Tough to Swallow

July 16, 2013

Salad

Image courtesy of Murin / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

(Guest Post by Patrick Wolf)

Subsidiarity is the principle that decision-making authority should be delegated to the lowest reasonable level.  Why?  Because people in localized areas like states, communities, schools, and families have contextual knowledge that helps inform their decisions – knowledge that centralized administrators in far-away places (like, say, Washington, DC) lack.  Subsidiarity  also is justified because small communities more directly reap the benefits when things go well for their members and suffer the consequences when things go poorly, meaning community decision-makers have strong incentives to get things right.

That brings us to the new Federal Lunch Program nutritional mandates, spearheaded by First Lady Michelle Obama and issued by the U.S. Department of Agriculture in January of 2012, to great fanfare.  You might consider them to be “The Common Core” of school nutrition policy, embodying the thinking of the best minds in Washington regarding what every child in America should consume for lunch.  As Kyle Olson at EAG News reports, implementation of the nutritional reforms hasn’t quite been as easy as pie.

The U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) released the official testimony of Kay Brown, the Director of Education, Workforce, and Income Security for the organization, regarding GAO’s investigation of the experience on the ground regarding the nutritional mandates.  To be sure, schools retained the ability to develop their own lunch menus, but they had to fit them into the strict guidelines for caloric intake and food types issued by the feds.  Not surprisingly, there have been problems.  For example,

The meat and grain restrictions…led to smaller lunch entrees, making it difficult for some schools to meet minimum calorie requirements for lunches without adding items, such as gelatin, that generally do not improve the nutritional quality of lunches. (p. 1)

 So, to meet the nutritional regulations imposed by Washington bureaucrats, some schools had to make their lunches less nutritional.  Nice.

The GAO testimony also mentions that some schools had to eliminate the cheeseburgers, beloved by high school students, because the feds redefined cheese as meat, leaving cheeseburger meals too meat-dominant for Washington’s liking.  (“You are a meat!  No, I am a dairy product!  No, you are a meat because I say you are a meat!”)  To save the cheeseburger, one school even shrunk the actual meat portion to a puny 1.5 ounces so that it could be blanketed by a slice of cheese (which is a meat by the way).  One can envision hundreds of teenagers, as opposed to one little old lady, shouting “Where’s the beef?!”

Students, predictably, dislike the changes and have taken steps to undermine them, most notably by throwing away much of the highly nutritional food that now must be provided to them.  Teachers report that students are less attentive during the final class period, when they have run out of energy due to inadequate caloric consumption during the day.  Coaches report student athletes who can’t perform during practice because they are famished.  Some schools have quit the Federal Lunch Program, denying their low-income students government lunch subsidies, just to escape the federal requirements.  Let’s just say this isn’t going so well.

When I was in high school, I was a 5-foot-6-inch, 120 pound speech-and-debate guy.  Sometimes I would eat lunch with Steve Janey, a 6-foot-8-inch, 200 pound center on our basketball team.  Steve had trouble keeping weight on his large frame.  The nice lunch ladies would sometimes slip him an extra hamburger patty, and I would give him food off my plate that I didn’t need or care to eat.  It took some work to keep Steve full and fit, but we all pitched in because it benefited us if he was the beast in the low post that we wanted him to be.  Subsidiarity.

The new school lunch nutritional standards were not designed for the Steve Janey’s of this world.  They were designed for the “typical American student” who really doesn’t exist.  Young people come in all shapes, sizes, and nutritional needs.  Athletes and children on farms burn thousands of calories per day more than do brainiacs.  How could we possibly expect that a single set of nutritional standards would be a good fit for all school children, in the distinctive communities that dot our country, and that they would passively eat their peas and carrots and like it?

Adhering to subsidiarity does not mean always delegating to the max.  For example, the President and the Congress should decide which national security secrets should be released to the public, not some low-level government contractor. National security affects the entire nation equally, and federal government officials bear the consequences as much as just about anyone except members of our armed forces when security is degraded.  But school lunches aren’t national security.  Let communities decide what is a fitting lunch for their students, and the high school students themselves choose from higher-calorie or lower-calorie meals based on their particular needs.  If not, Washington is likely to get a good old fashioned food fight.

    


How Reformers Can Threaten Liberty

July 13, 2013

I’ll interrupt my hiatus to post this video of my lecture to the Georgia Public Policy Foundation as part of their Friedman Day celebrations.  In this lecture I discuss ways in which aspects of the education reform movement are in danger of becoming the thing that they oppose.  In particular, I discuss Common Core, top-down accountability, and narrowing education to focus only on work-related skills.


Jay in the WSJ

July 11, 2013

(Guest Post by Matthew Ladner)

Jay took time off from his fishing trip to pen an Op-Ed for the WSJ on private schools and tolerance. Big finish:

It is not clear why private schools have an advantage in producing more tolerant students. It may be that private schools are better at teaching
civic values like tolerance, just as they may be more effective at teaching math or reading. It is also possible that, contrary to elite
suspicion, religion can teach important lessons about human equality and dignity that inspire tolerance.


Who Needs High School?

July 11, 2013

(Guest Post by Collin Hitt)

My introductory college courses were far better than the pap I was offered junior and senior years of high school. I remember wondering as a freshman at Southern Illinois University, why didn’t they offer these classes at Springfield High?

Now enter early college high schools, where kids take college courses at their high schools, which are often located on college campuses. A new gold standard study of ten early colleges finds that they raise reading scores, high school graduation rates, college attendance and – 7 years after high school began – college attainment. It turns out, making senior year more useful makes high school better for everyone.

The study, from the American Institutes for Research, uses gold-standard random assignment methods to evaluate the Early College High School Initiative that was launched by the Gates Foundation over a decade ago. The study looked at early college high schools, which offer kids the opportunity to earn college credit – even a two year college degree – while still in high school. The schools are typically formed in partnership with colleges and big-name employers, like IBM.

The AIR evaluation looked at 10 early college high schools that received Gates Foundation support. All were schools of choice that used lotteries to admit students, a majority of whom were low income. All of the schools were small; four of them were charter schools. We already have some evidence that small schools and charter high schools improved high school graduation and college going rates. The findings from the AIR evaluation are consistent with that literature; they find that early colleges increase graduation rates by 6-10 points and ever enrolling in college by 9 to 17 points.

The study mainly focused on “intent to treat” effects, i.e. whether the offer of a seat in an early college increased student achievement. The effects of actually attending an early college were buried in Appendix E. The effects are quite large.

The remarkable difference in early colleges is that 26.9 percent of early college students had completed a postsecondary degree by the time of the study, compared to 0.9 percent of the control group. Time will tell if those differences persist. But even if the control group eventually matches the early college students in educational attainment, the early college students will have likely entered the workforce much earlier and with far fewer student loans.

One of the most interesting developments in education today is the blurring line between secondary and postsecondary education. Colleges are increasingly doing the work of high schools. In early colleges, they are helping to offer college content. On the other hand, in remedial education, community colleges are teaching material that high schools failed to teach. Also, colleges will be expanding the online offerings available to high school students, which will be disruptive to the high school model. Where are we headed? A brave new world of neo-secondary education? I don’t know – hopefully towards a world where senior year of high school isn’t a complete waste of time.


You Never Can Have Enough Choice

July 5, 2013

(Guest Post by Matthew Ladner)

Matthew Ridley helpfully debunks the notion that modern society has “too much choice.”

P.S. Has Saturday Night Live spoofed TED yet?


Gone Fishing

July 3, 2013

I’m going to be taking a break over the next month to get some other stuff done, so I don’t plan on posting during July.  I’ve asked a few friends to join Matt and Greg in putting up some posts, just so that the blog is not completely inactive.

See you in August.


Standards and Curriculum—You Can’t Have One Without the Other

June 19, 2013

(Guest Post by James Shuls)

In a recent Education Next blog post, Peter Meyer wrote about the tendency of Common Core opponents to conflate the idea of content standards with curriculum. He writes, “It is not a small distinction, since standards provide goals and a curriculum provides the day-to-day, week-to-week, year-to-year road map for reaching those goals.” He goes on to say, “From both a pedagogical and political point of view, it is crucial to keep the distinction between standards and curriculum clean and clear. But, most importantly, we need to try as hard as we can to get the facts straight.”

I agree with Meyer in many regards. If Common Core supporters want to build support for the standards among Republicans they absolutely must differentiate the Common Core from curriculum. I also agree that we need to get the facts straight. Unfortunately, this is something that Meyer’s post fails to do.

This conflation of ideas is not simply something Tea Party activists or Common Core opponents are guilty of, it’s widespread. Do a Google search for “Common Core Content Standards” and “Common Core Curriculum Standards.” You’ll get more hits for the later. Curriculum and content standards are often used interchangeably. Teachers, principals, and even assistant superintendents are guilty of as much.

Last year I contacted my children’s school and requested a copy of the curriculum. They sent me a one-page summary of the Common Core and an excerpt from Children’s Mathematics: Cognitively Guided Instruction (CGI)

When I met with them and asked about the curriculum for spelling and reading. The teacher’s response was, “We’re following Common Core.”

When I asked about the math curriculum, the teacher told me they were using CGI to teach the Common Core. The principal even told me that she researched it by asking the district’s assistant superintendent for education about the district’s math curriculum. The answer—Common Core State Standards.

I tried to correct them. I tried to point out that these are standards not curriculum, but they were insistent. The problem is that the distinction between a “content standard” and “curriculum” is only a matter of degree. This distinction is not clear, not even for many educators.

Let’s look at an example. If I say students in first grade should be able to “Express the length of an object as a whole number of length units, by laying multiple copies of a shorter object (the length unit) end to end” Is that simply a standard or is that an activity that could be part of a lesson?

Meyer somehow tries to defend the distinction between Common Core and curriculum by noting that the standards must be complimented by a curriculum; an attempt that falls flat on its face. Demonstrating that a Common Core curriculum must be developed to implement the Common Core Standards simply illustrates that the standards will dictate curriculum to local schools. This strengthens the link between standards and curriculum.

Conflating standards and curriculum is not some ploy by opponents of Common Core. It is a widespread problem because the two are inseparable; just like love and marriage—you can’t have one without the other.

James Shuls is the education policy analyst at the Show-Me Institute


The Hubris of NCTQ’s Ed School Ratings

June 18, 2013

One of the bigger problems in education policy is hubris.  People regularly claim that they know what the right policies or practices are, and things would be better if only others would bend to their will.  The truth is that we know relatively little about effective education policies and practices.  This isn’t for lack of trying.  Despite considerable research effort and policy inquiry, we’ve found remarkably few “universal truths” about effective education.  Part of the difficulty is that knowing what works presupposes that there is a single, best way.  But  it appears much of what is effective in education is contingent on particular needs and circumstances and does not lend itself to broad declarations about the “right”  practices and policies.

Because the scourge of PLDD is endemic, however, we continue to hear claims that “We know what works.”   This was the traditional refrain of teacher union leaders, but now reformers have joined the hubris chorus.  The latest example of this is the ratings of Ed Schools issued by the National Council of Teacher Quality.  NCTQ claims to know what good teacher preparation programs should be doing and judges those programs against NCTQ’s vision of effective practices.

In particular, NCTQ identifies 18 standards by which it judges Ed Schools.  “Our standards for the first edition of the Teacher Prep Review” NCTQ assures us, ” are based on research; internal and external expert panels; the best practices of other nations and the states with the highest performing students; and, most importantly, what superintendents and principals around the country tell us they look for in the new teachers they hire.”

NCTQ describes the research basis for their standards in a lengthy document.  Yet, even according to their own description only 8 of the 18 standards are supported by “strong research.”  And in most of the 8 cases where they do claim to have strong research support, the research does not actually provide them with the strong support they assert.

For example, the “Early Reading” standard assesses whether “The program trains teacher candidates to teach reading as prescribed by the Common Core State Standards.”  None of the studies they cite actually examine the specific standard since none specifically examine what methods of teaching reading, if any, are actually prescribed by Common Core.  As is the case with all 18 standards in the NCTQ rating system, one has to make a series of leaps between the research cited and the actual standard being used to judge teacher prep programs.

In the case of early reading, the “strong research” they cite examines whether teachers are familiar with the “five components of effective reading instruction,” and whether teachers who are certified and have masters degrees are more likely to know those five components.  It turns out teachers are generally not familiar with the five components and are no more likely to know them if they are certified or have a masters.  That’s all very nice, but isn’t the “strong research” supporting the standard supposed to show that knowledge of the five components, which presumably have something to do with teaching “reading as prescribed by the Common Core State Standards,” actually lead to improved reading by students?  The strong research cited by NCTQ says it generally doesn’t: “This study also found no relationship between teachers’ knowledge of these components and their students’ reading growth – with the notable exception of third-grade students.”  This is typical of the “strong research” supporting 8 of the 18 standards by which NCTQ judges Ed Schools.

Standards 1 and 6 address whether teacher prep programs select “teacher candidates of strong academic caliber” and whether “teacher candidates have the broad content preparation necessary to successfully teach to the Common Core State Standards.”  In both cases the “strong research” on which these standards rely is a study by Boyd, et al examining the relationship between teacher characteristics and student achievement.  Let’s leave aside the fact that NCTQ acknowledges that research by Harris and Sass as well as Chingos and Peterson contradict their standard.  Even the Boyd, et al study they do cite does not specifically demonstrate that teachers from more selective programs or with more content training are more effective.  First, Boyd, et al are careful not to make the type of strong causal claims from their work that NCTQ does:

It is not easy to estimate how the achievement gains of students are affected by the qualifications of their teachers because teachers are not randomly sorted into classrooms. For example, if teachers in schools in which students perform best in math are more likely to be certified in math, one might be tempted to conclude that being certified to teach math contributes to higher student achievement. The causal relationship, however, may operate in the other direction; that is, more qualified teachers may be in schools where students perform well in math because they prefer to teach good students and because employers want to staff their courses with in-field certified teachers. Analysts need to be careful not to attribute the test-score gains associated with sorting to the attributes of teachers.

Beyond the fact that Boyd, et al would not make the strong causal claims from their work that NCTQ feels free to do, the Boyd, et al study examines a basket of teacher qualifications and does not claim to be able to distinguish accurately between teacher experience, selectivity of the college they attended, content knowledge, and other characteristics because “many of the measures of teachers’ qualifications are highly correlated with each other.”  In short, the Boyd, et al study is hardly the “strong research” in support of their standards that NCTQ claims it is.

Do we need more examples of how NCTQ misinterprets or stretches research to claim that their standards are supported by “strong research”?  Oh, how about one more…  Standard 13 is “Equity” and judges teacher prep programs based on whether “The program ensures that teacher candidates experience schools that are successful in serving students who have been traditionally underserved.”  The “strong research ” NCTQ cites for support of the claim “that entering teachers learn crucial methods of instruction and management through observation of and supervised practice in schools where staff are successfully teaching students living in poverty” is a piece by Ronfeldt.

Unfortunately, Ronfeldt’s study appears to make the opposite claim.  He finds that it is more important for student teachers to be trained in schools with low staff turnover that tend to have more advantaged students.  He concludes:

Should we place student teachers in “difficult-to-staff, underserved” schools to learn to teach? The main
findings of this study suggest otherwise – learning to teach in difficult-to-staff field placement schools is associated with lower teacher effectiveness and retention. Moreover, the results demonstrate that being trained in field placements with higher concentrations of poor, black, and lowest-achieving students has no significant effect on teacher retention or effectiveness.

I haven’t see this much unreliable citation of research since I read teacher union reports.

To be fair, NCTQ acknowledges that quality research on effective education practices is in short supply: “To the extent that high-quality research can inform how teachers should be prepared, NCTQ uses that research to formulate standards. Unfortunately, research in education that connects preparation practices to teacher effectiveness is both limited and spotty.”  But this lack of evidence does not prevent NCTQ from confidently declaring that they know what teacher prep programs should be doing and judging them on that basis.  If quality research is so limited, how does NCTQ know what everyone else is supposed to be doing?

And I’m sure that there is considerable room for improvement in teacher prep programs.  Many of NCTQ’s recommendations are probably sensible, even if they aren’t backed by “strong research.”  The problem is not so much that NCTQ is suggesting bad ideas as that they are claiming to know much more than they actually know.  And they are willing to boss around everyone else despite not knowing as much as they think.

Maybe we’d make more progress in improving teacher prep programs if we were more upfront about what we didn’t know and encouraged more experimentation and data-collection so that we can learn more.  And given that different circumstances may call for different practices, maybe we should be open to a variety of Ed School approaches rather than attempting to impose the one true way.


Twitter and Narcissism

June 12, 2013

Back in April I argued:

Twitter can be handy for announcing links to other material, following breaking news and unfolding events, or for humor.   But for policy discussion, Twitter has to be just about the dumbest thing on the planet.  Watching people attempt to have meaningful exchanges on Twitter is just ridiculous….  Some education policy analysts, however, are undeterred by the stupidity of Twitter and are determined to attempt to change the world through thousands of 140 character messages.  Quite often they are communicating thousands of profound 140 character messages to a relatively small number of followers.  As is too typical in education policy debates, everyone is on the stage and almost no one is in the audience.

I then went on to develop “the Narcissus Index, which is the ratio of the number of Tweets people have issued to the number of their followers.  Essentially it is the ratio of how much we love hearing ourselves talk to how many people actually want to listen to us.”

Well, researchers at the University of Michigan have confirmed my suspicion that there is a link between Twitter use and Narcissism:

Researchers interviewed 486 college students…. Researches administered a personality assessment that evaluated a person’s narcissism and found that participants who appeared to have a superior sense of self were likely to be active on Twitter….   Likewise, adults who scored high on a narcissism assessment were likely to be active on Facebook, where the goal is to curate an image and control how you are seen….   According to the U-M release, the study is among the first to compare the relationship between narcissism and social media use across ages.

The researchers were unable to say which came first, the chicken or the egg. In other words, does constant social media use breed narcissism or is it a symptom of the condition?  The study is published online in Computers in Human Behavior.

There you have it.  Science reports that there is a connection between Narcissism and Twitter.  Now everyone proceed to argue about this in 140 characters or less with your customary level of outrage and snark.  Doing so will make the world a better place 140 characters at a time.

(HT: Morgan Polikoff)


Learning Liberty

June 11, 2013

Support for liberty does not appear to be natural.  It has to be learned.  Everyone is inclined to preserve his or her own autonomy, but that is not the same as protecting the autonomy of other or supporting the principle of liberty in the abstract.  From a narrow self-interested perspective, the rational thing is to protect one’s own autonomy while being indifferent to the oppression of others.  As long as you are free to pursue your interests, why should you care if others aren’t?

Of course, it could be argued that you should promote liberty for others so that your own liberty is protected.  But this ignores collective action failure.  As long as a person can protect one’s own liberty why should he or she endure the risk and expense of protecting others?  Notice that the press did not become alarmed about Obama Administration actions until it was revealed that AP phone records had been secretly obtained. This greater interest in preserving one’s own rights is actually quite typical.

So, how do we overcome collective action failure and get large numbers of people to support liberty as an abstract principle for all and not just for themselves?  We are in  paradoxical situation where our self-interest does not construct and sustain a system by which we are free to pursue our self-interest.  We need non-self-interested ideas and actions to lay the foundations for a system where self-interest can flourish.

Tocqueville gave a fair amount of thought to this problem, but current supporters of liberty pay little attention to the issue.  Tocqueville noted that institutions like religion, family, and community help lay the foundations for liberty.  It’s interesting that all of these institutions that support a system where liberty is protected are themselves illiberal.  For the most part, one does not choose one’s family, religion, or community.  And even when one does choose a spouse, to convert to a new religion, or relocate to a new community, in all cases one must still submit to the authority of others.

The reason why these illiberal institutions help lay the foundations for liberty is that they induce one to subordinate one’s narrow self-interest for abstract principle — just as liberty requires some sacrifice of self-interest for the principle that other people’s self-interest is also worthy of protection.

In addition to these illiberal institutions, another mechanism by which support for liberty is cultivated is through art.  Research that I am doing with Brian Kisida and Dan Bowen is finding that exposing students to art promotes support for liberty.  The reason for this may be that art helps us reflect on the human condition, much like religion, and may lead us to subordinate some of our self-interest for the abstract principle of liberty.  Perhaps the important thing about art is that it is not “productive” in a narrow economic sense.  So it trains us to think that there are things of value other than the acquisition of material goods and power for ourselves.  This then helps create and sustain a system where we are free to acquire material goods and power for ourselves.

Whatever the mechanism is by which we learn to love liberty, we need to pay more attention to promoting those mechanisms if liberty will continue to flourish.  Liberty will not protect itself.  It must be learned.