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Report Release: Reforming Teacher Pensions for a Changing Work Force
New Education Sector report examines teacher pensions and details the problems facing current state pension programs.
Sport or Not? A Question for the Courts
Senior Policy Analyst Elena Silva interviewed by the New York Times on Title IX.
Teachers Unions as Agents of Reform
Brad Jupp, an architect of Denver's landmark performance-based teacher pay system, ProComp, is an outspoken advocate of both labor organizing and quality education for disadvantaged kids. In this interview, Jupp talks about ProComp, his views on teacher unionism, and the future of the teaching profession.
Education Sector Welcomes Three New Board Members
Education Sector's board of directors names three prominent leaders in the fields of education and journalism to the board: David W. Breneman, Richard Lee Colvin, and Peter McWalters.
For-profit colleges: Do they shortchange students?
Policy Director Kevin Carey comments on a recent Senate HELP Committee hearing on for-profit colleges.
But the school has done just about everything right in recent years. Principal Conce Rodriguez has introduced reforms that require students to wear uniforms and teachers to submit weekly progress reports on every student in every subject. There's an expanded pre-kindergarten program, teacher-attendance incentives, and a big tutoring project. Rodriguez even hired a “community liaison,” who has expanded the school's PTA membership to 700, the largest in
The changes at Marcus have paid dividends in the classroom. Under NCLB, the
But that's
The discrepancy isn't the product of fuzzy math. It's the result of competing ideas about how to use test results. NCLB's strategy is to cast a bright light on student performance and impose reforms on schools that don't measure up. To do this, it mandates that student populations be judged once a year against a fixed state standard, while Dallas measures changes in individual student performance from one year to the next.
Other
The sense that
Since shortly after its passage, the law has been under heavy attack—from congressional Democrats who say the administration hasn't invested the money it promised to implement the law, from Republican state legislators who resent the federal intrusion, and from teacher union leaders who never liked test-based accountability in the first place. But there have been other, less widely publicized, indictments of NCLB from parents, teachers, and principals who support high-stakes testing but see how NCLB is playing out in the classroom.
Educators in impoverished neighborhoods argue that the law's criteria for school success don't sufficiently take into account of how immensely far behind many of their students are when they start school. Educators and parents in affluent communities, where students routinely score above state standards, have a different complaint: that the NCLB accountability system is leading to a dumbing down of their schools' curricula. Many testing experts, meanwhile, point out that NCLB creates a host of perverse incentives, including encouraging states to set their academic standards low to reduce the number of their schools labeled “failing” under the law—the opposite of what NCLB's authors intended.
Education Secretary Margaret Spellings has responded to these charges with modest retreats, loosening some of the criteria by which schools are labeled failing so that fewer of them will be. These steps may buy the administration some short-term political relief. But they don't address the law's core problem: NCLB doesn't accurately measure the extent to which schools are improving student achievement.
This is no small flaw. The failure of public schools to educate
The hardest assignments
Why does the
Unlike NCLB, the effect of
By doing so, the “value added” school-rating metric provides a more accurate picture of which schools are actually educating their students well. It is also fairer to schools and teachers working with the most disadvantaged kids. It pressures them to perform without penalizing them for taking on the hardest assignments in education. Conversely, the system doesn't reward rich schools with privileged students merely for standing still. Passing the state test, an easy task for many of their students, is not good enough.
This greater accuracy and fairness in turn provides a host of other advantages. It offers districts and states a firmer basis upon which to mete out rewards to good schools and sanctions to bad ones. It gives teachers clearer pictures of how individual students are progressing, making it a more useful diagnostic tool. It gives principals a system of measuring teacher ability—a system that even most teachers who work under it think is fair. It potentially offers parents much more accurate and fine-grained information than they can currently get on how individual schools and teachers are performing, thus making the job of choosing the right school easier. And it avoids some of the perverse incentives that NCLB has created to set standards low or otherwise game the system.
Experience has borne out these benefits. In places such as
Robert Mendro, the district's research director, says that the Dallas schools such as Marcus that have used the student and teacher information that value-added testing gives them to target reforms have outperformed their peers. His only regret is that more
Bush's brain
Recently, I spoke with Sandy Kress, a veteran school reformer now with the law firm of Akin Gump.
The
Kress's work on the commission, and in particular his innovative accountability plan, landed him a seat on the
Bush had sought out Kress when he captured the
But as Kress's reform efforts progressed from
I first discussed NCLB with Kress in late 2001 in his large corner office in the White House's Eisenhower Executive Office Building, just as Congress was about to pass the law. He was straightforward in suggesting that value-added ratings were “a whole lot fairer” to schools than the NCLB rating system would be. The NCLB system would favor wealthy schools, he acknowledged.
Members of Congress on both sides of the aisle were just as aware as Kress was of NCLB's shortcomings—and of the importance of seizing the moment. George Miller, a
So, eager to make good on his campaign claim that he was a “compassionate conservative,” and with even congressional liberals backing his plan, the president introduced NCLB on his third day in office. Eleven months later the bill was back on his desk for signing.
Bubble boys
NCLB's accountability system was, Kress and the others believed, the best that could be achieved in 2001, and they were probably right. But the flaws in its testing mandate have become more and more evident with each passing year. In particular, education insiders say that NCLB's rating system holds schools responsible for factors they can't control. Studies have shown that such things as English proficiency, family income, and parental education have a major influence on test scores, but NCLB, by judging schools on the basis of whether enough students pass a set of tests once a year instead of on how much schools increase students' learning over the course of a year, as the value-added model does, fails to account for that reality. Respected measurement expert and accountability advocate Stephen Raudenbush of the
The flaws in the law virtually invite schools to game the system in various unproductive ways. To increase their scores, critics say, many schools lavish disproportionate attention on so-called “bubble” students—those who score just below the state standard. The rationale is clear, if cynical: The easiest way to avoid being labeled failing is to push these marginal students over the line. The more difficult students often get less help as a result. And while timetables built into the law will eventually force schools to deal with those students, there is, perversely, no incentive in the law for schools to focus on their more capable students. Indeed, research by value-added advocate William Sanders has shown that the rate of progress for high-achieving students in low-performing schools in
Defying political gravity
The value-added methodology, by contrast, doesn't create such incentives to focus on a handful of students. Under the system, every child's improvement counts the same towards the school's overall rating. And the methodology itself is widely seen by those who use it as fairer and more accurate. Value added should thus make it easier for teachers to accept the idea of higher pay for outstanding performance and for working in the toughest schools—changes many see as important next steps in reforming education. Indeed,
Many of the obstacles to the widespread use of value-added ratings have been overcome in recent years. Thanks in part to the passage of No Child Left Behind, schools all over the country are on their way to testing every year from 3rd to 8th grade—a prerequisite for the value-added methodology. States are also beefing up their computer and statistical resources. Researchers are still working to address some of the toughest technical issues raised by the value-added method, such as how to measure students who move from school to school and how to compare scores on a subject year-to-year when the curriculum changes. But enough progress has been made that more and more states are looking at the value-added idea.
There's an argument for replacing the adequate yearly progress method mandated by NCLB with value-added. But the political obstacles to doing so would be considerable. The idea that there should be one standard for all students, regardless of race or income, and that all schools should be held responsible for meeting those standards, is the gravity that holds the liberal and conservative sides of the school reform movement together. Moreover, setting that single standard for all students does seem to have the effect of lifting the aspirations of parents, students, and teachers in many low-income schools, and sparking a sense of panic that is not unhelpful given the dismal performance of many of these schools. Dropping the standards approach entirely makes no sense politically or policy-wise.
One solution might be to publish scores from both the standards-based and value-added methods but to tie rewards and sanctions only to the latter. Another would be to combine the two ratings strategies. That's what
From the outside, Marcus Elementary doesn't look like much. The front yard is a derelict landscape of dirt and crab grass. Torn shades hang awry in the school's aging window frames. But its library is bustling, its classrooms are lively, and its hallways are filled with students' work. It's not what you'd imagine a school filled with desperately poor, non-English-speaking students would be like. But seeing it up close, you can begin to imagine a better future for American education.
Marcus' Principal Rodriguez, a short, cheerful man in his mid-30s, told me when we met in his spare, painted-cinderblock office, that his emotions were split between an excitement at the possibilities offered by value added and the problems he has to deal with because of No Child Left Behind. He was pleased that the