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________________________________________ THE VERMONT EDUCATION REPORT
October 28, 2002 Vol. 2, No. 43
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Covering education news in Vermont and beyond...
Informative, provocative, unique...
Published by Vermonters for Better Education
VBE is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization whose mission is to enlist parents and the public at large in achieving quality educational opportunities for all the children of Vermont by monitoring the state of education in Vermont; promoting the value of educational freedoms for all parents; and giving parents the evaluative tools with which to identify excellence. Libby Sternberg, executive director: MAILTO:LSternberg@aol.com
NEWS & ANALYSIS...VERMONT IS NUMBER 12, ACCORDING TO ALEC
The American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) released its "Report Card on American Education: A State-by-State Analysis" last week, and Vermont ranked 12th in academic achievement among all 50 states and the District of Columbia. The top-scoring state was Wisconsin, followed by Washington and Minnesota. New England states in the top ten were New Hampshire at Number 7 and Massachusetts at Number 8. The academic achievement rankings were based on National Assessment of Educational Progress and SAT scores.
The Report looks at a number of factors, however, including per pupil spending, teacher compensation, academic achievement, and percentage increase in funding.
"A key finding of the report shows there is no immediate evident correlation between conventional measures of education inputs, such as expenditures per pupil and teacher salaries, and educational outputs, such as average scores on standardized tests," an ALEC press release accompanying the report said.
The Report shows that while spending per pupil in constant dollars has increased 22.6 percent nationwide over the past 20 years, 74 percent of public school eighth graders taking the NAEP mathematics exam in 2000 performed below the "proficiency" level, and 35 percent performed below the "basic" level.
The Executive Summary includes the following:
"The Report Card, with its more than 90 tables and 25 figures that display in various ways more than 100 measures of educational resources and achievement, strengthens the growing consensus that simply increasing spending on education is not enough to improve student performance. These measures and the analysis based on them confirms that there is no evident correlation between pupil-to-teacher ratios, spending per pupil, and teacher salaries on the one hand, and educational achievement as measured by various standardized test scores, on the other hand. In other words, lawmakers working to improve America's beleaguered education system must look beyond those conventional measures of investments in schools to find the keys to educational excellence.
"The tremendous growth and popularity of charter schools (37 states and the District of Columbia have enacted charter school laws governing over 2,366 operating charter schools), educational tax credit programs, private scholarship funds, and vouchers indicate that improving student achievement is not based on dollars spent, schools constructed, or even teachers hired. Instead, improvements are realized when accountability, choice and competition are injected into our current educational system... Faced with losing students to better educational options, public schools will have to improve."
Other key findings of the report include:
Seventy-four percent of public school eighth graders taking the NAEP mathematics exam in 2000 performed below the "proficiency" level. Thirty-five percent of eighth graders taking exam performed below the "basic" level.
Over the past 20 years, expenditures per pupil in constant dollar terms have increased nationwide by 22.6 percent. West Virginia (+109.4 percent), followed closely by Kentucky (+92.0 percent) led the nation in increased spending since 1979. The state with the next largest increase was Connecticut (+64.9 percent).
There is no immediately evident correlation between conventional measures of education inputs, such as expenditures per pupil and teacher salaries, and educational outputs, such as average scores on standardized tests. In fact, of all the educational inputs measured in this study, only higher pupil-to-teacher ratios, fewer students per school, and a lower percentage of a state's total budget received from the federal government have a positive impact on educational achievement. These results, however, are weak at best, and do not hold when measured as changes over the past two decades.
Of the ten states that increased per pupil expenditures the most over the past two decades, West Virginia (+109.4 percent), Kentucky (+92.0 percent), Connecticut (+64.9 percent), South Carolina (+63.0 percent), Maine (+60.0 percent), Hawaii (+56.7 percent), Tennessee (+55.4 percent), Vermont (+53.9 percent), Indiana (+51.9 percent), and Georgia (+51.6 percent), none ranked in the top ten in academic achievement.
Of the ten states that experienced the greatest decreases in pupil-to-teacher ratios over the past two decades Maine (-36.3 percent), Alabama (-34.2 percent), Virginia and Hawaii (-28.5 percent), South Carolina (-28.1 percent), West Virginia (-27.6 percent), Wyoming (-26.4 percent), New York (-25.1 percent), Georgia (-23.9 percent), and North Carolina (-23.3 percent) none ranked in the top ten in academic achievement.
ALEC is the nation's largest bipartisan, individual membership organization of state legislators. For a copy of the report, go to http://www.alec.org
SCHOOL CHOICE NOW! PAC ENDORSES VOYER
ANNOUNCES NEW WEB SITESchool Choice Now!, a political action committee supporting candidates who support school choice, will endorse Cathy Voyer for State Senate in Lamoille County, the PAC's chairman Bernier Mayo announced.
"When Cathy Voyer was in the House, she reported H. 716, the public school choice bill passed by the House, from the appropriations committee," says Mayo. "She has a strong history of support for school choice. Her opponent, Susan Bartlett, wouldn't even vote to have H. 716 considered in the Senate."
The PAC recommends any representative who voted for H.716, the public school choice bill passed by the House. For a record of votes, go to http://www.ethanallen.org and look for the Vermont Voter's Report Card.
The PAC now has a web site at http://www.schoolchoicenow.org.
ELSEWHERE...CHOICE IN FLORIDA
Education Week published a fascinating look at political and school choices last week. Here's a peek at the beginning of the article:
"Carleen Downing may be the perfect Florida Democrat. She compares Bill Clinton to John F. Kennedy. She testified last year in Tallahassee about voting problems in the 2000 presidential election. She's a longtime member of a local Democratic club and the NAACP.
"She's always known where she stood, and usually had no problem deciding her candidate for governor.
"Until the day Florida's education debate walked through her front door. Her youngest child, Freshandra Willis, wanted to leave her public school and use a state tuition voucher to attend Glades Day School, which was opened in 1965 for white families who did not want their students in integrated schools.
"Freshandra's request to take part in Republican Gov. Jeb Bush's voucher program not only violated her mother's political views and boundaries of race and tradition. It also forced her family to examine the same education issues many Florida voters will be weighing in the Nov. 5 election for governor.
"She put me right into a change," Ms. Downing said of her daughter.
"None of that mattered much to Freshandra, who is 14. She just wanted a place where the classes and the school itself were smaller. Where she felt safer. Where she could concentrate on school above everything else...."
For the complete article, go to: http://www.edweek.org/ew/ewstory.cfm?slug=08florida.h22
COMMENTARY...SHOULD THE FEDS GET INVOLVED IN SOCIAL STUDIES?
by Chester E. Finn, Jr.Reprinted from "The Gadfly," the electronic newsletter of the Fordham Foundation
http://www.edexcellence.netThe White House recently launched several ambitious initiatives to strengthen the teaching of history and civics in U.S. schools. Multiple federal agencies-including the Humanities Endowment, Education Department and Corporation for National and Community Service-are seeking to boost the civic understanding and historical knowledge of young Americans and to nudge schools and educators into doing a better job in this key area. A White House "summit" is slated for early 2003.
Members of Congress, too, have been agonizing about how Washington can help foster civic education. [See "President Introduces History & Civic Education Initiatives," White House, September 17, 2002 and "President Announces New Guidebook to Help Bring Service Programs to Schools," Corporation for National and Community Service, September 17, 2002.]
Part of the impetus for all this attention arises from heightened concern about civics and patriotism in the aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Part comes from the Bush administration's desire to encourage young (and older) people to engage in service to others. Part comes from the impulse to strengthen individual and national character and the understanding that this is inextricably linked to one's understanding of one's country, its polity and its past. And part stems from several rounds of dismal NAEP results and other evidence that young Americans know perilously little about their world, their nation's past and their government.
All true, all troubling and all in need of urgent attention. But how much can Washington do in this area? Key curricular decisions -graduation requirements, textbook selections, scopes and sequences, etc. -are made by states and districts. Essential decisions about teacher qualifications are made by states and hiring decisions by districts. (It's well known that history is one of the fields where U.S. students are most apt to encounter teachers who didn't major-or even minor-in the subject, because in nearly every state one can get certified as a social studies teacher by taking courses in any of the social sciences, such as psychology and sociology.)
Indeed, Uncle Sam has exacerbated the problem, albeit unintentionally. If one believes that "what gets tested is what gets taught," one must conclude that No Child Left Behind -with its strong emphasis on reading, math and, in time, science -will cause schools to reduce their attention to other subjects. Because NCLB places so much external scrutiny (from elected officials, top school administrators, business leaders, editorial writers, NAEP results, etc.) upon those three subjects on which schools, districts and states are to be held accountable and compared, other parts of the curriculum are more apt to be consigned to the tender mercies of their own experts.
And if ever there was a field in which it's risky to trust the experts, social studies is it. Worse, the National Assessment Governing Board, pressed to find the resources to fully test reading and math more often, recently moved to delay the next cycle of NAEP history and civics assessments, meaning that this influential source of objective evidence -and external scrutiny -will also slacken. (World history and civics will next be assessed in 2006, U.S. history and geography not until 2010.)
Neither are states doing well on their own. When the Thomas B. Fordham Foundation examined their academic standards in 2000, we found just three states that deserved "A" grades in history and seven in geography. Veteran history education expert (and historian) Paul Gagnon recently examined 48 state social studies standards (Iowa and Rhode Island don't have any) and reports that most of them are inadequate, "either overstuffed [with hundreds of specifics] or they are too vague and general." ["Educators Urged to Bring History Alive," by Kathleen Kennedy Manzo, Education Week, October 16, 2002] Another recent reviewer of state social studies standards estimates that only a quarter of them are good and just three or four truly praiseworthy. Thus the overwhelming majority of U.S. children attend school in states where even the official statement of what SHOULD be learned in this area lacks suitable content and rigor.
Nor is setting standards the end of the matter. Virginia is one state that developed solid standards, yet the recent rise in its social studies test results is attributable to a lowered passing score, not to improved pupil learning. Massachusetts, too, did a fine job with its standards several years back but is now embroiled in controversy over their revision.
To be sure, social studies is the most fractious of subjects, the one that evokes the most intense and selfish energies of interest groups (racial, national, religious, gender, etc.), each determined to ensure that its part of the story gets generously told and that nothing gets said or even hinted about it that might cause students to do other than revere it. This twin concern with group representation and admiration feeds into the bulking up of textbooks, the politically-correct-kitchen-sink version of standards, and the eradication from the curriculum of everything that's lively, provocative, judgmental or controversial -which means erasing just about everything that kids find interesting and are keen to learn.
That's one reason elected officials and other policy makers commonly back away from direct engagement with the social studies curriculum even as they devise more make-nice programs that, they insist, will strengthen student learning in this field. The result of their backing away, however, is to strengthen the profession's own grip over what gets taught, studied and learned.
And that's not good, considering how many social studies experts believe that, so long as a youngster practices niceness and multiculturalism and feels good about himself, their subject has done its job. They show scant interest in the meat of history, geography and civics. They poke fun at "mere facts and dates" and gush with constructivist zeal about "learning to think like an historian." They fret about "privileging" America in a diverse world, overemphasizing what's good about the nation's past, neglecting its misdeeds and mishaps. As David Gelernter recently wrote of Europe's tendency toward appeasement in foreign policy, they're in the grip of "a Weltanschauung, an entire philosophical world view that teaches the blood-guilt of Western man, the moral bankruptcy of the West, and the outrageousness of Western civilization's attempting to impose its values on anyone else."
This world view was on display in the curricular and pedagogical guidance that mainstream education groups (including the National Council for the Social Studies) pumped out after the 9/11/01 attacks and during the run-up to the first "anniversary" of that awful day. When the Thomas B. Fordham Foundation reviewed that guidance, we were dismayed by its neglect of real history, geography and civics, not to mention patriotism. We were disheartened by its overemphasis on tolerance, relativism, pluralism and feeling good about oneself. With the help of some real experts, we offered an alternative perspective for educators and policymakers. [See "September 11: What Our Children Need to Know," Thomas B. Fordham Foundation, September 2002] We were pleased when many readers thanked us for this.
Yet it was also clear that the troubling 9/11 guidance is but the tip of an immense iceberg. That iceberg is the underlying social studies curriculum itself and the views about it that are held by many of the field's opinion shapers, textbook writers, standards crafters and teacher educators. This is a key subject that begs to be snatched away from its own experts and restored to the sound impulses and decent values that dwell in the hearts of most ordinary Americans. One wishes the feds well in their endeavors in this area, but -short of adding social studies to No Child Left Behind and boosting its NAEP frequency -it's hard to see how Uncle Sam can do much to turn around the bleak situation that now envelopes this vital corner of K-12 education.
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The VERMONT EDUCATION REPORT is published by Vermonters for Better Education 170 Church Street, Rutland, VT 05701, 802.773.5240 Contact LSternberg@aol.com for more information.
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