Category Archives: Best Practices

Not a Gift Horse; Not Satisfied — The MMSD Budget

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Look me in the eye
Then, tell me that I’m satisfied
Was you satisfied?
Look me in the eye
Then, tell me that I’m satisfied
Hey, are you satisfied?

The Replacements, “Unsatisfied” (click to listen or download).

The Madison Metropolitan School District budget is not a gift horse, it is the product of a state-mandated process by which our elected and appointed school officials — with required input from taxpayers and other community members — arrive at taxing and spending decisions that fulfill their fiduciary duties to provide the best education possible for our children, while being good stewards of the funds in their charge. This year, those mandates and duties are being expanded to include some pledges that were made during this past November’s successful referendum campaign.

It is indeed proper to look very thoroughly into the mouth of this budget, to look at how well it meets it’s mandates, fulfills it’s duties and honors the pledges that were made previously. When I do that, I’m relatively pleased, but I’m not satisfied.

Without dissatisfaction there is complacency and little motivation for improvement. When you aren’t satisfied, you keep dreaming and reaching.

The Partnership Plan and a Broken Promise

As part of the basic proposal of the Partnership Plan, the Board and administration asked the voters to approve a recurring referendum, one that provided less revenue than would be needed to meet the annual budget gaps created by Wisconsin’s broken state school finance system. In return, they promised to find both efficiencies and non- or minimally harmful cuts, to make up the $1 million of the $3 million difference in the budget shortfall. At the time that the Partnership Plan was proposed, the projected budget gap unmet by referendum authorization was about $3 million. By this Spring, other factors had raised this number to $3.9 million. At the same time, a new bus contract saved close to $800,000, so we are back to about $3 million. As part of the Partnership Plan, $2 million in Fund Balance spending (referred to as Fund 10) was promised to “address the remaining” budget gap. Money from the Fund 80 Fund Balance was pledged to minimize tax increases. Initiating a strategic planning project was also part of the mix. This included the creation of the Fund 41, known as the Capital Expansion Fund, that was meant to increase state aid via amortization. It was presented as part of this plan, but since it made sense with or without a referendum, I never thought it belonged; the same might be said for the strategic planning.

All of these concepts, except one, were intact in the initial budget proposal from the administration. The pledge of $2 million from the Fund Balance in the 2009-10 budget was missing. Some further changes in the budget came about due to things like new inter-district transfer estimates. Normal stuff. But quite curiously, the $2 million in Fund Balance money to be used on the education of our children was totally abandoned.

You can interpret this pledge made during the referendum in at least three or four ways. You could believe that the pledge was made to reduce the projected budget gap by $2 million from the Fund Balance.

You could consider it a pledge to limit “same service cuts” up to $2 million in Fund Balance spending. You could consider it a pledge to spend the $2 million, whatever projections and budgeting indicated a “same service” budget would be. You could say that the pledge was maintain the quality of education to the degree made possible by up to $2 million in Fund Balance spending.

By all of these interpretations, excerpt perhaps the last, the pledge was broken. I say perhaps, because the district administration has said that they were able to maintain the quality of education without the money from the Fund Balance; by their own calculations they were not able to meet “cost to continue” without it, but I’m not 100% satisfied this is true (more on this below under “Is the Quality of Education Being Maintained”).

At this point, I want to note that there are good fiscal reasons to maintain or grow a Fund Balance. But it must be further noted that those reasons also existed when the Partnership Plan was proposed. And in the context of that plan, one would have thought that a higher standard would have to be met in order to champion a fiscal position that could trump the pledges made earlier in a referendum campaign.

The Partnership Plan represented an attempt to balance the desires of those of us who would have liked a bigger and better referendum and those who wanted something smaller or no referendum at all.

At the time I thought the compromise tilted too far toward the “small/no” position. The proposal to not use the Fund Balance money tilts it even further in that direction and breaks the trust. Broken trust is difficult to repair. I supported the referendum and worked to pass it. I solicited the endorsements and volunteer efforts of others. The $2 million in Fund Balance spending had a large influence in my commitment; without that pledge I would have supported the referendum from the sidelines.

Last week the Board and administration moved to restore some of that pledge, in a manner that seems to reflect, at least partially, the “spend the $2 million, whatever projections and budgeting indicate about “same service” interpretation.

Some of the Promise to be Restored: “Class and Half Specials,” and “Ready, Set, Go” Conference

At the April 3, 2009 Madison Board of Education meeting they “moved forward” a budget amendment which will put an end to the failed experiment in class and half specials (Art, Music, Phys. Ed.) in nine schools, beginning in the 2009-10 school year (some background here, video of the meeting here, this amendment budget Q & As here). the $1.2 million needed for this fix will come from a combination of the Fund Balance ($500,000) and anticipated revenues from TIF closures ($700,00). This is a very good thing. I’m very glad they are doing this, but I’m not satisfied.

At that meeting the Board also “moved forward” an amendment to restore the “Ready, Set, Go” conferences. The discussion of how to pay for that was not concluded. The initial proposal from Lucy Mathiak to “find the money” by cutting expenses paid for via purchasing cards was ill-conceived. Budgeting should not be done by looking at how things are paid for (p-cards, purchase orders, etc.,), but rather what is needed and what is affordable. Still I am very glad that it appears “Ready Set Go” conferences will be back, but I’m not satisfied. [As of this writing, I cannot find copy of this amendment on the district web site.]

Some people might say that it is proper to say “good work” and “thank you” and leave it at that. I don’t agree. I’m not satisfied.

I strongly support this use of the money to address the Specials mess (and to fund “Ready, Set Go” conferences if it comes to that) and further believe that this budget should include $1.5 million more in Fund Balance spending. This spending could be used to avoid cuts, restore previously cut programs or practices, expand current programs or practices, or initiate new things (see this post and this list for what has been lost over the years).

Is the Quality of Education Being Maintained?

If the definition of maintain is a lack of dramatic, direct cuts to programs and policies, the answer is certainly yes. It is clear that the combination of the successful referendum and adept management have produced a budget that will maintain the same general breadth and quality of education. This deserves respect and applause.

However, the budget does contain some significant cuts from “same service” calculations. Some of these may constitute erosion. Although there are reductions in unallocated positions in elementary and secondary education, these don’t bother me much because of the reduced enrollment projections and the fact that many unallocated positions are maintained. The ones that do bother me are in Education Services (Special Education and English Language Learners – ELL). I’m also not satisfied the “cost to continue” calculation for Vocational Education “Other Expenses” is not a cut in disguise.

By the district budgeting, there is a reduction of 31 positions and $1.8 million dollars in the Education Services budget. That’s a big hit, especially for a department that has taken some big hits in the recent past. One of these positions and $132,000 is through getting rid of a temporary administrative post. That still leaves 30 “unallocated” positions and almost $1.7 million (unallocated means that these are not part of the initial staffing estimates). The administration says “this has no effect on existing programs and services.” I’m not so sure, I’m not satisfied that this will be the case.

To be fair, even with the reductions, the department will gain a net 11.3 FTE. At the budget press conference, there was talk of looking at the initial “cost to continue” request and finding that it was too large and that the reductions in the budget preserved “same service.” I’d like to know more, but a reduction of 30 positions does concern me.

I looked at some old budget material and found that in 2005-6, all of the unallocated special education positions were used (this came in response to a question about cutting 10 positions in 2006-7). In 2005-6 the ratio between Special Education staff FTE and Special Education students was 4.42/1. In 2008-9 that ratio 4.89/1. If the student count remains the same next year, it will be 4.78/1.

I also looked at staffing ratios in ELL. In 2005-6 it was 16.26/1; 2006-7, 17.93/1; 2007-8, 20.51/1; 2008-0, 18.38/1. Again, assuming a constant number of students, the 2009-10 ratio will be 18.50/1. We also know that in 2009-10 the district will have to add one FTE specialist in Arabic and another in French.

Maybe same service in Educational Services, maybe “more with less,” and maybe also a department where we could add something back, as we did with “Class and Half” and “Ready, Set, Go.” At very least, we need more of an explanation than was given in the budget document (none), or at the press conference (little), would be nice.

The possible cut in Vocational Education, “Other Expenses,” is different. On page 93, here you can see that although non staffing expenses for Vocational Education was $481,000 this year and about the same previous years, the “cost to continue” figure for 2009-10 is $299,000. Is this a $182,000 cut? I don’t know, I’ve asked the appropriate people and still don’t know. There may be other anomalies like this that I haven’t noticed.

I don’t know how I feel about the “maintain quality” issue in general. I’m not satisfied either way and when I think about the $2 million that was pledged to do real “same service,” “cost to continue” maintenance of quality, I think that some consideration should be given to chopping that 30 FTE’s down to 15.

Some Concerns about Process

I said at the top that the budget proccess is state mandated. In Chapter 65.90 it is spelled out. One important idea is that the budget must be presented to the public 15 days in advance and that there must be a public hearing before the budget is passed. At subsequent times, the budget may be altered by a super-majority, 5 votes in the case of Madison, and no hearing is required.

As I understand it, public participation is considered to be so important that it is required. The hearing on the MMSD budget is 6:00 PM, May 6 at the Doyle Building (and may be continued on May 10).

65.90 also describes what must be in the budget presented prior to the hearing. It read in part:

(2) Such budget shall list all existing indebtedness and all anticipated revenue from all sources during the ensuing year and shall likewise list all proposed appropriations for each department, activity and reserve account during the said ensuing year. Such budget shall also show actual revenues and expenditures for the preceding year, actual revenues and expenditures for not less than the first 6 months of the current year and estimated revenues and expenditures for the balance of the current year. Such budget shall also show for informational purposes by fund all anticipated unexpended or unappropriated balances, and surpluses.

For some reasons that I understand and for others that I don’t, the MMSD budget does not list all “anticipated revenues” nor “all anticipated unexpended or unappropriated balances, and surpluses.”

As a side note, I also didn’t like the “non binding” budget votes on April 30.

The biggest anticipated revenues are Title I and IDEA monies from the stimulus package. The Federal Department of Education issued estimates of distributions in March, well prior to the publication of the preliminary MMSD budget (remember that this entire budget is predicated on estimates of what the State will do with their budget, what property values will be, how many students we will have, how contract will be settled, etc.,). Madison will get $11.7 million over two years, with, I believe, a bit under half coming in the 2009-10 fiscal year. That’s over $5 million in anticipated revenues that are not part of the budget.

There are good reasons for this. First, it takes time to work this into the budget and figure how to use the money wisely. Second there will be further clarification on the strings attached in the coming weeks (although once the Budget is set and if the “maintain quality” assertions are true, “Supplement not Supplant” issues become moot, it will be by definition supplementary…maybe that’s the point). What is lost is the chance to see the entire budget picture, to see how things fit together within the mandated process. Perhaps a delay to have time to put the pieces together prior to beginning the public process would have been better.

The $700,000 in TIF money is also an anticipated revenue that was not part of the initial preliminary budget (although from what I can gather the district was only made aware of this after the preliminary budget was issued).

The Budget issued also does not contain a clear statement of the projected status of the Fund Balances, whether at the close of the 2008-9 fiscal year or the close of the 2009-10 fiscal year (the latter may be pieced together from the line-by-lines, I believe). As I noted above, there are many factors that could influence all parts of the budget and that certainly includes the bottom line of Fund Balances.

That said, although I am not sure about the legal requirements, I know that this information is required by principles of good governance and due diligence. I’ll add that this information is very much part of the Budget process in districts around the state and was included in budgets Erik Kass prepared in Waukesha.

Without this information, the Board and the Public cannot know how they are managing their assets. They don’t know if they are squandering their savings and risking lower bond ratings and higher interest rates. They don’t know if they are making progress saving for that big purchase (4K anyone?). They don’t know if there is money sitting there doing little or nothing while needs and desires go unmet. The bottom line, the projected Fund Balances should be part of the discussion.

Green Bay, where Superintendent Dan Nerad was in charge, before coming to Madison, avoided many of these difficulties by doing the formal budget process and hearing in the Fall, right before the levy is certified. In Madison we do it in the Spring and then make adjustments to the levy (and other things) in the Fall.

Not 100% satisfied with the process.

Some Other Budget Observations

There are many things in the budget I like, for example two more Social Worker/Psychologists and one more Nurse, are good moves, but I’m not satisfied.

MMSD will be spending about $26,000 to test all 1st graders in order to identify Gifted and Talented students. I don’t like more testing and it isn’t clear what will be done once they are identified. Not satisfied that this is a good idea.

If my calculations, based on the projected decrease in state SAGE aid are correct, next year MMSD will have about 100 fewer SAGE aid eligible students in SAGE funded reduced class size classrooms. Not satisfied with this at all.

The set asides to begin implementation of the Fine Arts Task Force work, the Math Task Force work and the Strategic Planning are fine, although I have my doubts that there is little useful policy recommendations in the Math Task Force Report that will ultimately be implemented.

Closing Thoughts

Dissatisfaction reveals a faith that improvement is possible and is a first step in working toward that improvement. Some may see this as too negative and others may see it as nit picking. That this takes place within a general context of happiness that there are no glaring harmful cuts in this budget should not be lost; that there are only what some may see as nits to pick is in itself evidence that educational quality is not being seriously threatened in the budget.

The opportunity to scrutinize is built into the process, the uncertainty and lack of satisfaction that came as a result of this scrutiny can be healthy, especially if it leads to certainty and improvement.

I don’t expect anything major to change prior to the budget being passed, but I’m still glad I took a close look in that horse’s mouth and reported some of what I saw; I’m glad to communicate that at least some aren’t satisfied.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Filed under Accountability, Best Practices, Budget, education, finance, Local News, Referenda, referendum, Uncategorized

Equity Inaction

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Today was one of two opportunities for 8th graders in the West High School attendance area to take a test to qualify for Accelerated Biology next year (the other is tomorrow, May 6, 2009, 4:00 to 6:00 PM in room 225 at West High School).  I have it on good authority that there were no African American or Hispanic students among the approximately 40 students who took the test today.

The Equity Task Force was very concerned about these sorts of disparities (and those revealed in the graph at the top).  We recommended the following remedy:

Open access to advanced programs, actively recruit students from historically underserved populations, and provide support for all students to be successful.

The Board of Education never publicly discussed this recommendation and did not act on it.

Access is not open, it is by tests.  If recruitment is going on, today’s test takers show that it has not been effective.  I don’t know what supports are in place for those who chose to challenge themselves.

Although a desire to overcome not reproduce societal inequality was behind the recommendation, there was also another more basic idea:  No person (or test) associated with our schools should ever tell a student that their ambitions are beyond them, that they aren’t smart enough, that they should aim lower.

Those who took that test today and did not pass will be given exactly that message; many of those who weren’t taking the test have already heard that message, loud and clear.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Madison School Budget Q & As and Amendments

Stock Photos

Last Thursday, April 30, 2009,  the Madison Metropolitan School District Board of Education discussed and held non binding votes on Budget amendments (video here).  Prior to that meeting Board Members asked written questions of the administration and received written responses.  In previous years all Q&As and amendments were made available to the public prior to any Board discussion of budget matters.  This year, 3+ days after that discussion and the non binding votes, this information has not been posted on the district web site (anywhere I can find it).

I have posted here the Q &As  and amendments distributed (at my request) to those in attendance last Thursday.  These include the proposal “moved forward” to do away with “Class and a Half Specials,” two amendments on Culturally Relevant staff development/support and re-allocations to pay for it that received (non binding) negative votes, but do not include an amendment on mileage reimbursements that was also not “moved forward” and an amendment to restore Ready Set Goals (of Go) conferences that was given a non binding vote of support.

I liked it better when all information was readily available well before any Board discussion or votes — whether binding or not —  on budget matters and when all discussion and votes on budget matters took place as part of the budget hearing mandated in The Wisconsin Satutes, Chapter 65.90.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Schools, Prisons and Accountability

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Since last week’s Assembly Education Committee hearing on the School Finance Network plan (video here, more on AMPS here), I’ve been thinking about schools, prisons and accountability.

Early in the hearing, Chair Sondy Pope-Roberts reminded the committee and the hundreds who packed the hearing room about the comparative direct costs of education and imprisonment. I believe she cited a figure of $30,000 per year to imprison an individual. The current cost of education per student is in the $10,000 per year range; the SFN proposals and other plans to preserve, expand and improve educational opportunities in Wisconsin would add at absolute most $1,500 per student, per year (I’ll argue from this high figure rather than quibble). Indirect costs and benefits should also be considered. As Madison Superintendent Dan Nerad has often said (paraphrase), “We need to consider what it actually costs to educate students and we need to consider what is costs to not educate students.” See also this letter from the Eau Claire Leader-Telegram about jail construction costs and school budgets and the work of the Center for Benefit-Cost Studies of Education at Teachers College, Columbia University

Later in the hearing, the representatives of the School Finance Network were pushed hard on “accountability.” The SFN proposal includes some good guidelines to work toward a better accountability system and calls for a five-year review (pp. 11-12).

There was some confusion at the hearing about the confidence in the “what works/best practices” models that served as a basis for the SFN calculations and the reluctance to guarantee results. SFN attempts to direct resources to where they are most needed and will do the most good; it isn’t just a matter of “more money” it is sufficient money to preserve and extend “best practices.” Will this lead to predictable improvements on various benchmarks? Yes and no.

Very simply, there are no guarantees in education or social science research and implementation. You’d have to be a fool to ask for or promise a rise of x points on any standardized test or other measure.

We have good research and data on many things that have improved outcomes in the past; we have good research and data on many things that have harmed outcomes in the past; we have less good data on many things in both categories; we have no “this will work 100% of the time” guarantees.

The SFN team is confident that if the plan is implemented data will show improvements in many ways and welcomes a five-year review. This is as much as can be expected given the state of knowledge.

[Sherman Dorn’s recent post, “Margins for error in policy” hits some related ideas.]

There was also some talk at the hearing of five years being too long to wait for “accountability.” I don’t know how to respond to that, except to say that I believe five years is too short (see below for a little more).

As part of the budget process the Wisconsin Legislature is also considering changes in early prisoner release laws to save money. A recent report pegs the growth of incarceration spending in Wisconsin at $500 million in the last decade and attributes much of this to “truth in sentencing” laws .

All this got me thinking about some questions:

  • Why don’t we require “accountability” when we build a new jail, supermax prison or change sentencing laws?
  • What would that accountability include; how would you figure the costs and benefits?
  • How do you quantify “feeling safer” or even crime rates in dollars and cents?
  • How do you “cost out” the family disruptions and pain caused by incarceration in your calculations?
  • How do “cost out” the fact that prisoners are not contributing economically or otherwise to society?
  • How does recidivism fit in the analysis?

You get the idea. One more:

  • Why don’t we require “accountability” for every tax break, road construction dollar, loophole, economic development initiative, …war…like our elected officials always seem to want from educational investments?

I actually have one answer for the last. Elections are the accountability mechanism for most of these.

Too bad our state officials won’t take that responsibility with educational investment, just like they won’t take the responsibility to fix the broken school funding system they created; nor are they willing to give that responsibility to local elected school boards by lifting the revenue caps.

Last thought. I said above that five years is too short. Let’s implement the SFN plan and make incarceration rates in five years and 10 years and fifteen years and twenty years part of the “accountability” analysis. Let’s also reassert things like “democratic ideals and full individual development countering ‘individual economic rapaciousness’” in our educational goals and make those part of the “accountability” too.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Filed under "education finance", Accountability, Best Practices, education, Elections, finance, Local News, Pope-Roberts/Breske Resolution, School Finance

What’s at stake with the standards movement?: “[T]he kind of individuals we are developing and the kind of nation we wish to be”

The titular quote is from a new book by William A. Proefriedt, High Expectations: The Cultural Roots of Standards Reform in American Education; the video is from a review of that book in the Teachers College Record.

Proefriedt reminds us that the quest for quick and easy (or quick and dirty) standards and accountability has steamrolled a long tradition in America of striving for mass education that cultivates democratic ideals and full individual development while working against  “individual economic rapaciousness” as a danger to the Republic.  This is a tradition we don’t want to lose.

All the “business model” reformers and champions of “consumer interest” as a tool of reform (and that includes Sec. Arne Duncan and President Barack Obama) would do well to read Proefriedt and heed the wisdom of those he has written about.

See also: William A. Proefriedt, “Reading Emerson.”

Thomas J. Mertz

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Filed under Accountability, Arne Duncan, Best Practices, education, National News, nclb, No Child Left Behind, Quote of the Day

A Slice of Two-Thirds

Credit: TeckPoh

Credit: TeckPoh

Following several hours of impassioned testimony from administrators, parents, and staff from school districts throughout the state, both large and small, at this week’s School Finance Network Assembly Hearing, it ended, unfortunately, on what could be charitably characterized as a flat note. Despite the hard work of disparate leaders of education groups meeting constantly for the past couple of years to come up with a thoroughly conceptualized school finance reform plan to present to the legislature, a committee composed of organizations in the School Finance Network who have often been traditionally at odds with each other in the past (for example WEAC and WASB ), came to the hearing armed with numbers vetted by both economists at the UW-Madison and the state Legislative Fiscal Bureau, including a number of suggestions for how to pay for this reform. However, the Committee on Education made it clear they were not going to take any action on this plan for the upcoming budget legislation hearings for the 2009-2011 budget. And most discouragingly there was, as far as I’m aware, no newspaper coverage of this event. I saw only one Madison tv crew present. They covered some of the personal testimony at the beginning but were not around to hear the actual presentation of the plan itself, which came late in the proceedings, too late to make it into the evening broadcast.

There are several political issues at play here, and with the funding reform process seemingly ended as soon as it was given its first oxygen to breathe, I think we may be headed towards even more dangerous waters. We will try and cover what rocky shores we may be encountering in future posts (such as the Governor’s push to repeal the QEO without other fundamental reforms). I want to draw your attention to one of them that, frankly, I missed in some of our earlier discussion on AMPS here about the use of federal stimulus money for school budgeting. In the Summary of Governor’s Budget Recommendations, Thomas Mertz pointed out his confusion with the school district’s use of their increase in their federal Title I and Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) funding to reduce their levies and the potential bad effects this may have on district’s budgets in subsequent years. I, along with Mr. Mertz, remain quite confused about the Governor’s and the Legislative Fiscal Bureau’s thinking on the added stimulus money to IDEA and Title I as a way to keep within the Fed guidlines of “supplement not supplant.” It would appear that the Governor is planning to scale back his professed desire for the state to provide 2/3’s funding for education and instead reduce it to a level between 62.0% and 63.2% in 2010-11 and the shortfall made up with increased short-term Fed dollars. As an editorial in the New York Times noted the other day:

The education portion of the federal stimulus package gives a $13 billion boost to Title I, the federal program that is meant to provide extra help to disadvantaged schoolchildren. And the Department of Education has issued new guidelines, requiring states to give a clearer accounting of how education dollars are spent. But the federal money won’t get to the students for whom it is intended unless the department bird dogs this issue.

As envisioned by Congress, Title I is supposed to serve as an additional layer of financing for high-poverty schools that already are provided with budgets comparable to other schools in the same system. In reality, states and localities have often shortchanged schools that served the poor and used federal money to make up the difference in their basic budgets.

They further added:

The states and localities will resist the reporting requirement, which could easily unmask unethical financing gaps and even evasions of federal education law. But Arne Duncan, the education secretary, needs to hold them to the rules. The new reporting requirement is absolutely essential to school reform in general and fairness for impoverished children in particular.

But in yesterday’s State Journal report showing that MMSD would be receiving $11.7 million over two years from the stimulus bill, the Governor was quoted as warning school districts against “creating “funding cliffs”: using the short-term dollars to start new programs that would have to be sustained later by other funding.” But isn’t that what he is doing in his budget, promising something and then pretending he’s actually paying for it with two funds that are meant to supplement and not supplant state funding?

The Governor is further quoted, “This money can really protect our property taxpayers, and it also can add real quality to our schools if used correctly,” Doyle said.

Indeed. We’ll wait to see what the Obama administration has to say about this old street hustle 3-cups-and-a-ball routine.

Robert Godfrey

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Data _____Decision Making — MMSD Math Task Force Action

WKCE Mathematics Perecentages from DPI

WKCE Mathematics Percentages from DPI

In an earlier post I wrote about the dangerous, counterproductive, if casual racism of the Math Task Force Report and in another I wrote about the almost complete lack of assessment of MMSD Middle School Math teacher knowledge and skills to back up the assertion that “the adequacy of teacher preparation is a significant problem” and the linked recommendation that there be a “substantial investment in mathematics content-based professional development and a change in hiring priorities at the district level.”

On Monday April 20, the Board of Education will likely act on this recommendation, to the tune of $392,500 through 2011-12 1nd a continuing cost of $159,00 annually, thereafter. Before that happens, I think it is appropriate to revisit and expand on the earlier post concerning the treatment of middle school teacher preparation as “the problem” by the Math Task Force.

Before doing that I want to say a few things about the “Data ____ Decision Making” in the title. I’ve always believed in “data informed decision making,” or “data guided decision making” and have rejected the “data driven decision making” because it gives too much power to the in all ways limited data we have to work with, pretends to a false objectivity, when the data itself, and how it is presented, are the products of biases and choices, ignores what cannot be quantified, and marginalizes human feelings and judgment as somehow illegitimate. [For previous related posts, see here, here and here; for similar ideas see Deborah Meier, “‘Data Informed,’ Not ‘Data Driven.’”] Some in MMSD administration and governance (and at least rhetorically the Math Task Force) espouse the “data driven” ideal. In the case of this recommendation, the Emperor has no (or few) clothes, where there should be data to inform or guide, there is a blank, a hole.

I mapped part of that hole in the previous post and I’m not going to do over the details again. Here is the short version. The Task Force was asked to provide (among other things), “A discussion of how to improve MMSD student achievement.” As explored in the earlier post, nationally there has been a lot of heat and some light around the idea that inadequately trained Middle School math teachers are a major problem. They then lazily applied this analysis to Madison.

Finding out if this is a problem in Madison would have been a good thing for the Task Force to do. Instead, they did a very cursory survey of how many middle school Math teachers had a credential that the report itself says needs to be changed and then jumped on the “middle school teachers are the problem” bandwagon. Now the MMSD administration has joined them and the Board is poised to board the same wagon, bringing our tax dollars with them.

As I recommended in the previous post, the first (now next step) should be assessing the knowledge of our teachers via “the materials being developed by the Learning Mathematics for Teaching Project at the University of Michigan or a similar inventory.” Certainly before we commit $392,500 to fixing a problem we should have some idea if there is a problem.

There is another way to see if Middle School Mathematics instruction is the problem and that is by looking at student achievement. Although the report devotes 83 pages to WKCE data analysis, the question of whether the test scores in any way reveal a problem with Middle School instruction is never addressed. From what I can tell, they don’t.

I don’t have access to the scale scores or the grant money or the expertise time the Task Force had, but I did take a look and there were no red flags identifying the Middle School years as being the locus of achievement problems. The chart at the top (and below for your convenience) is the product of my exploration.

WKCE Mathematics Perecentages from DPI

WKCE Mathematics Percentages from DPI

What I did was try to identify trends by looking at cohorts, starting with the class that was in 4th grade in 2002 (the WKCE changed that year and use of prior years for comparisons is not recommended). This chart shows the percentage of students who scored in the advanced or proficient range as they moved from 4th grade to 8th grade. The scores aren’t there for each grade for each year, but this is what we have to work with (informed, guided, not driven). Call it a poor man’s “value added.”

The most striking thing is that things don’t change much from year to year, or cohort or between the cohort. The range of variation is small; from 71.5% to 75.6%.

When we look at the cohorts, the 4th, 5th and 6th grade scores are mostly a baseline and any identification of failures in Middle school would be in the 7th and 8th grade scores. The data is minimal, but in all three data points for 7th grade there is improvement over the previous data point for that cohort and one 8th grade cohort shows continued improvement while the other shows a good sized drop off.

What does this tell us? Not much. What might that mean? To me it means we should know more before we commit to investing in improving Middle School teacher preparation.

One more chart, because I think we always need to keep inequalities in mind.

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WKCE Mathematics Percentages from DPI

Same idea as the other chart, but this time only looking at “Economically Disadvantaged” students. The first thing I notice is how low the percentages are and see yet more evidence that we have a long way to go to eliminate gaps in achievement based on wealth. That this may never happen is no reason to stop trying. Next, again a narrow range, this time between 48% and 55.9%.

Some up and down but I don’t see anything compelling pointing to the Middle School years as the problem.

I did find the 2003 cohort up and down here and for all students intriguing, so I looked at state trends for those years, What I found was a similar if less extreme pattern, which may indicate that it is a product of the test and not a measure of the students. Statewide the 6th grade advanced/proficient percentage (A/S) for that all students (AS) in that cohort was 73%; for Economically Disadvantaged students (ED) it was 53.9%. In seventh grade the A/S rose to 79.1% and the ED to 61.5%. The 8th grade drops were to 75.3% AS and 56.8 ED. [I’d do a full chart, but I don’t have time, maybe in an update later). Data guided or informed, not driven or blank.

One last related note. A good thing about the new governance system in MMSD is that action items are supposed to come before committees a week before the Board acts. No more release of recommendations late Friday for action on Monday. This one didn’t. Last Monday the Board of Education agenda included a 10 page, 13 point “Summary Response” that gave an outline, but few details (Recommendation 3, here). I think a commitment of $392,500 deserves to go through the process.

As the above should make clear, I have serious doubts about whether the commitment of these resources is a good idea and have no doubt that the case that has been made so far, recommending this commitment, is less than weak. I ask that the Board and the administration step back and begin by clearly demonstrating there is a problem that needs to be addressed, and again recommend that part of this be a real assessment of the knowledge and skills of our Mathematics teachers. What will be before the board on Monday is an expensive solution in search of a problem.

Thomas J. Mertz

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School Finance Network Assembly Hearing, Tuesday April 21, Be There!

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The hearing is on the School Finance Network plan, but it is more generally an important opportunity to show support for comprehensive school finance reform.  The lawmakers need to know we care.  Be there if you can!

Details here and below.  The Basics: Tuesday April 21 at 1:00 PM at the Wisconsin State Capitol in room 413 north.

School Finance Network Reform Plan Subject of April 21st Hearing at the Capitol

Statewide coalition of more than 100,000 members announces support for changes to public school funding

Members of the Assembly Education Committee have scheduled a hearing for April 21st at 1 p.m., to consider the School Finance Network’s funding reform plan.

The meeting will be held at the Wisconsin State Capitol in room 413 north, and is open to the public. In addition to members of the SFN coalition, parents, students, educators, and taxpayers from around the state will speak.

The School Finance Network is a statewide coalition of educational, religious, and community-oriented organizations, committed to strengthening the funding system for our public schools.

The School Finance Network plan details how public school districts statewide would benefit through changes that help children with special needs, disabilities and from low income families. It also includes updates to the funding formula for rural districts and those with declining enrollment. The plan also helps maintain classes that help young people to learn skills that can benefit their communities.

The School Finance Network is made up of the following groups: AFT–Wisconsin, the Fair Aid Coalition, the School Administrators Alliance, the South-eastern Wisconsin Schools Alliance, the Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools, the Wisconsin Association of School Boards, the Wisconsin Association of School District Administrators, the Wisconsin Education Association Council, and the Wisconsin PTA

What: Assembly Education Committee hearing on the School Finance Network plan.

When: April 21st at 1 p.m.

Where: Wisconsin State Capitol, Room 413 North.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Filed under "education finance", Best Practices, Budget, education, finance, Local News, Pope-Roberts/Breske Resolution, Referenda, referendum, School Finance, Take Action, Uncategorized

Hit Again (again and again…)

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Wisconsin may have dodged the bullet of privatizers in our State Superintendent election, but at the national level the for profit, not the public crowd are going forth with guns blazing.  President Obama, Arne Duncan and their crew are showing themselves to be,  in the words of  Diane Ravitch, “Margaret Spellings in Drag.”

Their latest hire fits the profile.  Education Week is reporting and the the Department of Education site confirms the Broad trained,  former edu-preneur with LearnNow, most recently Bill “Money Talks” Gates bag man, James Shelton III (scroll here for a bio)  is the new head of the Office of Innovation and Improvement.

I guess for at least the next four years “innovation” will continue to mean privatization and profit-seeking and improvement will continue to defined by the Ministry of Truth.

In history, one school of thought holds that industrialists and capitalists came to welcome expanded government when they realized they could “capture” the boards and departments and use them for their own ends.   Think of the fox guarding the hen house.  The Obama crew are not liberators, just a changing of the guard.

As Deborah Meir recently wrote about the mindset that is at work in the corridors of power:

Some combination of Harvard and Wall Street smarts are seen as all-purpose disinterested expertise, fit for any purpose. The master key. While disregard of educators has a long history, and demonizing of teacher organizations is hardly new, it has reached new heights. A mere 20 years ago one could not imagine school systems would be run by people who never practiced or studied schooling or education. The assumption that “smarts” based on hands-on knowledge is valuable has lost its historic place in our view of reality. Law and business and finance smarts have ruled the day for this generation. At a cost. And not just in schools….

Our schools and our economy—and, above all, our democracy—require us to restore the balance.

The Obama permanent campaign will be holding listening sessions in Wisconsin.  It might be worth trying to get in a good word for public education by and for the people, not profit.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Fragrant Delusions

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In another episode of feigned outrage, the new adjunct to a scorned Republican Party searching for new identity – leaderless and jumbled up with 30 years of rhetoric that, surprisingly, in just a wink of an eye, seems immensely trite, dated even – tone deaf to the body politic; behold a specimen of Wisconsin politics that can easily serve as specimen A of this “did we really talk and think like that before” mentality. We present to you – Steve Nass.

In short, the Cap Times editorial, responding in part to this, pretty much says it all. It can only be redundant to pile on with citations of this piece. Suffice to say, this crazed, destroy it all juju, is merely a taste of the Trojan Horse “Sturm und Drang” that would have awaited us if the Rose Fernandez candidacy had been successful. To cite more positive rhetoric of Wisconsin’s history, Forward!

Robert Godfrey

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