen charter governance and boost the schools' funding from public sources, the inadequacy of which (even in high-spending New York) the authors deem "an obstacle" to those who might want to start charter schools in the Empire State. They're saying, in essence, that unless more ample provision is made for the start-up, capital and operating costs of charter schools in New York, there won't be a whole lot more of them and
Going Charter: New Models of Support
Implementing the Boston Teachers' Contract
Chester E. Finn, Jr. / April 25, 2002
Boston Municipal Research Bureau
March 2002
This short (8-page) and highly focused study by the Boston Municipal Research Bureau (in collaboration with the Massachusetts Advocacy Center) looks at how well the Boston Public School implemented some worthwhile reforms in the spring of 2001, reforms that the school system and its teachers' union had only agreed to in late 2000. The reason this is worth mentioning is that the reforms entailed giving school principals greater say over the selection of teachers for their schools than is common in big-city systems. The starting (and correct) premise is that staff selection is a key element of school success and that seniority rules shouldn't trump a school's ability to obtain the people it wants. Another change in Boston accelerated the annual teacher contracting cycle so that positions needing to be filled by going "outside the system" could be recruited for early enough to compete with suburban school systems. (Only in the context of an iron-grip teachers' contract would these even warrant attention. Many contractual impediments to staffing flexibility remain in Boston. Nothing, for example, was done about teacher tenure.) Considering the relatively short time the school system had to get ready for these changes in 2001, the authors of this report conclude, perhaps predictably, that they did pretty well but should do better next time. (Next time, incidentally, is right now.) If you'd like to read it, contact the Boston Municipal Research Bureau, Inc. at 617-227-1900.
Implementing the Boston Teachers' Contract
Mustering the Armies of Compassion in Philadelphia: An Analysis of One Year of Literacy Programming in Faith-Based Institutions
Kelly Scott / April 25, 2002
Bill Hangley, Jr. and Wendy S. McClanahan, Public/Private Ventures
February 2002
President Bush deems faith-based organizations the backbone of society's "armies of compassion." But how good are those groups at collectively meeting specific needs of the poor and downtrodden? This 46-page report from Philadelphia-based Public/Private Ventures (P/PV) offers evidence that faith-based programs can indeed meet civic needs and meet them well, at least when carefully constructed and managed in partnership with secular organizations. The case in point is Youth Education for Tomorrow (YET), an innovative research-based literacy program developed by P/PV and run by a diverse group of faith-based organizations in Philadelphia. The organizations provided the space, volunteers, and children; P/PV offered them a clear model to follow, complete with funding, pedagogy, training and oversight. The more closely the sites followed P/PV's model, the better their results. Children who were up to three years below grade level achieved significant gains in reading ability after only a few months' participation in YET. But success-which was fairly consistent across sites despite variance in organizational capacity-didn't come easily. Anecdotes from interviews with site and P/PV staff highlight the challenges inherent in any funded partnership and underscore the need for a clear mission and impeccable planning and implementation. You'll find the report in both HTML and PDF versions at http://www.ppv.org.
Mustering the Armies of Compassion in Philadelphia: An Analysis of One Year of Literacy Programming in Faith-Based Institutions
The Effects of Town Tuitioning in Vermont and Maine
Katherine Somerville / April 25, 2002
Christopher W. Hammons, Milton & Rose D. Friedman Foundation
February 2002
Given the media hubbub surrounding the pending U.S. Supreme Court case on the constitutionality of school vouchers in Ohio, some may be surprised to learn that a kindred practice has been in place in rural Maine and Vermont since the late 19th century. In a Friedman Foundation report released in February, author Christopher Hammons explains those states' practice of "town tuitioning," which allows parents living in small districts that do not own and operate their own public schools to send their children to public or secular private schools in other districts, within or outside the state, using funds provided by the home district. Of nearly 500 towns in Maine, 55 "tuition out" all their students and another 93 tuition out all of their high school students. Of Vermont's 246 towns, 15 tuition out all students and 95 more do this with their high school students. Parental choice generally determines where these students attend school (64% of the time in Maine and 95% of the time in Vermont). Hammons argues that the advantages of town tuitioning are manifold: schools perform better in a competitive environment, the benefits of school choice are spread across racial and demographic divides, and the practice saves taxpayers millions. Possibly the most surprising aspect of town tuitioning is that these century-old programs have existed more or less under the radar of contemporary education debates, failing to draw the
The Effects of Town Tuitioning in Vermont and Maine
Announcements
March 25: AEI Common Core Event
March 21, 2013While 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.





