(Guest post by Greg Forster)
No, I’m not referring to the state’s brand new voucher program. I’ve got a piece in today’s Oklahoman on how the evidence consistently shows school choice works.
(Guest post by Greg Forster)
No, I’m not referring to the state’s brand new voucher program. I’ve got a piece in today’s Oklahoman on how the evidence consistently shows school choice works.
The U.S. Department of Education’s “What Works Clearinghouse” (WWC) is supposed to adjudicate the scientific validity of competing education research claims so that policymakers, reporters, practitioners, and others don’t have to strain their brains to do it themselves. It would be much smarter for folks to exert the mental energy themselves rather than trust a government-operated truth committee to sort things out for them.
WWC makes mistakes, is subject to political manipulation, and applies arbitrary standards. In short, what WWC says is not The Truth. WWC is not necessarily less reliable than any other source that claims to adjudicate The Truth for you. Everyone may make mistakes, distort results, and apply arbitrary standards. The problem is that WWC has the official endorsement of the U.S. Department of Education, so many people fail to take their findings with the same grains of salt that they would to the findings of any other self-appointed truth committee. And with the possibility that government money may be conditioned on WWC endorsement, WWC’s shortcomings are potentially more dangerous.
I could provide numerous examples of WWC’s mistakes, political manipulation, and arbitrariness, but for the brevity of a blog post let me illustrate my point with just a few.
First, WWC was sloppy and lazy in its recent finding that the Milwaukee voucher evaluation, led by my colleagues Pat Wolf and John Witte, failed to meet “WWC evidence standards” because “the authors do not provide evidence that the subsamples of voucher recipients and public school comparison students analyzed in this study were initially equivalent in math and reading achievement.” WWC justifies their conclusion with a helpful footnote that explains: “At the time of publication, the WWC had contacted the corresponding author for additional information regarding the equivalence of the analysis samples at baseline and no response had been received.”
But if WWC had actually bothered to read the Milwaukee reports they would have found the evidence of equivalence they were looking for. The Milwaukee voucher evaluation that Pat and John are leading has a matched-sample research design. In fact, the research team produced an entire report whose purpose was to demonstrate that the matching had worked and produced comparable samples. In addition, in the 3rd Year report the researchers devoted an entire section (see appendix B) to documenting the continuing equivalence of the matched samples despite some attrition of students over time.
Rather than reading the reports and examining the evidence on the comparability of the matched samples, WWC decided that the best way to determine whether the research met their standards for sample equivalence was to email John Witte and ask him. I guess it’s all that hard work that justifies the multi-million dollar contract Mathematica receives from the U.S. Department of Education to run WWC.
As it turns out, Witte was traveling when WWC sent him the email. When he returned he deleted their request along with a bunch of other emails without examining it closely. But WWC took Witte’s non-response as confirmation that there was no evidence demonstrating the equivalence of the matched samples. WWC couldn’t be bothered to contact any of the several co-authors. They just went for their negative conclusion without further reading, thought, or effort.
I can’t prove it (and I’m sure my thought-process would not meet WWC standards), but I’ll bet that if the subject of the study was not vouchers, WWC would have been sure to read the reports closely and make extra efforts to contact co-authors before dismissing the research as failing to meet their standards. But voucher researchers have grown accustomed to double-standards when others assess their research. It’s just amazingly ironic to see the federally-sponsored entity charged with maintaining consistent and high standards fall so easily into their own double-standard.
Another example — I served on a WWC panel regarding school turnarounds a few years ago. We were charged with assessing the research on how to successfully turnaround a failing school. We quickly discovered that there was no research that met WWC’s standards on that question. I suggested that we simply report that there is no rigorous evidence on this topic. The staff rejected that suggestion, emphasizing that the Department of Education needed to have some evidence on effective turnaround strategies.
I have no idea why the political needs of the Department should have affected the truth committee in assessing the research, but it did. We were told to look at non-rigorous research, including case-studies, anecdotes, and our own experience to do our best in identifying promising strategies. It was strange — there were very tight criteria for what met WWC standards, but there were effectively no standards when it came to less rigorous research. We just had to use our professional judgment.
We ended up endorsing some turnaround strategies (I can’t even remember what they were) but we did so based on virtually no evidence. And this was all fine as long as we said that the conclusions were not based on research that met WWC standards. I still don’t know what would have been wrong with simply saying that research doesn’t have much to tell us about effective turnaround strategies, but I guess that’s not the way truth committees work. Truth committees have to provide the truth even when it is false.
The heart of the problem is that science has never depended on government-run truth committees to make progress. It is simply not possible for the government to adjudicate the truth on disputed topics because the temptation to manipulate the answer or simply to make sloppy and lazy mistakes is all too great. This is not a problem that is particular to the Obama Administration or to Mathematica. My second example was from the Bush Administration when WWC was run by AIR.
The hard reality is that you can never fully rely on any authority to adjudicate the truth for you. Yes, conflicting claims can be confusing. Yes, it would be wonderfully convenient if someone just sorted it all out for us. But once we give someone else the power to decide the truth on our behalf, we are prey to whatever distortions or mistakes they may make. And since self-interest introduces distortions and the tendency to make mistakes, the government is a particularly untrustworthy entity to rely upon when it comes to government policy.
Science has always made progress by people sorting through the mess of competing, often technical, claims. When official truth committees have intervened, it has almost always hindered scientific progress. Remember that it was the official truth committee that determined that Galileo was wrong. Truth committees have taken positions on evolution, global warming, and a host of other controversial topics. It simply doesn’t help.
We have no alternative to sorting through the evidence and trying to figure these things out ourselves. We may rely upon the expertise of others in helping us sort out competing claims, but we should always do so with caution, since those experts may be mistaken or even deceptive. But when the government starts weighing in as an expert, it speaks with far too much authority and can be much more coercive. A What Works Clearinghouse simply doesn’t work.

I have no idea why a bunch of ed reformers are so gloomy. Matt has already observed how Rick Hess and Mike Petrilli can’t seem to enjoy the moment when ed reform ideas go mainstream. Now Liam Julian is joining the poopy parade, lamenting that the new crop of naive reformers are doomed to fail just as past ones have, and “it never works out.” And continuing the gloomy theme, Rick is worrying that school choice (in the form of vouchers) over-promised and under-delivered, losing the support of people like Sol Stern.
That may be, but as a graduate student observed to me today, choice (in the form of vouchers) may have lost Sol Stern, but choice (in the form of charters) just gained Oprah, the Today Show, and the Democratic Party platform. Overall, he thought that was a pretty good trade, especially since he had to look up who Sol Stern was.
Let’s review. It is now commonly accepted among mainstream elites — from Oprah to Matt Lauer to Arne Duncan — that simply pouring more money into the public school system will not produce the results we want. It is now commonly accepted that the teacher unions have been a significant barrier to school improvement by protecting ineffective teachers and opposing meaningful reforms. It is now commonly accepted that parents should have a say in where their children go to school and this choice will push traditional public schools to improve. It is now commonly accepted that we have to address the incentives in the school system to recruit, retain, and motivate the best educators.
These reform ideas were barely a twinkle in Ronald Reagan’s eye three decades ago and are now broadly accepted across both parties and across the ideological spectrum. This is a huge accomplishment and rather than being all bummed out that everyone else now likes the band that I thought was cool before anyone ever heard of it, we should be amazed at how much good music there is out there.
We won! At least we’ve won the war of ideas. Our ideas for school reform are now the ones that elites and politicians are considering and they have soundly rejected the old ideas of more money, more money, and more money.
Now that I’ve said that, I have to acknowledge that winning the war of ideas is nowhere close to winning the policy war. As I’ve written before, the teacher unions are becoming like the tobacco industry. No one accepts their primary claims anymore, but that doesn’t mean they don’t continue to be powerful and that people don’t continue to smoke. The battle is turning into a struggle over the correct design and implementation of the reform ideas that are now commonly accepted. And the unions have shown that they are extremely good at blocking, diluting, or co-opting the correct design and implementation of reforms.
Rick Hess correctly demonstrated how important design and implementation are almost two decades ago in his books, Spinning Wheels and Revolution at the Margins. And it is always useful for him and others to remind reformers of the dangers that lurk in those union-infested waters. But for a moment can’t we just bask in the glow of our intellectual victory — even if our allies are a new crop of naive reformers?
(edited for typos)
“Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.” – John Adams
(Guest post by Greg Forster)
I love Rick Hess for being pissed off that voucher advocates promised the moon and stars back in the 1990s, setting us up for the appearance of disappointment. Inevitably, when we got actual programs enacted, we got tiny, cramped, ridiculously overregulated and sabotaged-by-educrats programs, not the universal vouchers that have defined the gold standard for school choice for fifty years. Unsurprisingly, the modest and heavily limited programs we have enacted have failed to deliver the moon and stars.
Of course I love him for that; we’ve been making much the same point for a while now. Welcome to the party, Rick!
And I love Rick Hess for demanding that we reboot the movement with a focus on “making markets,” on “deregulation and re-invention.” Advocates of school choice to improve public schools have been in hock to the private school status quo for too long. As Milton Friedman said, education is the only thing we still do exactly the same way we did it a hundred years ago. We don’t even know what a good school looks like; we have to set the market free to find out.
Again, welcome to the party!
But Rick doesn’t get the facts right on the question of whether vouchers “work.” He jumbles together respectable scholars (ahem) with breathtakingly shameless professional con artists who happen to have Ivy League credentials (ahem) as though they all had equal credibility. Obviously if you’re going to do that, you can create the appearance of uncertainty no matter how clear the facts are.
Don’t listen to the experts – including me. And don’t listen to experts who decide what’s true – or what’s certain or uncertain – by weighing how many alleged “experts” are on each side.
Find out the facts for yourself. Here’s a fact you can start with: there have been 19 high-quality empirical studies of how school vouchers (and in one case tax-credit scholarships) impact public schools. Of those, 18 find that vouchers improve public schools, one found no visible difference, and none found that vouchers do harm. And that one stray study finding no difference was . . . guess where? In D.C., where the voucher program intentionally insulates public schools from the effects of competition. So even the exception proves the rule.
Vouchers work. Facts are stubborn things. No matter how many “experts” you quote against them.
It’s imperative to look at the high-quality empirical studies and not anecdotes or people’s claims. That’s the only way you can reliably disentangle the impact of vouchers specifically from the impact of hundreds of other factors that affect school performance.
This matters because you can’t reboot the movement with a focus on building markets, as Rick and I both want to do, if you start by ignoring the facts about all the good vouchers have already accomplished. The effect is more likely to be despair and abandonment – if you’ve fought for 20 years and haven’t accomplished anything, why keep fighting?
In the 1950s and 1960s, the clever intellectual elites thought they could reboot America to pursue a new vision of greatness by pooh-poohing and downplaying the importance of all the great things America had accomplished in its past up to that point. They were hoping to inspire the rising generation to aim higher and achive a more glorious society.
What they got instead was a generation of dirty, smelly dopehead dropouts who wouldn’t fight for their country or make any contribution to society. After all, why should they? What good was it?
Anything that produces hippies is a bad thing. (Just ask anyone who’s made fun of “peace, love and understanding” in front of Matt.)
I want the same thing Rick wants. I just want him to see that when he advocates rebooting the movement around liberating real educational markets, the facts are on his side.
For some time now I have expressed disillusionment with merit pay as an ed reform strategy. In a paper Stuart Buck and I produced last spring for a Harvard conference on performance incentives we wrote:
All of this leads us to measured skepticism about the merit of merit pay, unless coupled with other reforms such as competition between schools. After all, merit pay boils down to an attempt to recreate a market system within a tightly controlled state monopoly. This is an objective fraught with peril. Even if wise and benevolent state actors manage to get the incentives right at a particular moment in time in a particular place, their actions can always be undone by immediate successors. Those successors may well be more influenced by the powerful special interests that want to block merit pay, loosen the standards, or even to call a system “merit pay” while rewarding behavior that has no relation to actual achievement.
Now we have additional reasons for skepticism. A well-designed random-assignment experiment led by Vanderbilt’s Matt Springer found:
Keep in mind that this experiment only tests whether financial incentives increase teacher motivation, resulting in higher student achievement. It does not address whether merit pay might change the composition of the teacher labor force, attracting and retaining more effective teachers.
Still, color me even more skeptical about the promise of merit pay as an ed reform strategy. It may well be that the current crop of teachers we have believe that they are doing their best, so offering them money for trying harder doesn’t result in a significant change in effort. And given the political and organizational barriers to merit pay, I hold out little hope that a well-designed program can be sustained long enough to effect the composition of the teacher labor market.
“Why Hitler Lost the War”
(Guest post by Greg Forster)
Reviewing Oprah’s segment on Waiting for Superman, Jay Matt [oops] just announced that the war of ideas is over and the unions have lost.
Hmm, where have I heard that before? Oh, yeah, that’s right – I’ve been saying it for a year and a half.
Permission to come aboard, granted!
The unions are primed for a major defeat. If you listen carefully, you can actually hear the voice-over from Mortal Kombat crying out “FINISH HIM!”
What the movement needs now is a fearless, dynamic organizational leader with a smart plan to get a truly universal voucher program (no more watering it down) enacted in a state in the next, say, three years, and who’s determined to spend the next three years doing nothing but putting that plan into action. There are states where that can happen. But it won’t happen unless somebody picks up the ball.
Or am I just waiting for Superman?

Despite various reports of the death of vouchers, mostly from people wishing that the idea were in fact dead, voucher programs and supporters keep gaining steam.
Today in the WSJ we learn about how both Democratic and Republican candidates for governor in Pennsylvania are voucher supporters. As the piece concludes:
The Obama Administration, which is phasing out a popular and successful school voucher program in Washington, D.C., at the insistence of teachers unions, refuses to acknowledge that vouchers can play a role in reforming K-12 education. But states and cities are the real engines of reform, and the Pennsylvania developments are another sign that the school choice movement is alive and well.
(Guest post by Greg Forster)
Yet you can count the voucher programs on your fingers.
Wow! Checker Finn has TWENTY-FIVE FINGERS!
(P.S. Congrats to FEC on the rockin’ new website.)
[Update: Just realized I should have added a link to Matt’s outstanding demolition of Checker, below.]
(Guest Post by Stuart Buck)
On July 14, Diane Ravitch wrote this:
La. students with vouchers do worse than peers in regular schools: http://tinyurl.com/347yht5. The panacea that never works, never dies.
Leave aside the uninformed claim that vouchers never work (in fact, they improve graduation rates, force public schools to improve, and improve test scores at least some of the time).
Has Ravitch found any actual evidence that Louisiana students are being harmed by vouchers? No.
Consider who receives vouchers in Louisiana. The program is limited to families with incomes under 250% of the poverty line — that is, students who tend to be poorer. On top of that, students must have attended “a public school during the 2009-2010 school year that is labeled academically unacceptable by the State.”
In other words, the voucher program is limited to students with lower incomes who attended failing public schools.
Now, as described in the EdWeek article that Ravitch so credulously cites, a former insurance executive and state board of education member named Leslie Jacobs came up with a comparison of voucher students and public school students. As far as I can tell, that comparison is available only in a blog post:
In the 2009-10 school year, 1113 children in grades K-4 received vouchers to attend one of the 32 participating non-public schools. Unfortunately, looking at the spring 2010 test scores, voucher students performed much worse than students in the New Orleans RSD – both its traditionally run public schools and public charter schools.
. . . .
Analysis
The performance of students enrolled in the voucher program raises serious concerns. While Louisiana’s proficiency goal is for all students to be Basic and above, in the voucher schools, only 35% of 3rd graders and 29% of 4th graders earned scores indicating they are grade level proficient in reading. Compare that to the RSD charters, where 54% of 3rd graders and 58% of 4th graders scored Basic and above. In fact, in English 4th grade students enrolled in the RSD charter schools outperformed students attending voucher schools by 2 to 1.
That’s the full extent of the “analysis” section. Evidently, all that Ms. Jacobs did was compare the raw average scores of voucher students to those of New Orleans public school students as a whole. Needless to say, this “analysis” is worthless — she’s comparing poorer students from failing public schools to everyone else. It’s unsurprising that the former might not be doing quite as well. Such an apples-to-oranges comparison tells us nothing about the performance of voucher-receiving private schools.
It’s a shame that Ravitch would treat this comparison with such gullibility while refusing to acknowledge the highly rigorous research done on vouchers.