Education Gadfly Weekly
Volume 7, Number 37
September 27, 2007
Opinion + Analysis
Opinion
Between a Little Rock and a hard place
Opinion
Five questions for NAEP
By
Michael J. Petrilli
News Analysis
All in
News Analysis
Father Paul
News Analysis
More books,??fewer lawyers
News Analysis
Hare-brained
Reviews
Research
Important, But Not for Me: Parents and Students in Kansas and Missouri Talk About Math, Science, and Technology Education
By
Coby Loup
Research
Minding the Gap: Why Integrating High School with College Makes Sense and How to Do It
Research
Education at a Glance 2007
Gadfly Studios
Podcast
Lavender curricula
This week, Mike and Rick talk Little Rock, Palo Alto, and international competitiveness. We have an interview with one of the foremost authorities on NAEP, and Education News of the Weird is going to the movies with a hunk of Camembert.
Between a Little Rock and a hard place
September 27, 2007
The most distinctive thing about Little Rock Central: 50 Years Later, a documentary that debuted Tuesday night on HBO, is that it actually adds something valuable to the discussion about race and education. Worthwhile contributions to that discussion are all too rare.
Fifty years ago this week, Little Rock's Central High School was integrated when nine black students were escorted to class by federal troops. The film puts a modern lens on a place that most Americans know only through history. Of course, for the families, students, and teachers whose lives revolve around Central's daily operations, the school doesn't exist in the past--it exists today as an American high school facing the same problems as other urban schools across the land.
Filmmakers Brent and Craig Renaud, Little Rock natives, seem to understand that. Their opening footage from 1957, of an angry white mob, quickly shifts to footage from 2007. And that's where the story stays; rather than dwelling in the past, the Renauds are concerned with the present, and with the possible future.
What becomes quickly apparent is that Central High today is racially divided. Comparisons to the racial divisions of 1957, however, are illogical. No angry white mobs crowd the parking lots after class, no one shouts racial epithets, no politicians go on television to support segregation. Racism as a "respectable" ideology is gone.
And so what we don't learn from the documentary
Between a Little Rock and a hard place
Five questions for NAEP
Michael J. Petrilli / September 27, 2007
The government released the latest National Assessment of Educational Progress scores on Tuesday, and Mark Schneider, commissioner of the National Center for Education Statistics, summed up the news in these words: "We're making slow and steady progress in reading, and we're doing much better in math."
But what is really going on under the headlines? Journalists expect pundits to provide instant analysis, but here are five questions worthy of leisurely study over the coming months and years.
Why is the nation making good progress in math (tripling the percentage of fourth graders "at or above proficient" since 1990) but not in reading (which is basically flat since 1992)? Some suggest that math is easier to teach than reading, especially to limited-English students and others with restricted vocabularies. Or that schools have a greater impact on math than on reading. Or perhaps there's stronger curricular alignment in math, and over a longer period of time, with state standards, state curricula, and NAEP all pegged (for better or worse) to the doctrines of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics standards.
Why isn't the math progress seen on NAEP showing up on international exams? Perhaps our definition of "math" differs from that of the rest of the world. Brookings scholar Tom Loveless told USA Today, "We have made some progress in a few areas in mathematics, but there are some very important areas, unfortunately, that are not covered by NAEP."
Why are we
Five questions for NAEP
All in
September 27, 2007
Are charter schools the new bargaining chips in parent/school board negotiations? It would seem so. After the Palo Alto school board told parents that, sorry, they weren't going to start a Mandarin-immersion program, the parents threatened to start their own Mandarin charter school. The superintendent figured that a charter school, of which Palo Alto currently has none, would cost the district $1,100 to $5,000 per student (legal bills would be extra). Money talks; the school board reversed itself and the immersion program was approved. School board candidate Melissa Caswell wasn't pleased, though. She said starting charter schools just to appeal to affluent parents isn't "in the spirit of why charter schools were established." No? Are charter schools not a way for parents, of any income bracket, to exercise choice, especially when school officials aren't meeting a perceived need? Certainly authorizers shouldn't approve charter schools willy-nilly. But giving power to the parents is what school choice is all about.
"Charter schools loom large over cushy districts," by Patty Fisher, San Jose Mercury News, September 24, 2007
All in
Father Paul
September 27, 2007
When Superintendent Paul Vallas left Philadelphia to take over New Orleans' Recovery School District, he wasn't just changing cities--he was also changing worlds. With over 90 percent of the 12,000 students in the New Orleans district mired in poverty, Vallas says his schools must "begin to provide the type of services you would normally expect to be provided at home." This means serving three meals a day, for instance, and providing basic dental and eye care. Such paternalistic measures have been successful so far and helped bring the truancy rate down from 50 percent at the end of last school year to about 15 percent today. Parents, one assumes, finally see some value in getting their children to school. Vallas has managed to find some time for academics, too. He has recruited top-notch teachers, reduced class sizes, and replaced nearly every high-school principal. With local and national governments botching badly the recovery efforts, though, one wonders when Vallas will be able to shift roles from part-time parent to full-time educator. The sooner, of course, the better.
"A Tamer of Schools Has Plan in New Orleans," by Adam Nossiter, New York Times, September 23, 2007
Father Paul
More books,??fewer lawyers
September 27, 2007
Things are changing at the St. Louis Public Schools. The special administrative board (which now oversees the city's schools; see here) replaced Kenneth Brostron, the district's longtime lawyer. An in-house lawyer--one who is much cheaper than Brostron and his firm--will begin work in October. For the past four years, according to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, St. Louis Public Schools has spent almost $11 million on legal fees. That's roughly $75 per student per year: twice as much--and in some cases 10 times as much--as what legal fees cost other school districts across the country. Of course, because of overregulation (not to mention our country's litigious culture) school districts are forced to spend huge amounts of precious time and money to protect against potentially devastating lawsuits. St. Louis, though, is a case-study in mismanagement. The real victims are the students. Last year alone, St. Louis Public Schools spent $2.8 million on legal fees but only $236,000 on new library books. Seems like Mound City's new school management won't tolerate such backward priorities.
"Spending millions on legal advice," by David Hunn and Steve Giegerich, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, September 23, 2007
More books,??fewer lawyers
Hare-brained
September 27, 2007
Sugar Bunny of Spokane, Washington once enjoyed a contented life as the pet rabbit in Lori Peters's preschool class at the Community Building Children's Center. Then some animal rights activists apparently had issues with Sugar Bunny's lifestyle--so they stole him. They left, in the cage, fliers that railed against the Ringling Brothers Circus (although not explicitly its magicians), which had recently visited Spokane. The fliers contain mentions of PETA, but the group's spokeswoman, Daphna Nachminovitch, said her organization does not endorse bunny-nabbing, nor does it provide support or succor to bunny thieves. Still, that's little consolation to five-year-old Zion, who deeply misses Sugar Bunny: "Somebody stoled him. I'm sad." Peters encouraged her students to write songs ("We had a little rabbit. His name was Sugar Bunny. Sometimes we took him out and he ran around and sometimes he rested outside....") and draw pictures to remember their beloved friend, but she remains unsure whether they will be able to replace the rabbit. A teachable moment, to be sure.
"Pet rabbit stolen from Spokane preschool, anti-circus fliers left in cage," Associated Press, September 25, 2007
Hare-brained
Important, But Not for Me: Parents and Students in Kansas and Missouri Talk About Math, Science, and Technology Education
Coby Loup / September 27, 2007
Alison Kadlec, Will Friedman, and Amber Ott
Public Agenda
September 2007
In an age of increasing global competitiveness, America's economic survival hinges on improving its math and science education. That, more or less, is the opening sentence of about 17,000 recent reports and op-eds, all of them decrying the decrepit state of U.S. math and science education. But while policymakers have started to respond to such warnings--see the America Competes Act, for instance, recently signed by the president--this report shows that students and parents aren't persuaded. Public Agenda asked 1,400 parents and 1,300 students in Kansas and Missouri what they think about the state of math, science, and technology (MST) education. Sixty-five percent of parents strongly agreed that "students with advanced math and science skills will have a big advantage when it comes to work and college opportunities," and 57 percent believed that the U.S. is "far behind other countries" in math and science education. Yet, surprisingly, 70 percent also believed that their local schools were "doing a good job of preparing students," and only 31 percent thought their schools needed to improve math and science "as quickly as possible." Student views were similarly contradictory. Sixty-three percent believed that, to succeed after high school, "it's crucial for most of today's students to learn higher-level math skills," yet when asked whether all students should actually take advanced math courses, only 26 percent answered in the affirmative. (This latter stance may
Important, But Not for Me: Parents and Students in Kansas and Missouri Talk About Math, Science, and Technology Education
Minding the Gap: Why Integrating High School with College Makes Sense and How to Do It
September 27, 2007
Nancy Hoffman, Joel Vargas, Andrea Venezia, and Marc S. Miller, eds
September 2007
According to this new book as well as a number of earlier volumes, Americans who lack a postsecondary education will lag behind in the global economy. But a lot of Americans, as we know, aren't getting to college and a lot more aren't staying there. In these pages, however, you can find innumerable recommendations to fix that. And while its chapters offer lots of as yet untried remedies, it's the current efforts that are most interesting. For example, an early college high school program in our hometown of Dayton, Ohio, sits on the campus of the University of Dayton, a location that automatically immerses low-income students in a postsecondary environment (see here). The editors are themselves involved with other such programs. In New York City, the CollegeNOW program allows high-school juniors and seniors to jointly enroll in the City University of New York. States such as Oklahoma and Ohio sponsor high-school skill exams, usually for tenth and eleventh graders, to assess competencies in math and to determine what needs to be fixed before students move on. Many of these programs are promising, but they are relatively new and therefore lack information about outcomes. Nonetheless, this book offers lots of solid information. You can find it here.
Minding the Gap: Why Integrating High School with College Makes Sense and How to Do It
Education at a Glance 2007
September 27, 2007
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Directorate of Education September 2007
Each year the OECD releases education data on 30 member countries. We've covered them in past years (see here, for example). The 2007 report looks at attendance and achievement, funding, the state of lifelong learning, and conditions for pupils and teachers. Some interesting bits: the U.S. spends on each public-school student, during his or her K-12 educational career, an average of about $100,000. That's one of highest amounts in the OECD. Finland and South Korea, whose students are always at the top in international tests, each spend less than the OECD average of $81,485. Teaching salaries in the U.S. are high in absolute terms, but low relative to GDP. American teachers, however, spend more time in the classroom than other OECD teachers. U.S. elementary teachers provide 1,080 hours of instruction per year, 200+ hours more than the OECD average. In higher education, American college students spend more for tuition than their counterparts elsewhere, but they also receive more financial aid (loans and scholarships). Only 54 percent of U.S. students who enter college will actually graduate (tying with New Zealand for last place). But the U.S. is still the top destination for study-abroad participants. More interesting facts are available here.
Education at a Glance 2007
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.





