Education Gadfly Weekly

Volume 5, Number 3

January 20, 2005

Is the NEA changing its stripes?

Chester E. Finn, Jr. / January 20, 2005

Perhaps it's just a straw in the wind. Possibly it was even a mistake, a misstatement awaiting retraction. There's ample reason to describe NEA president Reg Weaver as a follower, not a leader, a perpetuator of the status quo rather than an innovator. But maybe, just maybe, the January 2005 issue of NEA Today signals a partial turn-around by the nation's largest teacher union with respect to standards-based reform in general and NCLB in particular. (You can find it here.)

Here is the key quote:

The persistent achievement gaps between white kids and kids of color; between special education students and their regular-ed buddies; between kids who eat free pizza at school and their classmates who dine frequently in fancy restaurants, are hardly new to educators. But the so-called No Child Left Behind law - with its rules that grade and penalize schools based on the test scores of each group of students - has injected new life into the public discussion of the academic divide. While that discussion is rife with criticism of the overemphasis on testing, the question of how to fix the essential problem of the "gap" remains.


What does this mean for educators, who now are charged almost single-handedly with making the problem go away? It means that it's time to ratchet up the work. The problem may be formidable and NCLB may in many ways be flawed, notes NEA President Reg Weaver, but NEA

» Continued


Is the NEA changing its stripes?

Rocky mountain high-er education

January 20, 2005

Colorado labors under a conundrum: the state's populace is the most educated in the country, with one-third holding college degrees and two-thirds having some higher education. Yet it ranks 27th for college completions, with just 20 percent of the state's ninth-graders receiving a degree. (The explanation for this discrepancy is of course Colorado's success in attracting well-educated folks from other places.) This week, Governor Bill Owens announced a new initiative to boost the college matriculation rate among Colorado students. The effort features intensive counseling in schools, a public-awareness campaign, and a new website, www.collegeincolorado.org. Owens told a crowd of 700 students that curricular changes are also in order, with "a rigorous pre-college curriculum" becoming "the default position" of K-12 instruction, the exact language used in Fordham's recent study of state math standards and along the lines of what the American Diploma Project recommended. New regulations will also require parents to opt their child out of such a high-school curriculum if they wish, rather than electing it. Owens has the balance exactly right: pushing ill-prepared kids into higher education is a recipe for heartbreak and wasted money. Building

» Continued


Rocky mountain high-er education

Grading the UK report cards

January 20, 2005

While No Child Left Behind requires states to issue school report cards, ostensibly to let parents know how their child's school is doing, we should observe our neighbors across the pond. "School league tables" were introduced a decade ago in Britain to offer an easy way to compare the academic achievement of different schools. But, according to an editorial in the Wall Street Journal, the latest tables make comparisons harder, in part because the new system of calculations not only seeks to compare academic and vocational courses, but actually values vocational courses higher. For example, a school earns 58 points for a student scoring at the top of a national academic test but receives 68 points for a student who earns a D grade in a vocational course, such as health and beauty, while "a Level 2 certificate in cake decoration" earns 55 points. The government maintains that the new calculus benefits pupils who would otherwise graduate with no marketable skills by encouraging schools to offer more vocational courses. But the Journal argues that the system "offers an incentive for schools wanting to improve their league performance to strongly encourage pupils to switch into vocational degrees from academic ones." Of course, the editors also note the irony of having "report cards" that facilitate the comparison of schools, since parents can't do anything with that information. In the U.K., they note, all children whose parents can't afford otherwise "must attend a

» Continued


Grading the UK report cards

Progressive ed on the outs in Japan

January 20, 2005

Japan's ill-considered fling with progressive education could be coming to a close, though like every starred-crossed affair unfortunate consequences linger. Yomiuri Shimbun reports that education ministers are planning to roll back portions of Japan's 1990s experiment with yutori kyoiku or "loose education," which cut the school week, decreased reliance on traditional teaching methods, and focused on using "originality and ingenuity to teach students . . . international understanding, environmental matters, and welfare and health, by, for example, allowing them to garner practical experience." (See "Dewey does Tokyo.") Sound familiar? Once "loose" education was implemented, Japanese test scores and student performance on international assessments such as TIMMS sagged and a cottage industry of "back-to-basics" education arose (click here for more). The education minister now plans to "reexamine how to secure sufficient class hours for basic subjects, including Japanese, mathematics, science, and social studies. . . . Class hours should definitely be increased for Japanese and mathematics. In particular," he observed, "being able to read and write one's mother tongue is vital." Officials expect that some Saturday class time will be reinstituted, along with other reforms.

"Ministry to change 'pressure-free' education," Yomiuri Shimbun, January 17, 2005

» Continued


Progressive ed on the outs in Japan

Guided discovery of routinized opinions

January 20, 2005

Gadfly does not try to note every expression of pedagogical silliness out there - otherwise, he'd do nothing else! But once in while you have to stop and smell the skunk cabbage. This week, Alison Gopnik, a professor of psychology and author of a book on learning styles, had a column in the New York Times so absurd as to be noteworthy. Dr. Gopnik uses words like a fog, to mask meaning and blur distinctions, so everything becomes hazy. (The better to sneak up and hit you over the head, we guess.) At base, she distinguishes "routinized learning" from "guided discovery," generally to the detriment of the former, though she insists, mind you, that this is not a "touchy-feely progressive prescription." Rather, one should have a balance of the two. The problem is that so many children are just too brilliant: they can't shed their natural inventiveness to take on the mindless routinization required to master "unnatural skills like reading and writing," which are "meaningless in themselves" - unlike, apparently, making tortillas, a task she is much taken with. Dr. Gopnik finishes off this ramble with a baseball analogy that mostly serves to highlight her unfamiliarity with America's pastime. In the end, you can't make heads or tails of this essay, which means it will likely show up in ed school curricula soon.

"How we learn," by Alison Gopnik, New York Times, January 16, 2005

» Continued


Guided discovery of routinized opinions

Do What Works: How Proven Practices Can Improve America's Public Schools

Eric Osberg / January 20, 2005

Tom Luce and Lee Thompson, Ascent Education Press
2005

Luce founded, and Thompson's O'Donnell Foundation has helped to fund, Just for the Kids, a Texas-based organization that helps schools nationwide unleash the power of achievement test data. So while this book covers more territory, it focuses primarily on what's been learned from that work. It's fundamentally simple - to help a school improve, find other schools with similar demographics but better results, study those schools to see what they do differently, then adapt and adopt their best practices. This can, of course, be challenging to do properly, and the authors' hope is that others might learn from their work. They also highlight three other initiatives that "work": the Advanced Placement incentive programs, the Broad Prize for Urban Education, and the LEAP (Language Enrichment Activities Program) curriculum in preschool. Each of these relies on data - AP rewards students, teachers, and principals for high test scores; the Broad Prize uses achievement data in choosing the winner; and LEAP administers age-appropriate assessments to preschoolers to ensure they're learning. The book is an easy read and may be interesting to those wishing to improve schools in the brave new world of data-driven decision-making, a world that is here to stay, thanks to NCLB and the work of valuable organizations like Just for the Kids. You can buy it online for $23 at http://www.communitiesjust4kids.org/book.htm.

» Continued


Do What Works: How Proven Practices Can Improve America's Public Schools

The Effects of Class Size on Attainment and Classroom Processes in English Primary Schools (Years 4 to 6) 2000-2003

January 20, 2005

Institute of Education, University of London
December 2004

This short research brief discusses the effects of class size on student achievement and classroom procedures. Some of its findings are not surprising: students in smaller classes are "more likely to be the focus of a teacher's attention." But of course. As for actual achievement, however, the study found no evidence that children in smaller classes made greater progress - in any subject - than those in large classes. (A previous study by the same group did find that small classes are more effective for students in the first year of school.) The authors sympathize, and rightly so, with teachers who want to provide individual attention to students. But they propose to resolve the tension between this goal and the "constraints of the curriculum and the environment" by making "more strategic use of a third context for learning . . .that is, more use of more group work in the sense of pupils learning together with a deliberate attempt to minimize the teacher's input." In others, the kids teach one another. Consider us doubters. If you want to take a look for yourself, you can find it here.

"British study tracks effect of class size," by Debra Viadero, Education Week, January 12, 2005

» Continued


The Effects of Class Size on Attainment and Classroom Processes in English Primary Schools (Years 4 to 6) 2000-2003

No Child Left Behind Act: Education Needs to Provide Additional Technical Assistance and Conduct Implementation Studies for School Choice Provision

Chester E. Finn, Jr. / January 20, 2005

United States Government Accountability Office
December 2004

Once again we learn that the public-school choice feature of NCLB isn't working well. This 55-page GAO report appraises the first two years of its implementation and finds it sorely lacking. Though ten percent of Title I schools (about 5 percent of all public schools) "have been identified for school choice," only one percent of eligible students actually transferred. The reasons are myriad and diverse, according to GAO's close examination of eight districts. The biggest are "tight timelines and insufficient classroom capacity." The Education Department's monitoring and guidance, though extensive, are not adequate, either. By and large, the Department concurs with the GAO recommendations, which include better data, better studies, yet more guidance, and various forms of public/parent information and technical assistance to states and districts. In this report, however, nobody goes to what may be the heart of the problem, namely the law itself, with its cramped view of choice and severe limits on the options that must be afforded to children stuck in bad schools. See for yourself at http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d057.pdf.

"NCLB's transfer provisions stymied, GAO report says," by Caroline Hendrie, Education Week, January 5, 2005

» Continued


No Child Left Behind Act: Education Needs to Provide Additional Technical Assistance and Conduct Implementation Studies for School Choice Provision

An Evaluation of Florida's Program to End Social Promotion

January 20, 2005

Jay Greene & Marcus Winters, The Manhattan Institute
December 2004

This brief working paper from the Manhattan Institute makes a compelling case for the effectiveness of Florida's new retention policy. This policy, which began in 2002-03, mandates that third graders who cannot meet proficiency norms may not be socially promoted to the fourth grade. Before analyzing the data and drawing conclusions, Greene and Winters summarize and, more important, appraise earlier retention policy studies, most of which had deep methodological flaws. Then they evaluate the performance of two groups: all students who were subject to the policy (about one-fifth of these pupils were exempted from the policy and promoted despite low performance), and all of those who were actually retained. The second group posted greater overall gains than the first. Greene and Winters analyze student data for both the FCAT, Florida's own standardized test, and the Stanford 9, thus avoiding the possibility that gains were due to teachers teaching to the test (or worse). The gains are noteworthy: retained students posted relative gains of 4.10 and 3.45 percentile points in reading, and over nine points in math on both tests. The authors wisely refrain from making sweeping conclusions, as these data only reflect the first year of the new policy. It's surely a promising sign, though. You can read the full report here.

» Continued


An Evaluation of Florida's Program to End Social Promotion

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.

Read more announcements

Archives



  

Please leave this field empty

Gadfly Podcast

National