Education Gadfly Weekly
Volume 4, Number 27
July 22, 2004
Opinion + Analysis
Opinion
The governors speak - but are they listening?
News Analysis
Rolling back anti-charter bills in New England
News Analysis
The transfer mess - and promise
News Analysis
Stern defense of Bush
News Analysis
Legislating admissions
News Analysis
Lawsuit brewing in NYC
Reviews
Book
Going Broke by Degree: Why College Costs Too Much
By
Chester E. Finn, Jr.
Research
Putting Education to the Test: A Value-Added Model for California
By
Eric Osberg
Research
National Assessment of Vocational Education: Final Report to Congress
By
Chester E. Finn, Jr.
Research
State Higher Education Finance, FY 2003
By
Chester E. Finn, Jr.
Gadfly Studios
The governors speak - but are they listening?
July 22, 2004
If a tree falls in the forest and no one hears it, did it make any noise? If the nation's governors talk about education reform yet it has no effect on what they do, do the words matter? That's the question that arises from the just-concluded summer meeting of the National Governors Association.
NGA is one of the nation's most respected public policy outfits; since it purportedly represents the views of the highest state officials in the land, everyone assumes that what it says matters. But the NGA is compromised by the necessity of representing a wide range of opinions-from conservatives like Bill Owens of Colorado and Jeb Bush of Florida to liberals like Jim McGreevey of New Jersey and Rod Blagojevich of Illinois. Further, it has a new leader every year-and the two parties take turns. As a result, its position papers sometimes tend toward the oracular: weighty yet abstract, lofty and nebulous enough to lend themselves to wide interpretation. Simply put, in the interest of forging the appearance of consensus, the NGA often fudges a great many details and differences.
That doesn't mean its meetings aren't sometimes knife fights. Every governor always has his or her eye on the voters back home, as well as the special interests that can mobilize them. This means staff members-and occasionally living, breathing governors-spend hours in fierce negotiations over punctuation and turns of phrase.
This year's process was no different. What was different,
The governors speak - but are they listening?
Rolling back anti-charter bills in New England
July 22, 2004
We earlier reported that Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney had vetoed a one-year moratorium on new charter schools, but that it looked like the General Assembly would have the two-thirds majority needed to overturn Romney's veto. (See Gadfly, Volume 4, Number 25 for more). We're thrilled to have been wrong. This week, in what the Boston Globe calls a "rare show of solidarity" with the governor, the Massachusetts House voted 78-77 to sustain the veto. According to the Globe, lawmakers were "swayed by a plan to relieve the financial burden that charter-school funding has imposed on traditional public schools." (Specifically, opponents of the moratorium worked out a plan whereby a charter school's per-student payment would be based on the actual cost of educating that child, rather than the current method, which bases charter school funding on a per-student average in the local school district, including special education and bilingual students. It's too soon to know whether that new formula will deal a grave fiscal blow to the Bay State's existing charters.) Now charter supporters in New England must hope that the Rhode Island General Assembly will follow Massachuetts's lead. Last month, lawmakers in the Ocean State successfully slipped a charter-school moratorium into the state budget. Governor Donald L. Carcieri vetoed the budget July 1. Now the ball is back in the legislature's court.
"Romney backed on charter schools," by Scott S. Greenberger, Boston Globe, July 21, 2004
Rolling back anti-charter bills in New England
The transfer mess - and promise
July 22, 2004
Treat yourself to two fascinating features in the Chicago Tribune about a young girl who takes advantage of the NCLB transfer option to move to a new school on the North Side. Rayola has every disadvantage stacked against her: she failed third grade already, spends hours commuting across town to school, and is often absent because no one is available to get her there or her mother lets her stay up late or fails to wake her up in the morning. Still, with intensive attention, tutoring, and pluck, she does well and begins to make real academic strides. Unfortunately, her impulsive mother pulls her out of the school and sends her to a new one-her fifth in five years-that has many of the same problems as the school she originally transferred from. These two articles are both heartbreaking and heartwarming, though the reporter doesn't seem inclined to make any judgments beyond "What a mess this whole business is." We're inclined to take a more positive view. While we readily acknowledge the shortcomings of NCLB's transfer provision, the stories put a face on something we already have some evidence about-that the transfer provision can have the desired effect (see Gadfly, Volume 4, Number 17). And yes, social obstacles, lifestyle choices and family circumstances make implementing education reforms difficult. But while there are Rayolas out there-students who can do more, if more is expected of them-it remains a moral imperative to
The transfer mess - and promise
Stern defense of Bush
July 22, 2004
Sol Stern pens a long article in City Journal on the Bush education agenda and why the President deserves the moniker "Education President." It's interesting to note, Stern recounts, that time and again opponents of various Bush initiatives seemed nonplussed (to say the least) to discover that the administration actually meant what it said. That is, the Bushies meant it when they said, Reading First funding must be used for scientifically based programs or don't expect the money. They meant it when they said that, to get Title I funding, schools and states must show sustained increases in student performance. Stern is especially gifted at thinking through the implications of NCLB: how it could open the system up to heretofore unthinkable reforms-even such as vouchers-by making the inadequacy of many schools crystal clear. (Of course, that's precisely what many "establishment" critics of NCLB fear most-and have also glimpsed as a possibility.) Two quibbles: the piece wants a fuller discussion of some of NCLB's more glaring problems and inconsistencies. And pace Stern, achievement disaggregation by subgroup was not an idea germinated by Congressional Democrats. We're not sure why Eduwonk calls parts of the piece the "journalistic equivalent of a lap dance-some squirming and faux enthusiasm but no real payoff." In fact, we suspect Stern has shown a lot more leg than the administration would prefer when it comes to what NCLB might mean for the future.
"Yes, the Education President,"
Stern defense of Bush
Legislating admissions
July 22, 2004
The New York legislature may well have overstepped its bounds this week when it passed a bill that would limit state and city universities from using the SAT or other "high-stakes tests" as major criteria for acceptance into the schools. According to the New York Post, outraged college officials are now pressing Governor Pataki to veto the bill-which was originally pushed by the City University of New York (CUNY) professors' union-because "it sets a dangerous precedent of having state politicians dictating their admissions policy." More than that, were the bill to become law, it would likely embolden K-12 anti-testing groups, who are already pushing to lift the Regents' policy requiring students to pass five exams to earn a diploma and block Mayor Bloomberg's use of standardized tests to determine whether Gotham students can be promoted beyond the third grade. (See below for more.) This is a battle with an uncertain ending, but one that is well worth watching. Stay tuned.
"State pols pass bill to end colleges' reliance on SATs," by Carl Campanile, New York Post, July 20, 2004
Legislating admissions
Lawsuit brewing in NYC
July 22, 2004
More challenges loom for Hizzoner Bloomberg's controversial bid to require third graders to pass reading and math tests before advancing to the next grade (see Gadfly, Volume 4, Number 7). Lawyers from the NAACP Legal Defense Fund this week posted notices to various education listservs, fishing for plaintiffs for a lawsuit challenging the practice. (Unfortunately, the notices are not to be found on the web.) "Who are the ideal plaintiffs?" reads the notice. "African-American, Latino, Asian, and white students who scored at Level 1 on one or both of the exams . . . and were not otherwise promoted through the appeals process" and come from troubled city school districts such as Ocean Hill-Brownsville and Bedford-Stuyvesant. The attorneys want students whose grades were good enough to pass on to fourth grade but were denied because of poor scores on reading and math tests. We suspect this case is a non-starter (the courts have consistently upheld testing for purposes of determining graduation or advancement to the next level), but if it gets off the ground it's one more headache for Bloomberg and schools chancellor Joel Klein.
Lawsuit brewing in NYC
Going Broke by Degree: Why College Costs Too Much
Chester E. Finn, Jr. / July 22, 2004
Richard Vedder, AEI PressJune 200
Economist Richard Vedder wrote, and the American Enterprise Institute Press has just published, this fine book-length analysis of college costs, the reasons they have risen so much, and what can be done about it. In a nutshell, he finds U.S. colleges and universities deeply inefficient and unproductive places that pass along most of these weaknesses to their clients (and taxpayers) via rising tuitions and appropriations. He suggests a number of possible remedies, every one of which will outrage the mandarins of American higher education but almost all of which deserve respectful attention from state and federal policy makers. He examines both tuition-related issues and the (mixed and not entirely persuasive) case for public subsidies. "A good case can be made," Vedder writes, "that governments should largely get out of the higher education business, ending state subsidies and tax advantages for private donations. Moreover, the evidence is strong that massive governmental infusions of funds, along with tax-sheltered private contributions, have contributed to the cost explosion in higher education." Though higher ed is not Gadfly's usual beat, this is an important book that should have been written a decade ago and that Congress ought take very seriously when, next year, it starts afresh to renew the Higher Education Act. It weighs in at 260 pages, the list price is $25, the ISBN is 0844741973, and you can obtain additional information by clicking here.
Going Broke by Degree: Why College Costs Too Much
Putting Education to the Test: A Value-Added Model for California
Eric Osberg / July 22, 2004
Harold C. Doran and Lance T. Izumi, Pacific Research InstituteJune 2004
Like most states, California's current assessment system lacks value-added measures. Rather than tracking test scores of individual students over time to gauge learning gains each year, most states take "snap-shots" of class and school averages, a method that can neither account for changes in student populations (is a school really doing better if this year's fourth graders score better than last year's fourth graders?) nor measure a student's learning each year (a single score reflects a lifetime of learning, not just one year). Equally problematic, California's system, like others, tracks the proportion of students meeting proficiency targets; this ignores gains, or the lack thereof, made by students well above or below the proficiency cutoff (akin to "measuring a child's height with a yardstick but acknowledging growth only when his or her height exceeds 36 inches"). To rectify these problems, California legislated in 2002 that the Department of Education seek proposals for a student achievement tracking database. In 2003, it required creation of a system of unique student identification numbers and created a committee to recommend how to use these in assessment. This paper presents one potential solution: the REACH (Rate of Expected Academic Change) value-added model. It would track student achievement data over time to create a trend line, predicting how a student will fare by the end of his or her schooling compared to a "proficient" score. A student
Putting Education to the Test: A Value-Added Model for California
National Assessment of Vocational Education: Final Report to Congress
Chester E. Finn, Jr. / July 22, 2004
U.S. Department of Education Office of the Under Secretary 2004
In 1998, Congress instructed the Education Department to conduct an independent national assessment of vocational education in time for the next reauthorization cycle of the Perkins Act. If Congress were on schedule, this report would be late, but since it seems Perkins will be back on the table in January 2005, the report is timely. Though various contractors helped with the project and an "Independent Advisory Panel" watched over it, the final report to Congress (310 pages) and executive summary (a more manageable 24 pages) were written by a staff team in the Undersecretary's office. One might, therefore, expect a tepid, bureaucratic approach. Yet while the phrasing is mild and cautious, in fact the findings and recommendations contained herein are blockbusters, at least in context of the staid world of voc ed. Eighty-five years since the Smith-Hughes Act was passed, America and its education system have changed far more than voc ed has changed, and the resulting friction begs for reform. Here are some key findings:
- "The vocational courses most high school students take improve their later earnings but have no effect on other outcomes that have become central to the mission of secondary education-such as improving academic achievement or college transitions."
- "Occupational concentrators [i.e.
National Assessment of Vocational Education: Final Report to Congress
State Higher Education Finance, FY 2003
Chester E. Finn, Jr. / July 22, 2004
State Higher Education Executive Officers (SHEEO)
2004
The State Higher Education Executive Officers (SHEEO) produced this 92-page fact book dealing with the finances of higher education at the state level in 2003. It offers lots of important and sometimes counterintuitive information. For example:
- It's "superficial and premature" to conclude that state support for higher ed has been declining in recent years.
- In fact, from 1991 to 2003, per (FTE) pupil funding in public-sector institutions rose 2.1 percent faster than inflation (using a very generous higher-ed specific gauge of inflation measure). The authors make no suggestion that institutional results, effectiveness or productivity also rose during that period. Indeed, one sees here what must be termed declining productivity in U.S. higher education.
- Higher ed enrollments also continue to rise: up 19 percent between 1991 and 2003 (in public institutions).
- The share of total institutional spending (in public colleges/universities) that comes from tuition has risen too, from 26 to 33 percent.
- Not surprisingly, tuition levels (net tuition revenues per FTE student) rose 29 percent during that period, as state appropriations declined 7 percent.
Yes, tuitions are soaring. Yes, students (and parents and aid-suppliers) are bearing a larger share of the total cost of higher ed. But higher ed outlays per student are rising as well. Why? One recalls the old truism: because they can. There's no real pressure for greater efficiency. See for yourself by surfing here.
State Higher Education Finance, FY 2003
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.





