Phi Delta Kappan, Oct 1998 v80
n2 p112(20)
The eighth Bracey
report on the condition of public education.
(includes related articles) Gerald W. Bracey.
Abstract: Several Bracey Reports since 1992 have countered
the notion linking the economy to schools which is based on the
1983 report, 'A Nation at Risk.' The writer also proved that money
does matter in procuring a good education which is in opposition
to the report, 'Giving Kids the Business.'
Full Text: COPYRIGHT 1998 Phi Delta Kappa Inc.
This year Mr. Bracey counters some goofy ideas - among them, the
notion that schools control our economic destiny and the notion
that the amount of money spent on schools doesn't matter.
Because the reporters who normally would have covered the Jonesboro
killings were otherwise occupied, Washington Post science writer
John Schwartz got the assignment. At a subsequent forum at Arkansas
State University, he found that many locals viewed the media as
having contributed to the nightmare, being something like "flies
on an open wound." He was not surprised. He found that "journalists
looking for quick answers out of Jonesboro seemed to have brought
them along in their luggage. On a nightly deadline, chaos was molded
into compelling story lines. Disaster in the Heartland, logos read.
Kids killing kids. Guns in the South. Tragedy was repackaged as
entertainment, and authority became a substitute for insight."
On television "self-proclaimed experts blamed everything from
TV shows such as 'South Park' to the lack of prayer in schools to
ready access to guns to . . . some combination of guns and violent
Southern culture." Schwartz dubbed such stories "pat journalism."(1)
From a scientific standpoint, Schwartz said, the explanations
he heard failed the most basic test of epidemiological explanation:
your theory must include the afflicted and exclude the well. As
an example, Schwartz told a tale from an 1854 cholera epidemic in
London. During that crisis, a certain doctor, John Snow, showed
that the sick people lived near a certain public water pump. People
who lived farther away were not afflicted. Snow concluded that the
water was contaminated. He had the pump handle removed, and the
disease receded.
Schwartz couldn't find the pump handle in the explanations of
Jonesboro. Most kids in the South don't kill other kids, and one
of the two arrested in Jonesboro had spent his early years in rural
Minnesota. Schwartz found Jonesboro to be the kind of place where
he would want to raise his own kids. Even when the reporters wrote
insightful stories, he recounted, they were stymied by editors back
at the office who wanted the stories to emphasize "young white crackers
shooting each other." (An e-mail I received from Abigail Thernstrom,
co-author of America in Black and White, argued that our unthinking
reporters and editors are themselves evidence that our schools have
failed.)
If you were to take Schwartz' tale and replace "Jonesboro" with
"TIMSS Final Year data," you would find the media coverage equally
predigested. Not one reporter who filed a news story on the Third
International Mathematics and Science Study sought any insights
into what the data really mean. New York Times education writer
Ethan Bronner followed his straight news story(2) with a "thought
piece," but, rather than questioning the credibility of the TIMSS
data (and I presume that Kappan readers know by now that they are
not credible), Bronner's second piece focused on why the results
weren't all that important because of other, positive outcomes (creativity,
problem solving, and so on) that America's education system produces.(3)
The Washington Post played it straight all the way.(4) Education
Week was no better. Although I had given Debra Viadero much cause
to doubt the TIMSS data, no reservations clouded her story.(5) U.S.
News & World Report didn't even bother to carry the data as
news but told the tale through an abysmal op-ed essay by John Leo.(6)
The Wall Street Journal unleashed right-wing pit bull and former
assistant secretary of education Chester Finn, Jr., who rabidly
foamed that the TIMSS 12th-grade results indicted public education
as "an ossified government bureaucracy incapable of reforming itself."(7)
Aside from my editorial in USA Today,(8) the only essay declaring
that there might be something wrong with the data came not from
a journalist but from David Friedman, a fellow at MIT's Japan Project.(9)
However, he cannot be considered a wholly independent source since
one statistic he cited is one that only I have produced. By merging
math results from the National Assessment of Educational Progress
(NAEP) with data from the Second International Assessment of Educational
Progress (1992), I showed that the top third of American schools
scored as high in math as the top two nations, Taiwan and Korea.
Iris Rotberg came along as fast as lead times at Science allow,
demolishing the "impervious" data in the 15 May 1998 issue.(10)
David Berliner was silenced by the demands of the time-consuming
job of being dean at Arizona State University.
In the Fourth Bracey Report,
I recounted research showing that 90% of what journalists write
is what people in positions of authority tell them to write. This
certainly happened with the TIMSS report, and the media were encouraged
in their thoughtlessness by the U.S. Department of Education and
the TIMSS staff.
It was not until almost two months later that William Schmidt,
TIMSS research director, offered what could have been a reasonable
introduction to the TIMSS data. But by then it was too late. At
a panel at the annual convention of the National Council of Teachers
of Mathematics (NCTM) in Washington, D.C., and later at a Brookings
Institution seminar (neutrally labeled "Heads in the Sand" by seminar
organizer Diane Ravitch), Schmidt proposed that TIMSS had compared
not students but systems. Viewed this way, the fact that Norway
and Sweden were well ahead of everyone else in physics would become
merely an anticipated outcome, not a "devastating" result (a word
Schmidt had used earlier). The Scandinavian students performed as
they did partly because they were older, but mostly because they
had studied physics for three years.
If this fact had been made known during the initial press conference
convened by the U.S. Department of Education (ED), then maybe no
one would have thought that these students were in any way comparable
to American students who had taken only one year of physics. The
question might then have become, Should American students have an
opportunity in high school to study physics for three years? Or
in response to other differences between systems: Should American
students wait until age 7 to start school? Should we have a "grade
13" in our system as the Swedish and Norwegian systems do?
If the U.S. Department of Education had presented the results
as a comparison of systems, we might have asked whether we should
have more focused curricula, as they do in Cyprus. Cyprus came up
a lot in media reports because, it seemed, it was especially embarrassing
for us to be behind a nation whose schools actually teach Greek
kids and Turkish kids to hate one another. But the Cypriot system
is not like ours, nor are its results. Cyprus finished 18th of 26
nations in math at the fourth-grade level, 37th of 41 at the eighth-grade
level, and 20th of 21 nations on math/science literacy at the 12th-grade
level. However, apparently by tracking only a small proportion of
students into the study of math and science at the high school level,
the Cypriots managed to be sixth among the 21 nations in advanced
math and first on the calculus questions. I say "apparently" because
I have not ruled out the possibility that they cheated.
Of course, ED's presentation of the results wasn't framed that
way. ED portrayed the TIMSS outcomes (and the media thoughtlessly
went along) as a comparison not of systems but of kids. As I showed
in the September Kappan, everyone played it as "Our best kids went
up against their best kids in an apples to apples comparison, and
our kids got trounced." But as I also noted in September, if you
remove those countries that violated the exclusion rate and participation
rate criteria, only five nations remain. Iris Rotberg made the same
point in her Science article: "Low participation and high exclusion
rates tend to increase a country's rank because lower achieving
schools and students are more likely to be excluded from the testing
program. Indeed, the very reason that TIMSS provided the guidelines,
which were 'more honor'd in the breach than the observance,' was
to prevent that occurrence from influencing the rankings" (p. 1030).
Incidentally, the U.S. was one nation that did not meet the criteria
for participation rates.
I also mentioned in September that the "strict quality controls"
claimed by ED did not work. Beyond the participation and exclusion
rates, Rotberg declares that, even for the tests of general knowledge,
which were supposed to assess a representative sample in each country,
"some countries tested a range of diverse schools, whereas others
excluded vocational schools, apprenticeship schools, or private
schools" (p. 1030). She concludes that the "test score rankings
are meaningless as an indicator of the quality of education....
The [various international] studies are irrelevant to deliberations
about educational reform or as predictors of a nation's scientific
or technological strengths" (p. 1031).
Rotberg suggests that, rather than continue to waste money on
tests - TIMSS checked out at $51 million - we use alternative criteria
to decide how well we are doing as a culture. She summarizes these
criteria, which were discussed more fully in her December 1990 Kappan
article:(11)
* productivity in science and engineering as measured by breakthroughs
in basic research, technological advances, and product development;
* research opportunities in institutions of higher education (in
1997 German students took to the streets to protest lack of same
in their obsolete universities(12));
* the availability of qualified scientists and engineers to meet
work force requirements;
* retention and graduation rates in mathematics and science education;
* participation of women and minorities in science and engineering;
* access to higher education in science and engineering for low-income
students, students from racial and ethnic minority groups, and students
with disabilities;
* the availability of science and mathematics education for students
who do not attend college; and
* an adequate supply of science and mathematics teachers in elementary
and secondary schools.
The U.S. would shine on some of these criteria and not on others.
SAT Scores and Advanced Placement Tests
Coming soon from the Educational Research Service is a document
I assembled whose working title is The State of Education. This
is designed to be a more compact and more user-friendly version
of The Condition of Education. It will emphasize numbers, minimize
exposition, and be updated annually. One set of statistics that
the first edition will contain are state SAT scores from 1982 and
1997.(13) In looking at these data, something struck me as quite
remarkable. Here are the "national" averages using the recentered
scale. (National is in quotes because participation rates in the
states range from 4% to 80% of the senior class. And who can say
what it means when the College Board lumps them together and calculates
a mean?)
V M
1982 504 503
1997 505 511
What could possibly be remarkable about these small increases?
The proportion of seniors taking the SAT grew substantially during
this 15-year period. If the growth had happened in states where
few students took the SAT in 1982, we might expect the scores to
rise. That is, if 4% of the students in Utah took the test in 1982
and 12% took it in 1997, we would still be looking at the scores
of a select group of Utahans. But this is not where most of the
growth occurred. Most of the increase occurred in populous states
where many seniors were already taking the SAT. The following chart
lists the percentage of students who took the SAT in each of the
target years:
State 1982 1997
Connecticut 69 79
Maryland 50 64
Massachusetts 66 80
New York 62 74
Pennsylvania 52 72
Virginia 51 69
All 13 states in which nearly half (or more) of the seniors sat
for the SAT in 1982 showed substantial increases in 1997. Given
this much deeper dip into the talent pool, it is stunning that scores
did not fall.
The number of students taking Advanced Placement (AP) tests continues
to soar. Indeed, the numbers have grown so large that some colleges
are reconsidering whether they will continue offering course credit
for scores of "3." (AP tests are graded on a five-point scale.)
In 1997, 581,554 students took 921,801 tests (compared to about
100,000 who took around 150,000 tests 20 years ago.)
There would be more AP candidates, claims Washington Post education
writer Jay Mathews, if some schools didn't discourage some students
from taking AP courses or taking the tests. Why would schools do
so? To look good or in the misguided fear that challenging students
with AP courses might affect their self-esteem. To prod schools
to encourage students to take AP tests, Mathews devised a "Challenge
Index," defined as the number of AP tests taken divided by the size
of the graduating class. Mathews feels that anything above 1.0 is
good, and the top schools (he rated more than 1,000) have ratios
of nearly three tests taken for every graduate.[14]
Mathews is aware that a single measure is not appropriate for
evaluating a high school, but he holds that the index can identify
schools that ought to be doing better and other schools that are
doing better than anyone would expect. My problem with his Challenge
Index is that AP courses are offered in only about half of America's
high schools, and I imagine that students in schools without AP
courses are less likely to sign up for the tests. Mathews' list
also shows few schools in states where the American College Testing
(ACT) Program's college entrance exam is the test of choice, and
that is a serious weakness.
Education and the Economy: A Continuing Story
Shortly after the TIMSS Final Year results were released, my phone
began to ring a lot. Some people just wanted to know my take on
the data. Could I refute them? That was easy enough. A larger number
of callers accepted the data and wanted me to explain an apparent
contradiction: if our students are so bad, how come our economy
looks so good? I was dismayed to see how many reporters had bought
the notion that schools are tightly linked to the economy - and
to recognize how little influence my writings on the topic had had
since I first sought to debunk this notion in the Second Bracey
Report in 1992. Since that time I have
bolstered my refutation of the idea with more data in each successive
Bracey Report.
The goofy idea that schools control our economic destiny was carved
into the national consciousness in 1983 by A Nation at Risk. "If
only to keep and improve on the slim competitive edge we still retain
in world markets," that report intoned, "we must dedicate ourselves
to the reform of our educational system."[15] Most people bought
it, and many still do.
The foolishness reached its apogee (or fell to its perigee, depending
on how you look at it) with the publication of Winning the Brain
Race, by David Kearns and Denis Doyle Gushing about the ability
of Japanese high school graduates to understand complex instructions,
communicate easily with colleagues on the shop floor, solve problems,
and continue to learn on the job, these authors wrote that
we cannot compete in a competitive world without the highest levels
of academic success. If you doubt it, look at the competition. The
Japanese, our most successful competitors, have the highest levels
of achievement in the world. . . . Japanese students have the highest
test scores in the world. . . . There is a lesson [here] for us,
and that is the Japanese treat education as an instrument of national
policy. The Japanese are convinced - as we should be - that without
first-rate schools, they cannot have a first-rate economy.[16]
In early July, as I began writing this report, mile-high test
scores notwithstanding, Japan officially sank into recession: it
experienced negative economic growth for two consecutive quarters.
The U.S. intervened - to prop up the yen! The Japanese currency
had sunk to an eight-year low before our government stepped in (and
it has continued to fall). Fears were rampant that the Japanese
economy would go from recession into collapse, taking the rest of
Asia and all those wonderful test scores down with it.
Despite all the silly writings of the past about the "Japanese
miracle" and the "Asian tigers" and the contribution that high test
scores made to these nations' economic achievements, Americans have
no reason to gloat We have plenty of problems, too. The amount of
debt in the U.S. is astonishing. The amount of savings is equally
astonishing - by its absence. And if Japan does go deeper into the
hole, it can always start selling its U.S. holdings to get dollars.
This might be the best economy that the irrationally ebullient
Alan Greenspan has seen, but that doesn't mean there aren't chickens
that can come home to roost. Still, in his 21 July 1998 speech to
Congress, Greenspan argued that, while the Asian crisis was manifestly
slowing our economy, inflation remained a threat.
Indeed, our economic juggernaut steamed along so robustly that
New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman imagined this scene: "The
nightly news revealed that India and Pakistan had nuked each other
off the globe, that Moscow had declared bankruptcy and closed for
business, that the Asian economies all descended into the Pacific,
and that oil prices fell so low that gas was cheaper than Diet Coke
. . . and the Dow Jones hit a record high."[17]
Robert Samuelson, a columnist for both Newsweek and the Washington
Post, conjured up a bundle of potent dangers to the U.S. boom: Asia,
the year 2000 problem, the introduction of the Euro, and the overvalued
stock market. But, after noting that "everything affects everything
else," he said only that there was much uncertainty around and,
while contending that all booms end, refused to predict when or
how badly this one might go bust.[18]
Friedman's fanciful reverie is not pure fantasy. Standard &
Poor's DRI, an economic forecasting firm, constructed an "Armageddon
scenario" that imagined all sorts of terrible things for Asia and
South America but leff the U.S. in only a mild recession. The problem
with DRI's forecast, though, is that it is entirely cast in economic
terms. Further economic decline could have major political fallout,
including rebellions in Thailand, China, and Indonesia, a nation
of 1,100 dialects and 2,000 islands, some of which are talking about
secession. Former stockbrokers in Bangkok and Jakarta might join
the disaffected masses, putting the U.S. and Europe in a tight spot:
Do we shore up the current autocracies or let the rebels and the
establishment duke it out?
There is little consensus on the various scenarios, save for one
thing: Japan has to get its act together. A permanent tax cut (and
let's hope the good citizens don't just put the money into savings)
and an end to the "convoy system" of banking, in which the weakest
banks are not allowed to fail, are the reforms that are called for
most often.
Why am I going on about the economy? This is supposed to be a
report about schools. What has all this economy stuff got to do
with the condition of public education in these United States? Precious
little, and that's the point.
For more proof, look away from Asia to the European Union. The
fastest growing economies are Ireland, Spain, and Portugal.[19]
Only the Irish scored higher than the U.S. in TIMSS.
Pundit Robert Samuelson took a look at the situation beginning
with the observation that the resident computer genius at Newsweek
had majored in English literature and had never touched a computer
in college. There are lots of places other than schools where people
learn. With his eye on the TIMSS Final Year data, Samuelson continued,
"In isolation, test scores hardly count. What counts - for the economy
at least - is what people do at work. Do they fully use their skills?
Do they develop new ones? Are they engaged?"[20]
The paean to Japanese high school graduates sung by Kearns and
Doyle notwithstanding, opportunities for innovation and the development
of new skills occur here more often than in other nations. (I once
heard a German commentator on NPR claim that if Bill Gates were
German, he would be a middle manager, and Microsoft would not exist.)
Moreover, more than in many other countries, businesses here have
more freedom to set pay rates, hire and fire employees, and alter
work practices. This is a double-edged sword. It results in much
greater wage disparities here than in other countries, but the possibility
of high wages acts as an incentive for high performance. If you
mention the phrase "career ladder" to a Japanese executive or worker,
you will be met with a blank stare. The concept does not exist.
Further evidence that the economy and education run on different
tracks can be seen in our obsession with math and science, which
has led us to overstate the number of people who need high skills
in these fields. Borrowing from the study by Anthony Carnevale and
Stephen Rose (discussed in "The Statistics from Thin Air Award,"
page 122), Samuelson concludes that scientists, computer scientists,
engineers, accountants, programmers, and business financial officers
- people who need advanced math or science skills-account for 4%
of the work force. (I hasten to add that it is not the Camevale/Rose
report that earned a Rotten Apple.)
Our economy and its accouterments cause admiration, envy, and
resentment the world over, according to William Drozdiak of the
Washington Post foreign service.[21] Drozdiak cites the German weekly,
Der Spiegel, as saying, "Never before in modern history has a country
dominated the Earth so totally as the United States does today.
. . . America is now the Schwarzenegger of international politics:
showing off muscles, obtrusive, intimidating." A cartoon in the
French daily, Le Monde, depicted the world as a puppet dangling
from controls draped in the American flag. "On the brighter side,"
writes Drozdiak, "even Europeans who worry about the perils of American
arrogance say that on many difficult problems, such as making peace
in Bosnia, nothing gets done unless the United States assumes a
leading role."
Even so, the ebullient economy is not benefiting everyone. We
continue to stratify by wealth. William Finnegan, author of Cold
New World: Growing Up in a Harder Country, writes that there are
16 million more households in this country than there are adequately
paying jobs.[22] Entry-level wages for male high school graduates
fell 28% in real dollars from 1973 to 1997. College graduates didn't
get hit as hard, although they did lose ground, and only about 30%
of high school graduates persevere to obtain a bachelor's or better.
The 28% figure above can be a bit misleading. While the proportion
of students graduating from high school grew only slightly between
1973 and 1997, the college enrollment rates for these graduates
rose from 47% to 65%. Presumably, this increased college attendance
left an increasingly less able pool of students available for the
workplace. Presumably again, these students would be less able to
compete for higher-paying jobs.
What is perhaps more telling than the entry-level wage changes
are the changes in the percentage of family income that is discretionary:
1970 1993
One to three years of
high school 57 34
High school graduate 63 56
One to three years
of college 68 65
Four years of college 73 76
Five or more years
of college 77 81
It is also the case that various educational attainments vary
with socioeconomic status (SES). For the top quartile of SES, the
high school graduation rate is 94%; for the second, 89%; for the
third, 80%; and for the fourth, 67%. Thus those who are most in
need of at least a high school diploma are least likely to obtain
one. Similarly, only 32% of students in the lowest SES quartile
who do go to college will have obtained a degree after five years,
compared to 47% of those in the middle quartiles and 62% of those
in the highest quartile.
The source of these data is Paul Barton of the Educational Testing
Service (ETS), who wrote, "When all the negative factors are factored
in - higher cost, stagnating income, declining aid, and high dropout
rate [from college] - the result is growing disparity [among different
levels of SES] in students' ability to earn a postsecondary degree."[23]
A worthwhile publication from the National Center for Education
Statistics (NCES) on this topic appeared last year, but it seems
to have been little noticed.[24] It was written by Paul Decker,
Jennifer King Rice, and Mary Moore of Mathematica Policy Research
and Mary Rollefson of NCES. And despite its title, Education and
the Economy, it does not principally examine how education affects
the nation's economic health. It deals mostly with how education
affects the economic prospects of individuals. It is a well-organized,
well-written compendium of information about education and jobs.
The book is worthwhile in spite of the fact that its first chapter
opens with what appears to me to be a major misinterpretation of
a trend. Referring to what I have renamed Figure 1, which shows
productivity increases from 1947 through 1994, the book says, "It
is clear that the growth in output per hour worked [the usual measure
of productivity] since 1973 has lagged behind the 1947-1973 trend."
This is not true. Or, rather, it is true only if one simply averages
the productivity gains from 1973 forward. But such an average does
not provide an accurate representation of what's been happening.
Looking at Figure 1, we see that productivity falls from 1973
to 1974 and then resumes its 1947-73 growth rate until 1977. From
1977 through 1983, productivity growth is essentially zero; after
that, it again climbs at the 1947-73 rate until 1987, when growth
stops for two years before resuming again. According to the Bureau
of Labor Statistics, productivity growth since 1994 has been in
line with the 1947-73 rate.[25]
The book notes that some researchers think that our low placement
in international comparisons of math and science is responsible
for the "slowing" of productivity growth. But that "slowing" does
not really describe what has been happening. What the graph shows
is that, since 1973, productivity has grown in fits and starts.
When it grows, it grows at the same rate as in 1947-73. Then it
stops. Then it starts again. This is hardly the kind of trend line
that could be attributed to test scores or to educational attainments
or to fallings in education. The two periods of slowdown do correspond
roughly to periods of national recession. Recessions are part of
the economic cycles that economists, if pushed, admit they can't
explain.
The first chapter of Education and the Economy discusses "contributions
of education to economic productivity" and strikes me as mostly
a smokescreen to cover the fact that the econometric techniques
for calculating this statistic aren't very useful. At this moment,
with unemployment at levels that were considered impossibly low
until they happened, it may seem unimportant to look at education
and unemployment, but in the long term there is a clear trend. From
1960 through 1994, although there are wide fluctuations, unemployment
for both high school dropouts and high school graduates has been
increasing.
Dropouts, of course, suffer a much higher rate of unemployment.
In the 20-year period from 1974 to 1994, there is no trend for either
whites or blacks in the employability of recent high school graduates,
but whites have a much lower unemployment rate and show much smaller
fluctuations. While the unemployment rates of both groups are affected
by recessions, blacks get hit harder. Over the 20-year period, the
white unemployment rate varies from 10% to 20%, while the rate for
blacks runs from 25% to 58%. "Recent high school graduates" are
defined as individuals 16 to 24 years of age who graduated from
high school in the year the survey was taken and who were not enrolled
in college.
It's unfortunate that the data examined by this publication stop
in 1994 because I wonder whether some conclusions are still true.
For example, it says that "income inequality may be harmful to the
overall economy" (p. 23). Data are presented to show that inequality
of income explains about one-fifth of the variability in growth
in a group of countries. (Remember, too, that the techniques employed
are correlational and that causality cannot be inferred.) Yet income
inequality in the U.S. has been increasing rapidly even as the country's
economy soars. The U.S. is now the most economically stratified
nation in the West (see the Fifth Bracey
Report).
Some of the more intriguing data on the relationship between employment
and education come from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth.
The data are presented in terms of unemployment rates for people
between 19 and 31 years of age, by quartile level on the Armed Services
Vocational Aptitude Battery (ASVAB), by subject, and by educational
attainment. For people with a high school diploma, math scores show
a clear relationship: high scores equal low unemployment and vice
versa. For science and reading, though, the results are not so clear.
Those in the top quartile have lower unemployment, but there is
not much difference between the other quartiles except at the youngest
ages. For people with one to three years of college, the relationship
is weaker for all three subjects. For those with four to five years
of college, there is no relationship at all.
Not all jobs pay equally well, of course. The relationship between
test scores and wages is much more regular. Looking again at all
people between the ages of 19 and 31, no relationship appears until
after age 22, and then the lines for the four quartiles start to
diverge and continue to diverge until age 30. Again, math exhibits
the strongest relationship of the three subject areas. The difference
between the top quartile and all others in math is the largest.
For high school graduates, there is no pay difference between first
or second quartiles in math and science; for reading, only the fourth
quartile has lower pay.
For people with one to three years of college, the differences
are nil until about age 24, when the four quartiles separate by
a small amount. The divergence continues until age 31, when the
largest difference finds the first-quartile scorers in math earning
about $13.50 an hour, while the bottom quartile brings in about
$10.50.
For people with four to five years of college, placing in the
top quartile in math and science means better earnings, and being
in the fourth quartile in any of the three areas means lower earnings.
For reading, only the bottom quartile is different from the other
three.
Data in Education and the Economy, taken from the National Adult
Literacy Survey (NALS), are a bit different from those in ASVAB.
In NALS, there is a clear relationship between the five levels of
literacy and both employment and wages: people with higher literacy
levels are more likely to be employed and to make more on their
jobs. Among those who have only a high school diploma, those who
are employed had higher reading scores.
Education and the Economy expresses concern over the literacy
levels of the labor force, with some 40% reading at the lowest two
levels. This is certainly a matter of concern, but for the individuals
involved, not for the health of the economy, which requires large
numbers of unskilled workers (something society refuses to acknowledge).
As shown from the First International Adult Literacy Survey (FIALS),
in America reading well won't guarantee you a good job, but not
reading well virtually guarantees a low-paying occupation.
FIALS also showed that most of our immigrants do not read well.
For some reason, FIALS is given short shrift in Education and the
Economy, occupying only two pages near the end of the book. It was
discussed at length in the Seventh Bracey
Report.
Chapter 12 of Education and the Economy, "Education and Literacy
of Workers by Occupation," finds that workers in the highest-paying
occupations also have the highest literacy scores. This chapter
notes too that many of the fastest-growing occupations are in the
high-paying categories. This is true, but the difference between
rates and numbers must be considered. The fastest-growing jobs -
except for systems analyst - do not account for many jobs.
Education and the Economy repeats findings seen in SCANS (the
Secretary's Commission on Achieving Necessary Skills) reports and
the suppressed Sandia Report. Skilled workers and holders of college
degrees get much more training than those without skills or degrees,
thus increasing the stratification by wealth. AIthough more people
are reporting on-thejob training programs than 15 years ago, only
29% of those with a high school diploma reported receiving such
training in a 12-month period, while 61% of those with college degrees
reported receiving training. Similarly, those in executive, professional,
technical, or administrative support occupations were much more
likely to receive job improvement training. In another publication,
Anthony Carnevale of ETS found that people earning $25,000 or more
a year received 72% of on-the-job training, while those earning
$15,000 or less received only 5%.[26]
The book also reports earlier findings showing that, while secondary
school graduation rates are converging in industrialized nations,
only Japan comes close to the U.S. in the percentage of college
graduates. As reported, the statistics on college completion are
a bit misleading. While America graduates men and women in equal
numbers, Japan has three male graduates for every female.
It is important to note that, even though some relationships between
test scores and earnings are "clear" they are also not particularly
powerful; that is, the differences are relatively small and involve
large groups of people (quartiles). Henry Levin has observed that
the weak relation between test scores and adult earnings is replicated
in virtually every study on the subject. . . . Berlin and Sum found
that each additional grade level completed was associated with four
times as large a gain in earnings as an additional grade equivalent
of basic skills as measured by test scores. And completion of the
last year of high school was associated with 10 times the increase
in annual earnings as an additional grade equivalent of test scores.[27]
Levin agrees that "there is no doubt that education, more generally,
is an important determinant of earnings. But there is an enormous
chasm between this fact and the assertion that new educational performance
standards for students will lead to greater economic productivity."
Maybe now that someone from a highly regarded university has pointed
out this fact, the media and others will pay attention. Hope springs
eternal.
Does Money Matter?
Would anyone ask this question in connection with, say, the military?
The notion that money doesn't matter is what Alex Molnar, in his
revealing and readable Giving Kids the Business, calls "the master
myth," the myth that undergirds most privatization incentives.[28]
In any case, lots of people in 1998 have been saying that money
doesn't matter. And when used as described in the June 1998 Kappan
Research column, it doesn't. People who claim that money matters
assume that the people running schools view those schools as educational
institutions. As shown in the June column, that assumption is not
valid where schools are seen primarily as community jobs programs.
But, as a correspondent put it in a letter quoting Benjamin Barber,
"Money can't by itself solve problems, but without money few problems
can be solved. Money also can't win wars or put men in space, but
it is the crucial facilitator. It is also how America has traditionally
announced, 'We Are Serious About This!'"[29]
The tenacity with which people cling to the idea that money doesn't
matter is quite remarkable. In the October 1958 issue of Fortune
magazine, one Dan Seligman, apparently a staff writer, constructed
a measure he called "teacher-days," which is not clearly described
but appears to be the number of days a year a teacher taught multiplied
by the number of teachers. Combining this measure and measures of
spending, Seligman concluded that efficiency was declining even
as per-pupil costs rose. The increasing costs were related in part
to declining class size, which, Seligman thought but could not prove,
had no bearing on achievement.[30]
In this 1958 article Seligman drew close to an important insight,
but he considered it worthy of only a parenthetical comment: "The
steel industry's new facilities have brought it a steadily rising
output. The industry's productivity has been rising at an average
of 3 or 4 percent a year. . . . No comparable economies are visible
in the education industry (nor are they visible, of course, in most
of the other service industries)." Of course.
In the 40 years since his article appeared, Seligman has switched
magazines, but not mindsets. In the 15 June 1998 issue of Forbes,
he declares that there are "solid data telling us that spending
more on education does not, by and large, translate into kids learning
more."[31] Seligman contends that the 1966 study Equality of Educational
Opportunity, better known as the Coleman Report, proved this. Coleman,
of course, claimed that his report meant that we would have to spend
even more money if we wished to improve the achievement of poor
and minority children, but Seligman's interpretation is the usual
one.[32]
In 1958 Seligman put his faith in better use of space in schools
and in such technologies as Skinner's teaching machines and the
like. In 1998 he puts his faith in vouchers. The cult of efficiency
has been replaced by prayer.
The contention that money doesn't matter serves as balm for the
conscience of business and industry, which have been draining school
funds from the tax base through corporate tax breaks. More and more,
businesses have been demanding tax breaks as a condition for moving
to a given locality. At the same time, they tout their "gifts" to
schools. Business hyped the $32 million donated in Florida one year
but didn't mention that tax concessions had cost schools more than
$500 million in the same year.[33] In Wisconsin, by 1994, "corporate
tax breaks were taking over $1 billion out of the state treasury
every year."[34] On a national scale, the contributions that business
and industry make to schools would run the schools for less than
two hours.[35]
In the May 1996 issue of School Administrator, I discussed five
studies that found relationships between money and achievement,
along with several dishonest ones that didn't (e.g., William Bennett's
1993 Report Card on Education in America and George Will's use of
that study).[36] Even indices remote to daily instruction, such
as the SAT, rose with increased spending. To the best of my knowledge,
Eric Hanushek has studiously avoided acknowledging that these positive
studies exist. At least, I have never seen any references to them
in his work, nor did he seem aware of them when we debated the matter
at Williams College in January 1998.
Two new analyses provide additional confirmation. The first is
from economist Alan Krueger of Princeton University; the other is
from David Grissmer, Ann Flanagan, and Stephanie Williamson of the
RAND Corporation.[37]
Krueger, who once studied the effect of education on income by
comparing the incomes of identical twins with different educational
attainments, takes a new look at Tennessee's Project STAR, an experiment
that everyone in the country except Hanushek believes makes a strong
case for smaller class size. Krueger notes at the outset that the
literature relating money to outcomes is conflicting and that "much
of the uncertainty in the literature derives from the fact that
appropriate specification - including the functional form, level
of aggregation, relevant control variables, and identification -
of the 'education production function' is uncertain." He also observes
that the specification of the appropriate output is in question.
Educational researchers favor changes in test scores, whereas economists
focus on educational attainment and subsequent earnings.
Krueger found Project STAR interesting because it is the "only
large-scale randomized experiment on class size ever conducted in
the United States." (For more on Project STAR, see my September
1995 Research column.) At the outset of his analysis, Krueger feared
that deviations from randomization could have compromised the outcomes.
Students who were randomly assigned to small classes stayed in those
classes. However, when parents whose children were initially assigned
to regular classrooms complained, the students in regular classes
were re-randomized at the end of first grade between regular classes
and regular classes with fulltime teacher aides. In addition, some
behavior problems and other parental complaints resulted in the
transfer of about 10% of the students between regular and small
classes.
Even allowing for such compromises, Krueger's econometric analyses
confirm the essential findings of Project STAR. Some of his new
findings contradict contentions from Hanushek. Krueger quotes Hanushek
as writing, "If smaller classes [in Project STAR] were valuable
in each grade, the achievement gap would widen. It does not. In
fact, the gap remains essentially unchanged throughout the sixth
grade. . . . The inescapable conclusion is that the smaller classes
at best matter in kindergarten."
But Krueger found that, when the same children are tracked over
time, the gap does widen, except for those who entered small classes
as kindergartners: "For the wave of students who entered kindergarten,
the beneficial effects of attending a small class do not appear
to increase as students spend more time in their class assignments.
For students entering the experiment in first or second grade, however,
the test score gap between those in smalland regular-size classes
grows as students progress to higher grades."
Krueger also checked for Hawthorne effects (the teachers in the
small classes knew they were part of an experiment to show that
small classes work) and for John Henry effects (the teachers in
regular classes might have worked harder). He found no evidence
of either. In his search for Hawthorne and John Henry effects, Krueger
did find that, within regular classrooms, large classes (average
25) did not score as well as smaller classes (average 21). Because
these comparisons looked at large and small classes within the same
building, they cannot be the result of some extraneous cause, such
as differences in socioeconomic status.
Overall, Krueger's analyses find that small classes increase test
scores by about .22 standard deviations. The effects are larger
for minority students and for those receiving subsidized lunches.
Is an effect size of .22 big or small? "Unfortunately" writes Krueger,
"it is unclear how percentile scores on these tests map into tangible
outcomes." But he does note that "in kindergarten the impact of
being assigned to a small class is about 64% as large as the white-black
test score gap, and in third grade it is 82% as large. By both metrics,
the magnitudes are sizable."
Krueger admits, of course, that "no single study, even an experimental
one, could be definitive." He also contends, again of course, that
"one well-designed experiment should tromp a phalanx of poorly controlled,
imprecise, observational studies based on uncertain statistical
specifications."
The RAND researchers, using different data and different methods
of analyzing them, also found indications that smaller classes have
a larger benefit for poor and minority students. But before presenting
those data, let me observe here that all of these studies operate
under the actual variations in spending. While in most states the
high-spending districts spend more than twice as much as the low-spending
districts, most districts have similar withindistrict expenditures.
If we dropped spending to zero, the effect on achievement would
be large and quickly seen (as happened when Prince Edward County,
Virginia, closed its public schools rather than integrate them).
If we raised spending to $37,000 per pupil, achievement would rise
substantially. (This is the average salary nationwide for teachers.)
By spending this amount for each child, we could provide each with
a personal tutor and, no doubt, observe the well-known effects of
one-onone tutoring.
These researchers observe that the gap between black students
and white students on the NAEP mostly decreased from 1971 to 1996,
although it remains large - about four years. The RAND researchers
wondered why. In a 1994 study (discussed in the Fifth Bracey
Report), they made predictions of test
score changes over a 20-year period, using changes in family variables
as predictors.[38] Although many of the variables improved for blacks
- more education, fewer children, and less mobility for families
with children (somewhat offset by increases in teenage pregnancy)
- test scores rose more than predicted. Changes in family could
account for only a small amount of the changes in test scores.
In the current analysis, Grissmer and his colleagues examine other
variables. Tracking and grouping of elementary school children by
skill level within mixed classrooms do not appear to be playing
much of a role. Taking more demanding courses might be part of the
explanation for middle and high school students: between 1982 and
1992 both blacks and whites reported taking more math courses, but
the increase for blacks was greater. As for variables that affect
all ages, desegregation is a candidate, but it offers a complex
and sometimes contradictory set of data. For example, data from
the South support the contention that desegregation had a positive
effect, but test scores in the North also rose, despite increasing
segregation in northern schools over the period studied.
Looking at the gains for all students nationwide, the researchers
suggest three variables that changed while the scores were moving
toward one another, each of which could have produced some gain:
additional resources, smaller class sizes, and a more experienced
teacher force. For the last mentioned, during the period of interest,
the proportion of teachers holding a master's degree rose from 25%
to 50%, while the percentage of teachers with five to 20 years of
experience rose from 45% to more than 60%.
The additional resources allocated to schools over the past 30
years are much less than Hanushek and others have alleged. Conservative
critics have generally used the Consumer Price Index to adjust for
inflation. But the use of the CPI to measure increases in school
funding greatly overestimates how much is actually appropriated.
In addition, only about 30% of what was appropriated made it into
regular classrooms; the rest went to targeted populations that are
often not tested in national, state, or local programs (i.e., students
in special education programs).
In discussing the effect of class size, Grissmer and his colleagues
present some of the same arguments as Krueger. Incidentally, a summary
of class size research written for nontechnical readers can be found
in a monograph by Alex Molnar of the University of Wisconsin, commissioned
by the Keystone Research Center of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.[39]
The monograph also summarizes the conflicting claims made for voucher
programs in Milwaukee and Cleveland, as well as the Project STAR
data. In addition, it presents some new data from Wisconsin that
replicate the STAR findings.
So why, after a period of converging, did the gap between black
and white 17-year-olds widen once again? The researchers propose
violence as the reason. The murder rate among black teenagers
rose dramatically between 1985 and 1990 and remained high through
1992. If murder is a proxy for other adverse changes in black neighborhoods
and schools, it might explain declines in blacks' reading scores.
This theory is appealing because there was no parallel increase
in murders among white teenagers, so it could help explain why blacks'
scores declined while whites' scores remained stable[40]
Stephan and Abigail Thernstrom also noticed the widening gap after
1988. "Why this alarming turnaround? What brought about the earlier
gains that have now been reversed? These important questions have
not attracted the attention of many researchers."[41] Although not
experimental researchers, the Thernsroms offer the same hypotheses,
though they have no data with which to test any of them. Thus they
declare themselves "stumped." But to the increased violence hypothesis
of Grissmer, Flanagan, and Williamson, the Thernstroms add the observation
that crack cocaine and gangrelated drug wars both appeared in the
mid-1980s, largely in the black community.
The test scores of black students and white students can never
converge, though, until the attitudes of many black students change.
"A black teacher in the Bronx told me in a despairing tone that
she has male students who would rather be paraded in handcuffs before
television cameras than be caught reading a book," wrote columnist
Bob Herbert in the New York Times.[42] Herbert also presented the
example of a black 17-year-old girl who worked part time at a mall
in Marietta, Georgia, and "was taunted recently by high school classmates
who showed up at her job to express their resentment at the high
marks she was getting."
The purpose of Herbert's essay was to call attention to the Campaign
for African-American Achievement, launched by Hugh Price, president
of the Urban League. Price has drawn together 20 other organizations
to help. I hope that by now this is not news to Kappan readers.
September was designated "Achievement Month" by the campaign, which
was to "conduct a month-long series of high-profile events each
year celebrating the efforts of black youngsters who are doing well
in school."
That the achievement gap between blacks and whites is important
outside of school is shown in data provided by Christopher Jencks
of Harvard University and Meredith Phillips of UCLA. Their data
indicate that in 1964 blacks who scored above the 50th percentile
on a test given 12 years earlier earned only 65% of what whites
scoring above the 50th percentile earned. By 1993, similar scores
yielded earnings for blacks that were 96% of white earnings. "Reducing
the black-white score gap would probably do more to promote racial
equality than any other strategy that commands broad political support,"
they write.[43]
Jencks has changed his position on school effects and now thinks
that they are much more powerful than he and his colleagues suggested
in 1972 in Inequality. (But see the section on NASDC, below.) Changing
school variables probably still won't do much to close the gap,
because such a strategy would not command broad support. It would
cost too much to be politically feasible. Black schools and white
schools receive nearly equal funding, but black schools - operating
largely in poor neighborhoods - must spend their resources differently:
on special education, counseling, security, and so on. Teachers
in these schools are generally less qualified than those in suburban
schools, and higher salaries would be required to attract more qualified
teachers. While the public might accept spending 10% more for poor
schools than for others, it probably wouldn't support the large
increases that would be needed to make major differences.
Jencks and Phillips acknowledge that the attitudes of black students
about achievement in school need to change. However, looking at
the fact that blackwhite test score differences are large when children
begin school, they argue that "changing the way parents deal with
their children may be the single most important thing we can do
to improve children's cognitive skills" (p. 50). They admit that
this will be hard and offer no suggestions about how to accomplish
it.
Whatever Happened to NASDC?
Well, someone finally said it. Even school critics such as George
Will have acknowledged that the 91% of their lives from birth to
age 18 that children spend outside of school overwhelms the 9% they
spend in school. Unfortunately, it took an educator to say: "Education,
Alone, Is a Weak Treatment." That was the title that James Gallagher
of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, gave to his commentary
in the 8 July 1998 issue of Education Week. I say "unfortunately"
because, coming from within the education "establishment," such
a comment might be taken as defensive or self-serving. It is not.
It is why no one can find any silver bullets to solve our educational
problems. It is why Chris Whittle pared down his Edison Project
and adopted curricula developed by others (by educators, no less!)
rather than try to construct his own from scratch. It is why Reading
Recovery and Success for All can make significant improvements in
students' achievement and still leave children years below grade
level. It is why most industrialized nations score very much like
the U.S. on international assessments of reading, math, and science
(at grades 4 and 8, anyway). In the reading study of the IEA (International
Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement), American
14-yearolds finished eighth among 31 nations, but only Finland had
a significantly higher score, and only nations ranked 16th or lower
had significantly lower scores. Given that the chances of finding
significance increase with sample size and given that the samples
were exceptionally large, this means that the differences among
nations were tiny indeed.
The "weak treatment" effect of schools should be kept in mind
when looking at the programs funded by the New American Schools
Development Corporation (NASDC), now known simply as New American
Schools (NAS). NAS was introduced with great flourish by President
Bush in 1991 and ardently touted by his secretary of education,
Lamar Alexander. These were to be "break-the-mold" schools. They
would emulate business and show us poor, dumb educationists how
to do it. Remember?
By its own criteria, NAS was probably doomed to fail. Examined
from the more generous perspective of school reform generally, something
good might yet come from the effort. NAS gave itself two years to
get fully operational and a total of three years to show significant
student improvement. Other studies have suggested that it takes
five or six years to improve student achievement; one study even
found that it took a small, affluent suburb - i.e., a place with
everything going for it - eight years just to get its elementary
science curriculum revamped.[44] In any case, after a much ballyhooed
competition, grants were awarded to seven supplicants. Looking at
who got the grants, some concluded that the decisions could have
been made the day after the competition was announced.
The NAS project is undergoing a longterm evaluation by a RAND
Corporation team headed by Susan Bodilly.[45] In its second-year
report, the team divided the reform effort into eight "elements"
that had to be addressed: curriculum, instruction, assessments,
student grouping, professional development, community involvement/public
engagement, standards, and staff organization. The RAND evaluators
concluded that, for improvement in achievement to occur by the end
of three years, the first five of these eight elements should be
pretty much in place by the end of year two. They studied a nonrandom
sample of 40 schools. They concluded that two of these schools were
fulfilling their vision and that another 16 were implementing their
programs, but the rest were in a piloting or planning stage.
The three-year implementation strategy was not one that all schools
have adopted voluntarily. It was an NAS goal. In addition, some
of the schools were at risk of state-level takeovers or interventions
if they did not show improved performance within three years. The
RAND team notes that the time frame was not conducive to positive
outcomes:
Districts and NAS had to establish the process [of putting an
NAS design in place] at a time [of the year] when school people
were busy with testing regimes and when many staff had already determined
how they would use their summer leave. Second, districts had to
ask schools to make a major commitment at a time of the year when
many of the planning and preparation activities for such an undertaking
had already occurred. Schools had already developed school improvement
plans, school budgets, Title I budgets, and special education IEPs
for the coming year. Finally, rhetoric to the contrary, none of
the designs were proven at this point in time. Schools were being
asked to make choices about designs based on limited data about
the effectiveness of the designs in encouraging implementation in
like schools and based on limited data about the designs' ability
to increase student performance. (pp. 43-44)
One can only imagine the enthusiasm with which school faculties
and administrators received these assignments. Indeed, schools that
felt they had adopted a design without fully understanding it and
those that felt they had been forced to adopt it showed lower levels
of implementation. Surprise.
The RAND researchers divided the factors affecting the success
of implementation into four categories. Under "school structural
factors" elementary schools enjoyed much more success putting the
designs in place. At the district level, districts with stable leadership,
visibly strong support from the leadership, no crises, a culture
of cooperation, school autonomy, assessments aligned with the design,
and resources readily available - teacher planning time, money,
etc. - moved more quickly down the road toward implementation.
The design teams had a strong impact on program implementation
as well. Audrey Cohen died, and the single national facilitator
of her model retired. The ATLAS (Authentic Teaching, Learning, and
Assessment) team could not coordinate the ideas of the four founders.
The Modern Red Schoolhouse had initially relied heavily on consultants
and had to build a permanent staff quickly. In general, higher levels
of implementation were associated with stable design teams that
could effectively communicate the design to the schools and market
it to districts, that supported implementation with lots of facilitators
and extensive training, and that emphasized the first five of the
eight elements.
As usual, I come to the end of another report having exhausted
the amount of space the Kappan can provide, though far from having
exhausted the topics to talk about. This one has said little about
vouchers or charter schools, choice or privatization. It's not that
nothing happened in these arenas, but few hard data have been reported
this year. As economist Richard Rothstein notes, "Praise for charter
schools comes in the same form today as criticism of regular public
schools: little more than anecdotal puffery and phony statistics."[46]
On the voucher front, the Wisconsin supreme court ruled that the
Milwaukee voucher program could be extended to include church-affiliated
schools because the purpose of the voucher was not church-related.
This is hardly the last word.
I am currently conducting research in all these areas for People
for the American Way. A report will be forthcoming, and I expect
it will contain many experiences similar to those of Michael Winerip
of the New York Times and of Kevin Smith of the University of Nebraska,
Lincoln, and Kenneth Meier of the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.
In The Case Against School Choice: Politics, Markets, and Fools
(a play on John Chubb and Terry Moe's fatally flawed Politics, Markets,
and America's Schools), Smith and Meier found that the students
in some city schools thought that choice would work, but only if
you didn't let the bad kids choose.[47] They saw the problems of
the schools not in terms of incompetent teachers and inept bureaucrats,
but in terms of other kids, especially violent ones. If the bad
kids can choose, too, the students said, what is the point? This
is skimming in the extreme, but youngsters see in concrete reality
and take as a given what has been stated in the abstract by some
adult critics of school choice: choice must skim off the best students
in order to work.
The Children's Educational Opportunity Foundation (usually referred
to as CEO America) listed statistics pertaining to violence in schools.[48]
It then proposed taking the well-behaved youngsters out by giving
them vouchers. It does not seem concerned about the difficult children;
it does not seem concerned about what increasing their proportions
while reducing resources would do to the schools where they remain.
This is not a solution.
For his part, Winerip reports on a meeting he attended in Jersey
City, New Jersey, at which parents were encouraged to sign up for
a new charter school run by Advantage Schools, Inc., of Boston.[49]
To some, the presentation sounded like a sales pitch for some new-fangled
widget. To others, the presenter seemed to come on more like a preacher
at a revival meeting. At this meeting parents learned that at a
Rocky Mount, North Carolina, school operated by Advantage, "Our
children on third level are reading The Iliad. In fifth grade they
read Homer's Odyssey." All the kindergartners could read. This last
item was an accomplishment Winerip heard about over and over again.
Like any good researcher but few education reporters, Winerip
checked the accuracy of the assertion. He visited the school. A
corporate spokesman from Boston flew down to escort him. "All the
kindergarten kids read, you know," the spokesman said. Winerip acknowledged
that Advantage had done a great job of remodeling the facility into
an attractive place, but he began to grow skeptical about its academics
when he found the school receptionist teaching a top fifth-grade
math group. She told him, "All you have to remember is that you
can't go off the script."
Advantage's description of"the script" sounds like a means to
prepare children to live in a society organized around principles
laid out by George Orwell in 1984 or by Aldous Huxley in Brave New
World. In a section of its website that deals with "Frequently Asked
Questions" Advantage says that
students will make eight to 12 responses each minute. This means
that students will make between 240 and 360 responses in a half-hour
lesson. If they have three DI [Direct Instruction, but Drill Instructor
works for me] lessons in a day, they will make between 720 and 1,180
responses each day. . . .
Q: Am I fight in concluding that all students respond at the same
time? Absolutely. It is critical that all students make the correct
responses. If a child doesn't respond, the teacher can't know whether
the child knows the right answer or not.[50]
In kindergarten, the script in math finds the teacher saying things
like "87 minus 1 equals 86. Everyone, what's the answer?" She snaps
her fingers, and all the children say, "87 minus 1 is 86"And TIMSS
claimed American public school teachers don't emphasize conceptual
understanding!
But when Winerip turned his observations from math to reading,
he went deliberately off the script: he brought his own books for
the kindergartners to read. Confronted with a book that began, "I
am a ghostie," a boy in the class could not cope with "I." Another
boy, given a book that opened with "Drip, drip, drop," fared no
better. Given repeated hints about the pictures showing falling
rain, the boy finally said "Rain drops . . . no, I don't know."
A girl managed to sound out a few of these words "in agonizingly
slow fashion." Of course, to many of us, "education" means going
off the script. Stay tuned.
Golden Apple
The Friends-in-Need Award goes jointly to Alan Krueger, an economist
at Princeton University, and Peter Schrag, recently retired as op-ed
page editor for the Sacramento Bee. Both reexamined the conventional
wisdom that our public schools have failed, Krueger in a paper delivered
to the New York Federal Research Bank Conference on Excellence in
Education and later published in the Economic Policy Review, and
Schrag in the October 1997 issue of the Atlantic.(1) Krueger wrote,
"Contrary to popular perception, most standardized test scores have
not declined in the last quarter century, and the National Assessment
of Educational Progress data show a modest upward trend."
Krueger's paper also partially corroborates data reported in the
September 1998 Kappan Research column, in which I noted that, over
a four-year span, black students and white students gained equal
amounts on various NAEP assessments. Krueger does not report data
by ethnicity, but he does show that lower-class and middle-class
students exhibit similar increases during the school year but that
lower-class students tend to lose ground over the summer while middle-class
youngsters continue to improve. (These data were originally reported
by Doris Entwistle and colleagues at Johns Hopkins University.)
Schrag provides a very balanced treatment of various myths concerning
decline, historical comparisons, and international comparisons.
Along the way he points out that good news about schools serves
no one's political agenda for education reform. Conservatives want
choice, vouchers, and privatization, so they bash away. Liberals
want to keep the schools public but with more resources for reading
tutors, smaller class sizes, and so on, so they, too, accentuate
the negative. In speeches I have pointed out that President Clinton
does not celebrate American 9-year-olds' second-place finish in
How in the World Do Students Read? Rather, he laments that only
40% of third-graders can "read independently" (a contention for
which he has no data).
To Schrag's conclusions, I would add that business and industry
and large universities are not always friends of the schools either.
Business and industry would like schools to do for free what they
must otherwise pay for in on-the-job training (something observed
by Jane Addams in 1897).(2) Thus they complain. The schools of education
in large research universities have invested heavily in crisis rhetoric
in order to pry money loose from governments and foundations by
arguing, in effect, "We have all these terrible problems in schools.
Give us a bundle, and we'll fix them."
When the TIMSS Final Year data appeared, Schrag phoned me to get
my take on them. After I gave him my views, I asked why he had mentioned
Iris Rotberg and me in his essay, but not David Berliner and Bruce
Biddle, whose book, The Manufactured Crisis, had appeared two years
prior. "Oh," said Schrag, "I wrote that article three years ago.
They [Atlantic editors] called recently and asked if it was still
timely. I just prettied it up a little."
1. Alan Krueger, "Reassessing the View That American Schools Are
Broken," Economic Policy Review, March 1998, pp. 29-43; and Peter
Schrag, "The Near-Myth of Our Failing Schools," Atlantic, October
1997, pp. 72-80.
2. Thomas Cochran, Business in American Life: A History (New York:
McGraw-Hill, 1972), pp. 131-32.
Golden Apples
The Ernest Hemingway Crap Detector Award goes to Paul Pekin, a
freelance writer in Chicago, for his article "School House Crock.'"
Pekin took on John Leo, U.S. News & Worm Report's perpetual
whiner, for writing about a report from the Mackinac Center for
Public Policy that claimed college students cannot handle simple
problems, such as "How much change should you get back after putting
down $3 to pay for a 60 cent bowl of soup and a $1.95 sandwich?"
Although the called-for answer is 45 cents, the real answer cannot
be determined, because it would depend on state and city taxes,
which vary greatly. Pekin reports that the Mackinac Center "turns
out to be a right-wing think tank, founded in 1987 with the aid
of John Engler, the present 'New Republican' governor of Michigan,
champion of school vouchers and privatization." Being right wing
is not synonymous with being wrong, of course, but as Pekin puts
it, "These attacks upon higher education have an eerie similarity."
Ditto those on elementary and secondary education. And they tend
to be funded by a small number of right-wing foundations, as reported
in the Center for Responsive Philanthropy's Moving a Public Policy
Agenda: The Strategic Philanthropy of Conservative Foundations.
Pekin notes that Leo did not cite the study formally and certainly
provided no data. For his part, Pekin gave the problem to his wife
to give to her college freshman composition class, "as multicultural
a group as anyone might hope to find." One student who had not yet
mastered English put down $30. The other 50 said 45 cents.
This is for you, John Leo. The state of Ohio asked some 4,000
new high school graduates to solve a similar problem.(2) "In your
job as a cashier, a customer gives you a $20 bill to pay for a can
of coffee that costs $3.84. How much change should you give back?"
Granted, this problem has one step fewer, and these are high school
graduates, not college students. But only 5% of them could not cope
with it.
1. Paul Pekin, "School House Crock," Extra!, January/February
1998, pp. 9-10. Pekin's article first appeared in the 12 September
1997 issue of Chicago Reader.
2. Knowledge and Know-How (Columbus: Ohio Department of Education
and Ohio Business Roundtable, 1998).
The Right On! Award is captured by the Heritage Foundation for
a manifesto in its house magazine, Policy Review, titled "Still
a Nation at Risk.'" Despite the derivative and mistaken title, this
piece pointed out that
in the midst of our flourishing economy, we are re-creating a
dual school system, separate and unequal, almost half a century
after government-sanctioned segregation was declared unconstitutional.
We face a widening and unacceptable chasm between good schools and
bad, between those youngsters who get an adequate education and
those who emerge from school barely able to read and write. Poor
and minority children, by and large, go to worse schools, have less
expected of them, are taught by less knowledgeable teachers, and
have the least power to alter bad situations.
This analysis identifies one of our most horrific problems with
much greater clarity and accuracy than the original report, A Nation
at Risk, which was mostly a golden treasury of ideologically selected
and slanted statistics. Familiar names among the manifesto's signatories
include Diane Ravitch, William Bennett, Denis Doyle, Herbert J.
Walberg, and Chester E. Finn, Jr.
1. Heritage Foundation, "Still a Nation at Risk," Policy Review,
July/August 1998, pp. 23-29.
Rotten Apple
The Who Are They Talking About? Award goes to the Heritage Foundation
for its article "Still a Nation at Risk." Having identified the
current risk (and received a Golden Apple for the effort), the Heritage
Foundation goes on to discuss "Delusion and Indifference":
Regrettably, some educators and commentators have responded to
the persistence of mediocre performance by engaging in denial, self-delusion,
and blame shifting. Instead of acknowledging that there are real
and urgent problems, they deny that there are any problems at all.
. . . Then, of course, there is the fantasy that America's education
crisis is a fraud, something invented by enemies of public schools.(1)
Well, advocates of vouchers and privatization aren't exactly friends
of public schools. But who on Earth are they talking about? Me?
I've emphasized the problems of the poor in virtually every Bracey
Report. In the Fourth Bracey
Report, I pointed out that, while advantaged
urban students scored as high in an international math study as
the highest countries (Taiwan and Korea), disadvantaged urban students
did not score as high as the lowest country. Nowhere have I ever
suggested, as the Heritage article implies, that some students can't
be held to high standards.
Are they talking about David Berliner and Bruce Biddle? Probably.
But in The Manufactured Crisis, Berliner and Biddle devote an entire
chapter to real problems in the schools, which include poverty and
racial discrimination. They write, "American schools face a series
of daunting challenges. . . . The future of American students depends
on whether we can spread the best features of our schools more equitably."
Later, in a chapter devoted to changes that would improve schools,
they call for doing away with ability grouping and tracking, hardly
a proposal that would issue from people who have low expectations
for some students.
Perhaps the Heritage Foundation is suffering its own delusion.
Note that the first statement, which earns Heritage its Golden Apple,
contradicts the rhetoric that wins it a Rotten Apple. The second
statement presents the tired claim that mediocrity prevails everywhere;
the first limits it to poor kids and minorities. In order to champion
the poor, the Right is now having to admit that the real problem
is not that the whole nation is at risk, but that we have a system
of good schools and bad. This admission turns up with great frequency
these days in calls for vouchers.
1. The Heritage Foundation, "Still a Nation at Risk," Policy Review,
July/August 1998, pp. 23-29.
Rotten Apple
The With Friends Like These Award goes to the Ontario Ministry
of Education and Training. Recall that Ontario is home to John Snobelen,
the man who as education minister once said that "you have to generate
a sense of crisis" about the education system. He's out of office,
but his spirit lives on in his successor, David Johnson. The ministry
constructed the graph shown below.
This bar graph shows eighth-grade TIMSS math results for the top
seven countries. ("Slovenia" should have been "Slovak Republic."
Guess they don't study geography in the ministry.) The chart also
shows science results, but the grapher assumed that the countries
finished in the same order in science as in math, so most of the
scores are wrongly assigned.
What's worse, these countries' scores are followed by the Canadian
results and then by the provincial results for the five provinces
that tested sufficient numbers of students to generate reliable
provincial estimates. From this graph one would conclude that Canada
was the lowest-scoring country and that only British Columbia had
scores higher than the next-lowest country. And poor Ontario, it's
the lowest of the low in lowly Canada. Having deliberately constructed
a graph to portray Canada as a loser, the ministry sent it to every
household in the province.
There are, of course, 33 more countries in TIMSS, and, as a nation,
Canada scored above average in both math and science. Ontario's
math score is merely one percentage point below the international
average, and its science score is just two percentage points off
the international mean.
Rotten Apple
The Schools Can Never Win Award goes jointly to the Toronto Globe
and Mail and the Washington Post.[1] This prize might have been
named The Manufactured Crisis Goes Global Award. The Globe and Mail
looked at the results of the First International Adult Literacy
Survey, in which Canadians did fairly well, and declared that no
country could be happy with the results (probably a surprise to
the top-ranked Swedes, who, as reported in the March 1998 Kappan
Research column, are quite satisfied with their schools). The Washington
Post has constantly upbraided U.S. schools for low finishes in international
studies. But in an editorial, the Post observed that the nations
in FIALS did not differ significantly from the U.S. (which finished
just behind first-place Sweden in the proportion of good readers).
Rather than congratulate U.S. schools for being at least as good
as other nations, the editorial declared, "This grim news may at
least have the advantage of diluting the temptation, common among
education reformers, to dream that somewhere out there exists the
perfect system that America should adopt wholesale." Another manufactured
crisis: coming soon to a country near you.
1. Alanna Mitchell, "Weak Literacy Skills Imperil Prosperity,"
Globe and Mail, 7 December 1997, p. A-14: and "School Reform Maryland
Style," Washington Post, 13 December 1997, p. A-22.
Rotten Apple
The Least Ability to Follow One's Own LogicAward goes to American
Enterprise Institute fellow James K. Glassman. A Glassman column
in the Washington Post pitched school vouchers and the privatization
of Social Security. While arguing that "education monopolists" are
part of the problem of terrible schools, Glassman also contended
that "Americans can raise their own babies and drive in the rain.
They can certainly figure out how to buy and hold mutual funds and
pick good schools for their kids."[1] Glassman must have a chauffeured
limo; otherwise he'd notice that traffic slows to a crawl around
Washington when the rains fall. In any case, a number of mutual
fund managers haven't fared all that well even in the longest "bull
market" in history, and some work by Amy Stuart Wells casts doubt
on the likely success of Americans' choice of schools.[2] Letter
writers were quick to point out that mutual fund owners given an
"Investment I.Q." test by Money magazine didn't do very well.[3]
Still, let's grant Glassman his contentions for a moment. Where
do you suppose Americans got as smart as he thinks they are? In
our monopolistic schools, perchance?
1. James K. Glassman, "The Myth of the Ignorant American," Washington
Post, 30 June 1998, p. A-15.
2. Amy Stuart Wells, "The Sociology of Choice: Why Some Win and
Others Lose in the Education Marketplace," in Edith Rasell and Richard
Rothstein, eds., School Choice: Examining the Evidence (Washington,
D.C.: Economic Policy Institute, 1993), pp. 29-48.
3. See Letters to the Editor, Washington Post, 27 July 1998, p.
A-22.
Rotten Apple
The Whirling Dervish Spin Award goes to James Glassman, columnist
and host of the TV talk show "Techno-Politics," and to the show's
producer, Jack Harris of Blackwell Productions.
"Would you come to a studio to be interviewed on camera about
TIMSS for 'Techno-Politics?'" Harris asked me by phone. Sure. "Techno-Politics"
is a cross in format between "60 Minutes" and the Sunday morning
talk shows. It airs in Washington, D.C., on Saturday mornings on
PBS. I hope everyone else was watching cartoons. I went and chatted
with Harris for an hour, and all went well - or so I thought. The
interview allowed me to make all the points I'd made in the May
and September issues of the Kappan.
A few days later, Harris called to say that "a few shots" had
been spoiled because of a camera problem. He asked whether they
could come to my house to reshoot. Sure, They showed up and took
forever to get the camera to work right - so they said. Now I'm
not so certain it wasn't a ruse to try and make me impatient and
so perhaps Jess articulate. Although the interviewer had called
it a reshoot, all the questions were new.
I had never heard of "Techno-Politics" and had no idea what the
show's politics were. But I knew I was in trouble when the show
began and the host walked on camera and said, "Hi, I'm Jim Glassman."
Other than Milton Friedman, I doubt there is anyone in the country
who believes more strongly in the divine hand of a free market than
James K. Glassman. Aside from the market, Glassman, a fellow at
the American Enterprise Institute, loves all things Right and hates
the public schools and their defenders.
Glassman attempted to show - with large dollops of sarcasm, crosscuts,
and voice-overs - that, while the TIMSS Final Year results clearly
show American schools to be unmitigated disasters, I and Howard
Gardner and a few others have been trying to portray low TIMSS test
scores as good news. The tape was edited to try and make all of
us look like idiots. None of the footage I had shot earlier was
used. Only one of my many problems with the TIMSS data got mentioned.
The second interview was clearly a ploy to try to elicit less-than-intelligent,
lessthan-articulate statements. The segment closed with Secretary
of Education Richard Riley noting - at his TIMSS press conference
- that we need "less ideology and more geometry." Later, I was able
to laugh about that.
Rotten Apple
The Least Valid Index of Effectiveness Award goes, for a second
consecutive year, to Herbert Walberg of the University of Illinois,
Chicago, though this year Professor Walberg shares it with Chester
E. Finn, Jr., former assistant secretary of education. At first
blush, one would think that a recipient could not lay claim to a
second prize for the same performance, but perennial Rotten Apple
winner Walberg manages to do so - though he had to inveigle fellow
ideologue Finn into publishing with him (the report was first published
under Walberg's name on the website of Finn's foundation).[1]
Their joint venture, on the op-ed page of the Wall Street Journal,
was titled "World's Least Efficient Schools." Walberg received his
award in 1997 for claiming that the U.S. teaches reading least effectively.
He used data from the 1992 lEA study of reading, wherein only one
country of 27, Finland, outscored the U.S. at the 9-year-old level
and only one country of 31, Finland again, outscored the U.S. significantly
at the 14-year-old level. Some inefficient learning, huh?
Still, the American kids did make the least "progress" between
the ages of 9 and 14, as measured by subtracting the scores of the
9-year-olds from those of the 14-year-olds. This is not valid in
itself, but never mind. Walberg's measure of money spent said we
spend a lot relative to other nations, so he claimed that, when
you spend a lot and gain a little, you are the least effective.
Looking at the results, I noticed that the top-ranked Finns made
the second-least progress and that, in general, those nations that
scored well at the younger age made the least progress, while those
who scored low made the greatest strides. Such an outcome should
alert a researcher with only one eye open that something statistically
weird is afoot. In this case, it was mostly a matter of the age
at which students start school. Countries with early starts scored
well but made less progress; countries with late starts didn't look
so good as 9-year-olds but caught up. (Finland was a notable exception,
a late starter and number one in the world at both ages.)
Finn and Walberg repeated these findings and extended their "analysis"
to include TIMSS Final Year data. One chart shows that, of 16 nations,
Iceland was 16th at the eighth-grade level and fifth in the final
year (12th grade for the U.S.). Finn and Walberg thus called Iceland
the "most productive" country. They didn't seem to notice that between
the eighth grade and the last year of secondary school American
students grew older by four years, while the Icelandic "kids" aged
fully seven years! The students tested by Iceland in the TIMSS Final
Year study were 21.3 years old; those in the U.S. were 18.1. To
get comparable results Finn and Walberg would have had to test American
college students in the fall of their senior year. (There were,
of course, 41 countries participating at the eighth-grade level,
not 16, but Finn and Walberg compared only those nations with scores
at both levels.)
1. Chester E. Finn, Jr., and Herbert J. Walberg, "The World's
Least Effective Schools," Wall Street Journal, 22 June 1998, p.
A-22: and Herbert J. Walberg, "Spending More While Learning Less,"
at http://.www.edexcellence.net/walberg.html.
Rotten Apple
The Statistics from Thin Air Award is given in thirds to William
Jefferson Clinton, Albert Gore, and Brett Lovejoy, executive director
of the American Vocational Association. Clinton and Gore get their
prizes belatedly for a letter to the editor in the 11 October 1995
edition of USA Today, claiming that by 2000, "60% of all jobs will
require advanced technological skills." In a debate with me at the
1998 annual meeting of the National School Boards Association, Lovejoy
claimed that the technical sector "makes up 65% of available jobs."
He later repeated this assertion in an editorial in his association's
house organ.[1]
When I asked Lovejoy by letter for a citation, he at first declined
to respond. When pressed, he claimed that "the figure is a BLS projection.
If you take issue with that citation, so be it." I did take issue,
noting that his response was not a "citation," for it did not provide
a document name, author, number, or date. Certainly this "projection"
did not come from the Bureau of Labor Statistics prognostications
in Employment Outlook: 1994-2005 (Bulletin 2472), which was summarized
in the June 1996 Kappan Research column. Certainly, this "projection"
did not come from the more recent November 1997 issue of the Monthly
Labor Review, which contains forecasts from 1996 to 2006. Five categories
account for about 70% of all jobs: executive (10.5%), professional
specialist (15.2%), marketing (17.1%), clerical (8.7%), and service
(16.7%). But "technicians" account for a mere 3.7% of the labor
force. If we add "precision production, craft, and repair," the
"technical" category increases by 10.2%, and putting in "operators,
fabricators, and laborers" gives us another 12.8%. Even so, these
three "technical" categories still account for only a quarter of
all jobs.
Anthony Carnevale and Stephen Rose of Educational Testing Service
provide a different view of the labor force, but theirs doesn't
contain all that many technical workers either. Carnevale and Rose
look at what people actually do rather than at the industries in
which they work. The subtitle of their report tells the story: Education
for What? The New Office Economy. Some 41% of all workers work in
offices. White collars carry the day among these clerical workers,
supervisors, managers, sales reps, and accountants. These researchers
count some professionals - such as lawyers, computer specialists,
and editors - as office workers. And the low-skilled service sector
accounts for another 20%, which doesn't leave a lot of room for
the technical types.
It is important to emphasize that the office sector is not composed
solely of people doing routine office work. "It employs the decision-makers
in management, supervision, coordination, promotion, and planning."
The payoff for a college education comes, Carnevale and Rose contend,
not so much from technical skills acquired, but from the fact that
such an education is necessary to break into these types of jobs.
These are the ones who are getting ahead in the current economy.
The workers who are most closely identified with specialized high-tech
skills have not been the ones whose paychecks have risen. Instead,
it is the managers, lawyers, doctors, and other business professionals
who have caused the earnings of college-educated people to increase.
In cases where these highly educated workers do not obtain elite
jobs, their earnings have declined and were lower in 1995 than managers
and professionals with just high school diplomas.[2]
When I saw the Clinton/Gore missive, I sent letters to both, asking
them for a citation for the 60% figure and for a definition of "advanced
technological skills." To increase my chances of getting the info,
I sent copies of the letter to Secretary of Education Richard Riley
and Robert Reich, who was then still secretary of labor. My four
epistles produced one response. Someone in Riley's office wrote
to tell me that she was certain that someone in Reich's office could
answer my questions!
1. Brett Lovejoy, "Misleading America's Youth," Inside AVA, April
1998, p. 40.
2. Anthony P. Carnevale and Stephen J. Rose, Education for What?
The New Office Economy (Princeton, N.J.: Educational Testing Service,
1998), p. 52.
Rotten Apple
The Back to Statistics 101 and My Arithmetic Is Shaky Too Award
goes to David Boaz, executive vice president of the Cato Institute,
and to R. Morris Barrett, a writer. In "What Would School Vouchers
Buy? The Real Cost of Private Schools," a Cato Briefing Paper, Boaz
and Barrett followed a grand tradition of conservative school critics
and glommed onto the changes in SAT verbal scores as evidence of
public school failure.[1] (They don't mention the SAT math scores,
because they can't remotely be used for their purposes.) Wrote Boaz
and Barrett.
It is sometimes claimed by the education establishment that test
scores have fallen because more students are taking college admissions
tests these days. But the absolute number of students with outstanding
scores has fallen dramatically as well: in 1972, 2,817 students
scored above 750 (out of a possible 800), and another 116,630 scored
above 600. By 1994 those figures had dropped to 1,438 and 79,606
respectively.
Boaz and Barrett just happened to start their analysis with the
year in which the largest number of students in the history of the
SAT sat for it. The boomers were passing through college, and in
1972 1,398,400 of them applied to schools requiring the SAT. In
1994, 25% fewer students - only 1,050,386 - took the SAT. Thus,
even if the proportions of high scorers had stayed exactly the same,
there would have been 25% fewer high-scoring students in 1994.
The proportions of high scorers did fall in this period, but only
a bit: from 0.20% to 0.14% for those 750 and higher and from 8.34%
to 7.58% for those scoring above 600. During the same period, the
proportion of students scoring above 700 on the SAT math subtest
(I do not have figures for above 750 on math) rose from 3.2% to
4.85%, while the proportion of students getting at least a 600 went
from 16.36% to 18.90.%
Boaz and Barrett survey various cities and gather figures on tuition
fees that private schools charge. This leads them to conclude that
the average private school tuition is less than half of the per-pupil
expenditure in the average public school. By collecting only tuition
figures, they conveniently do not inquire about subsidies to the
private schools from institutions, such as churches. Nor do they
put their conclusions in harm's way by wondering how many people
in the nation are willing to teach for what many private schools
pay or by factoring into their calculations such costs as special
education, transportation, food services, and so on. You get the
picture.
Recall that Money magazine editors concluded that, if you live
in a suburb and send your kids to private school, you're probably
wasting your money.[2]
1. David Boaz and R. Morris Barrett, "What Would School Vouchers
Buy: The Real Cost of Private Schools" is available on the Cato
Institute website at www.cato.org.
2. Denise M. Topolnicki, "Private Schools Are Rarely Worth the
Money" Money, October 1994, pp. 94-112.
Rotten Apple
The Dumb and Dumber Award goes to the Florida legislature. After
making some scholarship funds contingent on SAT scores, the Florida
lawmakers found that they didn't have enough money to pay for all
the budding scholars. "No one really believed that many kids would
make that score on the SAT, and we are overwhelmed by the performance
of our young opie" said Betty Holzendorf, a Democratic legislator
from Jacksonville.[1] In fairness, the criterion score for eligibility
was not very high, but the legislature should have known in advance
approximately how many Florida students would qualify. (Hint: use
data from prior years.) I wonder what the average SAT score for
the lawmakers would be?
1. Ryan Gravatt, "Scholars Too Costly for State," Florida Times
Union, 3 April 1998, p. A-1.
Rotten Apple
The Maybe American Schools Do Teach Reading Least Efficiently
Award goes to unknown New York Times headline writers (who will
probably want to remain incognito) for the following: "I.Q.s Are
Up. SATs Are Down. Americans Flunk Math and Prosper. Somebody with
Brains Should Figure This Out."[1] Actually, the article under the
headline reported that SAT math scores had just hit a 26-year high.
For the record, verbal scores are at a nine-year high, but there
has been so little variability in the SAT verbal over the last 20
years that most people would probably call the scores "stable" or
"static" (depending on one's ideology). Both "highs" are calculated
with the recentered scale only.
1. George Johnson, "Tests Show Nobody's Smart About Intelligence,"
New York Times, 1 March 1998, sect. 4, p. 1.
Rotten Apple
The We Don't Have to Check for Accuracy 'Cause We All Know It's
True Award goes to the Florida Times Union of Jacksonville. This
paper opened its 7 July 1998 editorial, headlined "Allowing Choice,"
with these words: "Here's a Jeopardy-type puzzle: the president,
vice president, half the U.S. Senate, a third of the House, and
about 40% of the public school teachers. The question is, who sends
their children to private schools?"[1] I can't vouch for the accuracy
of the other figures, but the Times Union inflated the proportion
of public school teachers who use private schools for their children
by more than 330%.
Denis Doyle's 1995 analysis of 1990 census figures (Where Do Connoisseurs
Send Their Children to School?) showed that 12.1% of public school
teachers had children in private schools.[2] Doyle's analysis was
published by fellow choice zealot Jeanne Allen's Center for Education
Reform, and perhaps both Allen and Doyle would have preferred to
have found a higher proportion. But they didn't, and they didn't
claim that they did. The percentage was actually lower than the
general public's rate of 13.1%. (Interested readers will find a
longer discussion of this topic in the Fifth Bracey
Report in the October 1995 Kappan.)
By the way, Doyle's report also revealed that only one-third of
private school teachers send their children to private schools.
1. "Allowing Choice," Florida Times Union, 7 July 1998, p. A-10.
2. Denis Doyle, Where Do Connoisseurs Send Their Children to School?
An Analysis of 1990 Census Data to Determine Where School Teachers
Send Their Children to School (Washington, D.C.: Center for Education
Reform, 1995).
Rotten Apple
The Sam Goldwyn/Mark Twain 'It's Dangerous to Make Predictions,
Especially About the Future' Award goes to Richard Judy and Carol
D'Amico, the authors of Workforce 2020. I often note in speeches
that the data presented in the Hudson Institute's 1987 publication
Workforce 2000 did not always say what the text claimed they said.
The situation with the sequel, Workforce 2020, is simpler: assertions
therein are contradicted by daily events that everyone already knows
about.
Completely ignoring the seven-year recession in Japan (by now,
it has reached eight years), Judy and D'Amico write, "Today Asia
is the most dynamic continent in terms of economic trade expansion.
. . . The Asian economic expansion is likely to continue for decades,
because the labor 'reserves' of the largest and most rapidly growing
Asian countries will persist into the twenty-first century."[1]
No comment.
Judy and D'Amico also reiterate the contention from Workforce
2000 that the nation faces an imminent skilled labor crisis (a contention
refuted by 2000's own data). "Unless the education and skill levels
of the American workforce are upgraded, America's productivity and
prosperity will grow less quickly than is desirable" (p. 85). Sounds
ominous, but note that they make no argument for a decline, only
for growth less rapid than "desirable." (One might ask, For whom?
Surely not Alan Greenspan?)
They rightly observe that the proportion of jobs requiring skilled
labor is increasing. And they cite figures from the Department of
Labor's Dictionary of Occupational Titles, which categorizes jobs
by the levels of skill they demand in language, mathematics, and
reasoning, and point out that the jobs being lost are almost all
classified as "low skilled." But so are most of the jobs being created:
71% of new jobs will require only low or moderate levels of skill
in language, 67% will require only low or moderate levels of skill
in reasoning, and fully 84% will require only low or moderate levels
of skill in math. These data come from pages 81-84 of Workforce
2020.
1. Richard W. Judy and Carol D'Amico, Workforce 2020 (Indianapolis:
Hudson Institute, 1997), pp. 31-32.
1. John Schwartz, "Pat Journalism: When We PrePackage the News,
We Miss the Story," Washington Post, 19 April 1998, p. C-1.
2. Ethan Bronner, "U.S. 12th-Graders Rank Poorly in Math and Science,
Study Says," New York Trines, 25 February 1998, p. A-1.
3. Ethan Bronner, "Freedom in Math Class May Outweigh Tests,"
New York Trines, 2 March 1998, p. A-1.
4. Rene Sanchez, "U.S. High School Seniors Rank Near Bottom,"
Washington Post, 25 February 1998, p.A-l.
5. Debra Viadero, "U.S. Seniors Near Bottom in World Test," Education
Week, 4 March 1998, p. 1.
6. John Leo, "Hey, We're #19!," U.S. News & World Report,
9 March 1998, p. 14.
7. Chester E. Finn., Jr., "Why America Has the World's Dimmest
Bright Kids," Wall Street Journal, 25 February 1998, p. A-22.
8. Gerald W. Bracey, "Comparisons Mean Little," USA Today, 25
February 1998, p. A-11.
9. David Friedman, "International Tests Reveal Little About U.S.
Students' Real Problems," Los Angeles Times, 15 March 1998, Opinion
Section, p. 1.
10. Iris Rotberg, "Interpretation of International Test Score
Comparisons," Science, 15 May 1998, pp. 1030-31.
11. Iris Rotberg, "I Never Promised You First Place," Phi Delta
Kappan, December 1990, pp. 296-303.
12. William Drozdiak, "German Students Take to the Streets," Washington
Post, 27 November 1997, p. A-39.
13. Profiles of College Bound Seniors (New York: College Entrance
Examination Board and Educational Testing Service, 1982, 1997).
14. Jay Mathews, "Class Struggle," Newsweek, 20 March 1998, pp.
52-55; and idem, Class Struggle: What's Wrong (and Right) with America's
Best Public High Schools (New York: Times Books, 1998).
15. National Commission on Excellence in Education, A Nation at
Risk: The Imperative for Educational Reform (Washington, D.C.: U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1983). p. 7.
16. David T. Kearns and Denis P. Doyle, Winning the Brain Race,
rev. ed. (San Francisco: ICS Press, 1991), pp. 80-81.
17. Thomas L. Friedman, "The Big Ship Economy," New York Times,
21 July 1998, p. A-21. At many gas stations in the Washington, D.C.,
area, Friedman's imaginings have already come true: regular gasoline
was selling for 99.9 cents a gallon; Diet Coke was selling for 30
cents a pint.
18. Robert J. Samuelson, "Too Good to Last?," Washington Post,
22 July 1998, p. A-17. As this issue of the Kappan was being prepared,
another major "correction" buffeted the U.S. stock market, but analysts
remained unsure whether it meant that the "boom" was ending.
19. Edmund L. Andrews, "Europe's Clunkers Shift to Fast Lane,"
New York Times, 9 July 1998, p. D-1.
20. Robert J. Samuelson, "Stupid Students, Smart Economy?," Washington
Post, 12 March 1998, p. A-15.
21. William Drozdiak, "Even Allies Resent U.S. Dominance," Washington
Post, 4 November 1997, p. 1.
22. William Finnegan, "Prosperous Times, Except for the Young,"
New York Times, 12 June 1998, p. A-23. See also idem, Cold New World:
Growing Up in a Harder Country (New York: Random House, 1998).
23. Paul E. Barton, Toward Inequality: Disturbing Trends in Higher
Education (Princeton, N.J.: Educational Testing Service, October
1997), p. 11.
24. Paul T. Decker et al., Education and the Economy: An Indicators
Report (Washington, D.C.: National Center for Education Statistics,
Report No. NCES 97-269, 1997).
25. Edwin Dean of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, personal communication,
16 July 1998.
26. Anthony J. Carnevale, Education and Training for America's
Future (Washington, D.C.: Manufacturing Institute, 1998).
27. Henry M. Levin, "Education Performance Standards and the Economy,"
Educational Researcher, May 1998, pp. 4-11.
28. Alex Molnar, Giving Kids the Business: The Commercialization
of America's Schools (Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1996), p.
82.
29. Benjamin Barber, "America Skips School," Harper's Magazine,
November 1993, pp. 39-46.
30. Dan Seligman, "The Low Productivity of the Education Industry,"
Fortune, October 1958, p. 135.
31. Dan Seligman, "Ignoring the Facts," Forbes, 15 June 1998,
p. 104.
32. For a discussion of Seligman's 1958 article and of the flaws
in the work of Eric Hanushek, on whose analyses Seligman now hangs
his hat, see Gerald W. Bracey, Final Exam: A Study of the Perpetual
Scrutiny of American Schools (Bloomington, Ind.: Agency for Instructional
Technology, 1995), pp. 159-65.
33. William Cells III, "Despite Touted Gifts, Business Tax Breaks
Cost Schools Money," New York Times, 22 May 1991, p. A-1.
34. Molnar, p. 14.
35. Jay Taylor, "Desperate for Dollars," American School Board
Journal, September 1992, p. 23.
36. Gerald W. Bracey, "Money Does Matter" School Administrator,
May 1996, pp. 38-41.
37. Alan Krueger, "Experimental Estimates of Education Production
Functions," Working Paper, Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University,
Princeton, N.J., March 1998; and David Grissmer, Ann Flanagan, and
Stephanie Williamson, "Why Did the BlackWhite Score Gap Narrow in
the 1970s and 1980s?," in Christopher Jencks and Meredith Phillips,
eds., The Black-White Score Gap (Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution,
1998), pp. 182-226.
38. David Grissmer et al., Student Achievement and the Changing
American Family (Washington, D.C.: RAND Corporation, 1994).
39. Alex Molnar, |