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CORRESPONDENCE: Readers Respond
Evidence-based studies; update on Los Angeles; pre-K for all;
Indianapolis needs philanthropy; in defense of
Accelerated Reader
Evidence-based Studies
We are accustomed to
spirited intellectual debate and critique, but not to the kind of
misinformation in Eric Hanushek’s article (“The Confidence
Men,” check the facts, Summer 2007). We’d like to set the record straight.
First, our adequacy reports were prepared for state
education agencies, and legislative and gubernatorially created task
forces, not plaintiffs.
Second, we have never added effect sizes to estimate
the effectiveness of our model’s recommendations. We provide effect
sizes to show strength of program impacts and to help establish funding
priorities. We stated this in our response to Hanushek’s earlier
critique of our Washington study, which is widely available, and told him
so verbally. And none of the effect sizes should be linked to the National
Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), but to the tests associated with
each study, where the performance implications of a given effect size are
much smaller. Nor have we ever stated that all of our recommendations must
be implemented simultaneously. We routinely recommend gradual phase-in of
funding for reforms.
Our model is based on existing research. While each
report begins with that research, it is modified through an extensive
series of meetings with state policymakers and education professionals. The
result is a unique document that meets each state’s individual needs.
Hanushek implies that our recommendations will cost
most states a bundle. That is not true; using national average prices and
national student demographics, a new paper we have written finds that our
recommendations can be funded at the national average expenditure per
pupil. Hanushek overstates the cost of many of our contracts and fails to
note that usually the work includes additional
studies to assist policymakers in
developing funding systems for high-performing schools.
In second-round studies in Washington and in
Wisconsin, we found several schools that have dramatically improved student
performance using approaches similar to those recommended in our
evidence-based reports. Research-based practice has improved many other
fields, including medicine, and offers the same promise in education. Yes,
more education research is needed, but we should apply what we have learned
to date to help improve our schools. The fact that half of the states that
have implemented school funding systems relied on “costing out”
studies based on the evidence-based method suggests the strength of our approach.
Our goal is to help each state improve learning for all
children. Hanushek seems to believe nothing will work within the current
system. We disagree.
Lawrence O. Picus
Allan Odden
Picus and Associates
Hanushek responds:
I join with Professors Picus and Odden in seeking
effective school-finance policies. The difficulty is that education
research varies widely in quality, reliability,
and policy usefulness. Policymakers quite reasonably look for expert advice
in judging various claims and suggested policies, but have not received it
in the evidence-based studies. Picus and Odden’s own
“validation studies” for Washington and Wyoming make the point.
They find “several schools that have dramatically improved student
performance using approaches similar to those recommended in our
evidence-based reports.” But they do not show that all or even most
districts using their approaches improve. Nor do they show that districts
generally fail to improve without their approaches. Most important, they
have no way of determining that introduction of the “similar
approaches” was the cause of improvement, as opposed to being just present when
other systematic or idiosyncratic factors promoted improvement in these
several schools.
Medicine is an apt comparison, because that field
generally applies strict scientific standards when judging evidence, as
contrasted to education, where many inferior research designs are given
equal standing. My critique simply shows that their “evidence”
is not credible. Moreover, any method that completely ignores costs when
judging policies lacks merit.
Los Angeles Update
Since these
articles (“Power Struggle in Los Angeles,” forum, Summer 2007) were
written, Los Angeles mayor Villaraigosa has publicly announced that he will
not continue to press the courts to support his legislation. And the
mayor’s slate of candidates for the Los Angeles Unified School
District (LAUSD) school board has won, providing the mayor with a slim
majority of allies (four of seven).
I have a unique perspective, having been both an
assistant deputy mayor and the elected LAUSD president. What we are seeing
is a renaissance of public education being led by the people. For example,
in May the majority of the tenured teachers at Locke High School, one of
LAUSD’s most troubled schools, voted to become an independent charter
school. Significantly, they voted to opt out of LAUSD’s
teachers’ union in favor of the more progressive Maestros Unidos, a
California Teachers Association (CTA) affiliate. Across the district,
parents, teachers, administrators, and students are demanding more
independence from the central bureaucracy. New leaders are focusing on
rigor, quality, and deepening the relationships that support excellence.
They are taking responsibility.
The question is whether the mayor’s efforts will
provide the depth of challenge to the entrenched system required to drive
real student achievement. His comprehensive plan didn’t mention
charter schools as part of the solution, although it was written by a
former charter school leader and the stage was filled with charter school
students at the press unveiling. The new team can choose to support this
collective public action by providing facilities, cutting red tape, and
making the academic outcomes transparent, but doing so will require the
courage to honor the initiative of the people above the interests of the
establishment.
Caprice Young
President and CEO
California Charter Schools Association
Invest in Indianapolis
David
Skinner’s article (“Indianapolis Mayor Bart Peterson,” features, Summer 2007)
aptly describes Indianapolis’s efforts to reform and improve public
education. The legislature’s leadership and commitment for the past
six years, combined with Mayor Peterson’s and Ball State
University’s ability to authorize charters (and willingness to do
so), along with reform-minded superintendents such as Eugene White working
to improve the Indianapolis Public Schools (IPS), demonstrate to the
country’s education reformers that Indianapolis is prime territory
for innovation and investment.
Now it is time for the final piece to be put into
place: investment. On the East and West Coasts, philanthropists and venture
capitalists are investing huge sums to replicate charter schools and get
charter management organizations (CMOs) and education management
organizations (EMOs) up to scale. NewSchools Venture Fund, the Charter
School Growth Fund, and other individual foundations are focusing a great
deal of attention on large states. Rightly so. However, I would argue that
it is time to focus on the nation’s 12th largest city. From this
city, ripples can become waves across the Midwest.
It is worth noting that all the good that Indianapolis
is producing is even more stunning because of the relatively low level of
private funding committed to charter schools. The Lilly Endowment remains
mum on charter schools. Many corporate headquarters have moved out of
Indianapolis and Indiana altogether, and they have taken their
philanthropic attention and dollars with them. Thus, in addition to the
political leaders, the real leaders in Indianapolis and all of Indiana are
the few private donors who have supported education reformers in developing
their dream schools. Without these two pieces of the puzzle, the school
innovators and the funders, the charter school law would still just be a
law on the books.
With leaders all across the country increasingly
recognizing the power of charter schools to transform public education,
increased attention on Indianapolis by national funders, as well as an
infusion of efforts from school reform groups such as Teach For America,
New Leaders for New Schools, and CMOs and EMOs seeking to grow, could tip
the scales in Indianapolis and begin to improve public education for all
children in the city.
Kevin Teasley
President and founder
Greater Educational Opportunities Foundation
Adequacy Suits
In
“Adequately Fatigued” (legal
beat, Summer 2007), Joshua Dunn and Martha
Derthick describe court decisions in Texas, Massachusetts, and New York
that suggest the courts may be growing weary of educational adequacy cases.
They significantly understate their case. Eleven other adequacy cases have
also been decided in the last two years. Only in New Hampshire have
plaintiffs enjoyed any significant success.
In the other ten cases, the results have been largely
disappointing for plaintiffs. In Oklahoma, Indiana, Nebraska, Colorado,
Oregon, and Kentucky, the courts ruled that the amount of educational
funding is a political question for the legislature, not the courts, to
decide. In Arizona, the courts dismissed the case, concluding that the
state had no liability for achievement disparities it had not caused. A
trial court upheld the adequacy of South Carolina’s K–12
education system, approving only a claim related to pre-K programs. In the
latest trial in Wyoming, the court rejected the most significant of
plaintiffs’ claims, granting them relatively minor relief. Most
recently, an Alaska trial court ruled that plaintiffs had failed to prove
inadequate school funding in that state, holding only that more state
oversight over how some districts spent their money was needed. This was
hardly the result plaintiff school districts could have wanted.
The track record of the last two years is a
discouraging one for plaintiffs considering filing an adequacy lawsuit.
Rather than the courts, it has been through the often maligned legislative
process that advocates for increased funding for schools have had the most
success. Most notably, legislatures in New York, North Dakota, and Wyoming
significantly increased K–12 education appropriations in the last
year, but only after plaintiffs’ court claims for significantly
increased funding had either ended or been rejected.
Alfred A. Lindseth
Partner
Sutherland Asbill & Brennan
Pre-K for All
"Pre-K
101” (features,
Summer 2007) sets up a false choice between schools and community
child-care centers as the providers of pre-K. The reality is that we need
both, and this debate shouldn’t be allowed to sidetrack one of the
most dramatic improvements in the nation’s education system in the
past decade. Six years ago, the Pew Charitable Trusts launched a national
initiative aimed at helping states provide access to high-quality
pre-kindergarten for every three- and four-year-old whose parents want it
for them. Since then, the movement for pre-K has truly taken hold, with 29
governors recommending more than $800 million in new spending this past
spring, and growing numbers of farsighted states making pre-kindergarten
available to all three- and four-year-olds.
Underlying any decisions about how to structure early
education has to be a discussion of what will be of greatest benefit to the
children, and quality is the key. Private child-care providers can be an
essential part of a comprehensive network of facilities providing
high-quality pre-K. This year, Iowa, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Texas have
proposals on the table that embrace providing pre-K in diverse settings.
Indeed, the majority of states that have embraced pre-K build on the
success of community-based providers and give parents choices among
school-based, church-based, for-profit, and nonprofit child-care centers.
And there are good reasons for this: parents get choices, and states can
serve far more children than schools alone can possibly accommodate.
Susan Urahn
Managing Director
Sara Watson
Senior Officer
State Policy Initiatives
The Pew Charitable Trusts
Teacher Dispositions
"Return of the
Thought Police?” (research, Spring 2007) says there is a growing “approach to
teacher education and certification based on ideology rather than teaching
skills or mastery of content knowledge.” The author, Laurie Moses
Hines, teaches cultural foundations of education at Kent State University,
a National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education
(NCATE)-accredited institution. Were she to visit with faculty who are
preparing accreditation program reports in their respective disciplines of
mathematics, science, English, foreign language,
and other areas, she would better understand the depth and breadth of
content knowledge and its application for teaching that candidates must
demonstrate. This is the focus of NCATE: teachers who know the content they
plan to teach and how to teach it effectively so that students learn.
Regarding dispositions, NCATE expects
institutions to ensure that candidates “demonstrate dispositions that
value fairness and learning by all students.” In addition to these
commonsense expectations, institutions may develop other dispositions that
fit their mission. NCATE refers institutions to licensing standards for
professional educators adopted or adapted by most of the states.
Institutions often identify dispositions that encourage pre-service
educators to be caring teachers, lifelong learners, and reflective
practitioners. Institutions are encouraged to measure dispositions by
translating them into observable behaviors in school settings.
NCATE believes that the development of professional
dispositions is an important component of pre-service education. NCATE does
not expect or require institutions to inculcate candidates with any
particular social or political ideology. We hope that the record has been
set straight so that we all can continue the important job of preparing the
next generation of highly qualified educators who can work successfully
with all students.
Arthur E. Wise
President
National Council for Accreditation of Teacher
Education
Educational Software
The statement
by Todd Oppenheimer in “Selling Software” (features, Spring 2007) that Renaissance
Learning’s Accelerated Reader has not been “held up to serious
scrutiny” is simply inaccurate. There currently are several articles
on Accelerated Reader that are either published in or in press with
peer-reviewed journals. The peer-review process that determines whether an
article will be published subjects manuscripts to the utmost scrutiny.
One of our studies was a randomized trial in a large
urban district that found significant positive effects on reading
achievement for students who used Accelerated Reader according to the
publisher’s recommendations. This study was published more than a
year ago in the peer-reviewed Journal
of Education for Students Placed At Risk. Other
studies have included large quasi-experiments that also reported generally
positive outcomes for Accelerated Reader users, one of which is in press
with another peer-reviewed publication (Research in the Schools).
Beyond our studies, we are aware of several other refereed articles on
Accelerated Reader dating back to the 1990s.
In addition, the author made a serious omission by not
drawing distinctions between very different types of educational software.
The bulk of the article was dedicated to integrated learning systems (ILS),
in which the student sits at the computer and receives instruction through
the technology rather than from a teacher and also may complete exercises
and assessments.
Accelerated Reader is not an ILS. It’s a
progress-monitoring system that encourages book reading and helps the
teacher guide, monitor, and personalize student reading practice. Students
read books and then use Accelerated Reader to take comprehension quizzes
covering what they have read. Students have reading quantity and
comprehension goals, and the software tracks their progress against those
goals. The distinction between an ILS (to provide instruction) and a
progress-monitoring assessment system is a critical one.
Steven M. Ross
Center for Research in Educational Policy
The University of Memphis
John A. Nunnery
Department of Educational Leadership and
Counseling
Old Dominion University
In
“Selling Software,” Todd Oppenheimer opines that none of the
studies on Accelerated Reader have held up to serious scrutiny. However,
there is consensus among three key federally funded agencies (What Works
Clearinghouse, National Center on Student Progress Monitoring, and Florida
Center for Reading Research), as well as several peer-reviewed journal
articles that review research on education products, that Accelerated
Reader has met high standards of scientific rigor with positive effects and
no contrary evidence.
For 21 years Accelerated Reader has helped teachers
hold students in grades K–12 accountable for their reading practice.
What other educational product has withstood the test of time like that?
For more than two decades, Accelerated Reader has made a consistent,
reliable, and replicable contribution to the classroom.
Steven A. Schmidt
President and COO
Renaissance Learning, Inc.
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