Category Archives: National News

About those studies . . .

Paul D. Houston, the executive director of the American Association of School Administrators has penned an interesting editorial (free sub. req’d) questioning the recent spate of studies suggesting large public support for NCLB Act as we head into a new round of negotiations for the reathorization of the act.

“Isn’t It Amazing? A Few Words on Those No Child Left Behind ‘Studies’

In recent weeks, we have seen a flurry of “studies” on the No Child Left Behind Act that seem to conclude that it is a wonderful thing. I suggest it is time we look behind the headlines.

The latest study, commissioned by the Educational Testing Service, concludes that when the public learns more about this federal law, they tend to like it better. (“To Know NCLB Is to Like It, ETS Poll Finds,” June 20, 2007.) Now, far be it from me to suggest bias here, but one must ask: Who has benefited the most from No Child Left Behind? Would it be the teachers, who have faced pressures complying with regulations that bear little relationship to sound educational practice? Perhaps it is the children, who have seen their classroom studies narrowed to allow for more time for testing and test preparation? No, so far the greatest beneficiary of this law is the testing industry, which has had more business than it can handle. This has led not only to higher profits, but also to inaccurate results and huge errors in scoring and reporting.

So, a testing-industry study that shows that a law which requires massive testing is a popular thing seems unworthy of the coverage it has received.

The results of the ETS study fly in the face of the results obtained by the American Association of School Administrators, when we studied the same issues. (“Critics of NCLB Ask Congress to Overhaul It,” Feb. 23, 2007.) We concluded that the more the public knew about the No Child Left Behind law, the less they liked it. Who is right here? Well, it all depends on the questions asked. The ETS study asked whether the public liked a program that applied rigorous standards to schools and whether making certain that all kids learn is a good idea. The answer was a resounding yes. (Gee, do you think?)

The proponents of the No Child Left Behind law are fond of pointing out that whatever gets tested gets taught. True. And whatever does not get tested gets left behind. There is little doubt at this point that NCLB has narrowed the curriculum and focused on test results to the exclusion of a broader educational experience. And there is little doubt that overemphasizing results on a standardized test leads to more standardization and less innovation and creative expression—the coins of the realm in the global race for success.

Having the testing industry study the results of a massive program of testing is like having the cigarette industry do a study of lung cancer.

The AASA dug deeper, underneath the bumper-sticker goals of No Child Left Behind. We asked whether it was a good idea to emphasize testing so much that it takes away time for learning, whether testing kids in English who don’t speak English was reasonable, and whether it made any sense to treat a school that had fallen down in one area the same as another that had failed in all areas. The conclusion by the public was that it didn’t.

Having the testing industry study the results of a massive program of testing is like having the cigarette industry do a study of lung cancer.

In another recent NCLB study, the Center on Education Policy, which at least has no dog in the fight, found that after five years of placing a huge emphasis on testing, test scores have gone up. I am sure. Put pressure on the teachers and administrators in our public schools to produce higher test scores and they will do that. Ask them, however, whether the children actually know more and they will tell you that this isn’t the case.

An educational program built around tests has the same validity as a nutritional program built around Twinkies. Twinkies provide instant gratification, but it is hard to build a case that they provide the same nutritional value as a balanced meal. Some might even argue that the sugar and calories have a deleterious effect on one’s health.

The No Child Left Behind Act is currently undergoing reauthorization by Congress. People who have a vested interest in seeing that the law is renewed are lining up to ensure that it is approved with as few changes as possible. Many have no clue as to what broad effects this legislation has had on our nation’s children or our ability to compete internationally. Perhaps before building a case for No Child Left Behind, we need a conversation on what we really want from our educational system—higher tests scores or children who can fulfill their possibilities. Those are not necessarily one and the same.”

Robert Godfrey

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No One is Eating Our Lunch

With NCLB reauthorization up for renewal (newest suggested name by Sens. Lieberman, Landrieu, and Coleman “All Students Can Achieve”), the Aspen Institute is playing a major part in drafting some suggested changes. Again, it mostly more of the same numbers-driven approach to assessment, this time supposedly funding individual state’s data systems to keep track of such numbers. At the same time, a new coalition, NCLB Works, composed of groups like the Business Roundtable and the Education Trust, have made it clear they like the NCLB moniker. It’s important to note that each time the more than 40-year-old Elementary and Secondary Education Act is reauthorized, a name change usually follows.

However, it is groups like the Education Trust and the Business Roundtable which are doing their finest work in pushing for the hostile takeover of the public schools, ostensibly under the guise of pushing for reauthorization of NCLB. Gerald Bracey offers a well needed response to one of the most often referred to pieces of analysis; international comparisons, and their use as a cudgel to attack the American public school system. Bracey points out that one part of these global education comparison studies that receive little discussion in the yearly hand wringing reports on our failings as a nation to educate our children, is the lack of a level playing field when it comes to poverty. Amy Wilkins of the Education Trust is quoted recently as saying, “Our most affluent kids are getting their lunches eaten by kids in other countries. The system we have has not served our children well. There is no point pouring more federal money into very broken bottles.” Baloney.

Gerald Bracey sums up this research succinctly:

“Thus, for reading and science, the two categories of US schools with the smallest percentages of students living in poverty score higher than even the highest nation, Sweden in reading, Singapore in science. In math, the top US category would be 3rd in the world.

It is only in American schools with 75% of more of their students living in poverty where scores fall below the international average.”

Robert Godfrey

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YearlyKos: Education Uprising/ Education for Democracy

As part of the YearlyKos NetRoots Convention (Chicago, August 2-5), TeacherKen has put together a great panel based on the Education Uprising/Education for Democracy ongoing project.

This project has been so rich in ideas and insights that I suggest you read all the material linked to the post on the Education Policy Blog. Here is the basic description:

The design of American education is obsolete, not meeting the needs of our students and our society, and ignores most of what we have learned about education and learning in the past century. This panel will explore a new paradigm, including some specific examples, of how education in America can be reshaped in more productive and democratic fashions.

And a little more in the way of excerpts:

Education Uprising – Education for Democracy

Historically, one of our society’s central problem in improving public schools has been our disagreement over the purposes of public schools. We believe in three central purposes: preparing students to participate in our democratic society, empowering students to learn on their own, and encouraging them to explore their dreams.

A free and adequate public education is a right of every child. Not all children attend public schools, but all Americans must support public education that both fosters democracy and is treated as a right. Public education is a public good. It is a part of the commons for which we are all responsible. We start this brief essay by discussing the nature of education as a public good before we delve into meeting the individual needs of students, the curriculum, instruction, teachers, and accountability.

Education as a Public Good

There are two parts of education as a public good. One is the role of education in developing citizenship—not reflexive obedience but a deliberative and engaged public. If adults need the skills and confidence to debate public policy and act wisely, students need to learn those skills. The other part of public education is the obligation to operate democratically—to provide equal educational opportunities and to operate transparently and accountably.

Subtopics include: Fostering Democracy, Being Treated as a Right, Guaranteeing Equality, Building Relationships, Experimenting with Curricula, Supporting Teachers and Using Assessment.

Sherman Dorn, Mi Corazon and Marion Brady will be joining TeacherKen on the panels.

I doubt I will be able to attend, but I plan to follow along in the cybersphere.

Thomas J. Mertz

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School Name Study

School naming is very much on the radar in Madison. There is a new “study” on trends in naming schools. Too bad it is from Jay P. Greene and like most things associated with him (not all, even a stopped clock is right twice a day) , next to useless.

Greene is correct that what we name schools and how we arrive at those names is important. From there, he goes wrong. Greene identifies trends away from naming schools after people and presents them as seemingly both a cause and effect of a decline in civic values. Either way, acording to Greene the villian is the usual suspect: “progressive education.”

Leaving aside the irony of a proponent of charters and vouchers expressing concern about civic values, there are some big problems with Greene’s assertions (conclusions gives him too much credit). First, we all know that some names communicate more in the way of civic values than others, so the proxy metric is pretty lame. Beyond that, the progessive reforms Greene identifies happened about a century before the trends he identifies. Hell of a lag time. It is probably weakness of the study, but I was glad that Greene didn’t touch on another horrid trend: selling the naming rights to schools and facilities. I could go on, but why bother, I think I’ve already put more thought into this “study” than the author did.

Danny Rosenthal (the Quick and the Ed, hat tip to Sherman Dorn who has more to say) put in his a two cents and asked that we consider the educational possibilities of names such as “Roosevelt Amino Acids a2 + b2 i-before-e Hyperbole High School.”

Thomas J. Mertz

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Democratic Presidential Candidates on Education

The first two questions in last night’s presidential debate were on education. Because of the one minute answer format there aren’t many devilish details, but I still think it is worth reading what they had to say. The education questions and answers are excerpted here, a full transcript has been posted by the New York Times.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Compare and Contrast (Seattle-Louisville & Brown)

I’m going to be posting a lot more on the Seattle-Louisville decision, school integration, policy, history and my experiences, thoughts and feelings.

As I sort through the opinion, concurrences, dissents and reactions, I am struck by the contrasts in presentation (and content) between this decision and the Brown ruling and what these say about where we have been, where we have moved and where we are going as a nation.

The Brown decision was unanimous. The Court spoke with one voice; there were no concurrences or dissents. This was by design. Chief Justice Warren worked hard to make this happen because he wanted the Court to make a social or moral statement as well as a legal one. The Brown decision was short, about — 10 pages — because Warren wanted to speak to the American public and the world, not just lawyers, lawmakers and school policy people. The language was plain and the legalese minimal. Warren knew that this was a turning point in American history and he wanted that message to be clear to all. The Court was declaring that segregation was unconstitutional and wrong and that Federal power could be used to right this wrong. In the decades that followed Brown, Jim Crow apartheid fell due to the efforts of those who demanded that Federal power be used to redeem the promises of equality and equal access.

In part because of the desire for unanimity, the Brown decision left much unadressed, famously employing the contradictory phrase “all deliberate speed” in lieu of an actual remedy, but there was no question that the Court was telling states and school districts that they should act to eradicate segregation. This part of the message was clear. The lack of an explicit remedy was also in deference to the American tradition of state and local educational governance. This was made explicit in the 1971 Swann case:

School authorities are traditionally charged with broad power to formulate and implement educational policy and might well conclude, for example, that in order to prepare students to live in a pluralistic society each school should have a prescribed ratio of Negro to white students reflecting the proportion for the district as a whole. To do this as an educational policy is within the broad discretionary powers of school authorities.” 402 U. S., at 16.

The judgment of the plurality in the Seattle-Louisville (only four Justices concurred in full) radically differs from the Brown case in presentation, moral clarity and policy. Chief Justice Robert’s opinion is 48 pages long. With Justice Thomas’s concurrence, Justice Kennedy’s opinion, and the dissents from Justice Stevens and Justice Breyer, the package is 185 pages. With the exceptions of the historical section of Justice Breyer’s dissent and the introduction to Justice Steven’s dissent the writing is aimed at legal scholars. This is not a united Court seeking to communicate clearly to a broad audience.

As Justice Breyer makes clear, the issues before the Court are not much different than the issues the Brown court faced and nearly identical to those addressed in Swann and other cases, yet the plurality of this case offers justifications for equivocation instead legal and moral clarity. They say the “right things” about the value of diversity, but rule absurdly that school districts cannot use racial criteria to achieve racial diversity. Even Justice Kennedy (who joins in the judgment, but not the opinion) seems to demand that districts that desire racial diversity not employee racial-based means to achieve race-based goals.

It would be charitable to say that the lack of clarity and the contradictions and the legal nitpicking reflect the confusion of our society on racial issues, but I’m not feeling charitable. In 1954, when Brown was decided, at least half our nation was crystal clear on racial matters and the Court told them they were wrong (in the years that followed the Court also did much to clear up the “confusion” of the rest of the nation). So yes, I’ll grant that our society is confused, but I refuse to give the Supreme Court a pass on these grounds.

Writing in Slate earlier this week, Walter Dellinger and Delilah Lithwick made an important observation about the Roberts Court: “Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Alito—perhaps recalling their recent confirmation encomiums to stare decisis—have apparently decided to overrule cases without saying they are overruling them.” In his dissent, Breyer made a similar point: “The basic problem with the plurality’s technical dicta-based response lies in its overly theoretical approach to case law, an approach that emphasizes rigid distinctions between holdings and dicta in a way that serves to mask the radical nature of today’s decision.” The confusion is deliberate, cowardly and dishonest. Roberts will not say that Brown and Swann and decades of other cases have been overruled, but Swann certainly has (along with all the voluntary desegregation and de facto segregation cases and plans) and Brown hangs on by the thin thread of a “narrowly tailored remedy” to only de jure segregation subject to strict scrutiny. This deliberate confusion does our schools and those who govern them a disservice. In the wake of this ruling, much of the discussion has centered on the Kennedy opinion and what sorts of policies might satisfy Kennedy and therefore withstand a legal challenge. Scholars may have fun with that, but most districts can’t risk it. Most districts will abandon any use of race in assignment and the trends toward greater segregation will continue.

I’m going to close with a quote from Brown and try not to shed a tear for all that has been gained and lost since then and all that today the Court said we can no longer seek:

We come then to the question presented: Does segregation of children in public schools solely on the basis of race, even though the physical facilities and other “tangible” factors may be equal, deprive the children of the minority group of equal educational opportunities? We believe that it does.

Thomas J. Mertz

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More on the Supreme Court Decision (links)

“You Better Leave Segregation Alone” by the Nashville Quartet (listen)
(A reminder of what this is about and where we are as a country when the ironic protest song of 1960 becomes an accurate summation of views of the the narrow majority of the Supreme Court and thus the law of the land).

NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC

Teaching Brown: Reflections on Pedagogical Challenges and Opportunities
History of Education Quarterly, v. 44, Spring 2004
(A number of leading historians of education reflect on the Brown decision and how to communicate what it means to today’s students).

Supreme Court – School Integration
A national clearinghouse of Supreme Court School Integration information. Established by NAACP LDF.
(Some of the best information and opinions I’ve seen so far.)

Breaking: SCOTUS Strikes Down Voluntary School Integration
by The Maven (DailyKos)

Hillary [Clinton] on the School Desegregation Case

[John]EDWARDS EXPRESSES CONCERN ABOUT RADICAL SHIFT OF SUPREME COURT

Senator Barack Obama Releases Powerful Statement

Turning Brown Against Itself, Thomas Healy (more from Dorf on Law)

Shifting The Groundwork At SCOTUS (from firedoglake)

SCOTUS: Segregation Now, Segregation Forever? (from DailyKos)

Integrating Public Schools Not a Legitimate State Interest Says Roberts Court (from TalkLeft)

SCOTUSBlog
(Lots here)

More to come

Thomas J. Mertz

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Sad Day, the End of an Era

The Supreme Court has ruled 5-4 against the racial diversity measures used in Seattle and Louisville. The full opinion, with dissents is here. I’m going to be writing and linking more on this in the coming days, for now I just want to highlight this excerpt from Justice Steven’s dissent:

There is a cruel irony in THE CHIEF JUSTICE’s reliance on our decision in Brown v. Board of Education, 349 U. S.294 (1955). The first sentence in the concluding paragraph of his opinion states: Before Brown, schoolchildren were told where they could and could not go to school based on the color of their skin. Ante, at 40. This sentence reminds me of Anatole France’s observation: [T]he majestic equality of the la[w], forbid[s] rich and poor alike to sleep under bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal their bread.1 THE CHIEF JUSTICE fails to note that it wasonly black schoolchildren who were so ordered; indeed, thehistory books do not tell stories of white children struggling to attend black schools.2 In this and other ways, THECHIEF JUSTICE rewrites the history of one of this Court’s most important decisions. Compare ante, at 39 (.history will be heard.), with Brewer v. Quarterman, 550 U. S. ___,___ (2007) (slip op., at 11) (ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting) (.Itis a familiar adage that history is written by the victors.).

THE CHIEF JUSTICE rejects the conclusion that the racial classifications at issue here should be viewed differently than others, because they do not impose burdens on one race alone and do not stigmatize or exclude.3 The only justification for refusing to acknowledge the obvious importance of that difference is the citation of a few recent opinions none of which even approached unanimity grandly proclaiming that all racial classifications must be analyzed under strict scrutiny. See, e.g., Adarand Constructors,Inc. v. Peña, 515 U. S. 200, 227 (1995). Even today, two of our wisest federal judges have rejected such a wooden reading of the Equal Protection Clause in the context of school integration. See 426 F. 3d 1162, 1193.1196 (CA9 2005) (Kozinski, J., concurring); Comfort v.Lynn School Comm., 418 F. 3d 1, 27.29 (CA1 2005)(Boudin, C. J., concurring). The Court’s misuse of the three-tiered approach to Equal Protection analysis merely reconfirms my own view that there is only one such Clause in the Constitution. See Craig v. Boren, 429 U. S. 190, 211(1976) (concurring opinion).4If we look at cases decided during the interim between Brown and Adarand, we can see how a rigid adherence to tiers of scrutiny obscures Brown’s clear message. Perhaps the best example is provided by our approval of the decision of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts in1967 upholding a state statute mandating racial integration in that State’s school system. See School Comm. of Boston v. Board of Education, 352 Mass. 693, 227 N. E. 2d729.5 Rejecting arguments comparable to those that the plurality accepts today,6 that court noted: .It would be the height of irony if the racial imbalance act, enacted as it was with the laudable purpose of achieving equal educational opportunities, should, by prescribing school pupil allocations based on race, founder on unsuspected shoals in the Fourteenth Amendment. Id., at 698, 227 N. E. 2d,at 733 (footnote omitted).

Thomas J. Mertz

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Why Teacher’s Quit

“The combination of the increased needs of children and the increased testing and paperwork pressures of No Child Left Behind is a lethal one for many teachers. What started as exciting and meaningful work becomes overwhelmingly stressful and unfulfilling.

Inadequate funding, across all school districts in California, still places severe limitations on reducing class size and providing students with emotional support services. Additionally, many districts are more concerned with the stigma of low test scores than they are with providing adequate support for teachers. “

Full story By Mark Phillips in the Marin Independent Journal (hat tip to Jim Horn at Schools Matter).

Thomas J. Mertz

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Russ Feingold on NCLB

Contact Senator Feingold, Senator Kohl and Representative Baldwin and let them know what you think!

Thomas J. Mertz

FEINGOLD QUESTIONS ADMINISTRATION’S CONTINUED SUPPORT OF NCLB
Administration’s Top-Down Approach to Education Contradicted by Education Secretary’s Recent Op-Ed
June 22, 2007

Washington, DC – U.S. Senator Russ Feingold (D-WI) is leading a group of Senators in calling into question the Administration’s continued support of the No Child Left Behind law following a recently published op-ed by the Secretary of Education that expressed support for state and local control of education policy. In a letter to the Department of Education Secretary Margaret Spellings, the Senators cited her June 9th Washington Post op-ed, where she said that a move toward a national test would be “unprecedented and unwise” because states and localities have primarily held the leadership role in public education. Feingold and the other Senators questioned why the Department of Education does not extend this same rationale to the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) and they urged the Administration to work with Congress to reform key provisions of NCLB during the congressional reauthorization process. The letter was cosigned by Senators Pat Leahy (D-VT), Ben Nelson (D-NE), Debbie Stabenow (D-MI), Claire McCaskill (D-MO) and Maria Cantwell (D-WA).

“NCLB has hamstrung state and local decision-making by establishing a federal accountability system that measures and punishes our students and our schools based on, among other things, annual high-stakes standardized testing,” Feingold said. “This is the wrong approach, and the groundswell of opposition to the NCLB – from parents, educators, and administrators alike – shows just how flawed it is.”

The Administration’s proposal for NCLB reauthorization, released earlier this year, did not embrace enough of the themes Secretary Spellings expressed in her recent op-ed. Under the Department’s recommendations, states would still be required to annually assess students and states and districts would still be required to implement sanctions that may not be working in local schools and districts, including transfer options and supplemental educational services. Feingold opposed NCLB in 2001because he did not believe a federal policy centered on standardized tests was the best approach for Wisconsin students, teachers, and school districts.

“As Secretary Spellings points out, states and local districts are the ones developing the curriculum used in our nation’s schools and they’re the ones paying most of the costs of education,” Feingold said. “I hope Secretary Spellings’ recent op-ed signals a shift away from the Administration’s top-down approach to education and back toward empowering those who are working in the classrooms every day.”

A copy of the letter is available here: http://feingold.senate.gov/pdf/ltr_spellings_062207.pdf

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