Education Gadfly Weekly
Volume 6, Number 40
October 19, 2006
Opinion + Analysis
Opinion
(Brain) power shortage
News Analysis
Hit the deck!
News Analysis
Absent minded
News Analysis
Measuring the melting pot
News Analysis
Wade's world
Reviews
Research
Courting Failure: How School Finance Lawsuits Exploit Judges' Good Intentions and Harm Our Children
By
Eric Osberg
Research
How Well are American Students Learning: Volume II, Number 1
Research
"Failing" or "Succeeding" Schools: How Can We Tell?
By
Coby Loup
Research
High School Graduation in Texas: Independent Research to Understand and Combat the Graduation Crisis
By
Jennifer DeBoer
Gadfly Studios
Podcast
Puppies and kittens
This week, Mike and Rick chat about the Navy, incarceration in Buffalo, and the aesthetic pleasures of Brown Center Reports. We have an interview that will make you howl, and News of the Weird is like that scene in?Bambi?when Bambi's mom gets shot and Bambi doesn't really understand the complexities of death and then befriends lots of other woodland creatures who retake control of the forest, harness the destructive power of its walking, talking trees, and wage war against humanity. All in 20 minutes!
(Brain) power shortage
October 19, 2006
The twenty-third permutation of the MetLife teacher survey series, which annually compiles data on teacher attitudes across a range of topics, recently emerged and was mostly ignored.
The dearth of coverage is surprising because the survey counter-intuitively shows (claims of test-driven drudgery notwithstanding) that public school teachers are more satisfied with their jobs today than at any point in the past twenty years. But despite that heartening statistic, lots of educators are less than thrilled with their jobs. Twenty-seven percent of those surveyed plan to leave the field within five years.
That's a lot of turnover. Or maybe it's quite normal. Certainly the modern job market is not the one of fifty, twenty, or even ten years ago. Today's professional is mobile, always on the lookout for better opportunities, and is more willing to jump ship the moment a more-promising position becomes available. Today's college graduates typically explore multiple career paths before--maybe--picking one.
A recent survey from the American Business Collaboration (ABC) found that 41 percent of workers in mid-size to large corporations would seriously consider leaving their current job for another that offered better opportunities for advancement, while only 20 percent would do so for better job security. Peace of mind is less motivating, it appears, than climbing the corporate ladder. And while the ABC survey looked only at corporate workers, it's likely that many of the teachers who plan to
(Brain) power shortage
Hit the deck!
October 19, 2006
The first rule of combat is to avoid cross-fire. But the newly appointed Los Angeles superintendent, retired Navy Vice Admiral David L. Brewer III, already finds himself squarely in the middle of it. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, who recently gained partial control of the city's schools, wasted no time in expressing his displeasure at not being consulted before the school board hired Brewer (nor called by the candidate before he took the job). The admiral is another in a lengthening line of ex-military personnel with no experience in education hired to run school districts. To date, their record is mixed. (Colonel John O'Sullivan resigned earlier this year as leader of a suburban Minneapolis school district. It's reported he alienated people because he insisted on being called "colonel.") But the LA Times reminds its readers that "the same could be said of any number of traditional educators who rose to the top and crashed. And some of the nontraditional superintendents have won high praise." True enough, though the successful ones also demonstrated political acumen; Brewer isn't off to a great start on that count. It's not too late, though. Hire some good deputies, admiral, and stick with "Superintendent Brewer."
"Wanted: Schools Chief With Zero Experience," by Mitchell Landsberg, Los Angeles Times, October 15, 2006
"Ex-Admiral Is Named New Schools Chief," by Joel Rubin and Howard Blume, Los Angeles Times, October 13, 2006
Hit the deck!
Absent minded
October 19, 2006
After five months of negotiations, the Buffalo Board of Education voted 5-4 last week to base 10 percent of students' report-card grades on attendance. Thus, kids with five or more unexcused absences will receive zeros, meaning the highest grade they can then receive in any subject is a 90. The policy, first proposed in May, allows for "excused" absences including illness, impassable roads, college visits, and required court appearances or incarceration--a major relief, no doubt, to juvenile delinquents with their sights set on the Ivy League. The real question is will this policy, set to be reviewed after a year, help increase Buffalo's lagging attendance rates (last year, over 80 percent of the city's students were absent six times or more), or will it merely lead to grade inflation for students capable of putting their behinds in seats? Plus, the grades of compulsive truants should already be suffering because of their absences. If they're not, maybe it's Buffalo's curriculum and not its attendance policy that needs tweaking.
"Attendance to make up 10 percent of grade," by Peter Simon, Buffalo News, October 12, 2006
Absent minded
Measuring the melting pot
October 19, 2006
"It's a sordid business, this divvying us up by race," quoth Chief Justice John Roberts last year. The Department of Education is finally implementing a 1997 OMB mandate that students should be allowed to identify themselves as multiracial. That move could muddy NCLB's race-based classifications, however, and make it harder to identify achievement gaps. Sixty Democratic members of Congress--including the head of the Black Caucus and the ranking member of the House education committee--expressed their concerns in a strongly worded letter: "Disaggregated racial and ethnic data, as you well know, is one of the cornerstones of the No Child Left Behind Act, and we urge the department to refrain from any changes that could undermine this principle in any way." The danger is real, but if NCLB moves to a growth-based accountability system and tracks the gains of individual students over time, instead of group averages at the building level, racial classifications will no longer matter--we'll just worry about whether kids who are far behind are making significant progress and catching up. And then we'll be able to get out of this "sordid business" for good.
"Worries Surface in Racial-Identity Comments," by Sean Cavanagh, Education Week, October 18, 2006 (subscription required)
Measuring the melting pot
Wade's world
October 19, 2006
After gunning down two kittens on the property of the K-12 Indus school, just west of International Falls, Minnesota, Principal Wade Pilloud told the Minneapolis Star Tribune, "I am not a cat hater." Maybe not, but he's certainly a common sense hater. Pilloud, who often lives in a mobile home on campus because his permanent house in Blackduck is over 100 miles away, had been battling vermin underneath his temporary trailer. According to the Star Tribune, "Pilloud had set conibear traps, which are designed to kill an animal by squeezing its body between steel jaws," around school grounds. In this manner, he nabbed a lot of skunks and woodchucks (no word on how many freshmen were caught) and, one day, a mother cat who died in the course of being trapped. Her kittens were nearby. Pilloud then fetched a shotgun and dispatched the infant felines. This all happened after school hours, but a few students heard the shots. When the incident came to light, Pilloud found himself in a pack of trouble, facing the possibility of felony possession of a firearm on school property. He resigned, and in a partial mea culpa, wrote that he regretted his action but still believed "that the animals should have been disposed of, to end their suffering, but perhaps by using other methods." Perhaps.
"Indus, Minn., principal resigns over kitten shooting," by Larry Oakes, Star Tribune, October 14, 2006
Wade's world
Courting Failure: How School Finance Lawsuits Exploit Judges' Good Intentions and Harm Our Children
Eric Osberg / October 19, 2006
Edited by Eric A. Hanushek
Hoover Institution's Koret Task Force on Education
2006
This volume tears away both the legal and logical rationales for America's ubiquitous education "adequacy" lawsuits. Sol Stern's chapter alone is worth the price of admission. He chronicles the thirteen-year saga of Campaign for Fiscal Equity (CFE) v. New York, in which plaintiffs successfully argued that New York City schools are annually shortchanged $5.6 billion (not million) by the state (for operating expenses alone; capital outlays add another $9.2 billion). A general lesson from these cases is that judges have assumed the role of legislators--and aren't very good at it. The legal merits of these assessments are questionable to start with and whether they make for sound policy is even more doubtful. Editor Hanushek's chapter shows how contrived are the dollar figures that judges agree to mandate in these cases. Consultants produce ostensibly "scientific" analyses that entail little more than tallying up the cost of educators' dream schools. (And they tend to inflate the cost of everything.) Not that the money is then used to actually help needy kids, though. For example: after Kansas City, Missouri, recieved $2 billion to improve its schools, portions of the funds were spent on an arboretum, a wildlife refuge, and a model United Nations chamber. As Marguerite Roza and Paul Hill explain in their essay, school systems rarely allocate even their current funding for the students who need it most--the bulk of
Courting Failure: How School Finance Lawsuits Exploit Judges' Good Intentions and Harm Our Children
How Well are American Students Learning: Volume II, Number 1
October 19, 2006
Tom Loveless
Brown Center on Education Policy
The Brookings Institution
October 2006
This report is divided into three separate sections. One analyzes whether student "happiness" affects their test scores, another whether a "race to the bottom" exists, and the last how well American students are actually doing in math and reading. The findings, in a nutshell: 1) Happy kids aren't better at math than are other children. In countries where teachers attempt to make math more "relevant" to their students, test scores are lower than for those countries in which math is simply taught with no effort to make the material relevant to students' lives. 2) There is no NCLB-inspired "race to the bottom," because although states now report higher percentages of proficient students than NAEP, they were doing the same before NCLB's enactment (so there's more of a "dwell at the bottom" trend). 3) American students are making progress in math (reading gains are meager), but the main NAEP and the long-term trend NAEP disagree over how much math progress is actually being made. What conclusions can we draw from the report? That educators who focus on making their classes "fun" and "relevant" are not doing anything for their students' learning (see here). They should focus instead on teaching basic skills--even if such is the "un-fun" approach. Also, while it's fine to say that NCLB isn't driving a race to the bottom (though we would quibble), it's
How Well are American Students Learning: Volume II, Number 1
"Failing" or "Succeeding" Schools: How Can We Tell?
Coby Loup / October 19, 2006
Paul E. Barton
American Federation of Teachers
September 2006
In this short paper, Paul Barton complains that No Child Left Behind's (NCLB) current system of testing does not achieve the law's overriding purpose--evaluating school performance. According to Barton, "evaluating school performance with standardized tests requires measuring what students learned in the school during the year of instruction--a quite different matter from measuring the sum total of what students know and can do at a point in time." He urges tests that accurately capture what students learn over time; are aligned to content standards and instruction; and generate results that are transparent and easily understood by students and teachers, among others. Ideally, such tests would be administered at the beginning and end of the school year, and the results would be used to set growth targets for subsequent years. A good idea, though Barton may be too harsh on NCLB's current "cut-point" approach, which establishes a level of proficiency that all students should meet and identifies those who are not yet at that level. Identifying progress is good, but one must also know how far below grade level individual students are--and thanks to NCLB's disaggregated data, America's achievement gaps have been illumined. An optimal system would combine growth models with NCLB's focus on hitting identifiable marks of academic proficiency. (Barton acknowledges that the pilot growth model projects in Tennessee and North Carolina do this.) The report is a valuable contribution to the
"Failing" or "Succeeding" Schools: How Can We Tell?
High School Graduation in Texas: Independent Research to Understand and Combat the Graduation Crisis
Jennifer DeBoer / October 19, 2006
Christopher B. Swanson
Editorial Projects in Education Research Center
October 2006
With the Manhattan Institute-Economic Policy Institute debates (see here and here) as its backdrop, this report offers a fresh look at Texas's 2002-2003 graduation rates. Its method of calculation (the Cumulative Promotion Index) has certain advantages: it shows the graduation rate for a specific year rather than for a specific class (which gives a better overall picture), and it can show where in the high school pipeline problems arise. In Texas, we learn, the largest percentage of dropouts leave school after ninth grade. This report calculates Lone Star State graduation rates differently than the Texas Education Agency (TEA), and it illustrates how drastically the state inflates them by as much as 35 percentage points. That's worth knowing, particularly because inflation is most acute in the numbers for minority youngsters who make up 61 percent of Texas's enrollment. The report also shows that the degree of school segregation between racial and socioeconomic groups in Texas is large and growing--a problem not least because of the strong correlation between segregation and high school graduation rates. Though limited to Texas, the report provides an interesting case study of one state's graduation rates, the demographic implications of the data, and the methods used to calculate published rates. See it here.
High School Graduation in Texas: Independent Research to Understand and Combat the Graduation Crisis
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.





