Why has education policy produced such little improvement?
A former secretary of education on the gap between policy and practice. Rod Paige
A former secretary of education on the gap between policy and practice. Rod Paige
Editor's note: This editorial originally appeared in a slightly different form in the Austin American-Statesman.
At noon on Tuesday, January 13, the Texas Legislature convened its eighty-fourth legislative session. Like many previous legislative sessions, many hours of discussions will be devoted to improving Texas education. Like many previous legislative sessions, legislators will no doubt enact new state education policies aimed at improving Texas schools.
Despite massive new education policies from previous legislative sessions, and after decades of effort, tons of money, and volumes of educational punditry and political debate, we are left with relatively little to show for considerable effort. As we go forward with future education policies, it seems wise to pause and ask an important question. Why has so much previous education policy delivered such meager improvement?
Indisputably, that question has multiple answers. But one of the most critical answers is too often overlooked: Previous state education policy has been minimally integrated with education practice. Put another way, there has been, and there still is, a cavernous gap between education policy and education practice. In order for education policy to be an effective catalyst for improved school outcomes, it must influence education practice—and education practice is under the direct control of education practitioners. These practitioners have meager influence on education policy.
Previous state and federal education policy has ignored a cardinal truth: When schools improve, that improvement will be primarily due to the actions of people in the schools. Practically speaking, what this means is that teachers, principals, superintendents, and school board members are the major arbiters of school improvement, as they ultimately determine whether education policy has the desired efficacy or not.
Education policy, which consists of the laws, rules, and regulations enacted to govern the operation of our system of education, is primarily formulated in state settings and tends to be heavily influenced by the work of education think tanks, education lobby agencies, education advocacy organizations, and the practical realities of political expediency. Those who actually teach the children, manage the schools, and do the work of school boards are minimally represented in this process. This unfortunate truth creates a dual negative.
First, education policy created in this manner cannot benefit from the perspective of those who know the educational environment best. School reform policies constructed by policy elites, politicians, and others outside the school system are rarely based on sufficient understanding of the school environment and its unique cultural infrastructure to have the intended effect. Absent sufficient practitioner participation, policymakers’ understanding of schools is inevitably based on assumptions, theories, and notions about how education should be, which are seldom representative of real-world experiences in schools. More perilously, as outsiders, policymakers tend not to appreciate the complexity of teaching and learning in today’s schools. For education policy to be successful, it must be anchored in a realistic understanding of the school environment, and this cannot be achieved without authentic involvement and buy-in from those in the schools.
Secondly, and even more grievously, school professionals who are excluded from meaningful participation in the formation of education policy are likely to feel little ownership of the policy’s success. This leaves the policy void of meaningful practitioner advocacy. Further, education policy void of appropriate practitioner involvement fuels practitioners’ sense that the policy is being imposed upon them by those who not only do not fully understand the educational challenges, but also do not face any consequences for the success or failure of the policy. Some practitioners feel that their exclusion from the education policy development process demonstrates a fundamental indifference to the challenges that school personnel face, and even worse, an underlying disrespect for what they do and what they know.
Given the lack of meaningful practitioner participation, it seems unsurprising that educational practitioners greet so many policy changes with lackluster enthusiasm. To them, the issue is compliance, as opposed to improving student performance. The difference between responding to educational policy as a compliance issue vs. responding to it as an opportunity to improve student learning is not at all trivial. The level of advocacy within the school and school system is a major determinant of the quality of the results that will emanate from the reform policy.
This is not to understate or undervalue the importance of the work of policymakers. The vast majority of those involved in developing state and federal policy are not only sound thinkers with good intentions, but also experts in many aspects of the education policy landscape and committed to the task of education improvement. Clearly, their efforts are both needed and appreciated. But for policymakers’ goals to be accomplished, the gap between policymakers and practitioners must be significantly narrowed.
Undoubtedly, there are several ways to accomplish this goal. Two approaches come immediately to mind. Each has advantages and disadvantages. The first, an inclusion approach, involves broadening the participation of practitioners in policy formulation to enhance both the quality and quantity of dialogue between policymakers and practitioners. One might argue that teachers, principals, superintendents, and school board members already have advocacy organizations that participate in formulating educational policy. This is true, but with few exceptions, the influence of such organizations on education policymaking is minimal at best.
The disadvantage of this approach is that some such organizations have agendas that are not always aligned—and are sometimes even at odds—with the goal of authentic school improvement. Therefore, care in selecting participating groups is necessary. In fact, the effectiveness of this approach depends on state policymakers’ ability to involve organizations that are genuinely committed to improving the education system. Assuming sufficient awareness of this concern, increasing opportunities for such organizations to participate in educational policy development is a good thing.
The second approach is the empowerment approach highlighted by Richard Elmore and Milbrey W. McLaughlin in their seminal work, Steady Work: Policy, Practice, and the Reform of American Education. This approach involves shifting much of the responsibility for designing policy closer to those whose practice it concerns. Such policy would focus heavily on desired outcomes and on empowering practitioners with flexibility and variability in determining the inputs needed to achieve such outcomes. To be effective, however, this approach requires that there be adequate procedures for monitoring results and assuring accountability.
In summary, the current chasm between education policy and practitioners must be significantly narrowed if educational policy is to drive desired education reform. In the end, education policy is good only to the extent that it is implemented and operated with fidelity and policy implementation and operations are solidly under the control of education practitioners.
Rod Paige was the superintendent of the Houston Independent School District from 1994 to 2001 and the United States Secretary of Education from 2001 to 2005. He has served on the Thomas B. Fordham Institute’s Board of Trustees since 2005.
photo credit: cybrarian77 via Flickr
Arizona last week became the first state to make passing the U.S. Citizenship Test a high school graduation requirement. Governor Doug Ducey signed into law a bill mandating the test after the measure passed the state’s Republican-controlled House and Senate in a single day. And that’s really about all the deliberation that should be needed for other states to follow Arizona’s lead. It’s a no-brainer in more ways than one.
Here are some of the questions on the test:
These are among 100 basic questions on American government and history published by the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization service. It’s not particularly challenging stuff. Those seeking citizenship are asked up to ten of the questions; six correct is a passing score. Arizona students will need to get sixty of the hundred questions correct in order to graduate—the same ratio as immigrants to our country seeking citizenship.
It’s curious to note that the federal government—by law and tradition, and quite correctly—makes no curricular demands on its schools or knowledge demands on its native-born sons and daughters. But if you’re born elsewhere and wish to be naturalized, we do insist on a minimal baseline of factual knowledge before we confer upon you the title of citizen.
Here’s how hard the test is not: In 2010, the pass rate among those seeking naturalization was 97.5 percent according to a Xavier University study. Yet more than one in three native-born citizens fail when asked to show even that rock-bottom, basic level of civic knowledge. Raise the bar to seven out of ten for a passing and 50 percent fail. That’s an embarrassment, even humiliating. It’s also incongruous to make knowledge demands, however trivial, of one class of citizens but not another. Arizona, to its credit, is closing this gap.
Serious People in Education cluck at the citizenship test. It’s just trivial pursuit, they say. It’s no substitute for deep engagement in civics and citizenship. In an age where parents are rightly concerned about overtesting, do we really need yet another test to stress kids out? Perhaps not, but this one’s about as rigorous as the written test you took to get your learner’s permit at the Department of Motor Vehicles. If you graduate from a U.S. high school without being able to name one of your senators, any war fought in the 1900s, or the name of a single American Indian tribe, something has gone seriously wrong. Let’s not pretend otherwise.
To be sure, some questions on the citizenship test are trivia. No one should confuse the ability to cite obscure facts like the three authors of Federalist Papers or the precise number of amendments to the U.S. Constitution with a rigorous education in civics and history. But there is power in signaling an expectation, however modest, that there is a knowledge base common to all Americans and a baseline threshold below which no one should slip. It’s simply not a Herculean undertaking to familiarize yourself with a handful of elementary-school-level facts about the country whose schools have handed you a high school diploma.
Indeed a few years ago, a New Zealand-born elementary school teacher at a TeamCFA charter school in North Carolina was herself studying to take the citizenship test. She figured out that the answers to most of the hundred questions were in her school’s Core Knowledge curriculum. The solons of Arizona have basically mandated a fourth-grade education.
The simple—even simplistic—nature of the citizenship test isn’t a problem: It’s a benefit. Tired of the audacious “moonshot” goals we set for our schools? Me too. Overpromise and under-deliver enough and cynicism inevitably sets in. American education could sorely use a proof point that we can still get things done. Getting nearly all children to clear the low bar of the citizenship test is a worthy bid.
Our two goals— a deep engagement in public affairs and a minimal factual knowledge of civics and history—are not mutually exclusive. When I’m not at Fordham, I teach a seminar in civics and citizenship to twelfth graders at Democracy Prep, a New York City charter school that consciously (some might say aggressively) tries to inculcate a sense of civic duty and a spirit of activism. On January 30, every one of my students will take a short break from the current unit on examining police procedures and “broken windows” theory to take the citizenship test. It’s been a graduation requirement since the school was founded—and 60 percent isn’t the standard, but 83 percent. I’m not worried about it, and neither are my students. It’s not too hard. And it’s not too much to ask.
Without a doubt, we have bigger fish to fry in American education. Let’s start with the small fry. Kudos to Arizona for insisting all its children meet this barest minimum standard.
photo credit: Neven Mrgan via Flickr
Jeb Bush, Arizona’s citizenship test, the State of the Union Address, and the SAT scores of teachers.
SOURCE: Hamilton Lankford, et al., "Who Enters Teaching? Encouraging Evidence That the Status of Teaching Is Improving," Educational Researcher, Vol. 43 No. 9 (December 2014).
Alyssa: Hello this is your host Alyssa Schwenk of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute. Here at the Education Gadfly Show and online at edexcellence.net. Now please join me in welcoming my co-host the Anthony Fox of education reform, Robert Pondiscio.
Robert: The last man standing?
Alyssa: The person whom at the end of the day we would all trust to completely restart the Education Reform Movement should we all be in the Capitol when it's attacked by aliens, and everyone dies.
Robert: You're going to have to explain the reference.
Alyssa: As I think most of our listeners know, the State of the Union-
Robert: Wait, as in none of them know.
Alyssa: ... as most of them, we are talking to some of DC’s best and brightest wonks, most of them I hope were watching the State of the Union last night-
Robert: You just called me stupid didn’t you?
Alyssa: You're from New York you're not in the DC. Okay, so last night was the State of the Union and anytime that the President and most of the line of secession is together the Secret Service insists that somebody stay behind at an undisclosed physically secure location. So that in the event that there is a massive terrorist attack, or the Capitol gets Independence Day-ed, there is somebody to restart the government.
Robert: Continuance of government right.
Alyssa: Last night it was Anthony Fox the Secretary of Transportation. It's one of my favorite parlor games in the week leading up to the State of the Union, like, “Who’s he going leave behind? Does this mean anything about what policy announcements the President might make that night?” So you are that person that I would trust to restart the entire movement. How do you feel about that honor?
Robert: I feel like I fooled another one.
Alyssa: I think you're selling yourself short there, Robert.
Robert: Well, thank you Alyssa.
Alyssa: On that note let’s play Pardon the Gadfly.
Ellen: In President Obama’s State of the Union speech last night he said nothing about K-12 education, was this a missed opportunity?
Alyssa: Robert, what do you think?
Robert: Were we expecting him to say anything about K-12? He’s on this community college kick; he talked about that ad nauseam.
Alyssa: That's true, I do think though given that the ESEA hearing started this morning, people were expecting a little bit more of a mention. I personally think it was a good move on his part not to mention it. It's in front of Congress right now, Arne Duncan said his piece, it's time to let Congress work out the nuts and bolts and then proceed from there.
Robert: Fair enough. I like Frank Bruni’s column in the New York Times today where he kind of cast come cold water in. This is confirmation bias because I'm not a big fan of the community college gambit either. But Bruni writes that, “It's awfully late in the game.” What he means by that is, it's not it's late in the Obama Administration’s game to talk about community college; it's late in the academic lives of students to be concerned about free community college.
His point, and this is something we've talked about a lot on this podcast, is that we shouldn't take our eye off the ball on K12. I've come to think of what's going on in education now as a bar bell, we're focusing on the weights at both ends, but not in the middle. Everything’s all about universal Pre-K on one end, college on the other, who’s paying attention to what connects those two things?
Alyssa: That's true, I do think though implicitly for the community college plan to work, we do need good K12 education. The community college plan I feel rests a lot on students being prepared.
Robert: Sure.
Alyssa: And if community college is going to work, and I hope that it does. I think it is a good path to the middle class, I think it, at least in the community I grew up with, offered a lot of opportunities for kids who wouldn't necessarily have continued their education. But if it's going to work we do need good K12s.
Robert: Sure, it's hard to bash community colleges, we all love them. I don’t have this data in front of me, but from the top of my head guess what the three year graduation rate is for community colleges for first time students?
Alyssa: I'll be optimistic with fifty percent.
Robert: Guess lower.
Alyssa: Twenty.
Robert: Guess lower.
Alyssa: Oh gosh.
Robert: That's all right, you're in the ballpark.
Alyssa: Okay.
Robert: I think it was like eighteen or nineteen percent of first time community college students graduating within three years. Now, guess what percentage of those students require remediation?
Alyssa: Oh that's-
Robert: Stick with your original guess.
Alyssa: Fifty.
Robert: Fifty percent, that says we've got a problem and it's not a community college problem-
Alyssa: It's a K12.
Robert: ... it's a K12 problem.
Alyssa: Yeah. All right well second question, Ellen?
Ellen: The New Yorker published a profile of possible Presidential nominee Jeb Bush, but discussed his support for “for-profit” education and the Common Core. How will these issues affect a potential campaign?
Alyssa: First off I love that we're still saying “possible” Presidential nominee. I think you know if he was perhaps in the Capitol when it got Independence Day’ed he wouldn't be a Presidential nominee. Otherwise I do think he’s running. What about you Robert?
Robert: I hadn’t heard? He’s running?
Alyssa: The New Yorker thinks he is.
Robert: I guess he is then.
Alyssa: If the New Yorker thinks is, I guess he is. In this profile it discusses, obviously it's the New Yorker it's a very long profile-
Robert: It's always long.
Alyssa: Oh, so long.
Robert: Yeah, they get paid by the word there.
Alyssa: Well this writer made out well on this piece then. It discusses his history in Florida, his run for Governor, and particularly his involvement in education both in the charter sector, and now more recently with Common Core. It raises the possibility that both of those things might harm his Presidential campaign.
Robert: Yeah, it's an interesting question. I guess the conventional wisdom is that if you're going to be a Republican nominee, or want to be the Republican nominee, “Thou shalt disavow Common Core.” We've seen Bobby Jindal flip flop on this-
Alyssa: Wait, he’s running for President too?
Robert: Have you not heard?
Alyssa: Haven’t seen it in the New Yorker yet.
Robert: There was an interesting ... Let’s assume that the conventional wisdom is that you have to be anti-Common Core. There was an interesting article, I don’t remember where it was, but John Kasich in Ohio came out and said, “Look all of the anti-Common Core stuff is hysteria.” Call me a foolish optimist, I'd like to think that at some point grownups are going to stand up and say, “Look, we need higher standards; the political opportunism that has surrounded the opposition to Common Core on the GOP side has just got to stop.” Now tell me why I'm wrong?
Alyssa: Tell ... Why does it have to stop?
Robert: No, tell me that I'm wrong that it's not going to stop, and Common Core will be fatal for a Bush candidacy?
Alyssa: I do think particularly getting through the primaries it's going to be tough, given the action that we've seen at the state level. That being said the article seemed to think that the for-profit charter schools that he was involved with seeding-
Robert: That's different.
Alyssa: ... could be a bigger detriment to his campaign. I would actually say that Common Core I think is a tougher road for most of the people who are going to be voting in the primaries.
Robert: Yeah, it's hard for me to separate this out because I talk and write about Common Core a lot and I find myself saying the same thing over, and over again, that once people understand what Common Core says, their opposition softens. Once they understand that it's not a Federal takeover that there's a difference between curriculum and standards and there was a Bush quote in the article where he talks about local control.
But it does require a bit of a leap of faith that people are going follow you through that logic chain. I'd like to think that this is not fatal to a Bush candidacy. I am a little bit more concerned honestly about the for-profit charter stuff. Look, I'm a big charter guy; some of the results from for-profit charters have been not good. There's just something that makes you uncomfortable about conflating-
Alyssa: That's fair.
Robert: ... the profit motive and education, it just kind of goes against the grain. There's also a quote in the article where Bush says, and I'm paraphrasing, he doesn’t really care if somebody makes a buck, as long as their kids are getting a good outcome. And that's fair, but that strikes me as more likely to be demagogued than Common Core.
Alyssa: That's true. I do think though, at the end of the day, Bush has for over a decade now been very authentic on the issue of education. He absolutely cares about it. His dad, his brother, we're kind of the politics guys; he’s more of the policy guy. I think when starts to campaign “officially” we're going to see kind of a different Bush than we've seen from his dad and his brother. So I think it will be interesting.
Robert: Yeah, but if you're in favor of choice and charters, and I think those are red meat issues for the GOP, he’s your guy.
Alyssa: Yeah, well we will see. Ellen third question?
Ellen: Robert, you just wrote an editorial about Arizona’s new Citizenship Test. Should other states follow suit?
Alyssa: All right, bring it Pondiscio.
Robert: Yes.
Alyssa: That's it?
Robert: Any other questions? Come on Alyssa, this is not a heavy lift. Have you seen the Citizenship Test?
Alyssa: I have, I actually looked at a couple of the questions last night. They were fairly-
Robert: Did you strain your brain? Was it hard to remember why there are fifty stars on the flag? Did you have to really dig deep to remember who your Senator is? Or who the President is? Is this a heavy lift?
Alyssa: Well, since I live in DC I do not have a Senator, but that is an issue for another day.
Robert: Okay.
Alyssa: I agree that the test is something that all students-
Robert: Ridiculously simple?
Alyssa: ... could and should know. But I don’t believe that adding another multiple choice test to the education-
Robert: Alyssa ...
Alyssa: ... requirements for graduation-
Robert: Alyssa ...
Alyssa: ... will necessarily make kids more engaged citizens, which is ostensibly the end.
Robert: I don’t even know how to respond to this. This is so not a heavy lift. Here’s an interesting story, before I was with Fordham I worked for the I worked for the Core Knowledge Foundation, and I met a teach at a charter school, a Core Knowledge school in North Carolina who herself was taking the Citizenship Test. She turned it into an activity with her students; I think she was a second grade teacher. Out of one hundred questions on the Citizenship Test, guess how many come up in the Core Knowledge sequence by second grade?
Alyssa: Forty?
Robert: Seventy-five.
Alyssa: Okay.
Robert: This is second grade stuff. Come on this is not a heavy lift. If kids in Arizona, or elsewhere, can't do this it's a national embarrassment. In fact, here's a bit of data for you Xavier University a few years ago reported that 97.5 percent, virtually everybody, would be citizens who take the test pass it. What's the ratio of American citizens who ... And the way this works by the way, there's a hundred questions, you get asked ten, if you get six right you pass, 97.5 percent of would be citizens do it. What percentage of Americans, native born, can do the same?
Alyssa: Two out of three.
Robert: Exactly right, two out of three, and if you raise the threshold to seven out of ten, still low, and then will how many pass?
Alyssa: From Americans?
Robert: Yes, native born.
Alyssa: One out of two.
Robert: Fifty percent, that's humiliating.
Alyssa: I agr-
Robert: You’re a cab driver who just became a citizen and knows more about our government than you do.
Alyssa: Do I think that kids should know that? Yes. Do I think it needs to be tied to their graduation? No. Same way that I don’t think you should be asked for your driver’s license when you go to vote, or what all the county judges in your state are when you go to register. Would I like-
Robert: I am so comfortable-
Alyssa: ... people to know-
Robert: ... with you being wrong.
Alyssa: … this? Yes. All right well I think we're going to have to agree to disagree on this point then.
Robert: We're agreeing that you're wrong.
Alyssa: We're agreeing to disagree.
Robert: If you insist.
Alyssa: All right, well that's all of the time that we have today for Pardon the Gadfly-
Robert: And for Alyssa being wrong.
Alyssa: ... up next Amber’s Research Minute. All right today on Amber’s Research Minute we have Dara Zeehandelaar filling in for Amber. Welcome to the show Dara.
Dara: Thank you.
Alyssa: Earlier we were talking about the designated survivor of the State of the Union so I guess my first question is: did you watch the State of the Union last night?
Dara: I did and I also just learned about the designated survivor thing-
Alyssa: Isn’t it the-
Dara: ... this morning.
Alyssa: Isn’t it the coolest part about the State of the Union?
Dara: But who was it?
Alyssa: It was Anthony Fox, who was the Secretary of Transportation. Which I think makes a lot of sense. In the last couple years, it's been the Energy Secretary, it's been the Agricultural Secretary, if you're going to have to restart a government from scratch the things you need are roads, food, and an energy source. I actually think it's kind of brilliant.
Robert: Was Arne Duncan ever the designated survivor?
Alyssa: No, and the Secretary of Education has only been the designated survivor once in 1989-
Robert: Fascinating.
Alyssa: ... according to Wikipedia.
Dara: I just figured they would draw straws about who does have to go. Who can stay at home on the couch?
Alyssa: Who’s in sweatpants-
Dara: ... stay home.
Alyssa: Who’s in sweatpants-
Robert: My couch is a convenient location.
Alyssa: Who’s in sweatpants eating some popcorn? Yeah, all right what do you have for us today?
Dara: Today we have an article from Educational Researcher called, “Who Enters Teaching: Encouraging evidence that the status of teaching is improving.” From the all-star team of: Lankford, Loeb, McEachin, Miller and Wyckoff. It explores changes in the New York State teaching workforce since the 1990s after the State implemented a number of policies to improve the quality of its new teachers.
Briefly those policies: beginning in 1998, the State increased the general and content specific course work requirements needed for certification, and upped the number of hours of required field experience. It also eliminated Ad Hoc alternative certification pathways, like transcript review in favor of alternative pathways with formal requirements and it discontinued emergency and temporary licenses.
The authors ask, “After these changes to State policy what happened to the new teaching workforce?” Their data set combined SAT scores of individuals who completed certification and those who got hired combine their SAT scores with their personnel files. In total they looked at about two hundred and twenty thousand individuals received their certification and of those a hundred and fifty-two thousand who were hired between 1985 and 2010.
Robert: Hm, I'm in that data set. I was certified in Newark then.
Dara: Well then this will be particularly interesting to you. Remember that you're in 1998 was when they started implementing the new requirements. First prior to 1998/1999 the data show that the average academic abilities of new teachers was low, and consistently falling.
After 1999 SAT scores of both the certified group, and those who were hired improved substantially. With the biggest improvements for the group that was actually hired, for example between ’99 and 2010, the share of entrance drawn from the bottom third of SAT test takers decreased by seven percent. And the share of the top third of SAT scores increased by thirteen percent.
Robert: Not bad.
Dara: The improvements among New York City teachers were larger and occur earlier than throughout the rest of the State. For example in 1999 forty-three percent of new, New York City teachers came from the bottom third of SAT scores-
Robert: Yeah, I may be in there.
Dara: ... By 2010 that number dropped to twenty-four percent. This is particularly interesting because New York City is home of the New York Teaching Fellows which is a formal alternative certification program-
Alyssa: You're in that one too.
Robert: Yep, that was my program.
Dara: Improvements total the new teaching workforce are also more pronounced for teachers in hard to staff subjects, compared to elementary and non-hard to staff secondary subjects. Improvements are more pronounced for schools that enroll more poor students, and for entering minority teachers compared to white and Asian teachers.
Remember improvements occurred throughout the State not just in New York City, in all subjects at both rich and poor schools, and for teachers of all ethnicities. The authors rule out that the trends are the result in changes in the labor market, and conclude that the changes to the workforce are really likely due to the State policies. Of course the jury is still out on whether teacher SAT scores are related to student achievement at all. But as a proxy for the changing qualifications of the workforce SAT scores do show a varied market improvement in the past fifteen years.
Robert: But they haven’t tied that to student outcomes obviously yet?
Dara: No.
Robert: Which is what this is really all about?
Dara: Yes.
Alyssa: Right.
Dara: That is correct, and a very big caveat and I think there has been a lot of work with very mixed findings. Usually showing no relationship between SAT scores and other things like undergraduate institutions selectivity with student outcomes, but they also acknowledge there are so many intervening steps between all of those things, that you can't rule it out either.
Robert: The one thing that surprises, and I was a New York City Teaching Fellow during this timeframe, but what surprises me about this a little bit is I have to confess, and I'm not a genius, but I found the certification exams to be baby simple. Almost as easy as the Citizenship Test.
Alyssa: Oof, burn.
Dara: The idea is that you don’t use those scores on the certification exams. Instead you use SAT scores which are much more universal. The author’s more broad argument which I didn’t go into here as I presented the findings is that by increasing the selectivity of the teaching workforce you get better candidates.
Which is counter to the argument that raising barriers to entry, and that's what these policies did the policies raised barriers to entry, and the counter argument is that that dissuades good people from entering. They say, “I'm going to go make more money somewhere else. My opportunity cost here is way too high. I'm going to go do something else.” The author’s argue that is not the case with these policies.
Alyssa: Very interesting. You mentioned that it had happened during the introduction of New York Teaching Fellows, but did they go into at all about the recruiting tactics, or ...
Dara: No, this was a very high level quantitative analysis and so there have been other studies that look at the compared different alternative certification programs. They look at Teach for America; they separate that out from other alternative certification programs. They separate that out from Teaching Fellows; this is not one of those studies.
Robert: Right, and those are fairly small groups, you're talking about this is a Statewide setting not a Citywide?
Dara: Right.
Robert: So those programs would be impactful-
Alyssa: Targeted.
Robert: ... for those areas but maybe not Statewide?
Alyssa: Right.
Dara: And they didn’t identify how teachers got their credential they just said whether they were certified, whether they got hired. Then the piece about the New York City gains, one of the hypotheses that that might be attributed to, is the introduction of the Teaching Fellows Program in place the Ad Hoc alternative certification, and the elimination of the emergency credentials.
Robert: Yeah, this will be interesting to watch long-term because if I'm not mistaken, New York State has raised the bar yet again in the last year or two. I believe, from memory, the figure is like forty percent of new teachers are now being denied certification so ostensibly that bar will get higher still which makes for a good long-term data set.
Dara: Hopefully we'll continue to attract the best rather than increasing barriers to entry of those people.
Robert: Here, here.
Alyssa: Very interesting. Well that's all the time we have for this week’s Education Gadfly Show, till next week ...
Robert: I'm Robert Pondiscio.
Alyssa: And I'm Alyssa Schwenk for the Thomas B. Fordham Institute signing off.
Male: The Education Gadfly Show is a production of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute located in Washington DC, for more information visit us online at edexcellence.net.
The debate over annual testing has taken center stage as Congress considers reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA). Assessments provide critical information for parents and legislators on student progress, but when does annual testing become overtesting? And will it survive reauthorization? Watch Fordham's Mike Petrilli and AEI's Mike McShane discuss testing and accountability in the wake of the Senate hearing on the new ESEA.
A standard argument of those who downplay strong results among children in urban charters is that families who are motivated enough to exercise school choice are simply different, and their kids’ success is nearly preordained. This recent paper out of the National Bureau of Economic Research tests this assumption and studies the causal effect of takeover schools on student achievement in New Orleans’s Recovery School District (RSD). Specifically, it looks not at the impact of charter school admissions lotteries on the performance of kids who apply, but rather at the impact on the kids who don’t make a choice to apply—passive participants who are simply grandfathered into the newly constituted school. The sample includes eleven middle schools in the RSD that were slated for closure (called “legacy schools”) and subject to a full charter takeover, meaning they had all grades converted to a new school in a single academic year, typically in the same building. The comparison group is a group of same-grade students enrolled in schools that are not yet closed who, in the prior grade, went to a school that was similar to the one the legacy school students attended. Schools are “similar” if their performance scores are comparable to the legacy schools’. And students are matched based on race, sex, age, poverty, and other demographics. The “pre-takeover trajectories” of both groups of students are quite similar. They find that attending an RSD takeover charter substantially increases math and ELA scores (roughly .21 and .14 standard deviation, respectively, per year enrolled). Takeover effects are larger in seventh and eighth grade and in the first two years of takeover. The study was then replicated for a school in Boston where the authors also had lottery estimates, and the gains for grandfathered students were at least as large as the gains for those who got in via lottery. The analysts sum up the gist of the study quite well: Conventional wisdom says that “urban charter lottery applicants enjoy an usually large and therefore unrepresentative benefit from charter attendance because they’re highly motivated or uniquely primed to benefit from the education these schools offer. [Yet] Boston and RSD takeovers generate gains for their passively enrolled students that are broadly similar to, and sometimes even larger than the lottery estimates reported in [other research].” Very interesting. Charter takeovers of traditional schools are fraught with controversy, mostly among adults; this study says they are beneficial to kids.
SOURCE: Atila Abdulkadiro?lu, Joshua D. Angrist, Peter D. Hull, and Parag A. Pathak, "Charters Without Lotteries: Testing Takeovers in New Orleans and Boston," National Bureau of Economic Research, Working Paper 20792 (December 2014).
The massive 2014 protests in Albany led by the nonprofit Families for Excellent schools seemed, at the time, to strike like a bolt from the blue. Thousands of parents and students abruptly converged on the state capital in objection to New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio’s efforts to curtail charter expansion, drawing sympathetic press coverage and even gaining the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo. But according to the American Enterprise Institute’s prolific Andrew P. Kelly, the rally bore less resemblance to lightning than electricity. His new paper, examining parental engagement in education reform and touching on public demonstrations in New York, Louisiana, and California, reveals some of the ways in which unfocused energy can be harnessed and channeled into effective, disciplined movements. It’s a critical area of study because public schools, their school boards, and their districts are democratic entities responsive to a gamut of competing constituencies. Social agitators from the time of the abolitionists have all had to learn to convert their missionary zeal into a force capable of mobilizing public support, and the relatively young undertaking of education reform will be no different. Vital groups like Stand for Children and Parents United for Public Schools, often led by educated whites for the primary benefit of disadvantaged minorities, are especially vulnerable to being cast as Astroturf outsiders rather than grassroots activists. To combat this easy delegitimization, successful education reform advocacy organizations (ERAOs) enlist natural leaders among communities of parents and emphasize depth of commitment over a shallow breadth of membership rolls. As Kelly demonstrates, the “human touch” of parental networking—door-to-door canvassing, neighborly phone calls, and religious attendance at PTA meetings—is matchless both for enticing committed volunteers and imposing social costs on apathy. It’s good to see reform intellectuals espousing the dearly purchased lessons of community organizing (this must surely be the first AEI publication making favorable reference to the works of Saul Alinsky); it’s also fitting that the paper doesn’t attempt to answer all the tactical questions of how best to effect change with direct action. It can be left to future movement leaders to learn, for instance, whether it is best to work outside of schools or to cultivate the backing of cooperative teachers and officials. For now, let’s just be grateful for the message that education reform can’t be all sparks and no circuitry.
SOURCE: Andrew P. Kelly, “Turning lightning into electricity: Organizing Parents for Education Reform,” American Enterprise Institute (December 2014).
This new study from the Center for American Progress challenges the ubiquitous and frequently repeated statistic that the new-teacher attrition rate is 50 percent. Pulling from three NCES-sponsored surveys—the 2007–2008 and 2011–2012 Schools and Staffing Surveys and the Beginning Teacher Longitudinal Study—the authors instead found that 87 percent of new teachers remained in the profession for at least three years and almost 70 percent stayed for five years or more. Even teachers in high-poverty schools, a subgroup that has traditionally seen higher rates of turnover, were found to have retention rates comparable to their counterparts in low-poverty schools. The uptick in staying power for the teaching profession “may have started before the Great Recession began at the end of 2007 and continued because of it, or it may have started in response to it,” the authors note. Cause for further investigation is large local district-to-district variation, such as in North Carolina, where attrition rates can differ by as much as ten percent. Regardless of the lack of specific identifiers, this trend rectifies the reporting discrepancy between the outdated 50 percent figure and points to a positive trend for retaining highly trained, enthusiastic teachers. Moreover, as TNTP highlights, teachers who spend at least five years in the classroom tend to improve their instructional strategies and are more effective. The authors acknowledge the “narrow focus” of the study; and while we walk away with more questions worthy of investigation, we can, for the time being, revel in the promise of a committed teaching profession.
SOURCE: Robert Hanna & Kaitlin Pennington, “Despite Reports to the Contrary, New Teachers Are Staying in Their Jobs Longer,” Center for American Progress (January 8, 2015).