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Monday, July 24, 2006
Star Parker :: Townhall.com Columnist
How to spend limited taxpayer education dollars
by Star Parker
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The National Center for Education Statistics, part of the U.S. Department of Education, has just released a study comparing the performance of fourth- and eighth-graders in public and private schools. As important as this research may sound, I think it is more a symptom of our education problems than a useful tool in solving them.

Generally, studies show students in private schools outperforming students in public schools. However, in this research, statistical adjustment was made to account for differences in socioeconomic background.

The result: Whereas the raw data shows superior performance in private schools, much of that differential is eradicated after the statistical massaging. Public-school fourth-graders did better; however, the reading advantage at the eighth-grade level remained with the private-school kids.

Predictably, the National Education Association wasted no time to use this study to affirm the unqualified success of the public-school system and to use it as ammo to further load up in its endless and tireless attack on vouchers and school choice.

But there are many things the study doesn't say.

One, as John Tierney of The New York Times points out, is that, on average, private-school tuition is about half of what the average public school spends per student (no, most private schools are not fancy New England prep schools). So, even after going through statistical gymnastics to account for differences in kids' backgrounds, public schools spend far more to get not much better results.

Tierney goes on to point out that studies specifically designed to test results for providing a choice option in a district under controlled circumstances show that kids with vouchers do better.

But, frankly, with limited taxpayer dollars available, and 3 million kids nationwide in failing schools, is funding more research what we need?

Let's keep in mind that this is work funded by the Department of Education. The department was established in 1979 by President Jimmy Carter to improve education in our country. The department's budget then was $14.5 billion. Today, its budget has grown sixfold. Yet over the same period of time there has been virtually zero change, on average, in test scores.

Now I have no doubt that many of the bureaucrats walking the halls of the Department of Education are very fine people. But my common sense is violated to think that a parent in Los Angeles, where my organization CURE is headquartered, needs a single one of these folks in Washington to get his or her child educated. I certainly question that parents need much, or indeed any, of the reams of research and studies the department conducts to get their child educated.

The Department of Education may report that, on average, after filtering out socioeconomic differences, fourth-graders in public schools did better on tests than fourth-graders in private schools. But what are black and Latino parents with kids in Los Angeles Unified School District schools supposed to do with this information? Nine out of 10 black and Latino fourth-graders in L.A. public schools score below proficiency in reading and math.

What are the parents of the 250,000 kids in Los Angeles who are in schools that are failing by No Child Left Behind standards supposed to do with this information?

Can anyone still in touch with their common sense doubt that these parents would prefer having a choice where to send their kids to school? Anyone who does doubt this should talk to these parents. My staff does. We're working with them and trying to get at least the school choice that No Child Left Behind guarantees them.

We, along with the Alliance for School Choice, have filed complaints with the school districts in Los Angeles that they are not in compliance with NCLB because they are not informing parents that they have the option to transfer their child. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings has given the districts until Aug. 15 to respond to our complaint or have their Title I funds from the federal government jeopardized.

Choice, competition and freedom are core values that define what we are about as a nation. It is troubling to think that we have gotten to the point where these truths are no longer obvious and we have to do research to try and figure out if they are a good idea.

The Bush administration proposal to appropriate $100 million in opportunity scholarships for poor kids in failing schools is a needed program. Let's use our limited taxpayer dollars to enhance education freedom for poor families and not on superfluous research and bureaucracy.

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About The Author
Star Parker is the founder and president of CURE, the Coalition for Urban Renewal & Education, a 501c3 think tank which explores and promotes market based public policy to fight poverty, as well as author of White Ghetto: How Middle Class America Reflects Inner City Decay.
 
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How to Lie With Statistics
There is a great book by this title. The basic theme of the book is that you can say anything you want with the exact same set of statistics just by interpreting them differently. The classic is either showing the entire axis of a line graph or just zoom in on the line graph. (Very little variation versus lots of variation.)

When results are "controlled" for socioeconomic factors as this one was, I get nervous. This is a very sophisticated way to "lie with statistics."

I am a public school teacher, but I really have no problem with vouchers, homeschooling, private schooling, or competition. Public schools are free to compete and innovate. There are a number of excellent public schools out there. Of course, there are many horrible schools, and the majority fit into the complacent middle. I don't fear competition because I'm ready to compete!

nclb
No Child Left Behind is only advantageous if your school is a Title 1 school. Our local high school has been identified as a school in need of improvement for 3 years in a row and 2 years in a row in the special ed department. Standard reading tests show the school to only have 40% of the students scoring at or above proficiency. That means 60% score below. In math tests only 22% met or exceeded the standards. That means 78% did not. Because the school is not a Title 1 school we have no school choice and they don't really have to do anything. The socioeconomic factor has nothing to do with whether a school is providing a good education or not. The market values of houses in our town are in general from about $180,000 to $500,000 with a few lower and few higher values.
The NEA doesn't really care about a quality education. If it did they would be jumping all over the opportunity for vouchers and school choice and real accountability and job performance of the teachers and administrators. If for nothing else to prove what high quality services they are providing.

Choice For Schools
Those who advocate vouchers to get kids out of "failing" public schools always leave one important fact out of the equation... What about choice for the school system?

By that I mean that currently private schools have "choice" in that they can choose NOT to educate any child they wish. They simply dismiss them from the school.

By and large, this is why private schools have NO issue with discipline in the classroom, which, in my opinion is the PRIMARY reason why public schools are "failing" today.

I base this on experience. I serve on a local Board of Education. My wife is a teacher in a Title I school in the same town. We've both seen the affects that a small percentage of discipline problems can have on the whole classroom.

Let's stop beating the voucher drum and start giving public schools the tools to deal effectively with the students that are causing the issues.


How to spend limited taxpayer education
The Education Department cribbed their article from a self justification of the public school disaster from a School of Education in Michigan. The latter took data from the original unfavorable report and by weighting certain variables kowtowed to the 19th Century closed shop industrial union known as the AFT. And here I thought the closed shop was illegal.

I have worked as a professional assisting school districts in the financing of their bond issues for thirty years.

What I observe today is general public distrust of a system in which Education Quality (Value) has stagnated while Education Costs have skyrocketed. I see also in my home state the Agency responsible for enforcing standards dumbing down the tests and norming up the results making the individual districts look better.

The President's Advisory Commission on Science and Technology in 2004 reported that in the math and science curricula, European and east Asian (plus India) schools rank generally higher. Indeed, our vaunted advance placement programs in Mathematics and in Science are at the bottom of the heap.

This is as our country faces a 21st century world economy in which we must compete.

The National Governors Association reports that the states are spending more than $2 Billion per year in remediation for entering high school graduates. This requires extra course work and postponing graduation.

I have seen the problems with the Teachers Unions and their closed shops under which seniority in the system rules and the toughest jobs can be avoided by invoking seniority.

The systems are rife with teachers without subject matter mastery but advanced education degrees marching up the salary increase ladder. Teachers refuse to be periodically tested regarding their knowledge. Final years' salaries are artificially inflated to maximize pensions -- retirement pensions that can be drawn while the teacher or administrator gets paid well for a second job.

The military annually retires highly qualified officers and senior NCO who have taught at schools and service academies and universities. Smart and motivated, they are unable to be certified until schools of education pass them through a twelve month minimum curriculum.

And finally, legislators seeing parents and teachers as a bloc vote of support refuse to recognize that there might be room for improvement. The natural knee jerk result is to appropriate more money, as if funding were the solution. It is not.

The increase in quality which the parents, the students and the taxpayers want can only come from an opening of the field of public education to full Competitive Choice. It has been done in San Francisco and in Edmonton. Vest each student with his share of Education moneys. Allow each family to choose the public, parochial, private or home school subject only to accreditation by a reformed State Agency, but managed by the home Public School District. That District will retain to improve its own capabilities the overages. Special needs students will receive additional vesting.

The future of the country will be reflected in the quality of the education which the students receive. They are presently, being shortchanged. The dreams of the parents rest in the quality of education their children received. They are presently being interrupted. The system is broken and it must be fixed.

The CATO article is at

http://www.cato-at-liberty.org/2006/07/16/the-school-choice-movements-greatest-failure/


pete speer
Indian Creek Il
peterdee99@hotmail.com

Lies, Damn Lies and Statistics
The Education Department cribbed their article from a self justification of the public school disaster from a School of Education in Michigan. The latter took data from the original unfavorable report and by weighting certain variables kowtowed to the 19th Century closed shop industrial union known as the AFT. And here I thought the closed shop was illegal.

I have worked as a professional assisting school districts in the financing of their bond issues for thirty years.

What I observe today is general public distrust of a system in which Education Quality (Value) has stagnated while Education Costs have skyrocketed. I see also in my home state the Agency responsible for enforcing standards dumbing down the tests and norming up the results making the individual districts look better.

The President's Advisory Commission on Science and Technology in 2004 reported that in the math and science curricula, European and east Asian (plus India) schools rank generally higher. Indeed, our vaunted advance placement programs in Mathematics and in Science are at the bottom of the heap.

This is as our country faces a 21st century world economy in which we must compete.

The National Governors Association reports that the states are spending more than $2 Billion per year in remediation for entering high school graduates. This requires extra course work and postponing graduation.

I have seen the problems with the Teachers Unions and their closed shops under which seniority in the system rules and the toughest jobs can be avoided by invoking seniority.

The systems are rife with teachers without subject matter mastery but advanced education degrees marching up the salary increase ladder. Teachers refuse to be periodically tested regarding their knowledge. Final years' salaries are artificially inflated to maximize pensions -- retirement pensions that can be drawn while the teacher or administrator gets paid well for a second job.

The military annually retires highly qualified officers and senior NCO who have taught at schools and service academies and universities. Smart and motivated, they are unable to be certified until schools of education pass them through a twelve month minimum curriculum.

And finally, legislators seeing parents and teachers as a bloc vote of support refuse to recognize that there might be room for improvement. The natural knee jerk result is to appropriate more money, as if funding were the solution. It is not.

The increase in quality which the parents, the students and the taxpayers want can only come from an opening of the field of public education to full Competitive Choice. It has been done in San Francisco and in Edmonton. Vest each student with his share of Education moneys. Allow each family to choose the public, parochial, private or home school subject only to accreditation by a reformed State Agency, but managed by the home Public School District. That District will retain to improve its own capabilities the overages. Special needs students will receive additional vesting.

The future of the country will be reflected in the quality of the education which the students receive. They are presently, being shortchanged. The dreams of the parents rest in the quality of education their children received. They are presently being interrupted. The system is broken and it must be fixed.

The CATO article is at

http://www.cato-at-liberty.org/2006/07/16/the-school-choice-movements-greatest-failure/


pete speer
Indian Creek Il
peterdee99@hotmail.com

Statistical "controls"
I obtained a copy of the report, and while I haven't read it thoroughly (and probably won't since I don't have that kind of time and all that much interest) a few things stood out. For example, despite the fact that it's 66 pages long, it seems rather incomplete. I can't seem to find the actual descriptive statistics that compare private and public schools; I can only find the results of the statistical tests.

Anyway, the first thing to note, is that there are no such things as statistical controls. As much as you might like to, there's no way to completely control, statistically, for non-random pre-existing differences between two groups. Second, not only does the analysis "control" for student characteristics, it also "controls" for school characteristics (teacher experience, teacher certifiation, student absenteeism, student mobility, school location, school size, etc.). Now, one might ask, aren't some of the school charactersitics relevant to what essentially makes private and public schools different? For example, school absenteeism, in my experience, has been one of the best predictors (aside from SES) of overall school performance on various standardized tests. So wouldn't it be relevant if private schools have (or don't have, if that's the case) better attendance records than public schools?

The third problem with the report is that it also does not elaborate on how these student and school characteristics relate to performance. For example, it might be interesting to know how teacher certification relates to performance, but the direction of that relationship is not presented. While one might assume that the relationship is positive, it's also possible that it could be negative in that private schools may be more likely to employ teachers with master's and even possibly PhD's in their subject areas, rather than education degrees.

At any rate, I wouldn't take the "results" of this analysis all that seriously, or at least not until I obtained access to the original data set.

Return to an open Bible…

“Choice, competition and freedom are core values that define what we are about as a nation. It is troubling to think that we have gotten to the point where these truths are no longer obvious and we have to do research to try and figure out if they are a good idea.”

Ms. Parker, you are too kind with this statement. You forget that we are engaged in a civil war over authority. Choice, competition and freedom are core values that define what America used to be before the elites rejected the chief corner stone on which these things rest.

The foundations of wisdom and knowledge are not removed from the classroom without consequences. Look at SAT test results as a function of year. You will see a correlation between declining scores and the years that prayer, Bible reading and the Ten Commandments were removed by judicial fiat. Under the myth of neutrality the vain philosophy of men was substituted for truth. Vain philosophy is destructive. Until it is exposed and rejected as destructive there is no hope of recovering the public school.

Funding is not the issue. The real issue is to what authority will we bow? The choices are few. Will we continue with finite men forcing their autonomous reason as the authority over us, or will we return to an open Bible? The Bible gives men a reference to the absolute on which to know truth in morals and righteousness of life. The revelation of the personal and infinite God in the Bible is that which answers the questions of man’s origin and meaning. Without this revelation man is hopelessly lost. Autonomous man will reject and suppress the Bible to his own destruction.

School Choice and Vouchers
I teach at a Title I, urban, underperforming high school. I send my children to a private religious school. Yes, there are relatively few disciplinary issues at the private school, while I am inundated with behavioral issues on a daily basis. Private schools do not do better than public schools because they spend more money. It is clear that public education spends much more per students thatn do private schools. It is rather the commitment of the parents that makes the difference. This is the canard of the state-wide preschool effort made recently in California. Of course students who have attended preschool do better than other students and are more likely to go on to college - their parents have cared enough to make the commitment and sacrifice necessary for them to get a better head start. And please do not say that parents in the inner-city do not have enough money. Twenty-five thousand dollars for a fifteen-year-old girl's birthday party. A $600 per month car payment for a vehicle with $10,000 worth of spinning rims, all while the family lives in a rented one-bedroom apartment. I cannot get parents to come to Back to School Night because they have to work. One night a year is not too much to ask. I have intervened in the past with incalcitrant employers who have said that they can not let parents off for the evening. Every single one has changed their mind after talking with me. Unfortunately, most public school teachers will not make that kind of effort to help students or parents. Perhaps it is because I have experienced both forms of education, both as a child, and now as a parent and a teacher.

The real issue is the establishment and adherence to priorities. If a family makes a commitment to education, then the child will succeed. If a family expects the school to do it all for them, then their child will fail. Over 80% of my students are United States citizens, born in this country to immigrant parents. Yet, almost all of them never spoke a word of English until they entered Kindergarten and had no preschool experience. Needless to say they started school with an extremem disadvantage. The cultural differences and ultimate outcomes expected between immigrant populations, public schools, parochial education, and traditional modes of education are growing more vast as the years progress.

Vouchers are a way for all families to make education more accountable. Many private institutions have developed programs for special needs children because that is what families who attend these schools want and request. Although I am not involved with Catholic education, they seem to be very responsive to the needs of students. If people left the public schools in droves (as I am sure they would if vouchers were offered), the public schools would be forced to become more responsibve to the needs of the families they serve. Perhaps schools do not need an Activities Director as much as they need that salary relegated to the hiring of a qualified Advanced Placement instructor. Maybe if teachers would commit to organizing more extracurricular activities, instead of leaving school right at the bell at the end of the day, there wouldn't need to be an Activities Ditrector at all. Yes, I am sure that people will say that there are many good teachers who do this kind of thing. But believe me, they are in the distinct minority.

Blame the teachers' unions, the ACLU, the highly litigious society in which we live, or whatever your name-brand social poison is this week. But let's not say that vouchers would be more of a problem than that which now exists. It is amazing how we want to teach children how to be critical thinkers, which actually requires that there be options from which to choose. Yet, when it comes to the very act of providing them the education that we want them to have, the only choice they have is what we tell them they can have.

the fixer
I am quite sure that inner city schools see much different problems than schools in smaller communities or in private schools.
For instance, in my town the school board members let the superintendant tell them what to do. It is supposed to be the other way around. The administrations in the schools would be only too happy if the parents never tried to be involved with their kids' educations. We actually have been told by the high school administration that we as parents have no parental rights and our kids have no rights once they enter the building.
The teachers in the high school get away with saying some of the most outrageous things to the students without any repercussions. Things any student would be expelled for. On and on it goes.
My point is if we want to make any real headway in repairing the school systmes around the country we need to get rid of the Federal Department of Education. We need to let the local people take care of their own local schools and whatever unique problems they have.
One solution for the entire country is not going to work. Allowing the money to follow the student would be a good start though.

What do you suggest?
" I serve on a local Board of Education. My wife is a teacher in a Title I school in the same town. We've both seen the affects that a small percentage of discipline problems can have on the whole classroom.... Let's stop beating the voucher drum and start giving public schools the tools to deal effectively with the students that are causing the issues."

What do you suggest? I mean, I know how I would solve it, but how would you?

Test scores
I am no fan of public education or the Department of (Public) Education.
However, if test scores have not changed since 1979, that means that they have not fallen. With all the terrible things that have happened to childhood in the last quarter-century, that's good.

Education and Money
We are spending more per pupil (in real dollors) than any society, including ourselves, has ever spent since the world began. The answer is not more money but rather the admission that many of our teachers are incompetant and are being protected by labor unions and tenure and that there are many students in our schools that will not try to learn. We badly need to let schools get rid of ineffective teachers and students that are keeping others from learning. Perhaps we could set up special schools where the bad teachers babysit the disinterested students. Of course we would have to give the students in these schools welfare for life. Oh wait, we will have to anyway!

lack of tools
I'm sorry, but I can't buy Coolmoose' suggestion that the reason for the lack of performance is that the state schools have been denied the tools. If, indeed, they lack the tools, it is buy their own liberal hand. Typically, the concern of most state school apologists is for the institution, rather than those students and their parents that labor under its burden.

Quality Teaching
Children do not necessarily want to learn how to do what they need to do to succeed in school. Most children want to have fun when they come to school. Many do not want to struggle with learning and figuring out how to do something they don't like to do. I see a tremendous amount of bickering and fighting. I see horribly angry children, young children who have never learned how to manage their own anger, and many students who see no point in learning how to read, write, or calculate. I have been forced to spend a huge amount of my very limited instructional time dealing with 25 to 95 percent children who regularly violate the rights of those who really do want to try.

The percentage of disruptive children varies from classroom to classroom, and predictably the percentage of disruptive and abusive children tends to be higher when the classroom teacher is frustrated, angry, exhausted, or just plain just doesn't understand children.

Over the years I have also observed that all teachers are in dire need of support especially in dealing with the children with poor self images who also tend to wreck havoc in classrooms everywhere. This is an ages old problem, and over the years this situation has become increasingly more difficult. Their parents become increasingly more abusive toward teachers as they are also neglectful of their children.

If there are 25 children in a class, and just one or two wreck havoc day after day after day with the rest of the children in the classroom, and I have 50 minutes once a week to teach them at least a week's worth of curriculum, I am faced with some serious choices. I can't afford to lose one minute of instructional time, yet it will take at least 10 minutes to deal with just those two children -- and that assumes they will cooperate and take some responsibility for their actions.

The simple and obvious solution is for the disruptive children to be removed immediately from the group and so allow the remainder of the children to receive instruction and coaching on an as needed basis. And the two disruptive children? Wouldn't it be wonderful if there were a psychologist or some kind of behavior specialist who could work with those children right away -- even stand over them while they are in class so they wouldn't miss a minute of instruction and participation. And wouldn't it be great if I could do both jobs at once?

While I will agree that some teachers might be incompetent, many, many more of us are just over-stretched.
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